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Difference between revisions of "Ashtamangala"

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[[File:Ashtamangala.jpg|thumb|250px|Ashta-mangala, Eight Auspicious Signs of Buddhism: (First row, l->r): The precious Umbrella, Pair of golden fish, White Conch, (Second row), Treasure Vase, Lotus, (Last row) Infinite knot, Victory Banner and wheel. Leh, India.]]
 
[[File:Ashtamangala.jpg|thumb|250px|Ashta-mangala, Eight Auspicious Signs of Buddhism: (First row, l->r): The precious Umbrella, Pair of golden fish, White Conch, (Second row), Treasure Vase, Lotus, (Last row) Infinite knot, Victory Banner and wheel. Leh, India.]]
Ashtamangala (Sanskrit: अष्टमंगल [[Aṣṭamaṅgala]], Tibetan: བཀྲ་ཤིས་རྟགས་བརྒྱད, Wylie: bkra shis rtags brgyad, ZYPY: Zhaxi Dag'gyä, Lhasa dialect IPA: [tʂáɕitaʔ cɛ̀ʔ]); Chinese: 吉祥八宝 Jíxiáng bā bǎo) are a sacred suite of Eight Auspicious Signs endemic to a number of Indian religions such as [[Hinduism]], [[Jainism]], and Buddhism. The symbols or "symbolic attributes" (Tibetan: ཕྱག་མཚན།, Wylie: phyag-mtshan) are yidam and teaching tools. Not only do these attributes, these energetic signatures, point to qualities of enlightened [[Mindstream]], but they are the investiture that ornaments these enlightened "qualities" (Sanskrit: guṇa; Tibetan: ཡོན་ཏན, Wylie: yon tan). Many cultural enumerations and variations of the Ashtamangala are extant.
+
[[Ashtamangala]] (Sanskrit: अष्टमंगल [[[[Aṣṭamaṅgala]]]], Tibetan: བཀྲ་ཤིས་རྟགས་བརྒྱད, Wylie: bkra shis rtags brgyad, ZYPY: Zhaxi Dag'gyä, {{Wiki|Lhasa}} dialect IPA: [tʂáɕitaʔ cɛ̀ʔ]); Chinese: 吉祥八宝 Jíxiáng bā bǎo) are a sacred suite of [[Eight Auspicious Signs]] endemic to a number of {{Wiki|Indian}} [[religions]] such as [[Hinduism]], [[Jainism]], and [[Buddhism]]. The [[symbols]] or "symbolic attributes" (Tibetan: ཕྱག་མཚན།, Wylie: [[phyag-mtshan]]) are [[yidam]] and teaching tools. Not only do these attributes, these energetic signatures, point to qualities of [[enlightened]] [[Mindstream]], but they are the investiture that ornaments these [[enlightened]] "qualities" (Sanskrit: [[guṇa]]; Tibetan: ཡོན་ཏན, Wylie: yon tan). Many cultural enumerations and variations of the [[Ashtamangala]] are extant.
  
:    Groupings of [[Eight auspicious symbols]] were originally used in [[India]] at ceremonies such as an investiture or coronation of a king. An early grouping of symbols included: throne, swastika, handprint, hooked knot, vase of jewels, water libation flask, pair of fishes, lidded bowl. In Buddhism, these eight symbols of good fortune represent the offerings made by the gods to [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] immediately after he gained [[Enlightenment]].
+
:    Groupings of [[Eight auspicious symbols]] were originally used in [[India]] at ceremonies such as an investiture or coronation of a king. An early grouping of [[symbols]] included: throne, [[swastika]], handprint, [[hooked knot]], [[vase]] of jewels, water libation flask, [[pair of fishes]], lidded bowl. In [[Buddhism]], these [[eight symbols of good fortune]] represent the [[offerings]] made by the [[gods]] to [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] immediately after he gained [[Enlightenment]].
  
