Connecting the Sacred: Network Analysis of Buddhist Images on Early Medieval Chinese Pagodas from Nannieshui, Shanxi
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials
3. Dataset and Method
4. Discoveries and Interpretations
4.1. Overall Discovery of Patterns in Images from Nannieshui
4.2. Separated Clusters and Idiocyncratic Alignments
4.3. Between Pagodas and Steles: The Sequential Order of Images
5. Limitation
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | On an overview of the scholarship on Nannieshui sculptures. See (Zhao 2021). The pagoda is usually considered the reinterpretation of the hemispherical stūpa but features a tall, multistory, tower-like body, instead. Pagodas became the predominant form in East Asia following the eastward spread of Buddhism. Both pagodas and stūpas are generally referred to as ta 塔 in Chinese scholarship. |
2 | This is based primarily on the shape of surviving miniature stone pagodas and pagoda images in relief carvings and mural paintings, as rarely any pagodas in the built-form survive intact. |
3 | Pagodas in the built-form, usually of timber-wood structure, rarely survive from this period. For an overview of pagoda buildings, see (Lin 2016; Steinhardt 2011). GIS methods have been widely employed in mapping pilgrimage routes based on historical texts, Buddhist biographies, and gazetteers. For instance, Jason Protass examines the spatial pattern of the Northern Song Chan lineage by mapping out Chan sects in GIS. (Protass 2016). Wu Jiang centers on the locality of religious sects (Wu et al. 2013; Wu 2022). Peter Bol maps the distribution of religious sites based on their religious affiliations (Bol 2022). In cases studying historical figures, the location analysis method (LAM) measures the distance from their family clans to the prefectures of their political appointment, as well as their accessibility to a local devotional practice. Focusing on donors in medieval China, several studies have employed the social network analysis method to examine the interaction among individuals in literary or political circles, with a dataset made possible for designated historical periods. The network analysis method provides quantitative evidence to study historical structures and discern relevant communities. See (Bingenheimer 2018, 2020; Bingenheimer et al. 2011). Additionally, see (Vierthaler 2020) for an overview of the development of digital tools up to 2020 in East Asian studies. |
4 | For instance, see (Luo 2020a, 2020b; Zhang and Zuo 2018, 2020). Peking University launched an experimental teaching center for virtual reality and simulation in archaeology in 2017 where a panorama database of Chinese cultural heritage sites, mostly architecture sites, were developed. See http://www.vr-heritage.com/tour/dab88f0bfc4b6b78. Last accessed on 30 April 2023 (an accessible sample). |
5 | Buddhist grottoes that have been digitally documented and 3D-scanned include the Mogao Grottos in Dunhuang, Gansu province, the Yungang Grottos in Datong, Shanxi province, the Longmen Grottoes in Luoyang, Henan province, and the Dazu Grottos in Chongqing. The Center for the Art of East Asia at the University of Chicago has also completed two digital projects that record and archive the dislocated sculptures from Tianlongshan Grottoes in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, and Xiangtangshan Grottos in Handan, Hebei province. See https://tls.uchicago.edu/ and https://xts.uchicago.edu/ (last accessed on 3 April 2023). A recent example is a 3D scanning project undertaken at the Yungang Grottos in Datong, Shanxi province. See (Diao and Ning 2020). |
6 | The most representative case is the 3D scanning and annotation project undertaken by the National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C. See https://asia.si.edu/exhibition/body-of-devotion-the-cosmic-buddha-in-3d/ (last accessed on 3 April 2023). |
7 | On the stage of using digital tools to study art history, see (Brown 2020). For an overview of the recent development in employing digital approaches to study Chinese Buddhist architecture, see (Luo 2020a). |
8 | The square central pillars featured in some Buddhist cave temples, such as the Northern Wei Caves 5 and 6 at Yungang 雲岡, Pingcheng 平城 (present-day Datong 大同), Shanxi 山西 province, employ four-sided pictorial programs similar to pagodas. This connection between central pillars and pagodas has been a topic for a number of studies. Yet, it goes beyond the scope of this paper. For reference, see (B. Su 1996). |
9 | This reconstruction of the vertical alignment of stone blocks at Nannieshui is debatable since the original sequence for arranging them has been lost. The current alignment as shown in the museum has not been updated since the initial installment and does not incorporate recent studies. See (Zhao 2021). |
10 | Once a center of Buddhism, the region is home to several cave-temple sites and numerous Buddhist statues and steles that date to the northern dynasties (Gansu Sheng Wenwu Gongzuodui and Qingyang Bei Shiku Wenwu Baoguansuo 1987; Cheng 1998; Cheng and Yang 2003; Dong 2008). |
