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Fragrant Ritual Offerings in the Art of Tibetan Buddhism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2013
Extract
Buddhism, first officially adopted by Tibetan royalty in the seventh century, remained confined to court circles and was not widely accepted during the reign of the Tibetan kings between the seventh and ninth centuries. After a dark period of persecution during the late imperial period, the so-called “Second Diffusion” of Buddhism in Tibet began towards the end of the tenth century.
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References
1 Mallmann, Marie-Thérèse de, Introduction à l'iconographie du tântrisme bouddhique (Paris, 1986), pp. 155–156 Google Scholar, 167–169.
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8 Ibid., no. 45.
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15 For example, Sotheby's, Indian and Southeast Asian Art, New York, 16 September 1999, no. 89; Erberto F. LoBue, Tesori del Tibet. Oggetti d'arte dai monasteri di Lhasa, Milano, Galleria Ottavo Piano, 1994, no. 44; Trésors du Tibet: Région autonome du Tibet, Chine, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (Paris, 1987), no. 68.
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19 For example, see Steven M. Kossak, Jane Casey Singer, op.cit., no. 21.
20 Ibid., no. 24, a very fine Tibetan thang-ka of the 13th century: Maitreya, seated on a lotus, making with both hands the gesture of religious discourse (dharmacakra mudrā), holds the stems of two different flowers. A pale pink campaka flower appears near his left shoulder.
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