- TOP
- Daihannyaharamittakyo (Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra), Vol. 228
Overview
Important Art Object
Daihannyaharamittakyo (Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra), Vol. 228
- Museum No.
- BK97-1
Showing 1-6 of 1
Title | Daihannyaharamittakyo (Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra), Vol. 228 |
---|---|
Designation | Important Art Object |
Artist | |
Category | Calligraphy (B), Japanese Calligraphy, Buddhist Manuscripts |
Country | Japan |
Period | Heian Late |
Century | 12th |
Year | |
Quantity | |
Materials | |
Dimensions | Height 26cm Width 912cm |
Inscription by | |
Signature/Seals Etc | |
Donor | Moriya Yoshitaka |
Included Works
This object may be one within a set or the title of a set. To see all objects in the set, perform a Category Search by the Museum Number below, entering numerals only before the hyphen.
The Nanatsudera Sutras are copies of the entire Buddhist canon, which includes the tripitika (J., sanzô; the "the three baskets" of sutras, precepts, and commentaries) and other treatises, transcribed between 1175 (Jôan 5) and 1179 (Jishô 3). They were commissioned as a Buddhist vow made by Ônakatomi Yasunaga (n.d.), a local official of Owari Province (in the western part of present-day Aichi Prefecture). Today, 3,398 handscrolls and 1,556 accordion-style books (J., orihon) of this set are extant. The horizontal margin at the top and bottom of each scroll is marked in red, a special feature of this set. Only the Great Perfection of Wisdom Sutra (J., Daihannya haramitta kyô, Skt., Mahaprajnaparamita sutra) scrolls in this set have both horizontal and vertical margin lines.
In recent years, the discovery of disputed texts--supposedly long lost sutra copies appearing to be from the Nanatsudera set--have attracted the attention of researchers in the field of Buddhist textual studies.
Japan-Heian-Late