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Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 40(1), pp 111–151 February 2009. Printed in the United Kingdom.
© 2009 The National University of Singapore doi:10.1017/S0022463409000083
Garud.a, Vajrapān.i and religious change in
Jayavarman VII’s Angkor
Peter D. Sharrock
Ancient Cambodia turned definitively to state Buddhism under King Jayavarman VII
at the end of the twelfth century, after four centuries of state Śaivism. This paper
explores the motivation behind this momentous change and tries to establish the
means by which it was achieved. It uncovers signs of a very large, politically motivated
campaign of tantric Buddhist initiations that required a significant overhaul of the
king’s temples and the creation of a new series of sacred icons.
Since the 1920s, when French scholars discovered, in astonishment, that King
Jayavarman VII’s (r.1182–c.1218) great state temple, the Bayon, was originally
Buddhist, there has been little work on how this king achieved the momentous
shift of the ancient Khmers from four centuries of state Śaivism to state Buddhism.
As the only texts from the period are a number of temple inscriptions, we are obliged
to complement our search for clues to Jayavarman’s imperial politico-religious agenda
with close study of the decoration of his temples; and here, as Jean Boisselier says,
even minor changes in form, size and motif can reveal messages of political and
cosmological import:
To accord only a decorative role to all these suparnas [eagles, Garud.as], particularly in
the Bayon period, when the smallest scroll of foliage can recount so much history, would
be to misunderstand the meaning of Khmer decorative sculpture.1
This paper takes up the invitation to further research that Boisselier made in this pioneering paper of 19502 and looks at changes in icons and architecture to address the
question of how the king achieved the historical turn to Buddhism; it argues that there
Peter D. Sharrock is a Teaching Fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at London
University. Correspondence in connection with this paper should be addressed to: ps56@soas.ac.uk.
Special thanks for critical comments go to Hiram Woodward, Michael Vickery, Louise Cort and
Elizabeth Moore. (The plates reproduced are the author’s except for Plate 1, which is reproduced with
the kind permission of Arthur Probsthain, London, and Plate 12 for which I endeavoured to trace the
copyright holder but was unsuccessful. I seek the indulgence of the latter and would appreciate any information that will enable acknowledgement of copyright).
1 Jean Boisselier, ‘Garud.a dans l’art khmèr’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 44 (1950): 57.
(My translation, as are all others from French.)
2 Boisselier said the Garud.a in the Bayon style were undoubtedly Buddhist but their relations with nāga
raised questions, and the hypotheses he advanced should not be taken as solutions but as ‘instruments de
recherche’; ibid., p. 86.
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PETER D. SHARROCK
are many overlooked signs in the sacred art that support Boisselier’s tentative iconic
observations and that point to a sustained campaign to achieve political legitimisation
by imposing the Buddhist state.
The change in Jayavarman’s Garud.a icon that Boisselier detected, along with the
widespread deployment of the new model around consecration platforms, when seen
alongside other late changes in Jayavarman’s temples, are found to signal a major
religious event. The new icon points to an important background role in the
new state Buddhism for the warrior Bodhisattva of Tantrism, Vajrapān.i
(‘thunderbolt-in-hand’), as the protector of all who turn to the Buddha. The deployment of this Garud.a=Vajrapān.i icon is then seen to align with both the appearance in
the material record of a dozen bronze consecration conches embossed with the tantric
Buddhist supreme deity Hevajra, and with the addition of large new sanctuaries in the
king’s existing temples that are emblazoned with a striking new dancing goddess
motif. It is proposed that the sanctuaries were established to undertake large-scale
tantric Buddhist initiations. Together, these and other overlooked iconic pointers
are seen to disclose a well-planned and sustained campaign to get at least the ancient
Khmer elite to accept the historical shift to state Buddhism.
Temples as the powerbase and the archives of the regime
The drive behind erecting temples on earth for the gods was to align the human
state with cosmic forces capable of conferring legitimacy and power; political expediency could thus invoke religious authority and supernatural power. The temples
became, as Davidson puts it, ‘testaments to royal legitimacy’ and the ‘archives of a ruling house’.3 Jayavarman VII, a gifted communicator, was quick to exploit this means
of projecting his regime’s legitimacy and its new cosmic alignment with the Buddhas.
In the tradition set by his own Mahīdharapura dynasty,4 which established itself in the
erection of the large tantric Buddhist-dominated temple complex at Phimai (modern
northeast Thailand) between 1080 and 1107, the principal vehicle Jayavarman chose
for conveying his regnal strategy was a series of large, walled temple complexes
3 R. Davidson: ‘In erecting the new temple complexes, kings became patrons to the new divinities that
commanded the areas under the rulers’ political control. Thus the new temples satisfied many functions.
They became testaments to royal legitimacy, with the rulers using the temple walls as a tabula rasa for the
epigraphs that communicated royal piety, regal decisions on legal matters, imperial conquests, formal
alliances with other houses, and a host of matters rendering them archives of a ruling house.’ Ronald
M. Davidson, Indian esoteric Buddhism: A Social history of the Tantric movement (New York:
Columbia University Press, 2002), p. 73.
4 Claude Jacques has recently questioned George Coedès’ inclusion of Jayavarman VII in the
‘Mahīdharapura dynasty’ on the grounds that Jayavarman was raised in the unidentified city of
Jayādityapura and probably based his claim to the throne on the august antecedents of his mother
Jayarājacūd.āman.i, queen of Jayadityapura. (C. Jacques, ‘The Historical development of Khmer culture
from the death of Suryavarman II to the 16th century’, in Bayon, New Perspectives, ed. Joyce Clarke
(Bangkok: River Books, 2007), p. 32). However, despite the undoubted importance of the maternal
line in Khmer genealogy, we know that Jayavarman VII’s father, paternal grandfather and paternal
great grandmother (sister of Jayavarman VI) came from Mahīdharapura (also yet to be located). I therefore find that Coedès’ use of the term ‘Mahīdharapura dynasty’ remains a legitimate designator for the
preponderantly Buddhist northern Khmers who, when Jayavarman VII and Indravarman II are included,
ruled Angkor from 1080 to 1270 (this is not invalidated by the possibility we consider later that there was
a hiatus during the obscure reigns of Yasovarman II and Tribhuvanādityavarman, whose genealogies are
unknown).
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designed to regroup the capital’s population under Buddhist administrations.
Jayavarman VII took power by force in 11825 ‘to save the land heavy with crimes’6 following a period when the Khmers were split into competing factions,7 suffered a Cham
incursion and regicide and underwent an embattled five-year interregnum. Jayavarman
immediately marshalled Angkor’s quarrying, transport, engineering, masonry and carving resources in a building programme that was to double the city’s temple population
within a generation. He erected more sandstone than all his predecessors combined and
turned the royal sculpting workshops into a strategic asset of the realm.
The scale and intensity of the building programme have not however made its
purpose a matter of easy modern consensus; even the transition to state Buddhism
was not identified until the 1920s, when Coedès and Stern, elaborating on
Parmentier’s accidental discovery of a built-over Bodhisattva Lokeśvara, dislodged
the earlier consensus for seeing the Bayon as a ninth-century Brahmanical foundation.8 And the simplistic motivation offered most frequently for the scale of the
programme – Jayavarman’s megalomania9 – is only being contested now.10
5 The traditional date of Jayavarman’s coronation (1181) has recently been modified to 1182 by Sanskrit
scholars in a corrected reading of the śaka year in an inscription. Refer to Michael Vickery,
‘Introduction’, in Bayon, New perspectives, ed. Joyce Clarke, p. 13 n8.
6 This is Coedès’ translation of the Phimeanakas inscription (K.485 C v.28), written by the king’s
Sanskritist wife Indradevī (George Coedès, ‘Inscription du Bàyon K.470’, Inscriptions du Cambodge,
vol. III (Hanoi: EFEO, 1942): 177).
7 The Phimeanakas stela says the reign preceding Jayavarman’s was marred by multiple parasols being
raised by competing monarchs: ‘Under the preceding reign, the earth, although shaded by numerous
parasols, suffered from extreme heat; under his [Jayavarman VII’s] reign, when there was only one parasol, the earth was, strangely, released from all suffering.’ (K.485 A v.51=2, Coedès, ‘Inscription du Bàyon
K.470’, 387). Michael Vickery, in his Introduction to Bayon, New Perspectives, commends Claude
Jacques’ recent characterisation of this period of internal strife, intensified by a swirling mix of hostile
Khmer-Cham alliances:
‘Concerning the long, but poorly understood sojourn of Jayavarman in Champa, probably
from the 1150s or 1160s, Jacques insists that both Champa and Cambodia were “divided
into several more or less important kingdoms”, and that conflicts involved alliances of
Cham and Khmer fighting other alliances of Cham and Khmer … This is a welcome innovation in the study of this difficult period.’ (Vickery, ‘Introduction’, in Bayon, p. 24.)
8 The quandary the discovery posed is well illustrated in Louis Finot’s seminal 1925 paper on Lokeśvara
in which he records the presence of Bodhisattvas and Buddhas at Angkor Thom, Tà Prohm
. , Neak Pean,
Tan Nei, Ta Som, Bantéay Chmar as well as in the Bayon, in what he still takes to be the late ninthcentury capital of the Śaiva king Yasovarman I: ‘This conclusion [that Angkor Thom was … a
Buddhist city dedicated to Lokeśvara] raises complex historical problems, which we cannot address
here.’ (Louis Finot, ‘Lokeśvara en Indochine’, in Études asiatiques: Publiees a l’occasion du vingtcinquieme anniversaire de francaise d’ Extreme-Orient par ses members et ses collaborateurs (Paris: I
EFEO, 1925), p. 247).
9 Coedès’ view was: ‘What is sure is that he left the country exhausted by his megalomania and thenceforth powerless to resist the attacks of his young and turbulent neighbour to the west.’ George Coedès,
Pour mieux comprendre Angkor (Hanoi : Imprimerie d’Extrême Orient, 1925), p. 205. Philippe Stern was
among the first to use this word: ‘The buildings in the style of the Bayon are those most strongly marked,
in their dimensions, number and poor quality execution, by a sort of artistic megalomania and desire to
astonish …’ Philippe Stern, Le Bayon d’Angkor et l’évolution de l’art khmer: Étude et discussion de la
chronologie des monuments khmers (Paris: Librairie orientaliste Paul Geuther, 1927), p. 182.
10 See, for example, Christine Hawixbrock, ‘Jayavarman VII ou le renouveau d’Angkor, entre tradition
et modernité’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 85 (1998): 64; and Jacques, ‘The Historical
development of Khmer culture from the death of Suryavarman II to the 16th century’, p. 40: ‘Apart from
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One obstacle to understanding the temples is the damage they sustained in
an iconoclastic campaign apparently conducted by one of Jayavarman VII’s
Brahmanical successors, when key historical evidence was surely destroyed.
Another barrier to understanding the psychology of Jayavarman VII’s temple construction effort is that there seems to be too little awareness of the precarious position
the Khmer Buddhists endured through long periods of their history, before the twelfth
century. The plight of the oppressed is often only traduced by silence in the historical
record, and the silences of the Khmer Buddhists have not been tracked. Khmer sacred
art and inscriptions show us that the Khmers had been only marginally Buddhist until
Jayavarman VII ascended the throne. Buddhism flowered as a minority faith at certain
times from at least the fifth century, but it was suppressed in the late seventh century
and thereafter had to survive for substantial periods without royal patronage.
History of Khmer Buddhism
Because of the historical importance of the turn to Buddhism under Jayavarman
VII, it is worth sketching here the little-known history of the Khmer Buddhists. The
Buddhists flourished and then ran into crisis in the seventh century. In the midseventh century, Punyodaya, one of the early Indian Tantric Buddhist scholars to
travel to China, spent 15 years among the Buddhist community of pre-Angkorian
‘Zhenla’ on a Chinese imperial mission to acquire Khmer expertise in medicinal
herbs.11 But when Chinese Buddhist scholar Yijing travelled through Zhenla at the
end of the seventh century, he reported that Buddhism had entered the Khmer territory after Hinduism and fluoresced alongside it until, a few years before his visit, the
Buddhist monks were expelled or killed by ‘a wicked king’.12 Nancy Dowling’s study
of a series of large standing Buddhas in stone and wood in the Phnom Penh Museum
concludes that they were all made between 610 and 665 CE.13 The year 665 CE was
the date of the last seventh-century Buddhist inscription, at Wat Prei Var.14 Dowling
noted that her findings appeared to support Yijing’s report of what befell this
Buddhist community. And Yijing’s report of the suppression of the Khmer
Buddhists is borne out by a century-long gap from 665 to 791 in the mainstream
Khmer Buddhist material record, when there is no trace of any Khmer Buddhist
icon, inscription, temple or ashram (it should be noted that in the non-Khmer
world the Mahāyāna Punyodaya belonged to was making great advances in this
period in western India, Pāla India, Sri Lanka, Tibet, Tang China, northern
Champa, peninsular pre-Thailand and at Borobudur in Śrīvijaya). At the end of
this undoubtedly bleak period for the Khmer Buddhists, Jayavarman II (r.c.802–
835) founded the Śaiva state in the Angkor region in 802 and ushered in 260 years
of monarchs erecting Śaiva state temples, culminating in the Baphuon temple of
the eulogies contained in the inscriptions, it is sufficient to say that Jayavarman VII was a king generally
honoured in the same fashion as all Khmer kings, with no special “megalomania”’.
11 Lin Li-Kouang, ‘Punyodaya (N’ati), un propagateur du Tantrisme en Chine et au Cambodge à
l’époque de Hsüan-Tsang’, Journal Asiatique (July–Sept. 1935): 83–100.
12 Yijing, A Record of the Buddhist religion as practised in India and the Malay archipelago (A.D. 671–
695), trans. J. Takakusu (Oxford: Clarendon, 1896), p. 12.
13 N. Dowling, ‘New light on early Cambodian Buddhism’, Journal of the Siam Society, 88 (2000):
122–55.