== In Buddhism ==
+
== In [[Buddhism]] ==
[[Tibetan Buddhism|Tibetan Buddhists]] make use of a particular set of [[Eight auspicious symbols]], ''ashtamangala'', in household and public [[Art]]. Some common interpretations are given along with each symbol although different teachers may give different interpretations:
+
[[Tibetan Buddhism|Tibetan Buddhists]] make use of a particular set of [[Eight auspicious symbols]], ''[[ashtamangala]]'', in household and public [[Art]]. Some common interpretations are given along with each [[symbol]] although different teachers may give different interpretations:
  
 
=== [[Conch]] ===
 
=== [[Conch]] ===
 
[[File:Ashtamangala right whorl conch.png|thumb|150px|right-turning conch]]
 
[[File:Ashtamangala right whorl conch.png|thumb|150px|right-turning conch]]
The right-turning white [[Conch]] shell (Sanskrit: Śaṅkha; Tibetan: དུང་གྱས་འཁྱིལ, Wylie: dung gyas 'khyil), representing the beautiful, deep, melodious, interpenetrating and pervasive sound of the Buddhadharma, which awakens disciples from the deep slumber of [[Ignorance]] and urges them to accomplish their own welfare and the welfare of others;
+
The right-turning white [[Conch shell]] (Sanskrit: [[Śaṅkha]]; Tibetan: དུང་གྱས་འཁྱིལ, Wylie: dung gyas 'khyil), representing the beautiful, deep, melodious, interpenetrating and pervasive sound of the [[Buddhadharma]], which awakens [[disciples]] from the deep slumber of [[Ignorance]] and urges them to accomplish their own welfare and the welfare of others;
  
In [[Hinduism]] the [[Conch]] is an attribute of Vishnu as is the Wheel (Sudarshana). Vaishnavism holds that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] is an Avatar of Vishnu.
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In [[Hinduism]] the [[Conch]] is an attribute of {{Wiki|Vishnu}} as is the [[Wheel]] ([[Sudarshana]]). {{Wiki|Vaishnavism}} holds that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] is an {{Wiki|Avatar}} of {{Wiki|Vishnu}}.
  
:    The [[Conch]] shell is thought to have been the original horn-trumpet; ancient Indian mythical epics relate heroes carrying [[Conch]] shells. The Indian [[God]] Vishnu is also described as having a [[Conch]] shell as one of his main emblems; his shell bore the name Panchajanya meaning "having control over the five classes of beings".
+
:    The [[Conch shell]] is thought to have been the original horn-trumpet; ancient {{Wiki|Indian}} {{Wiki|mythical}} {{Wiki|epics}} relate heroes carrying [[Conc shells]]. The {{Wiki|Indian}} [[God]] {{Wiki|Vishnu}} is also described as having a [[Conch shell]] as one of his main emblems; his [[shell]] bore the name [[Panchajanya]] meaning "having control over the five classes of beings".
  
 
=== Knot ===
 
=== Knot ===
 
[[File:EndlessKnot03d.png|thumb|150px|endless knot]]
 
[[File:EndlessKnot03d.png|thumb|150px|endless knot]]
The [[Endless knot]] or eternal knot (Devanagari: श्रीवत्स; Sanskrit: śrīvatsa; Tibetan: དཔལ་བེའུ, Wylie: dpal be'u)  as Chandra et al. (1902: p. 69) state denotes "the auspicious mark represented by a curled noose emblematical of [[Love]]". Moreover, it represents the intertwining of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]], the mutual dependence of religious [[Doctrine]] and secular affairs, the union of [[Wisdom]] and method, the inseparability of emptiness and dependent co-arising), and the union of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]] in [[Enlightenment]]. It is also symbolic of knot symbolism in linking ancestors and omnipresence and the magical ritual and meta-process of binding (refer etymology of Tantra, Yoga and religion) (see Namkha). This knot/net/web metaphor also conveys the Buddhist teaching of the [[Doctrine]] of Interpenetration.
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The [[Endless knot]] or [[eternal knot]] (Devanagari: श्रीवत्स; [[Sanskrit]]: [[śrīvatsa]]; Tibetan: དཔལ་བེའུ, Wylie: dpal be'u)  as Chandra et al. (1902: p. 69) state denotes "the auspicious mark represented by a curled noose emblematical of [[Love]]". Moreover, it represents the intertwining of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]], the mutual dependence of [[religious]] [[Doctrine]] and secular affairs, the union of [[Wisdom]] and method, the inseparability of [[emptiness]] and [[dependent co-arising]]), and the union of [[Wisdom]] and [[Compassion]] in [[Enlightenment]]. It is also symbolic of knot [[symbolism]] in linking ancestors and [[omnipresence]] and the [[magical]] [[ritual]] and meta-process of binding (refer {{Wiki|etymology}} of [[Tantra]], {{Wiki|Yoga}} and [[religion]]) (see Namkha). This knot/net/web metaphor also conveys the [[Buddhist teaching]] of the [[Doctrine]] of Interpenetration.
  
