Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Cetiya

Shwedagon Pagoda, the oldest Pagoda in Myanmar, is an example of a Cetiya (စေတီ)

Cetiya, "reminders" or "memorials" (Sanskrit caitya), are objects and places used by Buddhists to remember Gautama Buddha.[1] According to Damrong Rajanubhab, four kinds are distinguished in the Pāli Canon: "Relic [Dhatu], Memorial [Paribhoga], Teaching [Dhamma], and votive [Udesaka]."[2] Griswold, in contrast, states that three are traditional and the fourth, the Buddha Dhamma, was added later to remind monks that the true memory of Gautama Buddha can be found in his teachings.[3] While these can be broadly called Buddhist symbolism, the emphasis tends to be on a historical connection to the Buddha and not a metaphysical one.

In pre-Buddhist India caitya was a term for a shrine or holy place in the landscape, generally outdoors, inhabited by, or sacred to, a particular deity. In the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, near the end of his life the Buddha remarks to Ananda how beautiful are the various caitya round Vaishali.[4]

Phra Pathom Chedi, one of the biggest Chedis in Thailand; in Thai, the term Chedi (cetiya) is used interchangeably with the term Stupa
  1. ^ Kalingabodhi jātaka, as quoted in John Strong, Relics of the Buddha (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004), 19
  2. ^ Damrongrāchānuphāp (1962). A History of Buddhist Monuments in Siam. Siam Society. pp. 10, 21.
  3. ^ Griswold, Alexander B. (1990). What is a Buddha Image?. Promotion and Public Relations Sub-Division, Fine Arts Department. pp. 14–15.
  4. ^ Skilling, Peter, in Amaravati: The Art of an Early Buddhist Monument in Context, Edited by Akira Shimada and Michael Willis, p. 25, British Museum, 2016, PDF

Previous Page Next Page






Cetiya German Cetiya ID เจดีย์ Thai Cetiya VI 支提 (建筑) Chinese

Responsive image

Responsive image