14 Coedès, ‘La stèle de Tep Pranam, Cambodge’, Journal Asiatique (Mar.–Apr. 1908): 207 n1.
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Udayādityavarman II. It is just possible, however, that Jayavarman II included the
Buddhists in the Khmer alliance he formed against an external foe identified only
as ‘Javā’, and from whom he asserted permanent Khmer independence. Close reading
of the Wat Sithor inscription (K.111) of c.990 from near Phnom Penh, and of the Sab
Bāk, Prakhon Chai, Nakhon Ratchasima province inscription (K.1158) dated 1066,
shows that an (otherwise unknown) tantric Buddhist guru named Śrī Satyavarman
(identified in both inscriptions) erected icons of Vajrapān.i and Lokeśvara for
Khmer Buddhist communities in what may have been the first Buddhist recovery
from the seventh-century suppression. Neither inscription gives him a date but the
Khmer language part of K.1158 says ‘Kamsten. Śrī Satyavarman, who obtained siddhi,
had originally erected them … above Abhayagiri, to prevent Javā from invading the
Khmer country.’15 Śrī Satyavarman’s purpose here is so close to the political banner
of Jayavarman II that we cannot do better, on this evidence, than consider them to
have been contemporaries. During Jayavarman II’s rise to power, one fragment of a
Lokeśvara inscription from what Finot calls ‘un sanctuaire sans importance’16 is
dated 791 and reused in the doorjamb of eleventh-century Prasat Ta Kam in
Siemreap province. The first evidence of the Buddhists being active again after
Jayavarman II’s time comes after another long break in the record when
Yośavarman I began building Yaśodhapura (Angkor) and constructed the
Saugatāśrama for what Coedès, who translated the ‘Stela of Tep Pranam’, called ‘a
small Buddhist community’ at the end of the ninth century.17 The stela opens with
praise for Śiva, reproduces many lines from other Brahmanical stelae, places the
Buddhists firmly in the second division with this concession: ‘Let us honour, a little
less than the Brahmin who possesses the vidyā, the ācārya versed in Buddhist doctrine
and grammar …’ and closes with the king’s promise that those who support the ashram will go (not to the Buddha’s but) to Śiva’s abode. One is left with the impression
that the ashram was a Buddhist island in a Śaiva sea. Thus there was Buddhist shrine
construction probably early in the ninth century and a Buddhist ashram received
royal patronage near Angkor in the late ninth century, but in between the
Buddhists were not able to maintain the shrines. The thin evidence we have therefore
suggests that after being suppressed, the Buddhists were possibly allowed a respite
under Jayavarman II, but altogether their fortunes waned more than they waxed
from 665 to 944. The situation of the Buddhists was then strengthened under
Rājendravarman and three kings who called themselves Jayavarman (the French historians numbered them Jayavarman V, Jayavarman VI and Jayavarman VII); the
Buddhists would eventually became dominant, but not without further roller-coaster
rides of fortune.
The Buddhists’ sometimes difficult history, through centuries as a religious minority, must have weighed in the deliberations of Jayavarman VII. The prospect of
achieving some degree of acceptance among the urban elite of how Buddhist teaching,
ritual, liturgy and mythology could embrace and even surpass the long-established
Śaiva rituals of state and the learning of the Brahmins must have seemed daunting.
15 Chirapat Prapandvidya, ‘The Sab Bāk inscription: Evidence of an early Vajrayāna Buddhist presence
in Thailand’, Journal of the Siam Society (1990): 11.
16 Finot, ‘Lokeśvara en Indochine’, p. 235.
17 Coedès, ‘La stèle de Tep Pranam, Cambodge’ (1908): 207.
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Yet it was achieved — and how is the subject of this paper. For the Khmers made their
historical turn to state Buddhism at this time and – after a switch to the southern
Buddhist vehicle – this is still in place today. Furthermore, there was indeed a
Śaiva reaction. The desecration of Jayavarman’s temples, quite unprecedented in
Khmer history, destroyed an untold number of Jayavarman VII’s icons and presumably some dedication stelae, which are the most concentrated records.18 The reworking of Buddha icons into Śivalingas in the Bayon, and the chiselling off of thousands
of Buddha images in Jayavarman VII’s other temples, has often been attributed to
the reign of Jayavarman VIII (r.1270–95 according to a recently adjusted reading of
the Mańgalārtha inscription K.567 by EFEO Sanskritists),19 whose posthumous title
parameśvarapada indicates his religion was Śaiva. This king left no inscriptions
and Jayavarman VII’s giant faces on the Angkor Thom gates were still said to be
Buddhas when Chinese envoy Zhou Daguan arrived in Angkor in the year after
Jayavarman VIII abdicated, which suggests continuity if anything. My own view is
that a Hindu-Buddhist clash, if that was the cause of the wide-scale desecration of
Jayavarman’s temples, is more likely to have occurred in the reign of Jayavarma
Parameśvara (Skt. jayamādiparameśvara), the last king to leave an inscription in
Angkor before the return of Ang Chan in the mid-sixteenth century. In 1327, in
his first year on the throne, Jayavarma Parameśvara erected a Śivalinga in the
(I would ask still Buddhist?) Bayon.20 Erecting a Śivalin.ga in the central temple of
Jayavarman’s state Buddhism (there are several lingas set in sanctuaries in the
Bayon today, but K.470 is the only surviving inscription mentioning one) immediately
upon enthronement looks like a politico-religious act of significance. Did Jayavarma
Parameśvara convert the whole Bayon for Śaiva ritual and then order the systematic
desecration of Jayavarman VII’s other temples in Angkor? These questions cannot be
confidently answered, but from the little data we have, there is no stronger candidate
for the desecration than Jayavarma Parameśvara.
Some major icons have been recovered and brilliantly restored but Jayavarman’s
temples were left almost empty of icons and substantially scarred. Recently, archaeologists have by chance uncovered a large number of damaged late thirteenth–
early-fourteenth-century Buddha icons, carefully placed in beds of sand in what
appears as a ritual burial, performed perhaps to preserve them against further
attack.21 Given the small amount of archaeological excavation yet undertaken within
18 P. Pelliot, Mémoires sur les coutumes du Cambodge de Tcheou Ta-Kouan: Version nouvelle (Paris:
Librairie d’Amérique et d’Orient, 1951), p. 11.
19 Jacques, Bayon, p. 41.
20 George Coedès, ‘Inscription du Bàyon K.470’, Inscriptions du Cambodge, 2 (Hanoi : EFEO, 1942),
p. 187.
21 The 274 Buddhist objects, mostly broken Buddhas on nāga, were found carefully buried with sand by
Sophia University archaeologists in Mar. 2001 in the grounds of Jayavarman’s Banteay Kdei temple
(Masako Marui, ‘The Discovery of Buddhist statues at Banteay Kdei temple’, Journal of Sophia Asian
Studies, 19 (2001); and Yoshiaki Ishizawa, ‘Special issue of the inventory of 274 Buddhist statues and
the stone pillar discovered from Banteay Kdei Temple’, Renaissance culturelle du Cambodge, 21
(2004), 2 vols.) The buried icons include several ‘earth-touching’ Maravijaya Buddhas and standing
Buddhas with belt, centre-fold and hand turned forward on the chest, which belong to the Khmer
Hīnayāna seen in the temples of Prah. Pallilay temple and monument 486. As Indravarman II apparently
followed Jayavarman VII’s Buddhism loyally, and Jayavarman VIII seems to have constructed nothing,
these temples and the buried Hīnayāna icons probably belong to the early fourteenth century, when the
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the large Angkor site, this may be only the first such find of ritually buried broken
remnants from the iconoclasm. The way in which Jayavarman brought the Khmers
to endorse his political strategy and religious predilections and how it was received
remain open to interpretation.
Jayavarman’s Buddhist strategy
Sanderson remarks on the ‘intense commitment to Buddhism manifest in
Jayavarman VII’s architectural undertakings’.22 But what political agenda was being
projected? Surely something was at work here that was more compelling than the
drift of courtly fashion towards being Buddhist as suggested by Hawixbrock.23
Rather, implanting state Buddhism seems to have laid the base for a sustained
drive to stabilise the capital and direct the empire towards a longer-term apogee of
power and influence. At court, the move to Buddhist dominance would imply a
major power transfer from Brahmins to Buddhist monks.24 Snellgrove’s reflection
on Khmer politics during a Buddhist revival in the tenth century probably applies
to the situation faced by Jayavarman in the twelfth:
But Buddhism was clearly at a disadvantage, especially within the confines of the capital
city of Angkor… [T]he lineages of influential Brahmins, often related to the leading aristocratic families, formed an essential part of the structure of the state at least from the
time of Jayavarman II onwards.25
The stakes for such a major change of regnal strategy must have been high, and one
rebellion against the new king is recorded in inscriptions. We are probably entitled to
detect the insecurity of the new Buddhist state in the fact that Jayavarman entrusted
two Cham Buddhist princes, educated at the court in Angkor, with quelling the
Malyang insurrection (recounted by the princes in Cham inscriptions C.92B-C and
C.90D after they returned to Champa). The king must have had second thoughts
about trusting Khmer generals or regional rulers. Jayavarman was anyway steeped
in Cham culture. The future king’s long sojourn in Champa in the 1160s and
1170s probably included his being engaged, as a militarily trained Khmer prince, in
the ongoing strife there between rival Cham kings and in cross-border fighting
between Cham and Khmer factions — where he may well have had to fight against
Khmers.26 We have only limited epigraphic clues to go on, but it is certain that
first use of Pāli in a Khmer inscription occurs in 1308 CE. (I differ here from Woodward, who assigns the
buried icons to ‘not … later than about the middle decades of the thirteenth century’, Woodward,
‘Foreword’, in Bayon, New perspectives, ed. Joyce Clarke, p. 8).
22 Alexis Sanderson, ‘The Śaiva religion among the Khmers: Part I’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française
d’Extrême-Orient, 90, 1 (2003–4): 429.
23 ‘We could ask ourselves whether it was not a matter of good form to convert to Buddhism during the
reign of Jayavarman VII, for one cannot take all these minor works as representing royal commands.’
Hawixbrock, ‘Jayavarman VII ou le renouveau d’Angkor, entre tradition et modernité’, BEFEO, 85, p. 74.
24 This is a surmise, not an observation. The Brahmins seem to have remained the writers of
inscriptions.
25 David L. Snellgrove, Khmer civilization and Angkor (Bangkok: Orchid Press, 2001), p. 54.
26 Michael Vickery assumes Jayavarman to have been ‘part of the Champa political scene’ in these years
and therefore proposes that eventually ‘the real conquest of Angkor was by Jayavarman VII and his
Cham allies, probably in the 1170s, at least before 1181 …’, Michael Vickery, Champa Revised, a working
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immediately after he took the Khmer throne, he had loyal Cham princes at his side
and he appeared well versed in militarised factional strife.
Jayavarman’s response to the disarray he found in Angkor, after the interregnum
and his victory in battle, was to immediately begin building massive defences to protect his capital against foreign and perhaps domestic foes27 and to invoke the state
protection offered by northern tantric Buddhism. His socio-politico-military
re-engineering came with major impact for the city populace. Community-building
under the guidance of monks, behind major physical defences, appears to have
been his policy.28 The ‘Angkor Thom’ centre around the royal palace and the
Bayon construction site was being protected by a moat and 3-kilometre-long earth
and laterite ramparts, pierced only by high stone gateways. Just outside the Angkor
Thom walls, the large, walled temple complexes of Prah. Khan, Tà Prohm
. and
Banteay Kdei, and a dozen smaller temples, were rising. The statistics on the stela
of the large Prah. Khan temple record 14,000 residents housed within its outer enclosure walls and temple complex is indeed described as a city – nagari jayaśrih. or ‘city
of victorious fortune’.29 Louis Finot memorably describes Jayavarman’s new fortified
Buddhist centres as ‘complex establishments that the inscriptions describe for us, at
the same time temples, convents, universities, and no doubt fortresses when needed,
capable of protecting the population and withstanding a siege’.30 The Prah. Khan and
Tà Prohm
. temple stelae mention dance troupes and musicians, supplied with costumes and instruments, which were presumably funded to help instil new, royally
decreed, religious festivals.31 The perennial invocation of Śiva in Angkor’s defence
had failed with the Cham incursion and the regicide; the new Khmer defences
were to be physical as well as spiritual and psychological, and this time they came
under a supreme Buddhist pantheon: thus four centuries of state Śaivism were
paper presented at the conference on Champa, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore,
Aug. 2004, p. 31.
27 Here I support Claude Jacques’ interpretation of the ramparts built around Angkor Thom:
‘Jayavarman VII clearly was anxious to raise high walls around his capital: his power was fragile because
his enemies were not far away and he had understood that he needed a well-protected capital’ (Jacques,
Bayon, p. 43).
28 Mabbett first identified the Indochinese (as opposed to Indian) monarchs as social engineers. ‘… in
Indochina kings possessed and exercised a degree of real control over social organization, by virtue of
their ritual position (which was foreign to India): they were social engineers’. I. W. Mabbett, ‘Varn.as
in Angkor and the Indian caste system’, Journal of Asian Studies, 36, 3 (1977): 429.
29 Coedès, ‘Le stèle du Prah. Khan d’Angkor’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 41 (1941):
294. Further, some 20,400 divinities in gold, silver, bronze and stone were erected within it and 8,176
villages with 208,532 male and female slaves donated by the king (Coedès, ‘Le stèle du Prah. Khan
d’Angkor’ (1941): 297).
30 M.L. Finot, ‘Lokeśvara en Indochine’, in Etudes Asiatiques publiées a l’occasion du 25eme anniversaire de l’EFEO (Paris: EFEO, 1925), p. 239.