=== Fish ===
+
=== [[Fish]] ===
 
[[File:8signs-SERNYA.png|thumb|150px|pair of golden fish]]
 
[[File:8signs-SERNYA.png|thumb|150px|pair of golden fish]]
The two goldfish (Sanskrit: Gaur-matsya; Tibetan: གསེར་ཉ, Wylie: gser nya ), representing the state of fearless suspension in a harmless ocean of [[Samsara]], metaphorically often refer to [[Buddha]]-eyes or rigpa-sight; symbolises the auspiciousness of all [[Sentient beings]] in a state of fearlessness without danger of drowning in the Samsaric Ocean of [[Suffering]], and migrating from place to place and teaching to teaching freely and spontaneously just as fish swim freely without fear through water;
+
The two goldfish (Sanskrit: [[]]Gaur-matsya; Tibetan: གསེར་ཉ, Wylie: gser nya ), representing the state of fearless suspension in a harmless ocean of [[Samsara]], metaphorically often refer to [[Buddha-eyes]] or [[rigpa]]-sight; symbolises the auspiciousness of all [[Sentient beings]] in a state of fearlessness without danger of drowning in the [[Samsaric]] Ocean of [[Suffering]], and migrating from place to place and teaching to teaching freely and spontaneously just as fish swim freely without fear through water;
  
In the following quotation, the two golden fishes are linked with the [[Ganges]] and Yamuna, and nadi, prana and carp:
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In the following quotation, the [[two golden fishes]] are linked with the [[Ganges]] and {{Wiki|Yamuna}}, and [[nadi]], [[prana]] and carp:
  
:    The two fishes originally represented the two main sacred rivers of [[India]] - the [[Ganges]] and Yamuna. These rivers are associated with the lunar and solar channels, which originate in the nostrils and carry the alternating rhythms of [[Breath]] or prana. They have religious significance in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist traditions but also in [[Christianity]] (the sign of the fish, the feeding of the five thousand). In Buddhism, the fish symbolize [[Happiness]] as they have complete freedom of movement in the water. They represent fertility and abundance. Often drawn in the form of carp, which are regarded in the Orient as sacred on account of their elegant [[Beauty]], size, and [[Life]]-span.
+
:    The [[two fishes]] originally represented the two main sacred rivers of [[India]] - the [[Ganges]] and [[Yamuna]]. These rivers are associated with the [[lunar]] and [[solar]] [[channels]], which originate in the nostrils and carry the alternating rhythms of [[Breath]] or [[prana]]. They have [[religious]] significance in {{Wiki|Hindu}}, {{Wiki|Jain}} and [[Buddhist]] traditions but also in {{Wiki|Christianity}} (the sign of the fish, the feeding of the five thousand). In [[Buddhism]], the fish symbolize [[Happiness]] as they have complete freedom of movement in the water. They represent fertility and abundance. Often drawn in the form of carp, which are regarded in the Orient as sacred on account of their elegant [[Beauty]], size, and [[Life]]-span.
  
 
=== [[Lotus]] ===
 
=== [[Lotus]] ===
[[File:Indian Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera).jpg|thumb|150px|The Lotus Flower represents the "primordial purity" of the body, speech, and mind.]]
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[[File:Indian Lotus (Nelumbo nucifera).jpg|thumb|150px|The [[Lotus Flower]] represents the "[[primordial purity]]" of the [[body]], [[speech]], and [[mind]].]]
The [[Lotus]] flower (Sanskrit: Padma; Tibetan: པད་མེ, Wylie: pad me), representing "primordial purity" (Tibetan: ཀ་དག, Wylie: ka dag) of [[Body]], speech, and mind, floating above the muddy waters of attachment and desire; represents the full blossoming of wholesome deeds in blissful liberation.
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The [[Lotus]] flower (Sanskrit: [[Padma]]; Tibetan: པད་མེ, Wylie: pad me), representing "[[primordial purity]]" (Tibetan: ཀ་དག, Wylie: ka dag) of [[Body]], [[speech]], and [[mind]], floating above the muddy waters of [[attachment]] and [[desire]]; represents the full blossoming of wholesome deeds in blissful liberation.
  
