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Borobudur
is one of the
most impressive
monuments ever
created by man.
It is both a temple
and a complete
exposition of
doctrine, designed
as a whole, and
completed as it
was designed,
with only one
major afterthought.
It seems to have
provided a pattern
for Hindu temple
mountains at Angkor
(see above Cambodia
and Vietnam),
and in its own
day it must have
been one of the
wonders of the
Asian world. Built
about 800, it
probably fell
into neglect by
about 1000 and
was overgrown.
It was excavated
and restored by
the Dutch between
1907 and 1911.

It
now appears as
a large, square
plinth (the processional
path) upon which
stand five terraces
gradually diminishing
in size. The plans
of the squares
are stepped out
twice to a central
projection. Above
the fifth terrace
stands a series
of three diminishing
circular terraces
carrying small
stupas, crowned
at the centre
of the summit
by a large, circular,
bell-shaped stupa.
Running up the
centre of each
face is a long

staircase;
all four are given
equal importance.
There are no internal
cell shrines,
and the terraces
are solid; Borobudur
is thus a Buddhist
stupa in the Indian
sense. Each of
the square terraces
is enclosed in
a high wall with
pavilions and
niches along the
whole perimeter,
which prevents
the visitor on
one level from
seeing into any
of the other levels.
All of these terraces
are lined with
relief sculptures,
and the niches
contain Buddha
figures. The top
three circular
terraces are open
and unwalled,
and the 72 lesser,
bell-shaped stupas
they support are
of open stone
latticework; inside
each was a huge
stone Buddha figure.
The convex contour
of the whole monument
is steepest near
the ground, flattening
as it reaches
the summit. The
bottom plinth,
the processional
path, was the
major