31 The 1191 Preah Khan stela commands the presence at an annual spring festival in the capital of the
icons of 122 gods (including 23 ‘Jayabuddhamahānāthas’ distributed to major cities: K.908 D v.159,
Coedès, ‘Le stèle du Pràh. Khán d’Angkor’, 41 (1941): 267. This is presented as a new, empire-wide
Buddhist festival with a leading place in the ritual calendar of the new Buddhist state. For a controversial
but illuminating account, refer to a discussion of the form taken by the spring festival in David K. Wyatt,
‘Relics, oaths and politics in 13th century Siam’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 32, 1 (2001): 18. The
Tà Prohm
. stela prescribes a similar new festival with parades, music and dancing involving large numbers of icons a month later than that at Preah Khan (Coedès, ‘La stèle de Ta-Prohm
. ’, Bulletin de l’Ecole
française d’Extrême-Orient, 6 (1906): 77).
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overnight supplanted by the Khmer equivalent of what in China had been earlier
known as ‘state protection Buddhism’. The internationalist cast of Jayavarman’s vision
of empire may be indicated in his choice of Sanskrit, whose use we know he revived in
his temple inscriptions and which we can assume was also revived in the liturgy of his
temple rituals and festivals.32 For his vision, reflected in his broad road and hospital
network, clearly embraced the Mons and Chams in a Khmer-centred, Buddhist-led
empire stretching the umbrella of its power from the Burmese border to the South
China Sea. Maxwell has recently noted how Sanskrit was ‘a prime instrument of
power’ in the medieval world.33
Quite how Jayavarman managed to transfer power to the Buddhists has not been
much inquired into, and how it was received by the Brahmins and the entrenched and
wealthy Brahmanical families is not recorded — unless their reaction is shown in the
later desecration of the Buddhist foundations already mentioned. Did Jayavarma
Parameśvara’s Śaiva activities in the Bayon express a long-lasting resentment
among the Brahmanical elite of Jayavarman’s imposition of Buddhism? As previous
Khmer monarchs invariably respected the foundations of their predecessors, we are
bound to seek an exceptional motive when temple desecration on this scale was the
visible outcome. If there was a violent Hindu-Buddhist clash under Jayavarma
Parmeśvara, we can imagine the dismaying social impact on a city, under Buddhist
sway for 145 years, of a campaign to smash Buddhist icons in the temples and
knock thousands of Buddhas from the temple walls.
Before turning back to the sustained and evolving investment in sacred art that
underpinned Jayavarman’s strategy, we should briefly recall the major historical fact
that grounds our interpretation: the Khmers turned definitively to Buddhism during
Jayavarman VII’s reign. From earlier epigraphy and art, we can see that Buddhism
reached the Khmers by the fifth century and flourished in the seventh, before
being suppressed. In the eighth century, the Khmer Buddhists were either unable
to participate in the international florescence of the Mahāyāna – in India, Sri
Lanka, Tibet, China, Java, Champa – or they did it in exile. And until Jayavarman
VII ascended the throne, the Buddhists had secure footing at only two courts —
those of Jayavarman V in the tenth century and of Jayavarman VI, who inaugurated
the Mahīdharapura dynasty in the eleventh century. From Jayavarman VII’s reign
until today however, Khmer regimes have all been Buddhist (except for the brief,
destructive resurgence of Śaivism perhaps under Jayavarma Parameśvara). Khmer
32 Jayavarman’s revival of Sanskrit in Khmer inscriptions ‘as an international elite language serving
both countries [Cambodia and Champa]’ is noted by Vickery (Champa revised, p. 32). We know
from the material record that some Cham temples received Khmer icon donations when the Khmers
took control of central and southern Champa from 1203–20, and it would follow that these icons
were accompanied by Khmer-style, Sanskrit ritual and liturgy. It may be added here that the outlook
of reigning Southeast Asian Buddhist monarchs was apparently made internationalist on a greater
scale at this time by Islam’s destruction of the most important Buddhist monasteries in the Ganges valley
(1197–1207) — as seen for example in the King of Burma building a Bodhgayā temple in Burma in an
effort to afford Buddhism a replacement international centre following the overrun of the Indian pilgrimage site marking the Buddha’s enlightenment.
33 ‘As in the fifth century, so in the tenth, Sanskrit learning was a prime instrument of power, and the
cream of this learning was evidently held by many to be the analytical penetration of Buddhist thought
and the catholicity of its Mahāyāna doctrine’, T.S. Maxwell, ‘Religion at the time of Jayavarman VII’, in
Bayon, New perspectives (Bangkok: River Books, 2007), p. 90.
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Buddhism at some as yet undetermined point subsequently switched from the northern to the southern vehicle, but the fundamental shift from state Śaivism to state
Buddhism was made under Jayavarman VII, and it is this turn that stands out as
one of the most abrupt and decisive in the country’s religious history.34 How was it
achieved? In part it was done through the sacred art of the Bayon style, and it appears
to have been done on a broad scale.
Nāga and Garud.a
I now want to focus on the evolution of some mythical figures carved in
Jayavarman’s temples, and in particular on a mutation in the icons of Garud.a. Jean
Boisselier, in two pioneering articles in the early 1950s, studied the Khmer Garud.a
from its modest beginnings as the mythical heavenly eagle of Hinduism and
Buddhism in temple lintels in seventh-century Sambor Prei Kuk, to its apogee as
the most reproduced icon of all in Jayavarman VII’s Angkor.35 The adversary and
prey of the classical mythical eagle and their king Garud.a was the nāga, the chthonic
serpent that is the Indian and Southeast Asian equivalent of the Chinese dragon and
which appears to represent ancient ancestral cults. Boisselier reflected on the sudden
mass production of Garud.a icons under Jayavarman VII and wondered whether this
could be associated with narratives in northern Buddhism of the fiery Bodhisattva
Vajrapān.i taking on the form of Garud.a to protect nāga that converted to
Buddhism. I believe Boisselier’s feelers were picking up the right vibrations, but unlike
him, I think the association with Vajrapān.i and the protection of converts was only
overlaid after Jayavarman’s Garud.a icon mutated.
The primordial mythical role of nāga in the Indian subcontinent, where they
were known as the fierce guardians of the treasures of the seas, as well as the producers of rain, was absorbed by all the Indic religions in the first millennium BCE. The
early Buddhists evolved icons to respond to the problems they faced in attracting
snake- and tree-worshipping hunter-gatherer peoples into a sedentary, vegetarian
life of rice-growing around stūpa — in sufficient numbers to support a large community of mendicant, non-producing monks. At Amarāvatī and Nāgārjunakon.d.a in the
second=third centuries CE, the stūpa bears relief images of large nāga with multiple
cobra hoods stretching in a web over model stūpa to protect the relics within.36 The
sculptors also developed an icon of the Buddha enthroned on the coils of a large nāga
and protected by the nāga’s multi-headed hood. Many modern historians have long
34 This is not David Wyatt’s view, who sees ‘Jayavarman VII and the Angkorian elite’ as maintaining
the state Śaivism of previous centuries under a veneer of Buddhism. But Wyatt is putting the cart before
the horse when he sees Jayavarman’s twelfth-century Buddhism as ‘a sort of Counter-Reformation’
against the thirteenth-century sweep of a (by analogy Protestant) Theravāda which was to emerge
from Sri Lanka, Burma and Sukhothai and reach Cambodia by the fourteenth century. ‘It
[Jayavarman’s politico-religious strategy] was misguided and doomed to failure, for it was sorely deficient
in understanding what the religious change had meant, and why it would amount to what can be called a
“religious revolution” ’. David Wyatt, ‘Relics, oaths and politics in thirteenth century Siam’, Journal of
Southeast Asian Studies, 32, 1 (2001): 48.
35 ‘… Garud.a plays a role of increasing importance. Having made a modest start in statuary, he rose to
occupy the first place in the Bayon period …’ (Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 56).
36 J. Ph. Vogel, Indian serpent-lore or the Nāgas in Hindu legend and art (London: Arthur Probsthain,
1926), plate 10. Reproduced with the kind permission of Arthur Probsthain, London.
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taken this to be the incident in the early Buddha biographies when the nāga
Mucalinda protected the meditating Gautama from an unseasonal storm beside the
Nairañjanā River, a few weeks after his enlightenment.37 In one Nāgārjunakon.d.a
relief, Longhurst believed that lines suggesting a river carved behind the nāga’s
hood invoked the Mucalinda episode — one of many other events from Gautama’s
life recorded there.38 (A third–fourth century Gandharan relief at the Victoria and
Albert Museum is closer to the text in showing the requisite seven coils mounting
the Buddha’s body hermetically to the neck and with Mucalinda’s hood and seven
heads reaching over him in a canopy). But if this is Mucalinda in just one
Nāgārjunakon.d.a relief, it should not be confused with the predominant Buddha
enthroned by nāga at these stūpa. In the principal and much repeated image, the
Buddha is seated on multiple nāga coils on the āyaka slab behind the railing of his
own stūpa; here Gautama’s life of teaching the dharma among men is over, and
not about to begin after his enlightenment, as in the Mucalinda story. This Buddha
has gone to nirvān.a, leaving behind his teaching and relics, and so we see a transcendent Buddha, regally raising his right hand in ‘have no fear’ mudrā as his relics are
venerated by visitors to the stūpa. The nāga’s role here seems to be signifying the
ascension or transcendence of the Buddha whose earthly mission is in the past and
whose power on earth resides in dharma and relics. It is this icon of Buddhist transcendence, sometimes associated with relics, which then began a remarkable passage,
as traced by Pierre Dupont39 through Sri Lanka, peninsular pre-Thailand, ‘Dvāravatī’
and finally Cambodia, where it was reproduced in uncountable numbers.40 Pal,
among other scholars, has pointed to Andhra Pradesh as the source for the first
Buddhas enthroned on nāga.41 Frédéric sees the Southeast Asian Garud.a-nāga
myths as ultimately harking back to the stūpa-protecting role developed in Amarāvatī:
In Buddhism, the Garud.as are the mortal enemies of the nāgas; only nāgas possessing
a Buddhist relic or converted to Buddhism could escape them.42
37 The story is recounted, among other places, in the Vinaya Pitakam 1.3 Oldenberg reprint Pāli Text
Society, 1938–66.
38 A.H. Longhurst, Memoirs of the archaeological survey of India: The Buddhist antiquities of
Nāgārjunakon.d.a, Madras Presidency (Madras: ASI, 1937), Plate Lb.
39 Dupont noted the multiple similarities between the sixth–eighth century Sri Lankan Buddhas
and the first Khmer nāga Buddhas of the tenth century, and concluded that the Mon Buddhists had
been the indispensable intermediary in the iconic transfer: ‘It is therefore not possible that at the end
of the tenth century, Khmer art borrowed [the traditions] directly from Ceylon and, as an intermediary
was indispensable, only Mon art could have played this role. We therefore have to admit that the Khmer
image of the Buddha on the nāga was inspired … by the Mon iconography …’ Dupont, L’archéologie
Mône de Dvāravatī (Paris: EFEO, 1959), p. 263. Woodward concurs, noting that the Buddha on the
nāga appeared in Dvāravatī art in the eighth century but ‘[t]he source was surely Sri Lanka where the
nāga-protected Buddha had become an iconic type slightly earlier.’ H. Woodward, The Sacred sculpture
of Thailand (London: Thames & Hudson, 1997), p. 72.
40 Bruno Dagens has also recently detached the Khmer nāga Buddha from the Mucalinda story: ‘At
first sight nothing explains the success of the Buddha on the nāga, unheard of elsewhere in the
Buddhist world; we would readily think that it is not due to the anecdote of Mucilin.d.a, but rather to
the very Khmer character that the presence of the nāga gives him…’, Bruno Dagens, Les Khmers
(Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 2003), p. 196.
41 P. Pal, ‘An Unusual naga-protected Buddha from Thailand’, in Buddhist Art, form & meaning
(Mumbai: Pal Mang Publications, 2007), p. 55 onwards.
42 Louis Frédéric, Buddhism (Paris: Flammarion, 1989), p. 279.
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Pl. 1 Vogel 1926 pl.10 (Reproduced with the kind permission of Arthur
Probsthain, London)
Getty refers to texts where the Buddha divided his monastic robe into infinitesimal
pieces, which he distributed among nāga who appealed for his help: ‘No nāga with
this inviolable talisman could be harmed by a Garud.a.’43
The nāga, as Mus and Coedès show, is linked in many Asian cultures with the
rainbow and can be seen as a transcendent highway between the world of man and
the world of the gods.44 At the same time the image retains the missionary associations of embracing converts and according generous space, under the Buddhist
umbrella, for ancestral beliefs. There are already abundant signs of ancient serpent
cults in early Angkorian temple lintels and in temple moat balustrades, the most spectacular of which is the 0.7 metre radius nāga that stretches 100 metres across the moat
at the ninth-century Bakong Śaiva temple at Roluos. The nāga here opens a path
between the world of men and the palace of the gods that is the temple. However,
43 Alice Getty, The Gods of northern Buddhism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1914), p. 155.
44 G. Coedès, Pour mieux comprendre Angkor (Hanoi: Imprimerie d’Extrême Orient, 1943), p. 98.
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Pl. 2 Amarāvatī transcendent Buddha
the Khmer Buddha was only enthroned on a giant serpent, in the form Dupont traced
back to Sri Lanka, when the Khmer Buddhists obtained the right to erect the small
brick and stone Bat Cum temple in the rebuilt Śaiva capital of King
Rājendravarman II in the mid-tenth century. The Bat Cum Buddha has not been
identified but in all the Buddha statues and caitya reliefs from this period the
Buddhas are enthroned on nāga with long, separated, striated necks and with multiple, crested heads. This image of the Buddha was to be reproduced thousands of
times in the twelfth century, culminating in a 4-metre nāga Buddha being installed
by Jayavarman VII in the central sanctuary of the Bayon.