  
 
=== Parasol ===
 
=== Parasol ===
 
[[File:Parasol.png|thumb|150px|parasol]]
 
[[File:Parasol.png|thumb|150px|parasol]]
The jewelled parasol (Sanskrit: chhatraratna; Devanagari: छत्ररत्न; Tibetan: རིནཆེན་གདུགས, Wylie: rin chen gdugs) or Sacred Umbrella, which is similar in ritual function to the baldachin or canopy. Müller-Ebeling, Rätsch & Shahi (2002) scholarly chart the origins of the Sacred Parasol as a symbolic depiction of sacred medicinal and hallucinogenic mushrooms of the Himalayan pharmacopeia; representing the protection of beings from harmful forces, illness; represents the canopy or firmament of the sky and therefore the expansiveness and unfolding of space and the element æther; represents the expansiveness, unfolding and protective quality of the sahasrara; under the auspice of the precious parasol all take [[Refuge]] in the Dharma.
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The [[jewelled parasol]] (Sanskrit: [[chhatraratna]]; Devanagari: छत्ररत्न; Tibetan: རིནཆེན་གདུགས, Wylie: rin chen gdugs) or [[Sacred Umbrella]], which is similar in [[ritual]] function to the {{Wiki|baldachin}} or {{Wiki|canopy}}. Müller-Ebeling, Rätsch & Shahi (2002) scholarly chart the origins of the [[Sacred Parasol]] as a symbolic depiction of sacred medicinal and hallucinogenic mushrooms of the {{Wiki|Himalayan}} {{Wiki|pharmacopeia}}; representing the protection of beings from harmful forces, illness; represents the canopy or firmament of the sky and therefore the expansiveness and unfolding of [[space]] and the element {{Wiki|æther}}; represents the expansiveness, unfolding and protective quality of the [[sahasrara]]; under the auspice of the precious parasol all take [[Refuge]] in the [[Dharma]].
  
=== Urn ===
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=== [[Urn]] ===
[[File:Bumpa.png|thumb|150px|The Treasure Vase represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, wisdom, and the phenomenon of space.]]
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[[File:Bumpa.png|thumb|150px|The [[Treasure Vase]] represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, [[wisdom]], and the phenomenon of space.]]
The treasure vase or Urn of [[Wisdom]] (Tibetan: བུམ་པ, Wylie: bum pa) represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, [[Wisdom]] and the phenomenon of space. Indeed, to disambiguate, "Space" (Sanskrit: ākāśa) is a rendering of the particular denotation of the element of the [[Mahabhuta]] (Sanskrit; English: "Great Elements") and the Five Pure Lights. Space is that elemental matrix that contains, holds, and conducts all phenomena. Space is the repository and conduit of everything that is manifest, embodied or incarnate; symbolises Śūnyatā (Sanskrit); the iconographic representation of the '[[Wisdom]] urn' is often very similar to the 'water pot' (Sanskrit: Kumbha), which is one of the few allowable possessions of a [[Theravadin]] [[Bhikku]] or [[Bhikkuni]]; the [[Wisdom]] urn or treasure vase is used in many [[Vajrayana]] empowerments and initiations;
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The [[treasure vase]] or [[Urn of Wisdom]] (Tibetan: བུམ་པ, Wylie: [[bum pa]]) represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, [[Wisdom]] and the phenomenon of [[space]]. Indeed, to disambiguate, "[[Space]]" (Sanskrit: [[ākāśa]]) is a rendering of the particular denotation of the element of the [[Mahabhuta]] ([[Sanskrit]]; English: "[[Great Elements]]") and the Five Pure Lights. Space is that elemental {{Wiki|matrix}} that contains, holds, and conducts all phenomena. [[Space]] is the repository and conduit of everything that is manifest, embodied or incarnate; symbolises [[Śūnyatā]] (Sanskrit); the iconographic representation of the '[[Wisdom urn]]' is often very similar to the '[[water pot]]' (Sanskrit: [[Kumbha]]), which is one of the few allowable possessions of a [[Theravadin]] [[Bhikku]] or [[Bhikkuni]]; the [[Wisdom]] urn or [[treasure vase]] is used in many [[Vajrayana]] [[empowerments]] and [[initiations]];
  
=== Wheel ===
+
=== [[Wheel]] ===
 
[[File:Dharma Wheel.png|thumb|150px|Wheel of Law]]
 