11 | On the construction of pagodas during the northern dynasties, see (Luoyang qielan ji jiaoshi 1963; Shui jing zhu 2007; Xu 1994; B. Su 2011; Steinhardt 2011, 2014). On the commission of miniature pagodas during the northern dynasties in China, see (Yin 2000; Wang 2006; X. Su 2010; Zhao 2022). |
12 | |
13 | Social network analysis has been widely used across the social and political sciences. On some examples using interdisciplinary method-borrowing of a digital approach in humanities, see (McCarty 2013; Veidlinger 2019; Clark and Lindsey 2022). |
14 | Around 20 stone blocks are not included in the current study. Some underwent severe damage, leaving the images on one or more sides unidentifiable. Some feature an oxagonal shape, not fitting into the current analysis. In the spreadsheet of edges, I assign blocks as “source” while images as “target”. This source–target design does not make any difference when all the nodes are processed as undirected in Gephi. |
15 | All sculptures under discussion in this paper were carved from limestone and discovered at Nannieshui. It is for future comparison with sculptures from other sites to include the discovery place and material in the spreadsheet. A local quarry of limestone was found not far from the hoarding pit in the same county. (Shanxisheng Kaogu Yanjiuyuan and Qinxian Wenwuguan 2022, p. 9). |
16 | The most prominent group of Hebei materials was discovered in a hoard in 1953 at Quyang, consisting of Buddhist statues dated from the 520s to the 750s. See (Y. Lee 1994; Li and Tian 1999; Li 2007). For Shandong materials, see (Nickel 2002; Wang and Wang 2002; Qingzhou shi bowuguan 2014). |
17 | Specifically, the standing bodhisattva carved on QN 193 and QN 348 of the Northern Wei appears with a hair style of the Buddha despite the typical bodhisattva dress. |
18 | Junghee Lee has combed through the historiography on this exact topic. See (J. Lee 1993). For major studies on the subject, see (Mizuno 1940; Rei 1975; Berthier 1982; Leidy 1990; Hsu 2002). |
19 | Various evidence has been provided by scholars on each side. The debate partially results from an ahistorical approach to piecemeal interpretations of inscriptions on statues from different periods of the fifth and sixth centuries. For a detailed discussion, see (J. Lee 1993; Hsu 2002). Both scholars agree that pensive figures dated prior to the mid-sixth century represent Prince Siddhārtha. |
20 | For Gandhara, see (Ingholt 1957, figs. 225 and 257; Foucher 1905, vol. 1, figs. 76 and 77). For Mathura, see (Lerner 1984, pp. 30–35). |
21 | Chūgoku Sekkutsu: Kizil, 2 vols., pls. 87 and 88. Lee, “The Origin and Development”, pp. 316–17. |
22 | On one of the Northern Liang stūpas dating to the 430s CE, the pensive figure is depicted on a horizontal register together with Maitreya and six seated Buddha figures, representing the succession of past Buddhas followed by Śākyamuni and the Maitreya of the future. The pensive bodhisattva is arranged on the lower belt with another six Buddha images and one Maitreya on a stone pagoda discovered in Jiuquan, Western Gansu province. A number of similar stone stūpas were discovered in the region and dated, by their inscriptions, to the Northern Liang period. |
23 | One of the earliest surviving pensive images can be found on the back of a 471 bronze statue’s backscreen. The piece was dedicated by Chou Jinu 仇寄奴 to his deceased parents. It was uncovered in Xincheng, Hebei Province. (Matsubara 1995, vol. 1, pls. 36 and 37). There are two other bronze statues that apply a very similar rendering of a pensive bodhisattva on the backscreen’s reverse side. One piece, dated to 484, depicts the pensive bodhisattva on the back and a standing Avalokitesśvara on the front. See (Matsubara 1995, pls. 74–75). The other statue with the same iconography was excavated in Pingquan, Hebei Province and dated to 489 using an inscription on its pedestal. (Matsubara 1995, pl. 86). |
24 | On the Gandharan tradition, see (Strong 1983; Behrendt 2003, 2007; Branccacio and Behrendt 2006). On the Yungang tradition, see Caves 5–11, 5–38, 25, 28, 29, 33, 33–34, and 34; (Yi 2017, chps. 5 and 6). For an example, see (Yungang Shiku Wenwu Baoguansuo 1991, Figure 197). For a comprehensive study of the story’s iconography, see (Li 1996; Hu 2005; Yi 2017, chp. 3). |
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Zhao, J. Connecting the Sacred: Network Analysis of Buddhist Images on Early Medieval Chinese Pagodas from Nannieshui, Shanxi. Religions 2023, 14, 625. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050625
Zhao J. Connecting the Sacred: Network Analysis of Buddhist Images on Early Medieval Chinese Pagodas from Nannieshui, Shanxi. Religions. 2023; 14(5):625. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050625
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhao, Jinchao. 2023. "Connecting the Sacred: Network Analysis of Buddhist Images on Early Medieval Chinese Pagodas from Nannieshui, Shanxi" Religions 14, no. 5: 625. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050625
APA StyleZhao, J. (2023). Connecting the Sacred: Network Analysis of Buddhist Images on Early Medieval Chinese Pagodas from Nannieshui, Shanxi. Religions, 14(5), 625. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050625