Garud.a enters the sacred art of Angkor in a minor way as Vis.n.u’s mount at the
Bakheng temple when Angkor was founded and then on a striking scale at the early
tenth-century Vais.n.ava shrine of Prasat Kravan. In a very physical image, his human
body raised high on a giant bird’s legs, Garud.a holds Vis.n.u aloft on his shoulders. The
impression of power is enhanced by the way the relief image in brick fills a whole wall
of the small sanctuary crowded with large Vis.n.u images. The sacred eagle later takes a
minor role in the lintels of East Mebon, Banteay Srei, Baphuon and is surprisingly not
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very prominent at the great twelfth-century Vais.n.ava shrine of Angkor Wat. But in
the Bayon period, the eagle suddenly becomes pervasive, in ways which demand
explanation. The largest image of Garud.a appears on the new temple walls in the
early, imperial expansion phase of Jayavarman VII’s reign. All association with
Vis.n.u is dropped and the magical eagle grows into a towering, barrel-chested defender of Buddhism and the new temple enclosures built by the king.
‘Power Garud.a’
I will designate these early Garud.as, twice the height of a man, as Jayavarman’s
‘power Garud.as’. They exude strength and military prowess like Dvarapāla door guardians, standing guard beneath large (defaced) icons of the Buddha. The king dedicated Prah. Khan temple to his father in the image of the Bodhisattva Lokeśvara in
1191 and the 14,000 residents were ‘protected’ by 72 such martial Garud.as carved
into the walls of their complex. With their beaks thrust into the air, their talons
hold down large, multi-headed cobras with unfolded hoods; their human hands
hold the nāga tails triumphantly aloft. Garud.a is transformed from Vis.n.u’s mount
into the protector of Buddhism, as Boisselier observes:
This reign … confers on Garud.a his most important role. Reappearing in the decoration
of pilasters and lintels, he replaces, united with the nāga, the previous decorative motif
for temple balustrade ends, adorns the angles of gopuras, supports the gigantic heads of
the face towers and alternates with the lion on royal terrace walls … though he certainly
remains a symbol of victory, he appears above all as a protector of Buddhism.45
Boisselier goes on to see the nāga beneath Garud.a’s talons at Prah. Khan as resembling
the multi-headed nāga that form the throne-back of the dominant Khmer nāga
Buddha icon, and therefore, I believe wrongly on both counts, takes them to be representations of the ‘good’ nāga Mucalinda, who protected the meditating Gautama
from an unseasonal storm.46 I cannot agree with Boisselier here. I see the similarity
he points to in the form of the nāga hood but not in the meaning of the nāga
under the Prah. Khan Garud.a’s talons. The Khmer Buddha enthroned on nāga
coils, I have suggested, is a transcendent Buddha in nirvān.a, not Gautama before
the commencement of his earthly ministry being covered against a storm by
Mucalinda. And the two Prah. Khan nāga pinned down by Garud.a do not look like
nāga of transcendence but rather the eagle’s traditional opponents pinned underfoot.
The Prah. Khan Garud.as are surely a symbol of protection, but those being protected
are the people inside the complex, not the nāga under Garud.a’s feet.
The reason Boisselier brings up the Mucalinda story, is that he wishes to bring in
the link made in northern Buddhism between the Bodhisattva Vajrapān.i and Garud.a
in the protection of nāga that convert to Buddhism.
Garuda, while remaining the enemy of the nāgas, also becomes, somewhat paradoxically,
the protector of some of those who, like Mucilinda, attached themselves to the person of
45 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 57.
46 ‘Uncrested, [the nāgas] strongly remind us of the nāga Mucilinda on which the Buddha sits … Their
similarity to the nāgas of the corniches leads us to suppose that these are the “good” nāgas protected by
Garud.a’, ibid., p. 74.
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Pl. 3 Prah. Khan Garuda under effaced Buddha
the master or wanted to hear the teaching of his doctrine. It seems that from this point of
view he was fairly closely linked to Vajrapān.i, who even exceptionally takes on his form
in late Buddhism. The thunderbolt clan Vajrapān.i presides over is thus somehow in
liaison with the solar cult and Garud.a takes an enlarged role. It is without doubt this
complex aspect which is illustrated in the statuary of the Bayon, where Garud.a appears
at the same time linked to the nāgas and as the protector of the Buddha.47
Boisselier’s associating Garud.a with Vajrapān.i is I think insightful and, despite his
hesitations, has not since been challenged. But I find the association problematic in
the Prah. Khan period of the 1190s, when, I will shortly propose, Jayavarman VII
had a different icon for Vajrapān.i. But I find the association of the eagle and the
Bodhisattva does fit the Garud.a=nāga icon that emerges from a radical mutation in
the icon that probably occurred in the early 1200s.
47 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 56.
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‘Gentle Garud.a’48
Jayavarman’s Garud.a=nāga icon was produced in far greater numbers towards the
end of the reign when a mutated Garud.a=nāga appears at the end of a large number of
balustrades that mark out new sacred areas around the principal sanctuary buildings in
the king’s temple complexes. These eagles are smaller in size than the ‘power Garud.as’
but they still look lordly and powerful. However, rather than trampling nāga, they softly
embrace their multiple heads. The relationship has swung from hostility to tender care;
they have become what I will call the ‘gentle Garud.a’. Boisselier leaves out Mucalinda in
his second paper and says of these later icons: ‘Their attitude in fact suggests much
more the idea of a protector than a victor suppressing his enemies …’49 The new balustrade Garud.a, a quarter of the size of their predecessors, straddle one of the nāga’s multiple heads and wrap their arms gently around others, while holding their human hands
forward in the ‘have no fear’ mudrā. Sometimes their hands hold a flower. The mudrā is
clear in exceptionally well-preserved Garud.a from Prah. Khan of Kompong Svāy that
were recenty returned to the Siemreap Conservation depot after being looted and recovered from a truck by the Cambodian police.
This dramatic change in the icon is striking and must, in the Angkorian context,
betoken a message from the palace. Whatever its import, the message was well distributed, because these gentle Garud.a also appear in numbers at Banteay Kdei, Ta Prohm
.,
Srah. Srang, Banteay Chmar and Wat Nokor. Indeed the proliferation of Garud.a in the
late Bayon period took the familiar but not especially celebrated mount of Vis.n.u from
relative obscurity to the status of the most reproduced icon of all, as Boisselier notes:
at the end of the first quarter of the thirteenth century, which corresponds to the apogee
of Khmer power and the greatest construction effort the empire experienced, Garud.a
plays a role of steadily growing importance. Having made a modest debut in statuary,
he came to occupy the first place in the Bayon period …50
Frédéric says nāga only escaped the attacks of the heavenly eagles either by having
Buddhist relics or by converting to Buddhism. As the nāga in Angkor show no sign of
carrying relics in the balustrade ends, should we take them to be converts to Buddhism?
If we now take up Boisselier’s tip and digress briefly into the mythology of northern
Buddhism, we find a better fit than Mucalinda for Jayavarman’s new Garud.a icon.
Vajrapān.i=Vajrin=Trailokyavijaya
In northern Buddhism, Vajrapān.i took over Ānanda’s role in conversion and
rapidly accumulated others, as Etienne Lamotte notes:
Dragon or nāga converting became a major activity in the final years of the Buddha’s life,
and Vajrapān.i became his most effective and constant companion in this. Where
Ānanda was the leading disciple, converter, text memorizer for the Theravāda,
Vajrapān.i had all these roles in the Mahāyāna.51
48 I thank Elizabeth Moore for this designation of the late Bayon style Garud.a icon.
49 Boisselier, ‘Vajrapān.i dans l’art du Bàyon’, p. 326.
50 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 56.
51 Étienne Lamotte, ‘Vajrapān.i en Inde’, Mélanges de sinologie offerts à M. Paul Demiéville (Paris: PUF,
1966), pp. 133–8.
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Pl. 4 Garud.a platform at Banteay Kdei
Pl. 5 Prah. Khan Garud.a
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Pl. 6 Garud.a from Kompong Svāy
Pl. 7 Srah. Srang Garud.a
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In early Buddhism, Vajrapān.i was the primitive and violent krodha-vignāntaka (‘wrathful destroyer of obstacles’) or ‘hit-man’ first known as the yaks.a (demigod) protector of
the Rājagr.ha on the ‘Vulture peak’ (Gr.dhrakūta).52 He first appeared at the Buddha’s
side when the Buddha knew his death was near and wanted to undertake a number of
difficult conversions, like that of the nāgarāja Apalāla in northern India. So he took
Vajrapān.i with him, rather than Ānanda, and the nāga’s storms and hail were suppressed
by Vajrapān.i’s fire and violence. His all-powerful vajra (previously Indra’s thunderbolt)
counters all monsters, snakes and other obstacles to conversion. Marcelle Lalou says the
engagement of Vajrapān.i in the Buddha’s last conversion missions made ‘…Ānanda the
first victim of a re-emergence of local cults, of which one finds traces elsewhere than in
the Vinaya of the Mūlasarvāstivādin and in tantric Buddhism’.53 Vajrapān.i is immediately linked to conversion, violence and the exotic, as Buddhism expands into new areas.
The theme of conversion was present in such early Mahāyāna classics as the
Lotus Sūtra, where a striking account is given of the powers of an eight-year-old converted nāga.54 The rapid international expansion of tantric Buddhism in the eighth
century boosted the career of the Bodhisattva endowed with Indra’s thunderbolt,
which could coerce the recalcitrant and protect the converted. Vajrapān.i’s role as
chief converter to Buddhism is defined in chapter 6 of the sarvatathāgatatattvasam.graha (STTS), the root tantra of the Yoga class, which was the main textual platform
for this phase of the international expansion of the Vajrayāna. The STTS was one of
the primary Buddhist texts now thought to have been current in Cambodia from the
mid-tenth century and this text immediately and indelibly links Vajrapān.i with conversion.55 He dominates chapters 6 to 10 after orchestrating his famous battle to bring
Śiva into the Buddhism man.d.ala — a drama that disrupts the hitherto smooth flow of
events in the celestial assembly in the adamantine jewelled palace at the summit of
52 M. Lalou, ‘Four notes on Vajrapān.i’, Adyar Library Bulletin (Adyar, 1956), p. 289.
53 Ibid.
54 Burton Watson summarises:
‘Chapter 12 relates another affair of equally astounding import. In it, the bodhisattva
Manjushri describes how he has been preaching the Lotus Sutra at the palace of the dragon
king at the bottom of the sea. The nāga or dragons, it should be noted, are one of the eight
kinds of non-human beings who are believed to protect Buddhism. They were revered in early
Indian folk religion and were taken over by Buddhism, whose scriptures often portray them as
paying homage to the Buddha and seeking knowledge of his teachings. Asked whether any
succeeded in gaining enlightenment, Manjushri mentions the daughter of a dragon king
Sagara, a girl just turned eight, who was able to master all the teachings. The questioner
expresses scepticism and … the girl herself appears and before the astonished assembly performs acts that demonstrate that she has achieved the highest level of understanding and can
“in an instant” achieve Buddhahood. Earlier Buddhism had held that five obstacles gravely
hamper women, including the fact that they can never achieve Buddhahood. All such assertions are unequivocally thrust aside in the Lotus Sutra. The child is a dragon, a non-human
being; she is of the female sex, and she has barely turned eight, yet she reaches the highest goal
in the space of a moment.’
Burton Watson, The Lotus Sutra (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), p. xviii.
55 For the Buddhist texts sought abroad by tenth-century Khmer Buddhist guru Kīrtipan.d.ita, refer to
A. Sanderson, ‘The Śaiva religion among the Khmers: Part I’, BEFEO, 90–1 (Paris: 2003–4), p. 427 n284.
In his recent reflections on the Wat Sithor inscription, Maxwell suggests that in retaining the existing
framework of Brahmanical titles, rites and practices, ‘Kīrtipann.d.ita was a forerunner of Jayavarman
VII, probably one of many’ (Maxwell, ‘Religion at the time of Jayavarman VII’, p. 90).
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Mount Sumeru around the supreme, unifying, sun Buddha Vairocana. Vajrapān.i says
he cannot assemble his clan (kula) to participate in the Vajradhātu man.d.ala because
some criminal elements, including the god Śiva-Maheśvara, refuse to submit:
‘O Lords, there are evil beings, Maheśvara and others, who have not been converted even
by all of you Tathāgathas. How am I to deal with them?’56
Vairocana endows Vajrapān.i’s vajra with special powers and the vajra bearer then
proclaims:
‘Oho! I am the means of conversion, possessed of all great means. Spotless, they assume a
wrathful appearance so that beings may be converted by these means.’57
Another Vairocana spell brings Śiva and his host of gods into the assembly and an
extended duel ensues in which Vajrapān.i inflates himself into his wrathful
Trailokyavijaya or ‘conqueror of the three worlds’ form, trades insults and intimidating
displays with Śiva in his equally wrathful Mahābhairava shape, until the Bodhisattva
tramples the pan-Indic Hindu god and his consort Umādevā and ‘kills’ them, before
reviving Śiva in the Vajradhatu man.d.ala as the Tathāgata-bhasmeśvara-nirghosa
(‘Buddha, soundless lord of ashes’). In the ninth century, this tantra established
Trailokyavijaya as the principal deity of what Linrothe designates as phase two of tantric
Buddhism; Heruka presides over the third expansion of international tantric Buddhism
from the twelfth century.58 The vajra was to propel Vajrapān.i to the highest Bodhisattva
rank and higher, as Lamotte says:
Bearer of the thunderbolt in the old Buddhist tradition, elevated to the rank of Bodhisattva
of the 10th world by the Mahāyāna, Vajrapān.i had his place ready-made in the Vajrayāna.