[[File:Dharma Wheel.png|thumb|150px|Wheel of Law]]
The Wheel of Law (Sanskrit: Dharmacakra; Tibetan: ཁོར་ལོ, Wylie: khor lo), sometimes represents Sakyamuni [[Buddha]] and the Dharma teaching, and also represents the mandala and chakra. This symbol is commonly used by Tibetan Buddhists, where it sometimes also includes an inner wheel of the Gankyil (Tibetan). Nepalese Buddhists don't use the Wheel of Law in the [[Eight auspicious symbols]].
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The [[Wheel of Law]] (Sanskrit: [[Dharmacakra]]; Tibetan: ཁོར་ལོ, Wylie: [[khor lo]]), sometimes represents [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddha]] and the [[Dharma]] teaching, and also represents the [[mandala]] and [[chakra]]. This symbol is commonly used by {{Wiki|Tibetan}} [[Buddhists]], where it sometimes also includes an [[inner wheel]] of the [[Gankyil]] ({{Wiki|Tibetan}}). {{Wiki|Nepalese}} [[Buddhists]] don't use the [[Wheel of Law]] in the [[Eight auspicious symbols]].
  
Instead of the Dharma wheel, A Fly Whisk may be used as one of the ashtamangala to symbolize Tantric manifestations. It is made of a yak's tail attached to a silver staff, and used in ritual recitation and during fanning the deities in an auspicious religious ceremony (puja) The Mani wheel is another Dharmacakra guise that unites the function of the yak's tail with the doctrinal aspect of the Wheel of Law. The Sudarshana Chakra is a Hindu wheel-symbol.
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Instead of the [[Dharma wheel]], A Fly Whisk may be used as one of the [[ashtamangala]] to symbolize [[Tantric]] manifestations. It is made of a {{Wiki|yak}}'s tail attached to a silver staff, and used in ritual [[recitation]] and during fanning the [[deities]] in an {{Wiki|auspicious}} [[religious]] {{Wiki|ceremony}} ([[puja]]) The [[Mani wheel]] is another [[Dharmacakra]] guise that unites the function of the {{Wiki|yak}}'s tail with the doctrinal aspect of the [[Wheel of Law]]. The {{Wiki|Sudarshana Chakra}} is a {{Wiki|Hindu}} wheel-symbol.
  
=== Victory Banner ===
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=== [[Victory Banner]] ===
  
[[File:Dhvaja, roof of Sanga monastery.jpg|thumb|250px|The Victory Banner was a military standard of ancient Indian warfare.]]
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[[File:Dhvaja, roof of Sanga monastery.jpg|thumb|250px|The [[Victory Banner]] was a {{Wiki|military}} {{Wiki|standard}} of ancient Indian warfare.]]
Dhvaja (Skt. also Dhwaja; Tibetan: རྒྱལ་མཚན, Wylie: rgyal mtshan), meaning banner or flag. Dhvaja banner was a military standard of ancient Indian warfare. Makara Dhvaja has become latter an emblem of the Vedic [[God]] of [[Love]] and desire — Kamadeva. Within the Tibetan tradition a list of eleven different forms of the victory banner is given to represent eleven specific methods for overcoming defilements. Many variations of the dhvaja's design can be seen on the roofs of Tibetan monasteries to symbolyze [[The Buddha]]'s victory over four maras.
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[[Dhvaja]] (Skt. also [[Dhwaja]]; Tibetan: རྒྱལ་མཚན, Wylie: rgyal mtshan), meaning banner or flag. [[Dhvaja]] banner was a military standard of ancient Indian warfare. Makara Dhvaja has become latter an emblem of the {{Wiki|Vedic}} [[God]] of [[Love]] and [[desire]] [[Kamadeva]]. Within the {{Wiki|Tibetan}} [[tradition]] a list of eleven different forms of the [[victory banner]] is given to represent eleven specific methods for overcoming [[defilements]]. Many variations of the [[dhvaja]]'s design can be seen on the roofs of {{Wiki|Tibetan}} [[monasteries]] to symbolyze [[The Buddha]]'s victory over four [[maras]].
  
== Sequences of symbols ==
+
== Sequences of [[symbols]] ==
 
Different traditions order the eight symbols differently.
 
Different traditions order the eight symbols differently.
  
