A Graeco-Buddhist Sculpture representingenting the Buddha's Descent from the Heaven of the Thirty-three Gods

By C.L. Fabri, Leiden
Acta Orientalia
1930, pp.288-293



p. 288 Queen Maya, we are told, died seven days after her son Siddhartha the future Buddha, was born. She was reborn a god in the Heaven of the Thirty-three Gods. Later on when the Bodhisattva became enlightened, he once followed the voice of a mild filial feeling and visited the Trayastrimsa heaven in order to teach his mother the Good Law and to convert her. After three months and seven days the Lord returned to the earth. The gods through their heavenly architect made him a triple ladder: Brahma descended a golden one on his right, together with all the gods of the Rupaloka; Indra descended a crystal ladder, accompanied by all the devas of the Kamaloka; while the Blessed One went down in the centre on a staircase made of pure lapis lazuli. A great crowd awaited him. But the nun Utpalavarna, who would have liked to be the first to greet her Master, by magic power took the shape and appearance of a great emperor, and was admitted with her chariot and troops into the foremost row. She said: With chariot and horses four I came, Made visible by supernormal power, And worshipped, wonder working, at his feet, The wondrous Buddha, Sovran of the world.(1) ------------------------------ 1. Iddhiya abhinimmitva caturassam ratham aham, buddhassa pade vanditva lokanathassa sirimato (Therigatha, 229). I quote above the beautiful rendering of Mrs. Rhys Davids, Psalms, I, p. 113. For the story of the Descent of Buddha and the nun Utpalavarna (pali: Uppalavanna), cf. Rockhill, Life, pp. 80-82; Beal, Si-yu-ki, I, pp. 202-205; Watters, On Yuan Chwang, I, pp. 333--339; Divyavadana, ed. Cowell and Neil, p. 401; M.E. Lulius van Goor, Do buddhistische non [in Dutch] p. 289 This is in short what the texts relate us with some slight divergences of the various sources. It must have been a favourite legend with the Buddhists, as we see it represented since the very beginnings of Buddhist art until the time that Buddhism became nearly extinct in India. We are here especially interested in the representations of Gandhara; but a brief survey of other reliefs will not be out of place. In Bharhut we meet the first illustration on the Ajatasatru Pillar(1): here we see a very realistically sculptured simple ladder, divided into three by two perpendicular beams. In the centre, at the topmost step, there is a footprint, and a second one is on the lowermost step. This is all that symbolizes the descent of the Buddha. There are moreover, 24 personages, some of whom must be gods, others men. It is quite impossible to ascertain whether the flying figures must represent Sakra and Brahma, and why a caitya-tree is placed below, with a sitting-pad covered with flowers. The same legend is found on a basrelief of Sanchi, which seems to us-notwithstanding the fact that the monuments of Sanchi must be some 100 years younger than those of Bharhut--in every way more primitive and less skilful than the previous.(2) Here the ladder is not triple, but an excessively narrow flight of steps, with a clumsy railing on one and a voluminous beam on the other side. Instead of the two footprints two caitya-trees are sculptured above and below the ladder. Adoring figures find celestial musicians encircle the ladder; among them a turbaned person with a chauri and a lotus may be either Brahma or the nun disguised as a cakravartin emperor. The whole is very indistinct, and one can easily understand Fergusson who was not willing to accept Beal's identification.(3) As far as I can ascertain, there are only three Graeco- Buddhist illustrations of the legend in question so far published. We are glad ------------------------------ 1. Cunningham, Bharhut, pp. 91--93, pl. XVII, middle. 2. Fergusson, Tree and Serpent Worship, pl. XXVII, 3, and pp.133f.; Maisey, Sanchi, pp.33 f., pi.XI; Marshall, Guide to Sanchi (1918), p. 56. 3. Fergusson, loc. cit., p. 133, note; JRAS, N. S., vol.V, p.181. p. 290 to publish here a fourth relief representing the same scene. It is quite peculiar that the treatment of the subject- matter is obviously highly different in all the four reliefs. Nothing is found of that mechanical, monotonous treatment which characterizes many another scene represented in Gandharan sculptures. Professor Foucher publishes two of these reliefs.(1) One, now in the Museum of Bombay, originating from Babuzai, has two panels below each other, representing two phases of the descent. In the upper compartment the Buddha is standing on the second step of a staircase of only two steps, flanked by Indra and Brahma and some other adoring figures. Below the same scene is repeated. There is, however, some reason for supposing that here the nun Utpalavarna was sculptured kneeling on the left side in front of the steps. Professor Fouchcr does not mention this, but we there see traces of a figure now broken. Besides, Brahma is put somewhat higher than Indra (whereas in the upper panel the two deities are placed at the same level), obviously in order to leave place for a kneeling figure. The second relief (fig. 265 in Prof. Foucher's work) has been found at Loriyan Tangai, and is now in the Museum of Calcutta. It has very little in common with the previous one. The staircase consists of some 19 steps, and has three compartments between which the supporting beams(? ) and pillars(?) are depicted in a curious manner. Somewhere on the seventh step stand Brahma, the Buddha and Indra. On both sides hosts of gods are seen in the air. On the earth, at the left, a king approaches, riding an elephant, and followed by his suite. Below the Blessed One a person with hands folded in adoration is kneeling or rather sitting, evidently the nun Utpalavarna who 'reassumed her form as a bhiksuni.'