But here the baton he holds is not only the weapon of fire brandished against the adversaries
of the Buddha, it is also the immanent, adamantine essence of all beings and all things.59
In Cambodia, images of Vajrapān.i were erected by Buddhist leader Śrī Satyavarman
perhaps, as already mentioned, in the early ninth century, when Jayavarman II
founded the Angkorian state, but the Bodhisattva’s surviving epigraphic dedications
are concentrated in the mid–late tenth century. Boisselier concluded from Finot’s
work on late tenth-century Sanskrit inscriptions to Vajrin (‘possessor of the vajra’)
or Vajrapān.i (‘vajra-in-hand’) that this Bodhisattva ‘ranks third in the texts, after
Lokeśvara and Tārā but equalling the Buddha himself’.60 Icons of Vajrapān.i, the
Buddha and Divyadevī (Prajñāpāramitā) were erected in Bat Cum (inscription
K.266), the first Buddhist temple built in Angkor in 953 CE, and the Wat Sithor
inscription (K.111 B.39) refers to the guru Kīrtipan.d.ita’s restoration of more than
10 images of Vajrin and Lokeśa first raised by Śrī Satyavarman. One of several caitya
56 D.L. Snellgrove, ‘Introduction’, in Sarva-tathāgata-tattva-samgraha, facsimile reproduction of a
tenth-century Sanskrit manuscript from Nepal, ed. Lokesh Chandra and David L. Snellgrove (New
Delhi, 1981), pp. 5–67.
57 Ibid., p. 40.
58 R. Linrothe, Ruthless compassion: Wrathful deities in early Indo-Tibetan esoteric Buddhist art
(London: Serindia, 1999), p. 178 and following, 243 and following.
59 Lamotte, ‘Vajrapān.i en Inde’, p. 151.
60 Boisselier, ‘Vajrapān.i dans l’art du Bàyon’, p. 325.
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found at villages northwest of Angkor, beside the road to Phimai (Thma Puok
inscription K.225 III, 66A, 4;C,6) is dated 989 CE and invokes the Buddha,
Prajñāpāramitā, Lokeśvara, Vajrin, Maitreya and Indra. The Khmer language inscription (K.240) from Prasat Ta An dated 979 CE from this period and region invokes
Vajrapān.i in his wrathful form of Trailokyavijaya, which recurs later at Phimai.
The icons of the Khmer Vajrapān.i in the late tenth century mostly show the
Trailokyavijaya form which projects his famous battle with Śiva in the STTS. In a
striking relief on the Kbal Sre Yeay Yin caitya from the Phnom Srok village northwest
of Angkor, and now in the Musée Guimet in Paris, the six-armed Bodhisattva has
three visible crowned heads with fierce expressions61 and the crowns support the
five Buddhas of the Vajradhātu man.d.ala. He holds the vajra and ghantā and other
weapons and seems to depict Vairocana’s final warning to the still arrogant Śiva
that ‘Vajrapān.i is the overlord of all the Tathāgatas’:
His brows tremble with rage, with a frowning face and protruding fangs; he has a great
krodha appearance. He holds the vajra, ankuśa-hook, sharp sword, a pāśa-noose and
other āyudha.62
The contemporary Thma Puok caitya names Vajrin and gives him a single, fierce face
with hair hanging to his shoulders and four arms, two of which grasp the vajra and
ghantā to his waist. A similar, finely carved, life-size, Kleang-style statue in the Guimet
has the same bulging yaks.a eyes, fangs and long hair below a regal tiara. Although all
four hands of this regal icon are broken off, this also appears to be the same wrathful
Vajrin. Woodward, I think rightly, identifies another fierce, dancing Vajrapān.i on a
tenth-century pink sandstone stela now in the Bangkok Musuem.63 The one Vajrapān.i
image from this period without the fierce face appears on a slightly earlier Pre Rup
style caitya from the Prasat Ta Moan in the Dangrek mountains in the reign of King
Rājendravarman, where larger images of Prajñāpāramitā occupy the other three sides.
The image, published in a Spink catalogue in 1997 and now in the Ashmolean,
Oxford, has two of its four arms again grasping the vajra and ghantā at the waist.
The next Khmer images of a deity dancing on a corpse and flourishing a vajra
and ghantā in the air – as in the figure on the pink sandstone caitya Woodward identifies as Vajrapān.i in the Bangkok Museum – appear at Phimai a century later, where
the most likely identification is again Vajrapān.i (contra Woodward’s suggest that this
is an early form of Bodhisattva Vajrasattva of the kind adopted in the 16 vajra beings
of Shingon Esoteric Buddhism in Japan).64 The Khmer language inscription at Phimai
61 Iyanaga cites the Ninnō-nenju-giki (‘probably composed by Liangpi, a disciple of Amoghavajra’) on
the duel with Śiva in which Vajrapān.i is described as ‘Trailoyavijaya-vajra (Gōsanze-kongō) whose anger
is terrible, with four faces and eight arms, and who subjugates Maheśvara (Makeishura-daijizaiten) and
the armies of Māra’. Nobumi Iyanaga, ‘Récits de la soumission de Maheśvara par Trailokyavijaya d’après
les sources chinoises et japonaises’, in Tantric and Taoist studies in honour of R. A. Stein, ed. Michel
Strickmann, vol. 2 (1983), Mélanges chinois et bouddhiques, vol. 21 (Brussels: Institut belge des hautes
etudes chinoises: Distributeur, Office international de librairie, 1981–85), p. 671 n54.
62 STTS 18.882.369b–373b.
63 Woodward, ‘The Kārandavyūha Sutra and Buddhist art in tenth century Cambodia’ in Buddhist art,
form and meaning, ed. Pratapaditya Pal (New Delhi: Marg Publications), p. 77.
64 Woodward, The Art and architecture of Thailand from prehistoric times through the thirteenth
century (Leiden=Boston: Brill, 2003), p. 148.
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PETER D. SHARROCK
Pl. 8 Vajrapān.i-Trailokyavijaya on Kbal Sre Yeay Yin caitya, Musée Guimet
calls the god whose image was erected in 1108 CE ‘kam.mrateng jagat senāpati
Trailokyavijaya jā senāpati kam.mrateng jagat vimāya’, an unusual Old Khmer construction, which seems to indicate that the newly raised god Trailokyavijaya is the
‘general’ of the principal god of Phimai,65 who was probably an earlier image of a
Buddha enthroned on a nāga. Such a military, protective role would indeed fit
Vajrapān.i=Trailokyavijaya, whose historical role ‘had always been called the ‘general
of yaksas ( yaks.asen.āpapati)’.66
65 Coedès, ‘Etudes cambodgiennes XVII – L’épigraphie du temple de Phimai’, Bulletin de l’Ecole
française d’Extrême-Orient, 24 (1924): 349.
66 Davidson, Indian esoteric Buddhism, p. 143.
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Pl. 9 Vajrin, Guimet
Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara=Bhais.ajyaguru
In his work on the Bayon period, Boisselier made yet another valuable contribution to the study of Khmer Buddhism when he separated out a group of seven
Khmer ‘Buddhas’ from the rows of icons in the Siemreap Conservation Depot and
identified them as ‘statues of Vajrapān.i … the only ones we know in the statuary
in the Bayon style’.67 These seated, two-armed austere deities, with the calm faces
and lowered eyes characteristic of Bayon style images of the 1180s and 1190s, all
hold a vajra and ghantā crossed at the wrists before the diaphragm in a version of
the prajñālinganābhinaya or prajñā-embrace mudrā that is the distinguishing mark
of Vajradhara.68 These deities are all seated in the half-lotus position, minimally
67 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 325.
68 Mallmann, Introduction à l’Iconographie du Tântrisme bouddhique (Paris: Maisonneuve, 1986),
p. 420. The mudrā was hitherto rare in icons from this region. A photograph in Christie’s 2001
New York catalogue shows a regal 42cm bronze Vajradhara with six arms, probably four faces and
with vajra and ghantā crossed at the chest, sitting on a high throne with elephants and lions. From
the parasol and drapes above the throne, it probably belongs with the ‘Bengali-influenced’ bronzes
of the pre-Thai peninsula under the Śailendra, which Woodward dates to the 770–780s (Woodward,
The Art and architecture of Thailand, p. 93).
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PETER D. SHARROCK
Pl. 10 Vajrapān.i in Phimai
dressed and unadorned; they have single heads with us.n.īs.as covered with lotus petals.
Boisselier comments: ‘We have said above that the personalities of Vajradhara and of
Vajrapān.i were not clearly defined and that they seem to be merged in Cambodia in
Vajrapān.i.’69
The same mudrā that Boisselier identified in the depot is found in at least four
larger Bayon style icons, one of which was found in the ruins of Jayavarman’s
Banteay Chmar temple. It is 80 centimetres high and the hands and left arm are
damaged. Victor Goloubew saw it in situ in the temple in 192170 before it was
removed from the remote and unprotected site to the security of the National
Museum in Phnom Penh, which now labels it Vajrapān.i, as a result of Boisselier’s
work.71 The remnants of the damaged hands leave no doubt about the
prajñā-embrace mudrā. On the art market in London, dealer John Eskenazi in
1995 published a 94-centimetre Vajrapāni=Vajradhara almost identical to the one
found in Bantéay Chmàr but in almost perfect condition and with the mudrā quite
69 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 330. The tantric texts themselves render the naming of
Vajrapān.i difficult. Linrothe observes: ‘In the STTS Vajrapān.i is also known as Samantabhadra,
Vajrasattva, Vajradhara, Vajrahūm
. kara and Trailokyavijaya’ (Linrothe, Ruthless compassion, p. 156).
70 Victor Goloubew, ‘Sur quelques images khmèrs de Vajradhara’, Journal of the Indian Society of
Oriental Art, 5 (1937): 97–104.
71 N. Dalsheimer, L’art du Cambodge ancient: Les collections du musée national de Phnom Penh (Paris:
EFEO, Magellan & Cie, 2001), p. 176.
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Pl. 11 Vajrapāni=Vajradhara of Bantéay Chmàr
clear.72 Sotheby’s auction catalogues offered two similar Khmer icons in the same year
in London.73
The Banteay Chmar find spot offers no help in clarifying the context in which
this substantial series of Vajrapān.i=Vajradharas was venerated, but others do. In
the phase of imperial expansion, roughly corresponding with the 1190s, when a network of roads with rest-houses and hospitals was extended across Jayavarman’s
empire (and the army fought unsuccessfully to attach Champa), the icons of distributed Khmer power at the apogee of the empire were a powerful looking ‘radiating’
Lokeśvara from the kāran.d.avyūhasūtra (KVS) with a Buddha and his universe in
every pore of his skin — which Woodward surely correctly identifies as the
Jayabuddhamahānātha commanded to be brought annually (in effigy?) to a festival
in Angkor. This image of Lokeśvara is found on the rest-house chapels. The hospital
stelae invoke Bhais.ajyaguru, the Buddha of medicine, but the hospitals (ārogyaśāla)
also had a quiet but intense holder of the vajra (Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara) seated before
their sanctuaries — in at least one case on a vajra-decorated pedestal. The hospitals
were not, to Finot’s surprise, put under the protection of Lokeśvara ‘the compassionate healer par excellence’74 but were assigned to Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara, identifiable
in Khmer icons by the prajñā-embrace mudrā. Goloubew mentioned in his 1937
article a smaller, headless Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara which was set on the only
vajra-decorated pedestal in Angkor in front of the east chapel of the hospital complex
near Takeo temple.75 (The image has now disappeared though the vajra pedestal
72 J. Eskenazi, Images of faith (London, 1995), no. 41; Regaldado Trota Jose, Images of faith: Religious
ivory carvings from the Philippines (Pasadena: Pacific Asia Museum, 1990).
73 Sotheby’s 27 Apr. 2005 (#221 67cm) and 19 Oct. 2005 (#196 84cm). Hiram Woodward kindly
brought these to my attention.
74 Finot, ‘Lokeśvara en Indochine’, p. 237.
75 Goloubew, ‘Sur quelques images khmèrs de Vajradhara’, Plate XIIIB.
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PETER D. SHARROCK
remains.) Goloubew published another image, this time with tiara, which is today in
the depot marked with inventory number 308, but without its head. This series of
Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara in sandstone implies a significant cult of this deity and a strong
link with medicine — a link reinforced by three other crowned icons with the same
mudrā but in a more squat, provincial style recorded before the sanctuaries of hospital
complexes at Nang Rong of Buriram, Prang Ku of Sisaket and Na Dun of Maha
Sarakham in northeast Thailand.76 And I have identified a fifth 40-centimetre
headless image of Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara standing beside the hospital stela in the
Wàt Phra Keo museum in Vientiane (which I have not yet been authorised to
photograph).
The importance of Bhais.ajyaguru to the Khmers can be seen from the 10 places
reserved for him out of the 41 mentioned in small inscriptions left legible in the
Bayon. But did Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara also have a link with medicine, or was his
role at the hospital sanctuaries again only protective? It is possible that the Khmers
in the late Bayon period were associating Vajradhara with their hospitals because
in the tantric version of the bhais.ajyaguru-sūtra translated by Yijing in the Tang capital in 707, the Bodhisattva Vajradhara is given special prominence when he utters a
concluding dhāranī for protection against all diseases. According to Pelliot,
Vajradhara thus achieved eminence in the esoteric Buddhist communities of Tibet,
China and Japan as a Bodhisattva associated with the Bhais.ajyaguru Buddha.77 As
the ancient Khmers’ expertise with medicinal herbs was known to the international
Buddhist community from at least the seventh century, when China sent
Indian Buddhist sage Punyodaya on a mission to ‘Zhenla’, as noted earlier, it
seems possible that this association of Vajradhara with medicine was also maintained
among the Khmer Buddhists into the twelfth century. And as we have five
‘Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara’ with a firm contextual link to Jayavarman’s ārogyaśāla, we
may also speculate that, for this king, Bhais.ajyaguru was also Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara.