Here is the sequential order of the [[Eight auspicious symbols]] of Nepali Buddhism:
+
Here is the sequential order of the [[Eight auspicious symbols]] of {{Wiki|Nepali}} [[Buddhism]]:
  
 
*    [[Endless knot]]
 
*    [[Endless knot]]
*    [[Lotus]] flower
+
*    [[Lotus flower]]
*    Victory Banner
+
*    [[Victory Banner]]
*    Wheel of [[Dharma]] or Chamaru in Nepali Buddhism
+
*    [[Wheel of Dharma]] or [[Chamaru]] in Nepali Buddhism
*    Treasure Vase
+
*    [[Treasure Vase]]
*    Golden Fish pair
+
*    [[Golden Fish pair]]
*    Parasol
+
*    [[Parasol]]
*    [[Conch]] shell
+
*    [[Conch shel]]l
  
The sequential order for [[Chinese Buddhism]] was defined in the Qing Dynasty as:
+
The sequential order for [[Chinese Buddhism]] was defined in the {{Wiki|Qing Dynasty}} as:
  
*   Wheel of [[Dharma]]
+
*   [[Wheel of Dharma]]
*    [[Conch]] shell
+
*    [[Conch shell]]
*    Victory Banner
+
*    [[Victory Banner]]
*    Parasol
+
*    [[Parasol]]
*    [[Lotus]] flower
+
*    [[Lotus flower]]
*    Treasure Vase
+
*    [[Treasure Vase]]
*    Golden Fish pair
+
*    [[Golden Fish pair]]
 
*    [[Endless knot]]
 
*    [[Endless knot]]
  
== Hindu symbols ==
+
== {{Wiki|Hindu}} [[symbols]] ==
  
In Indian and Hindu tradition, the Ashtamangala may be used during certain occasions including: pujas, weddings (of Hindus), and coronations. The ashtamangala finds wide mention in the texts associated with [[Hinduism]], Buddhism, and [[Jainism]]. They have been depicted in decorative motifs and cultural artifacts.
+
In Indian and {{Wiki|Hindu}} [[tradition]], the [[Ashtamangala]] may be used during certain occasions including: [[pujas]], {{Wiki|weddings}} (of {{Wiki|Hindus}}), and coronations. The [[ashtamangala]] finds wide mention in the texts associated with [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], and [[Jainism]]. They have been depicted in decorative motifs and cultural artifacts.
  
 
*    The North Indian tradition lists them as:
 
*    The North Indian tradition lists them as:
**        lion
+
**        [[lion]]
 
**      bull
 
**      bull
**        elephant
+
**        [[elephant]]
 
**        water jar or a vessel filled with gems
 
**        water jar or a vessel filled with gems
 
**        fly-whisk
 
**        fly-whisk
Line 106: Line 106:
 
In the Digambara tradition, the eight symbols are:
 
In the Digambara tradition, the eight symbols are:
  
#    Parasol (Chhatraratna)
+
#    [[Parasol]] ([[Chhatraratna]])
#    Banner (Dhvaja)
+
#    [[Banner]] ([[Dhvaja]])
#    Vessel (Kalasha)
+
#    Vessel ([[Kalasha]])
#    Whisk (Chauri)
+
#    Whisk ([[Chauri]])
#    Mirror (Darpana)
+
#    Mirror ([[Darpana]])
 
#    Seat (Sukhasana)
 
#    Seat (Sukhasana)
 
#    Fan
 
#    Fan
Line 117: Line 117:
 
In the Svetambara tradition, the eight symbols are:
 
In the Svetambara tradition, the eight symbols are:
  
#    Swastika
+
#    [[Swastika]]
 
#    Sri Vatsa
 
#    Sri Vatsa
 
#    Nandavarta
 
#    Nandavarta

Revision as of 11:46, 29 July 2013

Ashta-mangala, Eight Auspicious Signs of Buddhism: (First row, l->r): The precious Umbrella, Pair of golden fish, White Conch, (Second row), Treasure Vase, Lotus, (Last row) Infinite knot, Victory Banner and wheel. Leh, India.

Ashtamangala (Sanskrit: अष्टमंगल [[Aṣṭamaṅgala]], Tibetan: བཀྲ་ཤིས་རྟགས་བརྒྱད, Wylie: bkra shis rtags brgyad, ZYPY: Zhaxi Dag'gyä, Lhasa dialect IPA: [tʂáɕitaʔ cɛ̀ʔ]); Chinese: 吉祥八宝 Jíxiáng bā bǎo) are a sacred suite of Eight Auspicious Signs endemic to a number of Indian religions such as Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism. The symbols or "symbolic attributes" (Tibetan: ཕྱག་མཚན།, Wylie: phyag-mtshan) are yidam and teaching tools. Not only do these attributes, these energetic signatures, point to qualities of enlightened Mindstream, but they are the investiture that ornaments these enlightened "qualities" (Sanskrit: guṇa; Tibetan: ཡོན་ཏན, Wylie: yon tan). Many cultural enumerations and variations of the Ashtamangala are extant.