afterthought.
It consists of
a massive heap
of stone pressed
up against the
original bottom
story of the designed
structure, so
that it obscures
an entire series
of reliefs--a
few of which have
been uncovered
in modern times.
It was probably
added to hold
together the bottom
story, which began
to spread under
the pressure of
the immense weight
of earth and stone
accumulated above.
The whole building
symbolizes a Buddhist
transition from
the lowest manifestations
of reality at
the base, through
a series of regions
representing psychological
states, toward
the ultimate condition
of spiritual enlightenment
at the summit.
The unity of the
monument effectively
proclaims the
unity of the cosmos
permeated by the
light of truth.
The visitor was
meant to be transformed
as he climbed
through the levels
of Borobudur,
encountering illustrations
of progressively
more profound
doctrines the
nearer he came
to the summit.
The topmost terrace,
whose main stupa
contained an unfinished
image of Buddha
that was hidden
from the spectator's
view, symbolized
the indefinable
ultimate spiritual
state. The 72
openwork stupas
on the circular
terraces, with
their barely visible
internal Buddhas,
symbolize incomplete
states of enlightenment
on the borders
of manifestation.
The usual way
for a pilgrim
to pay reverence
to a Buddhist
stupa is to walk
around it, keeping
it on his right
hand. The vast
series of reliefs
about three feet
(one metre) high
on the exterior
walls of the terraces
would thus be
read by the visitor
in series from
right to left.
Between the reliefs
are decorative
scroll panels,
and a hundred
monster-head waterspouts
carry off the
tropical rainwater.
The gates on the
stairways between
terraces are of
the standard Indonesian
type, with the
face of the Kala
monster at the
apex, vomiting
his scrolls.
The reliefs of
the lowest level
illustrate scenes
that show the
causal workings
of good and bad
deeds through
successive reincarnations.
They show, for
example, how those
who hunt, kill,
and cook living
creatures such
as tortoises and
fish are themselves
cooked in hells
or die as children
in their next
life. They show
how foolish people
waste their time
at entertainments.
From these scenes
of everyday life,
one moves to the
terraces above,
where the subject
matter becomes
more profound
and metaphysical.
It illustrates
important Mahayana
texts dealing
with the self-discovery
and education
of the bodhisattva,
conceived as being
possessed by compassion
for and devoted
wholly to the
salvation of all
creatures. The
reliefs on the
uppermost terraces
gradually become
more static. The
sensuous roundness
of the forms of
the figures is
not abated; but,
in the design,
great emphasis
is laid upon horizontals
and verticals
and upon static,
formal enclosures
of repeated figures
and gestures.
At the summit
all movement disappears,
and the design
is entirely subordinated
to the circle
enclosing the
stupa.
The iconography
of Borobudur suggests
that the legend
of the royal bodhisattva
recounted in many
of the reliefs
was meant to "authenticate"
some king or dynasty.
Yet it hardly
seems possible
that Borobudur
was the focus
of a specific
royal cult, as
there is no provision
at all for the
performance of
royal ritual.
It must have been,
then, in some
sense a monument
for the whole
people, the focus
for their religion
and life, and
a perpetual reminder
of the doctrines
of their religion.
A considerable
number of bronzes,
some small, some
large, have been
found in Indonesia
in a style close
to that of the
sculptures of
Borobudur and
Mendut. One fine,
large standing
image comes from
Kotabangun in
Borneo; but some
come from Java.
Many small cult
images of the
Buddha and Buddhist
deities exist.
Some are close
in type to the
early Pala images
of Indian Bihar,
the homeland of
Buddhism, with
which the Javanese
must have maintained
close touch. A
few small but
extremely fine
gold figurines
of undoubted Javanese
workmanship have
also turned up.
For all their
small size they
must rate as first-class
works of art.
As well as images
there are many
beautiful bronze
ceremonial objects,
such as lamps,
trays, and bells.
These objects
are decorated
with the same
kinds of ornament,
although on a
miniature scale,
as the architectural
monuments: scrolled
leaves, swags,
and bands of jewels.
Post-Borobudur
tjandis
Post-Borobudur
tjandis illustrate
the Buddhist doctrine
in different ways.
Kalasan, for example,
built in the second
half of the 8th
century, was a
large, square
shrine on a plinth,
with projecting
porticoes at the
centre of each
face. The roof
was surmounted
by a high circular
stupa mounted
on an octagonal
drum, the faces
of which bear
reliefs of divinities.
Topping each portico
was a group of
five small stupas,
and another large
stupa stood at
each disengaged
corner of the
main shrine. The
moldings were
restrained and
elegantly profiled.
Each section of
the exterior wall
contains a niche
meant for a figure
sculpture. The
decorative scroll
carving is especially
fine.
Another shrine
from this period,
Tjandi Sewu, consisted
of a large cruciform
shrine surrounded
by smaller temples,
only one of which
has been restored.
All of the temples
seem to have had
roofs in the form
of tiered stupas,
compressing the
overall Borobudur
scheme into the
scope of a storied
shrine tower.
From Tjandi Plaosan
came many beautiful
sculptures, donor
figures, and iconic
images of bodhisattvas.
Perhaps the most
interesting of
the post-Borobudur
Buddhist shrines
of the 9th century
is Tjandi Sari.
It is an outstanding
architectural
invention. From
the outside it
appears as a large,
rectangular, three-storied
block, with the
main entrance
piercing the centre
of one of the
longer sides.
The third story
stands above a
substantial architrave
with horizontal
moldings and antefixes.
Two windows on
each short side,
three on each
long, open into
each story, though
at the rear they
are blind. The
windows are crowned
by large antefix-like
cartouches of
ornamental carving
based on curvilinear
pavilions hung
with strings of
gems. The uppermost
windows are hooded
with the Kala-monster
motif. The roof
bears rows of
small stupas,
and perhaps there
was once a large
central stupa.
Inside, Tjandi
Sari contains
a processional
corridor around
three interior
shrines that were
possibly intended
for images of
the garbha-dhatu
deities, as at
Tjandi Mendut.
The last great
monument of the
central Javanese
period, Lara Jonggrang
at Prambanan,
is indeed a colossal
work, rivalling
Borobudur. It
was probably built
soon after 900.
Not Buddhist but
Hindu, the shrine
represents the
cosmic mountain.
There were originally
232 temples incorporated
into the design.
The plan was centred
on a square court
with four gates
containing the
eight principal
temples. Facing
east, the central
and largest temple,
some 120 feet
(40 metres) high,
was devoted to
the image of Siva.
To the north and
south it is flanked
by slightly smaller
temples devoted
to the two other
members of the
Hindu trinity,
Vishnu and Brahma.
The smaller shrines
contained many
subsidiary images.
The whole complex
was enclosed,
far off-centre,
in an extremely
large walled courtyard.
Although these
are Hindu buildings,
their high-terraced
shrine roofs bear
tiers of elongated
and gadrooned
stupas. The reliefs
on these structures
are especially
beautiful. One
series, representing
the guardians
of the directions,
integrates the
ornamental motifs
with the plastic
forms of the bodies
in a most original
way. The balustrades
and inset panels
abound with lively
reliefs portraying
various deities
or scenes taken
from the great
Hindu classics,
especially the
Ramayana.
Borobudur
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