Darani sutra 陀羅尼経, from a set of One Million Pagodas (Hyakumantō 百万塔)

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Darani sutra 陀羅尼経, from a set of One Million Pagodas (Hyakumantō 百万塔)

Japan

Date
767
Medium
Ink on paper
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

According to Japan’s earliest recorded histories, in the mid-760s, the Empress Shōtoku (718–770) commissioned the production of one million miniature scrolls printed with Buddhist incantations, each one enshrined within a small wooden pagoda. When they were completed, the empress donated 100, 000 scroll-pagoda combinations to each of the ten major Buddhist temples in Nara, then the capital. One of those temples, Hōryūji, still owns several thousand of Empress Shōtoku’s miniature pagodas. Traditions holds that the empress’ commission may have been related to a scandal involving a love affair with a young Buddhist priest and an attempted coup, but whatever the case, the empress no doubt garnered a vast amount of karma through her million-pagoda project. Asia

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