Borobudur is a Buddhist stupa and temple complex in CentralJava Indonesia dating from the 8th century, and and UNESCO World Heritage site.
This is one of world's truly great ancient monuments, the single largest
Buddhist structure anywhere on earth, and few who visit fail to be taken by
both the scale of place, and the remarkable attention to detail that went into
the construction. Set as it is in the heart of the verdant Kedu Plain, the
backdrop of mighty active volcanoes only enhances the sense of awe and drama.
Borobudur is best seen at dawn, when the air is fresh and
full of birdsong. As the mist begins to lift, the sun scales the surrounding
volcanoes and terraced fields, and highlights the stone reliefs and the many
faces of Buddha. Glimpsing Borobudur for the first time is often a deeply felt
emotional experience.
The Borobudur Temple Compounds is one of
the greatest Buddhist monuments in the world, and was built in the 8th
and 9th centuries AD during the reign of the Syailendra Dynasty. The
monument is located in the Kedu Valley, in the southern part of Central
Java, at the centre of the island of Java, Indonesia.
The main temple is a stupa built in
three tiers around a hill which was a natural centre: a pyramidal base
with five concentric square terraces, the trunk of a cone with three
circular platforms and, at the top, a monumental stupa. The walls and
balustrades are decorated with fine low reliefs, covering a total
surface area of 2,520 m2. Around the circular platforms are 72 openwork stupas, each containing a statue of the Buddha.
The vertical division of Borobudur
Temple into base, body, and superstructure perfectly accords with the
conception of the Universe in Buddhist cosmology. It is believed that
the universe is divided into three superimposing spheres, kamadhatu, rupadhatu, and arupadhatu, representing respectively the sphere of desires where we are bound to our desires, the sphere of forms where we abandon our desires but are still bound to name and form, and the sphere of formlessness where there is no longer either name or form. At Borobudur Temple, the kamadhatu is represented by the base, the rupadhatu by the five square terraces, and the arupadhatu
by the three circular platforms as well as the big stupa. The whole
structure shows a unique blending of the very central ideas of ancestor
worship, related to the idea of a terraced mountain, combined with the
Buddhist concept of attaining Nirvana.
The Temple should also be seen as an
outstanding dynastic monument of the Syailendra Dynasty that ruled Java
for around five centuries until the 10th century.
The Borobudur Temple Compounds consists
of three monuments: namely the Borobudur Temple and two smaller temples
situatued to the east on a straight axis to Borobudur. The two temples
are Mendut Temple, whose depiction of Buddha is represented by a
formidable monolith accompanied by two Bodhisattvas, and Pawon Temple, a
smaller temple whose inner space does not reveal which deity might have
been the object of worship. Those three monuments represent phases in
the attainment of Nirvana.
The temple was used as a Buddhist temple
from its construction until sometime between the 10th and 15th
centuries when it was abandoned. Since its re-discovery in the 19th
century and restoration in the 20th century, it has been brought back
into a Buddhist archaeological site.
Borobudur Temple |
Mendut Temple |
Pawon Temple |
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