Groupings of Eight auspicious symbols were originally used in India at ceremonies such as an investiture or coronation of a king. An early grouping of symbols included: throne, swastika, handprint, hooked knot, vase of jewels, water libation flask, pair of fishes, lidded bowl. In Buddhism, these eight symbols of good fortune represent the offerings made by the gods to Shakyamuni Buddha immediately after he gained Enlightenment.

In Buddhism

Tibetan Buddhists make use of a particular set of Eight auspicious symbols, ashtamangala, in household and public Art. Some common interpretations are given along with each symbol although different teachers may give different interpretations:

Conch

right-turning conch

The right-turning white Conch shell (Sanskrit: Śaṅkha; Tibetan: དུང་གྱས་འཁྱིལ, Wylie: dung gyas 'khyil), representing the beautiful, deep, melodious, interpenetrating and pervasive sound of the Buddhadharma, which awakens disciples from the deep slumber of Ignorance and urges them to accomplish their own welfare and the welfare of others;

In Hinduism the Conch is an attribute of Vishnu as is the Wheel (Sudarshana). Vaishnavism holds that Shakyamuni Buddha is an Avatar of Vishnu.

The Conch shell is thought to have been the original horn-trumpet; ancient Indian mythical epics relate heroes carrying Conc shells. The Indian God Vishnu is also described as having a Conch shell as one of his main emblems; his shell bore the name Panchajanya meaning "having control over the five classes of beings".

Knot

endless knot

The Endless knot or eternal knot (Devanagari: श्रीवत्स; Sanskrit: śrīvatsa; Tibetan: དཔལ་བེའུ, Wylie: dpal be'u) as Chandra et al. (1902: p. 69) state denotes "the auspicious mark represented by a curled noose emblematical of Love". Moreover, it represents the intertwining of Wisdom and Compassion, the mutual dependence of religious Doctrine and secular affairs, the union of Wisdom and method, the inseparability of emptiness and dependent co-arising), and the union of Wisdom and Compassion in Enlightenment. It is also symbolic of knot symbolism in linking ancestors and omnipresence and the magical ritual and meta-process of binding (refer etymology of Tantra, Yoga and religion) (see Namkha). This knot/net/web metaphor also conveys the Buddhist teaching of the Doctrine of Interpenetration.

Fish

pair of golden fish

The two goldfish (Sanskrit: [[]]Gaur-matsya; Tibetan: གསེར་ཉ, Wylie: gser nya ), representing the state of fearless suspension in a harmless ocean of Samsara, metaphorically often refer to Buddha-eyes or rigpa-sight; symbolises the auspiciousness of all Sentient beings in a state of fearlessness without danger of drowning in the Samsaric Ocean of Suffering, and migrating from place to place and teaching to teaching freely and spontaneously just as fish swim freely without fear through water;

In the following quotation, the two golden fishes are linked with the Ganges and Yamuna, and nadi, prana and carp:

The two fishes originally represented the two main sacred rivers of India - the Ganges and Yamuna. These rivers are associated with the lunar and solar channels, which originate in the nostrils and carry the alternating rhythms of Breath or prana. They have religious significance in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist traditions but also in Christianity (the sign of the fish, the feeding of the five thousand). In Buddhism, the fish symbolize Happiness as they have complete freedom of movement in the water. They represent fertility and abundance. Often drawn in the form of carp, which are regarded in the Orient as sacred on account of their elegant Beauty, size, and Life-span.

Lotus

The Lotus Flower represents the "primordial purity" of the body, speech, and mind.

The Lotus flower (Sanskrit: Padma; Tibetan: པད་མེ, Wylie: pad me), representing "primordial purity" (Tibetan: ཀ་དག, Wylie: ka dag) of Body, speech, and mind, floating above the muddy waters of attachment and desire; represents the full blossoming of wholesome deeds in blissful liberation.


Parasol

parasol

The jewelled parasol (Sanskrit: chhatraratna; Devanagari: छत्ररत्न; Tibetan: རིནཆེན་གདུགས, Wylie: rin chen gdugs) or Sacred Umbrella, which is similar in ritual function to the baldachin or canopy. Müller-Ebeling, Rätsch & Shahi (2002) scholarly chart the origins of the Sacred Parasol as a symbolic depiction of sacred medicinal and hallucinogenic mushrooms of the Himalayan pharmacopeia; representing the protection of beings from harmful forces, illness; represents the canopy or firmament of the sky and therefore the expansiveness and unfolding of space and the element æther; represents the expansiveness, unfolding and protective quality of the sahasrara; under the auspice of the precious parasol all take Refuge in the Dharma.