Sarvadurgatipariśodhana-tantra (SDPS)
Vajrapān.i’s role of protecting nāga who converted to Buddhism is also given
weight in the eighth–century sarvadurgatipariśodhana-tantra (SDPS) ‘Tantra of the
elimination of all evil destinies’. It is possible that the SDPS was one of the texts introduced into Cambodia in the tenth century along with the STTS. There are many similar themes in both texts, including a central 37-deity man.d.ala and Vajrapān.i as
master of ceremonies, and both are attributed to Buddhaguhya, a celebrated sage of
Vikramaśila monastery in the Ganges valley whom Davidson considers the master
of the tantric Buddhist revival ‘the pre-eminent exegete during the second half of
the eighth century … [who] more than any other single individual represented the
confluence of spirituality, esotericism, political insight, and promotional skill’,78
Traces in the Khmer temple art may point to a borrowing from this text. In the
76 Plan and report of the survey and excavations of ancient monuments in north-eastern Thailand (1959
reprint 1979: fig 38; 1960–1: figs 4, 90) (Bangkok: Fine Arts Department), for which I am grateful
to Hiram Woodward, who believes these Vajradhara can be dated to as early as 1186 (Woodward,
The art and architecture of Thailand, p. 208).
77 Paul Pelliot, ‘Le Bhaisajyaguru’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 3 (1903): 33.
78 Davidson, Indian esoteric Buddhism, p. 154.
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Pl. 12 Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara on a a vajra pedestal before the East Chapel, Angkor,
after Goloubew 1937
SDPS, Vajrapān.i introduces a series of man.d.ala centred on himself and
Śākyamuni=Vairocana (the tantra makes an historical transition by having
Śākyamuni appear as ‘Sarvavid’, the ‘omniscient’ Vairocana) in which the pan-Indic
Hindu gods acknowledge the superiority of the Buddhas, as do the Eight Great
Planets and the Eight Great Nāga. The astamahānāga (‘Eight Great Nāga’) man.d.ala
section treats the theme of conversion from ancestral beliefs, when it says the man.d.ala
is an antidote to the venom of snakes.79 And the Tibetan translation of a commentary
known as sNan bahi rgyan (‘Tibetan Tanjur’, vol. 76, no. 3454) takes the ritual removal
of the venom of the snakes in the man.d.ala as a metaphor for ‘the conversion of unbelievers’.80 In order to generate the Eight Great Nāga man.d.ala, Vajrapān.i (called
Vajradhara ‘vajra bearer’ in this passage) leads the nāga kings Ananta, Taksaka,
Karkota, Kulika, Vāsuki, Śamkhapāla, Padma and Varuna into the man.d.ala while
79 T. Skorupski, Sarvadurgatipariśodhanatantra (Oxford: Motilal Banarsidass (UK), 1983), p. xxvii.
80 Ibid., p. xxviii.
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they display their cobra hoods. The nāga rejoice ‘holding their hands in añjali’ and
promise to ‘provide that great being with constant protection, security and cover’:
We will act with great initiative, strength and vigour. We will render the venom ineffective. From time to time we will shower with rain. We will produce all crops. We will
shower untimely rains on all the hostile kingdoms. Destroying all fears, we will ensure
that the command of the Victorious One and of Vajradhara is carried out.
He [the adept] should recite the syllable PHUM one hundred thousand times meditating
on the Lord Vajradhara with his head surrounded with snake-hoods and garlanded with
beautiful white rays.81
This vision of Vajrapān.i=Vajradhara and nāga may also throw light on a mysterious
series of Khmer sculptures located behind the Leper King Terrace in the Royal Plaza
at Angkor. In these carvings, which from their construction functioned as the embellished ends of balustrades, a deity in the Bodhisattva sitting posture mahārājalīlāsana
(‘at royal ease’), with right knee raised, holds a vajra to his chest and is surrounded by
a group of crested nāga heads that tower above him. These Bayon-style icons were
new to Angkor. A possible interpretation is that they represent Vajrapān.i with the
Eight Great Nāga. The icons should probably be dated to Indravarman II’s reign,
for their style is that of the Leper King Terrace, which Stern considered to be the
last of the Bayon style, when figures are crowded together and their dress becomes
heavily ornamented.82 Under Jayavarman himself, we see other possible evidence
for the Eight Great Nāga man.d.ala.
Vajrapān.i and Tà Prohm
.
No Khmer icon has yet come to light showing the eight nāga reclining in añjali
mudrā on the petals of a lotus, as described in the words of the tantra — the form
seen in an eleventh-century Pāla dynasty stone from Nālandā, the other great centre
of Vajrayāna having close relations with other Asian states. But the Khmers appear to
have had their own version of the eight nāga kings being supported by Garud.a, following their conversion to Buddhism. Boisselier, in his second pioneering paper, drew
attention to a narrative lintel in Ta Prohm
. temple on a tower just outside the central
sanctuary, which he thought was associated with Vajrapān.i and the conversion
stories.83 The lintel shows eight nāga kings, each with three crested and crowned
serpent heads and their human bodies kneeling in añjali mudrā beside and under
81 Ibid., p. 58.
82 Stern attributes the northern terraces facing the royal plaza to what he calls a ‘troisième période
avancée’. Philippe Stern, Les monuments khmers du style du Bàyon et Jayavarman VII (Paris: Presses
Universitaires de France, 1965), p. 161 — ‘either contemporary with the last work on the Bàyon or
immediately following it’ (Stern, Les monuments khmers du style du Bàyon et Jayavarman VII, p. 165).
83 ‘We know that in the Buddhist tradition of the north, Vajrapān.i, substitute for Indra, appeared as the
rain god and the protector of the Nāga. To fulfil this role, he sometimes took on Garud.a’s own aspect as
seen in some Nepalese bronzes. This is the form he took to protect the Nāga from their implacable enemies when they came to listen to the teachings of the historical Buddha. We believe we have identified the
episode on a pediment of Tà Prohm
. at Angkor, where, above a frieze of three-headed Nāga with human
bodies, their hands joined, another Nāga and a Garud.a, both in the attitude of prayer, appear on each
side of the Buddha.’ Boisselier, ‘Vajrapān.i dans l’art du Bàyon’, Proceedings of the 22nd Congress of
International Orientalists (Istanbul, 1951), p. 326.
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Pl. 13 Balustrade ends
the raised throne of a (defaced) Buddha. The leading nāga king kneels to one side of
the Buddha’s throne and on the other we find a winged Garud.a kneeling with human
hands in añjali mudrā. Boisselier made no mention of the astamahānāga but if we
combine Boisselier’s hints about Vajrapān.i’s presence permeating late Angkor and
Lamotte’s description of Vajrapān.i’s discrete ways of working – ‘Vajrapān.i only
shows himself to the Buddha and to his direct adversary and remains invisible to
the mass of spectators’84 – we come back to Boisselier’s account of why Garud.a
becomes ubiquitous in the Bayon style:
The exceptional importance accorded the images of Garud.a in the Bayon style … do not
seem to us unrelated to the importance of the cult of Vajrapān.i during this period.85
Seventh-century Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang records oral accounts of how a group of
nāga listened to the Buddha preaching and were converted. Alice Getty notes that as
they entered the faith, the Buddha charged Vajrapān.i with protecting them henceforth
against their natural enemies, which they identified as the eagles. To do this,
Vajrapān.i transformed himself into Garud.a, king of the eagles:
84 Étienne Lamotte, ‘Vajrapān.i en Inde’, Mélanges de sinologie offerts à M. Paul Demiéville (Paris: PUF,
1966), p. 115.
85 Boisselier, ‘Vajrapān.i dans l’art du Bàyon’, p. 327. Boisselier went on to claim that ‘the continuity of
the Vajrapān.i cult’ linked the late tenth century to the epoch of the Bayon and he added Vajrapān.i as
another layer to the already dense mix of deities Coedès saw in the Bayon face towers. ‘These data
[de La Vallée Poussin’s showing that Lokeśvara Samantamukha may teach the law with the face of
Vajrapān.i] would suffice to explain the unusual characteristics of the faces of the Bayon towers, which
would so remain the image of Lokeśvara projected in the person of the king, but a complex
Lokeśvara possessing the supreme intelligence of Vajrasattva, from whom he proceeds, as much as the
virtues of Vajrapān.i with whom he had the power to identify …’
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Hsüan-tsang mentions Vajrapān.i as being with the Tathāgata when he subdued the
gigantic snake in Udanya. It is also related that when the nāgas appeared before the
Buddha to listen to his teachings, Vajrapān.i was charged by the Tathāgata to guard
them from the attacks of their mortal enemies the Garud.as, and that in order to deceive
and combat the Garud.as, Vajrapān.i assumed a form with head, wings, and claws like the
Garud.as themselves.86
Getty says the ‘Garud.a form’ of Vajrapān.i ‘may have a human head with a beak or a
head like a Garud.a; he sometimes carries a sword and a gourd-shaped bottle, or his
two hands may be in “prayer mudrā”’— the pose Garud.a adopts in the Ta Prohm
.
lintel. A somewhat saintly looking Garud.a, crowned and dressed as a prince, suppresses his native power to submit to the commands of the Buddha. There is in
fact a second Garud.a=nāga narrative lintel in Ta Prohm
. , which does not show the
eight nāga kings but which also appears to convey Xuanzang’s version of the
Buddha’s command at Udanya. The second lintel is sited inside the large new ‘hall
with dancers’ of the same temple. It shows Garud.a kneeling, with feathered legs
and talons, human torso and human hands in añjali mudrā, before the (effaced)
Buddha and appearing to accept the Buddha’s order to protect a three-headed
nāga queen (with breasts and a slim, more elegant neck than the nāga kings on
the other lintel) who also kneels in añjali mudrā. The positioning of the second lintel
inside the ‘hall with dancers’ may show linkage between the convert protection theme
and the late cycle of Buddhist rituals such halls were created to house.
With this new image of Garud.a in mind, it then comes as something of a shock
to realise that we have all along been surrounded by just such gentle, partly anthropomorphised and princely eagles in Jayavarman’s temples. For the Garud.a icon on the
balustrades that demarcate the open-air platforms and walkways outside the last halls
that were added to Jayavarman’s temples is also a princely ‘gentle Garud.a’, with
eagle’s head, feathered legs and human torso and hands, who rides upon the necks
of the nāga. Do these Garud.a=nāga icons then mean that all who enter these areas
come under the protection of Vajrapān.i, in the form he takes to protect converts
to Buddhism? The eagle’s human hands open in the ‘no fear’ mudrā and often
hold a flower, but otherwise it resembles the princely eagle that quietly kneels to
do the Buddha’s bidding in the Ta Prohm
. lintels.
In order to counter any impression that Xuanzang may leave that Vajrapān.i’s
transformation into Garud.a belonged only to the Gautama biographies of early
Buddhism, it is perhaps worthwhile here briefly mentioning the broader and current
Mahāyānist theme of Bodhisattva transformation. Ariane Macdonald’s study of the
man.d.ala of the mañjuśrīmulakalpa (MMK), tracks how branches of the Mahāyāna
developed the transformational power of Bodhisattvas as a device for incorporating
Hindu gods into tantric Buddhism, namely by claiming they had all been
Bodhisattvas in disguise.87 In this way, the Indian Buddhists projected the Buddhist
mission back in time in order to appropriate intellectual property from their
Brahmanical rivals. They claimed the Vedic and Hindu gods were earlier incarnations
86 Alice Getty, The Gods of northern Buddhism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1914), p. 48.
87 Ariane Macdonald, Le Man.d.ala du Mañjuśrīmulakalpa (Paris: CRNS Adrien-Maisonneuve, 1962),
p. 40.
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Pl. 14 Eight Great nāga at Ta Prohm
.
of Bodhisattvas who had appeared in the world in those forms in order to eventually
direct people of sophisticated beliefs towards Buddhism. This was claimed as an application of the Bodhisattva capacity for self-transformation into any form in order to
propagate Buddhism. Vajrapān.i’s taking the form of Garud.a in order to protect converts from ancestral cultural beliefs to the Buddhist cause, as recounted by Xuanzang,
Pl. 15 Ta Prohm
. lintel of Vajrapān.i commanded to protect nāga converts
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PETER D. SHARROCK
was taken up into this tantric Bodhisattva doctrine in India. Macdonald builds on
Jean Przyluski’s earlier work on how minor deities and magicians or vidyārāja entered
the Buddhist man.d.ala of the MMK, where they are described as ‘those who take the
body of a woman to save living beings, and those who borrow the form of birds, yaks.a
or raksas.a in order to effect conversions’,88 The major instance of a Bodhisattva selfmetamorphosis made explicit in the MMK is not accomplished by Vajrapān.i but by
the Bodhisattva Mañjuśrī, who claims he had already adopted the form of Brahmā,
Śiva, Vis.n.u and Garud.a ‘to convert creatures susceptible to this method’.
Macdonald hesitates to call the process ‘conversion’ as the claim is that it had all
been pre-planned and the people were all along being gradually nurtured towards
Buddhism:
It was not so much converting as rallying the devotees of Hinduism, viewed as a kind of
preconception of the Mahāyāna, at least in its technical aspects.89
In the MMK, Mañjuśrī claims the credit for the rites taught in the Hindu tantra of
Garud.a and says he appeared on earth as an eagle as the Bodhisattva ‘Garutma’.90
When a ‘buddhicized’ Śiva enters the man.d.ala, Mañjuśrī claims to be the author of
all the Śaiva tantras. Mañjuśrī is however unknown in Khmer Buddhism and so
the conversion-by-transformation role presumably fell to the multi-faceted Khmer
Bodhisattva Vajrapān.i in his Garud.a avatar.
Balustrades and temple access
The Garud.a=nāga balustrades were raised in Ta Prohm
. , Prah. Khan, Banteay Kdei
and around a large platform beside the Srah. Srang pool opposite Banteay Kdei in
Angkor; outside the capital they occur at Banteay Chmar, Prah. Khan of Kompong
Svāy and Wat Nokor. Thus the ‘gentle Garud.a’ becomes pervasive in the late programme of additions to the king’s temples. What purpose did it serve? If these platforms and walkways were erected with icons of Vajrapān.i in his Garud.a guise, for the
protection of converts, do the widespread temple extensions they were contemporary
with91 signal a large-scale campaign of conversion to Buddhism?
