佛教文化考古 英文
Mahāyānika Golayantritasri Gautama Sripada
Southeast Asia in 430 CE
Kedah inscription, 5th century
Yijing 635-713 A.D. Travelled over 30 countries in 20 years collecting over 500,000 Buddhist verses. Translated 61 scriptures.
Xi’an: (Chang-an) Big Wild
Goose; Small Wild Goose Qing Long Si: master and disciple bid farewell
Nalanda copper-plate, mid-9th century:
There was a king of Yavabhumi who was the ornament of the Sailendra dynasty. He had a son, who possessed prudence, prowess, and good conduct... He was the foremost warrior in battle-fields and his fame was equal to that earned by Yudhishthira, Parasara, Bhisena, and Arjuna. Tara was the queen consort of that king, the illustrious Balaputra. With the mind attracted by the manifold excellences of Nalanda and through devotion to the son of Suddhodana (i.e. the Buddha) and having realised that riches are fickle like the waves of a mountain stream, he … built there a monastery which was the abode of the assembly of monks of various good qualities and was white with the series of stuccoed and lofty dwellings.
Buddhist Archaeology and the ISEAS Archaeological Unit
Buddhism came to Southeast Asia almost 2,000 years ago. Chinese pilgrims such as Faxian in the fifth century and Yijing in the late 7th century travelled between China and the holy places of Buddhism in northeast India by sea, through Southeast Asia. They travelled on merchant ships, and stayed in major ports such as Srivijaya and Malayu, where they saw large monasteries. Historical records on early Buddhism in Southeast Asia are very scarce. Archaeological materials for the study of early Southeast Asian Buddhism are much more common, and include huge quantities of Buddhist sculpture and architecture from Burma (Myanmar), Java, and Sumatra. Singapore in the 14th century was also a Buddhist kingdom, and was an important seaport for a century before the foundation of Melaka.
Borobudur
Nalanda
Xi’an
• The ISEAS Archaeological Unit will form part of the NalandaSriwijaya Centre. • Research Projects: Early Buddhist sites in Myanmar, Indonesia, and Singapore. • Study of the spread of early Buddhism along maritime trade routes. • The Archaeological Laboratory at NUS . • Displays on Buddhist archaeology at ISEAS. • A Modern Buddhist Monument: a book on the Buddhist Lodge.
Sri Tri Buana goes to Temasek and founds a city which he names Singapura.
1825 map of Singapore, depicting the Malay Wall, probably a 14thcentury fortification
The Malay Annals and the Founding of Singapore
The twtang Mahameru, Palembang.
The young prince Sang Nila Utama becomes ruler with the title Sri Tri Buana.