Urn

The Treasure Vase represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, wisdom, and the phenomenon of space.

The treasure vase or Urn of Wisdom (Tibetan: བུམ་པ, Wylie: bum pa) represents health, longevity, wealth, prosperity, Wisdom and the phenomenon of space. Indeed, to disambiguate, "Space" (Sanskrit: ākāśa) is a rendering of the particular denotation of the element of the Mahabhuta (Sanskrit; English: "Great Elements") and the Five Pure Lights. Space is that elemental matrix that contains, holds, and conducts all phenomena. Space is the repository and conduit of everything that is manifest, embodied or incarnate; symbolises Śūnyatā (Sanskrit); the iconographic representation of the 'Wisdom urn' is often very similar to the 'water pot' (Sanskrit: Kumbha), which is one of the few allowable possessions of a Theravadin Bhikku or Bhikkuni; the Wisdom urn or treasure vase is used in many Vajrayana empowerments and initiations;

Wheel

Wheel of Law

The Wheel of Law (Sanskrit: Dharmacakra; Tibetan: ཁོར་ལོ, Wylie: khor lo), sometimes represents Sakyamuni Buddha and the Dharma teaching, and also represents the mandala and chakra. This symbol is commonly used by Tibetan Buddhists, where it sometimes also includes an inner wheel of the Gankyil (Tibetan). Nepalese Buddhists don't use the Wheel of Law in the Eight auspicious symbols.

Instead of the Dharma wheel, A Fly Whisk may be used as one of the ashtamangala to symbolize Tantric manifestations. It is made of a yak's tail attached to a silver staff, and used in ritual recitation and during fanning the deities in an auspicious religious ceremony (puja) The Mani wheel is another Dharmacakra guise that unites the function of the yak's tail with the doctrinal aspect of the Wheel of Law. The Sudarshana Chakra is a Hindu wheel-symbol.

Victory Banner

The Victory Banner was a military standard of ancient Indian warfare.

Dhvaja (Skt. also Dhwaja; Tibetan: རྒྱལ་མཚན, Wylie: rgyal mtshan), meaning banner or flag. Dhvaja banner was a military standard of ancient Indian warfare. Makara Dhvaja has become latter an emblem of the Vedic God of Love and desireKamadeva. Within the Tibetan tradition a list of eleven different forms of the victory banner is given to represent eleven specific methods for overcoming defilements. Many variations of the dhvaja's design can be seen on the roofs of Tibetan monasteries to symbolyze The Buddha's victory over four maras.

Sequences of symbols

Different traditions order the eight symbols differently.

Here is the sequential order of the Eight auspicious symbols of Nepali Buddhism:

The sequential order for Chinese Buddhism was defined in the Qing Dynasty as:

Hindu symbols

In Indian and Hindu tradition, the Ashtamangala may be used during certain occasions including: pujas, weddings (of Hindus), and coronations. The ashtamangala finds wide mention in the texts associated with Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. They have been depicted in decorative motifs and cultural artifacts.

  • The North Indian tradition lists them as:
    • lion
    • bull
    • elephant
    • water jar or a vessel filled with gems
    • fly-whisk
    • flag
    • trumpet
    • lamp
  • The South Indian tradition lists them as:
    • fly-whisk
    • full vase
    • mirror
    • elephant goad
    • drum
    • lamp
    • flag
    • a pair of fish.
  • The list also differs depending on the place, region, and the social groups.

Jain symbols

Adinath image with Ashtamangala

In Jainism too, the Ashtamangala are a set of Eight auspicious symbols. There is some variation among different traditions concerning the eight symbols.

In the Digambara tradition, the eight symbols are:

  1. Parasol (Chhatraratna)
  2. Banner (Dhvaja)
  3. Vessel (Kalasha)
  4. Whisk (Chauri)
  5. Mirror (Darpana)
  6. Seat (Sukhasana)
  7. Fan
  8. Vessel

In the Svetambara tradition, the eight symbols are:

  1. Swastika
  2. Sri Vatsa
  3. Nandavarta
  4. Vardhmanaka (Food vessel)
  5. Bhadrasana (seat)
  6. Kalasha (pot)
  7. Darpan (mirror)
  8. Meen Yugala (pair of fish)

Source

Wikipedia:Ashtamangala