88 Jean Przyluski, ‘Les Vidyārāja: contribution à l’histoire de la magie dans les sectes Mahāyānistes’,
Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 23 (1923): 309.
89 Macdonald, Le Man.d.ala du Mañjuśrīmulakalpa, p. 40.
90 ‘And last the powerful mantra om
. , eagle, great eagle! You whose wings are spread like a lotus! Killer
of all the serpents … The Bodhisattva who teaches this, svāhā is known under the name Garud.a. He is
the best at converting the beings who are difficult to convert. He destroys the venom of the serpents and
if we add the Mahāmudrā, he will conquer the hordes of hostile demons and serve as the antidote for all
poisons. He has been taught by me (Mañjuśrī) as the means for converting those susceptible to this
method. I came to act with the appearance of Garud.a, the stunning king of the birds. All the rites developed in the Tantra of Garud.a were taught by me for the benefit of creatures. Having come to earth as the
Bodhisattva Garutma, with the appearance of a bird to convert creatures, I worked to combat the venom
of the serpents.’ Ibid., p. 79.
91 For comparative chronological studies, using petrological sampling of magnetic susceptibility to indicate which sandstone was extracted at the same time from the quarries, and so which parts of the temples
were built earlier than others, refer to Olivier Cunin and Etsuo Uchida, Annual report on the technical
survey of Angkor monument (2002), p. 216. These researchers for example found that the sandstone
blocks in the ‘halls with dancers’ in Ta Prohm
. and Prah. Khan produced identical measurements of
1.22×10−3 SI Unit.
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The relatively open design of Jayavarman’s temples also suggests participation in
rituals on an unprecedented scale. Bernard Philippe Groslier pointed to the number of
temples and the architectural concept of an open Bayon, which had a raised, visible,
city-centre ceremonial platform. This design lent itself to wide participation in state
rituals, rather than the distancing of the population from secret rites performed
behind moats and high walls, as had been the case earlier in Angkor Wat,92 or
Baphuon. Groslier saw the design of the Bayon and the space allowed for small family
sanctuaries in his other temples,93 as a radical design departure and exoteric means
for engaging the population in the royal cult:
religious fervour was unequalled and burned like a flame in this crowned old man … As
well as the order and prosperity of the kingdom he seemed to take to heart the wellbeing
of each of his subjects. We witness an eruption into the sanctuaries, formerly jealously
reserved for the king and his entourage … It is not only the close or distant relatives of
the king who partake of these privileges; they are extended to all … the temples of
Jayavarman VII become veritable pantheons.94
Some of the sacred spaces of the un-walled Bayon were exposed on a high platform
around the central sanctuary at the heart of Angkor Thom and ceremonies,
accompanied by music and dance, would have been observed by a mass of people
congregated at the new city centre.
Ritual instruments
The ‘gentle Garud.a’ icon alone is an indicator of a change on a notable scale in
what was programmed in the temples, but it is not an indicator of specific ritual content. More clues to what was actually being undertaken in the king’s temples emerge
from studying the surviving bronze ritual paraphernalia cast for temple officiants, and
the decoration of the new sanctuaries that the pathways with the Garud.a=nāga icon
surround. The material record from Jayavarman’s time is in fact unusually rich in
ritual instruments. Numerous items of Bayon-style bronze paraphernalia and a number of fine bronze palanquin finials that are now in the museum collections, especially
in the bronze rooms of the Phnom Penh and Bangkok museums, also share the decorative theme of Garud.as and nāga. Some items are bronze ritual vajras with the
heads of Garud.a, which, as Boisselier pointed out, support the link between
Vajrapān.i and Garud.a and bring both into the ritual arena:
The vajras, whether they are authentic vajras or the handgrip on cultic bells, most often
bear, as their only element of decoration, small heads or busts of Garud.as. This union of
the thunderbolt and Garud.a seems to us to deserve special mention because it could represent a new aspect of the relationship that would seem to exist between Vajrapān.i and
Garud.a.95
92 This was noted by Paul Mus, ‘Le Sourire d’Angkor’, Artibus Asiae, 24 (1961): 380.
93 See also, Christine Hawixbrock’s study on the large number of additions of small family chapels
inside Jayavarman VII’s temple complexes. Hawixbrock, ‘Jayavarman VII ou le renouveau d’Angkor,
entre tradition et modernité’, Bulletin de l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 85 (1998): 64.
94 B.P. Groslier, Hommes et pierres (Paris: Arthaud, 1956), p. 153.
95 Boisselier, ‘Garuda dans l’art khmèr’, p. 79.
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The unusual volume of surviving Bayon style bronze paraphernalia reflects both the
number of temples Jayavarman VII built – Jayavarman was the first Khmer king to
construct multiple temples to propagate his strategy – but also surely the intensity
of his ritual programme.
What tantric Buddhist initiations are the most likely candidates for performance in
Angkor late in Jayavarman VII’s reign, say from 1200 to 1210? Historically this was still
the period when cults of Hevajra, the fierce, dancing emanation of the supreme tantric
Buddha, proliferated internationally in the monasteries of northern Buddhism and
indeed beyond the monasteries — Khubilai Khan underwent the four consecrations
to Hevajra in 1260.96 And the ancient Khmers did create an exceptional number of
ritual bronzes of Hevajra. Groslier exhumed a finely cast, 22-centimetre gilt bronze dancing Hevajra in the elaborate late Bayon style97 at his excavation site in the royal palace
in Angkor Thom in 1952–53.98 Wibke Lobo lists 40 Khmer bronze Hevajras in museum
collections.99 In the context of the Prah. Khan dedicatory stela of 1191, it was recorded
that more than 20,400 statues in gold, silver, bronze and stone had already been distributed throughout the ancient kingdom within a decade.100 This does not seem a very
large number, but it is still probably the largest group of Hevajra ritual bronzes
found anywhere. These extant Khmer Hevajra bronzes tell us that this cult was active
on an unusual scale under Jayavarman VII and suggest they may have had a role in
political legitimisation. Such bronzes would have played a key role in Hevajra
initiations, when they would be placed in man.d.ala prepared for the four consecrations
as defined in some detail in the hevajra-tantra itself, and in greater detail in ritual handbooks extracted from the tantra. Henri Maspero in 1914 photographed a Sanskrit palm
leaf (olla) volume of this kind entitled ‘The Hevajra consecration ceremony’ (hevajrasekaprakiyā) at the Puan temple in China’s Zhejiang province, which Finot translated
into French in 1934. Maspero was told by the Puan bonzes that the olla had been
brought from India with other tantric texts by the monk Baoshang in 1057.101 No
96 Morris Rossabi, Khubilai Khan: His life and times (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988),
p. 42; and P.H. Pott, Yoga and Yantra, trans. R. Needham (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1966), pp. 69–70.
97 Groslier dated the piece to c. 1200; refer to Bernard Philippe Groslier, Indochina: Art in the melting
pot of races, trans. George Lawrence (London: Methuen, 1962), p. 186.
98 Bernard Philippe Groslier, ‘Fouilles du Palais Royal d’Angkor Thom’, in Proceedings of the 23rd
International Congress of Orientalists, Cambridge 1954 (London: Royal Asiatic Society, 1954), p. 229.
Of course, this single piece, now in the Phnom Penh museum, does not alone prove the nature of the
late royal cult of Jayavarman’s reign, but the exactitude of its provenance supports the idea of a special
link of the king with this deity. Groslier’s reliability as an excavator must remain in question until the
paperwork on the dig and the subsequent laboratory analyses are studied in the EFEO archives. Apart
from a brief report to the 1954 Congress of Orientalists, Groslier, despite promising a book for several
years, released only skimpy details of the pollen analysis done by the National Natural History Museum,
Paris, in a paper published by the Siam Society (Groslier, ‘Our knowledge of the Khmer civilization:
A Re-appraisal’, Journal of the Siam Society, XLVIII, 1 (1960): 1–26).
99 Wibke Lobo, ‘L’image de Hevajra et le bouddhisme tantrique’, Angkor et dix siècles d’art khmer, ed.
Jessop and Zephir (Paris: Réunion de Musées Nationaux, 1997), p. 73. London art market dealer,
Alexander Götz, told me he had handled 25 Khmer Hevajras from private collections over the past 25
years and thought there may 100 such icons in public and private collections.
100 K.908 v.CXXVII (Coedès ‘La stèle du Práh. Khàn d’Angkor’ (1941), Bulletin de l’Ecole française
d’Extrême-Orient, 41 (1979): 279.
101 Henri Maspero, ‘Rapport sommaire sur une mission archéologique au Tchö-kiang’, Bulletin de
l’Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, 14 (1914): 69.
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Pl. 16 ‘Gentle Garud.a’ palanquin finial Bangkok Museum
such handbook has survived in Cambodia but it is more than likely that the
Mahīdharapura Khmers, who were producing bronze Hevajra icons at the time
Baoshang was using his text, had access to such documents.
As well as the Hevajra bronzes, there are a number of bronze moulds for creating
clay sealings that bear motifs of Hevajra and his circle of eight dancing goddesses or
yoginī. We have little understanding of how such sealings were used in temples but
according to a recent analysis by Peter Skilling, who dismisses as a modern misconception the theory that sealings were pilgrims’ mementoes, they would have served a
ritual purpose.102 I have recorded six different moulds with Hevajra’s image: the two
102 ‘The production of tablets was open to all, and, as we shall see, many were produced by kings,
members of the court, and senior monks. The sealings were products of a ritual ideology of mass production – the augmentation of merit by multiplication of images. The mass-production technology led to
the earliest known printing of texts (the ye dharmā stanza and dhāran.ī) in India and Southeast Asia.
Oddly, it is not usually recognised as such – perhaps because the impression was done on clay, perhaps
because text and figure were often produced together from a single mould, perhaps because the
impressed texts were not as such meant to be read.’ P. Skilling, ‘Buddhist sealings in Thailand and
Southeast Asia: Iconography, function, and ritual context’, in Interpreting Southeast Asia’s past:
Monument, image and text, EurASEAA, 10, 2, ed. Elisabeth Bacus, Ian Glover and Peter Sharrock
(Singapore: NUS Press, 2008).
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most interesting are the large so-called ‘Trailokyavijaya’ moulds found in Lopburi and
Angkor with Hevajra’s man.d.ala in the centre below three tiers of seated Buddhas and
above a row of standing Bodhisattvas; and a small one in the Phnom Penh Museum,
which was found at Poipet and was published from a plaster cast in the Bangkok
Museum by Woodward in his seminal 1981 paper.103 The latter mould seems to
record the underlying pantheon of the Mahīdharapura Khmers, with Vajrasattva at
the centre, Hevajra and Sam
. vara on each side, the nāga Buddha above and
Bodhisattvas below. More obviously important to rituals are the many surviving
bronze lustration conches or shankha, a dozen of which are embossed with motifs
of Hevajra and his yoginī. These can only have been made for consecrations to
Hevajra.
‘Salles aux danseuses’
Most of Jayavarman’s temples had additions late in the reign which included a
large central room with lively friezes of dancers.104 The early French scholars used
the term ‘salles aux danseuses’ and left their purpose unexplained. The halls are
given central locations and the hall added to Prah. Khan temple was one of the largest
spaces under a corbelled roof in Angkor; the dancers’ hall in Banteay Chmar was even
bigger, measuring 35 m × 15 m. The dancers that create a one-metre frieze around the
double room in Banteay Chmar are distinctive in their size and in the fact that their
arms are symbolically feathered and their legs are the legs of eagles. Why was so much
covered space suddenly required in all the temples, under the aegis of these goddesses
and five (effaced) Buddhas, who appear to be the Khmer version of Vajrayāna’s
Vajradhātu Pentad?105 The new halls could have accommodated several dozen people
at a time in each of Preah Khan, Ta Prohm
. , Banteay Kdei, Banteay Chmar and if the
Bayon was involved that could have accommodated hundreds, so the new cult symbolised by the dancers could have engaged large numbers of people in temple rites.106
103 H. Woodward, ‘Tantric Buddhism at Angkor Thom’, Ars Orientalis, 12 (1981): 57–67.
104 ‘Many additions are made to the monuments that were most important in the first phase. Typical
additions were outer galleries, halls with dancers etc.’ Philippe Stern, Les monuments Khmers du style du
Bàyon et Jayavarman VII (Paris: PUF, 1965), p. 147. Stern’s evaluation is supported by the recent technical studies of Olivier Cunin and Etsuo Uchida, Annual report on the technical survey of Angkor monument 2002, ed. Takeshi Nakagawa, Japanese team for safeguarding Angkor (JSA=UNESCO=Japanese
Trust Fund for the Preservation of the World Cultural Heritage), Tokyo, p. 216.
105 Claude Jacques now suggests the ‘five great Jinas’ found in the ‘salle aux danseuses’ of Prah. Khan of
Angkor and in Prah. Khan of Kompong Svāy, as well as the five Buddhas of the northern lintel of
Phimai’s sanctuary, may have been called the ‘five Śrīghana Buddhas’ by the Khmers because the Sab
Bāk inscription (K.1158) of 1066 CE, mentioned above, opens with an invocation of śrīpañcasugatā
yādau śrīghanām. vibhāvikāh.… ‘Those who, from the beginning, were the five Śrī Sugata, the creators
of Śrīghana…’ and then invokes the sixth Buddha Vajrasattva (C. Jacques, ‘The Sect of Śrīghana in
ancient Khmer land’ in Buddhist legacies in mainland Southeast Asia (Paris: EFEO, 2006), p. 73).
Jacques lists nine Khmer inscriptions which use this rare epithet for the Buddha. Peter Skilling, who
reads the epithet Śrīghana as a Sanskrit tatpurus.a compound meaning ‘mass of glory’, has traced
other occurrences of the word in Nālandā, Nepal, Amarāvatī, Bodh Gaya etc. Refer to Skilling,
‘Random jottings on Śrīghana: An Epithet of the Buddha’, Annual Report of the International
Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology ARIRIAB at Soka University, vol. 7 (Mar. 2004), pp. 147–58.
