Art,
archéologie et
anthropologie de l’Asie
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Peter
Skilling
École française d’Extrême-Orient
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Recent discoveries and excavations have significantly
transformed the map of ancient Buddhist India. One of the most
impressive of the new sites is Phanigiri in Andhra Pradesh – a hill-top
monastic complex with a large stupa and numerous other structures. The
phase presented in this lecture dates from the first to the third
centuries CE. Two architraves from a gateway of the stupa were
unearthed in 2005. One is carved with scenes from the life of the
Buddha. The second architrave is devoted to post-Nirvana scenes, as yet
unidentified, featuring monks, relics, and snakes. Other fragments and
artefacts include jataka medallions and stone footprints of the Buddha.
The lecture is based on a visit made to the site in March, 2005.
Peter Skilling is a member of the École française d’Extrême-Orient (Bangkok and Paris). He has lived in Thailand for over thirty years. His research interests include the art and archaeology of India and Southeast Asia, in particular as related to the history of Buddhism. He has edited “Mahasutras: Great Discourses of the Buddha” (2 vols., The Pali Text Society, Oxford, 1994, 1997) and is editor and co-author of “Wat Si Chum” (River Books, Bangkok, 2007). At present he is preparing a corpus of the Pali inscriptions of Thailand.
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