106 Tantric Buddhist consecrations ordered by an emperor of Tang China, following earlier texts than
the hevajra-tantra, are recorded as lasting two weeks and involved thousands of people. Orlando records
that in 768 CE, tantric Buddhist patriarch Amoghavajra celebrated a ceremony that lasted 14 days. ‘The
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Pl. 17 Poipet mould
If the ceremonies in Angkor were cyclical and repeated, it would be a reasonable
assumption that, for example, the adults among the 14,000 residents of Preah Khan
would have been involved, over time, but not the 208,532 villagers who supported
the temple complex.
The Bayon too shares the motif of dancing goddesses — of the size of those in
Banteay Chmar, but in far greater numbers. The demeanour of the Bayon dancers,
whose bodies are braced and whose challenging eyes, with one foot raised to the
opposite thigh in an extreme dance movement, suggests they are akin to the yoginī
that whirl around the supreme dancing deity Hevajra in the late Bayon style bronzes.
The emphatic use of the motif of dancing goddesses on the Bayon is unprecedented in
Angkor, and yet it is what might be anticipated in a cult of Hevajra, who worked largely through the intercession of his eight ascetic goddesses. Friezes of goddesses
enwrap all the outer approaches to the Bayon and dominate the temple entrances.
They confront visitors with their stares and their sensuality. The Bayon alone, in
its pristine state, had some 6,250 of these challenging goddesses on the pillars and
gopura that led to its sacred spaces, according to my calculations at the site. Many
of the entablature friezes in the entrances have collapsed with time, and the sandstone
eunuch attendants, the ministers, and all the commanders of the imperial army were ordered by the
emperor to receive abhis.eka at the ceremony. Altogether more than 5,000 monks and laymen attended.’
R. Orlando, A Study of Chinese documents concerning the life of the tantric Buddhist patriarch
Amoghavajra (A.D. 705–774) (Princeton University, 1981), p. 147. Chou records Amoghavajra conducting an abhis.eka in which he ‘converted in succession hundreds, thousands, and myriads of people’
(Y. Chou, ‘Tantrism in China’, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 8 (1945): 280).
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blocks bearing them are now buried in the piles of stone inside and outside the Bayon
outer gallery walls. The original total number of dancers can be calculated from their
positions in the eight gopura and from the two rows of pillars outside the outer
gallery, as well as on internal friezes.
From a Chinese report written in the early thirteenth century, we glean a picture
of a period when women were prominent in the temple rituals in Angkor. The
Chinese source suggests Jayavarman’s temples were particularly known for their
focus on female officiants. The 1225 chronicle of Zhoarugua, the Chinese
Superintendent of Maritime Trade in Canton, was based on hearsay rather than visits
to the countries whose goods he taxed at the northern end of the maritime trade
route, but his testimony contains a unique indication of what was taking place in
Jayavarman’s temples:
[In Chen-la, i.e. Cambodia] the people are devout Buddhists. In the temples there are
300 foreign women; they dance and offer food to the Buddha. They are called a-nan
[Skt. ānanda (bliss)]. … The incantations of the Buddhist and Taoist [Śaiva yogin]
priests have magical powers.107
Zhoa’s choosing of the term ‘a-nan’ (blisses) possibly indicates the use of the word in
Bayon rituals. The hevajra-tantra, for example, defines four ‘blisses’ that an adept
strives for in executing a four-stage consecration cycle (caturabhis.ekas). Women
trained as ‘tantric assistants’108 help sādhaka achieve the four blisses of
spiritual emancipation through meditational and yogic-sexual initiations. The four
rituals (ācārya, guhya, prajñājñāna, caturtha) generate four different blisses
(ānanda = bliss, paramānada = perfect bliss, viramānanda = bliss of cessation, sahajānanda = innate bliss or natural ecstasy).109 The halls with dancers (I have proposed we
call them yoginī110) suggest that a large investment in space for new consecrations was
undertaken in the period when the Bayon was nearing completion, perhaps from 1200
to 1210. The function of the terraces and platforms outside the new consecration halls
protected by the new ‘gentle Garud.a’ icon could have accommodated large numbers
of people, perhaps assembled to take Buddhist initiation vows and renew their allegiance to the king, perhaps on the model of the large tantric Buddhist consecrations
led by Amoghavajra under the Tang.111 There was indeed a precedent for this taking
place in one of Cambodia’s neighbours — the Đai Viê.t. Under the Ly Dynasty
(1009–1224) Buddhism was elevated to the rank of official state religion in the midtwelfth century, shortly before Jayavarman VII took the same step in Angkor. Zürcher
says the Buddhist state established by the Ly rulers ‘was closely patterned after the
107 Chau Ju-Kua: His work on the Chinese and Arab trade in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries,
entitled Chu-fan-chi, trans. F. Hirth and W. Rockhill (St Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences,
1911), p. 53. The inserted notes are Hirth’s.
108 Macdonald, Le Man.d.ala du Mañjuśrīmulakalpa, p. 69.
109 D. Snellgrove, The Hevajra-Tantra, a critical study (London: Oxford University Press, 1959), p. 134.
110 P. Sharrock, ‘The Yoginīs of the Bayon’, in Interpreting Southeast Asia’s past: Monument, image and
text, EurASEAA, 10, 2, ed. Bacus, Glover, Sharrock (Singapore: NUS Press, 2008), p. 260.
111 ‘In consequence all classes of society adopted the cult. This was the most prosperous era of esoteric
Buddhism in China’ (R. Tajima, Étude sur le Mahavairocana-sūtra (Dainichikyō) (Paris: Librarie
d’Amérique et d’Orient, Paris, 1936), p. 23).
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Tang … prominent monks were admitted to the administration of the kingdom and
came to play an important political role’.112
Support for this argument for the existence of a royal Hevajra cult in Angkor
comes from an unexpected source. Rob Linrothe, an authority on the texts and
icons of tantric Buddhism in Tibet and China, who would not claim close acquaintance with the Buddhism of Jayavarman VII, makes a brief reference which captures
the singularity of what appears to have been a politically driven Hevajra cult of
Cambodia. Linrothe surveys the evolution and spread of tantric Buddhism through
a ninth–eleventh century phase led by Vajrapān.i-Trailokyavijaya and defines a further
phase (the third, for him) dominated by texts and images of Heruka, Hevajra and
Sam
. vara. He perceives that something special happened with the deities of this
phase in Phimai, Angkor and Java=Sumatra where Hevajra=Heruka was adopted politically into a royal cult and not only in monasteries: ‘Phase Three krodhavighnāntaka [‘wrathful destroyers of obstacles’] especially Heruka and Hevajra,
appear after the eleventh century in Southeast Asia as well [as in Tibet], in Java
and in Thai and Khmer contexts.’113 Outside of his principal focus on Tibet,
Linrothe observes a clear political application of such a third phase cult:
If there was a Hevajra cult, it seems to have thrived in Southeast Asia. Hevajra imagery
may have come overland to Thailand from eastern India, directly from Bengal via
Burma. The transmission of Hevajra teachings was probably reinforced through contacts
along the maritime routes from island Southeast Asia and eastern India. Whatever the
route it clearly had considerable influence in the highest levels of society. Seemingly
removed from his yogic and monastic origins, Hevajra was utilized in the royal cult,
not, as in the Ming court, to improve relations with Tibet, but as part of an attempt
at local political legitimisation … The compelling power of the Hevajra image seems
to have contributed to the cult, which sponsored commemorative monuments more
so than monasteries.114
Linrothe formulates the central metaphor adopted by tantric Buddhism as
dompteur=dompté (‘vanquisher=vanquished’). In yogic concentrations, the aim of
destroying the ego and internal impurities originates in early Buddhism in
Śākyamuni’s victory over Māra and ‘esoteric Buddhism appropriated this trope and
used the krodha-vighnāntaka to express it … Trailokyavijaya [the wrathful form of
Vajrapān.i] extends and refines the dompteur=dompté relationship by conquering
112 Erik Zürcher, ‘Beyond the Jade Gate: Buddhism in China, Vietnam and Korea’, in ed. Bechert and
Gombrich. The World of Buddhism: Buddhist monks and nuns in society and culture (Thames and
Hudson, London, 1984), p. 206.
113 Linrothe, Ruthless compassion, p. 222.
114 Ibid., p. 274. I have earlier drawn a comparison with the political application of the Vajrapān.i and
the STTS at the Tang court, rather than with the more limited Heruka cult under the Ming. Linrothe’s
perspicacity in this passage seems to me to go beyond the reservations that brought the translator of
the hevajra-tantra to a halt when he reflected on the meaning of the Khmer Hevajra bronzes:
‘Judging by the number of images of Hevajra found around Angkor and on various sites on the
Khorat Plateau in Thailand … it would seem that a cult of this important Tantric divinity was practised
from the eleventh century onwards. Since no relevant literature is available, not even a stray reference on
a carved inscription, nothing of certainty can be said regarding this cult.’ David Snellgrove, Khmer civilization and Angkor, p. 57.
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not deities associated with the underworld, but the Lord of the Three Worlds above
them, Śiva-Maheśvara.’115 Hence Vajrapān.i’s epic battle to bring the submission and
transformation of Śiva in the STTS and SDPS entails this logic: ‘the conquered is nothing less than the conqueror in a pre-enlightened state, and the conqueror is nothing
more than the vanquisher transformed.’116
Vajrapān.i’s role of crushing Śiva was transferred in the later yoginī tantra to
Heruka (in the cakrasamvara-tantra) and to Hevajra in the hevajra-tantra —
whose four feet trample and destroy Maheśvara, Mārā, Indra and Brahmā.117 In
twelfth-century Khmer political terms, the metaphor of the ‘vanquisher=vanquished’
translates into what is usually called religious syncretism under a Buddhist umbrella,
in which sections of Jayavarman’s Buddhist temples were reserved for Śaiva and
Vais.n.ava rites, but within a Buddhist framework or man.d.ala. State protection
Buddhism replaced but also embraced Śaivism in the political arena. Some scholars
(e.g. Stein and Iyanaga)118 have questioned whether the historical opposition of
Buddhism to Hinduism in India is reflected in the Buddhist tantras. Davidson has,
I think, rightly resisted their attempts to dissociate the texts from the socio-political
history of their times:
Buddhist monasteries at this period had become enormous landed institutions that controlled great economic resources but had a tenuous relationship to the wider society,
somewhat like the medieval Christian monasteries and modern universities … Thus,
at the socio-historical level, we should understand the Maheśvara myth in the
Tattvasam.graha as a straight-forward defensive technique of the Buddhists to establish
superiority of their gods over Maheśvara, Brahmā, Vis.n.u, etc., in an attempt to retrieve
some of their lost position in unsophisticated circles in India, whether at Devīkot.a,
Vārān.asī, Patna or wherever.119
The Mahīdhara Khmers, as Linrothe perceptively observes, do indeed seem to be the
archetype of an application of esoteric Buddhism for political legitimisation, in what
he defines as the third and international phase of the Vajrayāna from the eleventh
century onwards. Among the krodha-vighnāntaka that Linrothe focuses on, are in
this mature phase Hevajra, Heruka and Sam
. vara,120 all of whom are forms of the
ultimate truth expressed as the sixth transcendent Buddha, or primordial
115 Linrothe, Ruthless compassion, p. 178.
116 Ibid., p. 214.
117 Hevajratanra, I.iii.17, D. Snellgrove, The Hevajra-Tantra, a critical study (London: Oxford
University Press, 1959), p. 59.
118 Iyanaga, Nobumi, ‘Recits de la soumission de Maheśvara par Trailokyavijaya – d’après les sources
chinoises et japonaises’, in ed. Michel Strickland. Tantric and Taoist studies in honour of R.A. Stein,
Mélanges chinois et bouddhiques vol. XXI (Brussels : Institut belge des hautes études chinoises, 1983),
pp. 630–745.
119 R. Davidson, ‘Reflections on the Maheśvara subjugation myth: Indic materials, Sa-skya-pa apologetics and the birth of Heruka’, Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, 14, 2
(1991): 215.
120 From Linrothe’s following list, the ‘phase three’ wrathful deities known from clear icons or epigraphic mentions to have been adopted under Mahīdhara rule are Hevajra, Heruka and Sam
. vara:
‘Other members of the set [of krodha-vignāntaka] seem to be formal metamorphoses of
Trailokyavijaya, but for the most part these are names and deities unique to Phase Three: Heruka,
Hevajra, Sam
. vara, Yamāri, Guhyasamāja and Kālacakra’ (Linrothe, Ruthless compassion, p. 244).
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Vajrasattva.121 These are the mature Vajrayānist deities we find in the icons and
inscriptions of the Mahīdharas.
The ruins of Ta Prohm
. , today still partly overgrown with the trees of the forest
that once engulfed it when the Khmers moved their capital south, seem to hold clues
to a seminal message from the Buddhist king who apparently sought large-scale participation in rituals in his temples to consolidate and legitimise his Buddhist state. For
only this level of engagement could have ended and absorbed the Śaiva state that first
unified the Khmers in the ninth century and enabled them to eventually build one of
the great Asian empires. Vajrapān.i’s ‘killing’ Śiva then reviving him in the Buddhist
man.d.ala, in the classic dompteur=dompté metaphor of transformation, re-enacted in
the mature Vajrayāna by Hevajra, reached its political dénouement in Jayavarman
VII’s royal strategy to transform the Śaiva state and implant Buddhism definitively
among the Khmers.
121 ‘For Phase Two Esoteric Buddhism there is no sixth Tathāgata. Mahāvairocana, the central
Tathāgata of the STTS, unified the five Tathāgata. Phase Three, by contrast, considers a sixth Buddha
to be the supreme unifier, usually called either Vajrasattva or Vajradhara (note: The sixth Buddha is
called Vajrasattva in the Hevajratantra and in the Sam
. vara cycle).’ Ibid., p. 237.