(2) There is a third relief in the Lahore Museum (no. 1133), which prof. Foucher calls-for good reason-- 'fort miserable' (p. 537); a re- ------------------------------ 1. Art greco-bouddhique, I, figs. 264 And 265. 2. Beal, Si-yu-hi, p. 205. p. 291 production of this piece of sculpture is found in Mr. Hargreaves' The Buddha Story in Stone.(1) Only four persons figure in this relief. On the top, of a triple ladder stand Brahma, the Buddha and Indra. Below Brahma a person is kneeling in adoring attitude, who must be our bhiksuni in her natural form. The fourth relief, published here for the first time, is now since many years in the collection of Imre Schwaiger, Esq., in London.(2) It is, no doubt, the fullest illustration extant of the Descent from the Trayastrimsa Heaven, and it is in many respects the finest of the four known representations. It measures 22 1/2 inches in width and 19 1/2 inches in height, and, as may be seen from the plate, it is very well preserved except for the two top corners and the face of the lowermost Buddha. Traces of red colouring are found in many places. It is really 'an assembly of gods and men' (devamanusya- sampada, Divyavadana p. 401), There are not less than 70 persons and 5 horses sculptured and arranged in a skilful composition. In the centre, on a triple staircase leading from top to bottom, the Buddha appears thrice in abhaya-mudra, flanked by Indra and Brahma, who turn towards him with hands folded in worship.(3) On both sides of the staircase four horizontal rows of heavenly beings are turned towards the Lord in adoring attitude or throwing flowers. They are kneeling and standing in alternating rows. Below, on the earth, are two rows of human beings, distinguishable from ------------------------------ 1. 1914, p. 32, fig. XXIV. 2. Here I wish to thank Mr. Schwaiger, who was good enough to show me his remarkable collection in September 1929, and gave me his consent to publish it. I intend to publish also the other pieces which, I believe, represent the best what is now to be had on the European market. 3. The sculpturing in one panel of different phases of a happening is very common in early Buddhist art; e.g. the Mahabhiniskramana scene on the torana of Sanchi. Prof. Vogel kindly draws my attention to the fact that in Gandhara very few instances are known. They are the Birth of the Bodhisattva, the Story of Angulimala, the Dipankara-jataka, and, perhaps, the Attempt of Devadatta to crush the Buddha under a huge stone. As to this last legend, I hope to publish some new documents in short. p. 292 the gods only by the fact that they have no halo. To tile left: a king and two(?) queens in a chariot(1) drawn by two relatively very small horses (crude work) with suit, bearing flowers and a tray with fruit; one personage riding a horse, with hands in worshipping pose. To the right: adoring figures, some of them casting flowers, one bearing also a cup, two riding on horses, preceded by a person (head broken) who carries a bunch of lotuses in his left arm. All turn towards the Blessed One. The execution of the figures is not bad, except the horses which are very coarse. To bring some variety in the representation of the heavenly beings, the author sculptured some of the gods in a different attitude from the others, and has put flowers or a garland in the hands of some of them. The pageant of the disguised nun-emperor is composed with much skill, especially at the left, where only the wrong proportions give some disharmonious effect. The first queen carries some flowers, and she is clad and her hairs are dressed in an evidently Hellenistic manner. The figures of Indra and Brahma are made with much effect. The sculptor has bestowed great care on the figures of the Buddha; the heads, however, have turned out too large. The whole relief is, to be sure, too crowded owing to the Indian horror vacui; in the present instance, however, this mode of representation is in accordance with the subject-matter as related in the texts. We can at once realize how utterly different the rendering of this legend became in later times, if we cast a glance at the stupa drum of Dhruva Tila, now in the Museum of Mathura. An illustration is found in Professor Vogel's paper devoted to this interesting docu- ------------------------------ 1. Sir Aurel Stein was kind enough to draw my attention to the fact that there is perhaps some similarity between this chariot and that depicted in the mural paintings of Miran. See: Serindia, vol. I, figs. 135-136. Sir Aurel described the drawing of that chariot as 'curiously clumsy' (p.518). I believe that our chariot has still more resemblance to one of the chariots at Sanchi; see: Fergusson, Tree and Serpent Worship, pl. III, fig. 6, or Maisey, Sanchi, pl. XV, fig. 12, and see also pl. XXXVI, fig. 12; for a chariot in Bodh Gaya see Cunningham, Report, vol. III, pl. XXVII. p. 293 ment of Mathura art.(1) Before a very crude triple ladder in the centre stands a Buddha. On both sides stand two uncouth figures of what must be Brahma and Sakra. Professor Vogel calls this justly 'as summary a manner as possible.' The same may be said with regard to another Mathura sculpture, numbered II 1, which is illustrated in his Catalogue of the Mathura Museum.(2) Here, however, a small kneeling figure must represent the nun Utpalavarna. Yet, even this summary treatment is perhaps surpassed by the concise manner in which the Gupta sculptors and the later mediaval artists used to render the scene. A standing Buddha in the centre flanked by Brahma and Indra is all what remained. Sometimes a few steps are visible below their feet, and in a few instances the figure of Utpalavarna is also symbolized by an adoring female personage.(3) Indra usually carries an umbrella, while Brahma holds a water-gourd or a fly-whisk (chauris, in one instance also an aksamala (rosary). In conclusion we may state that the bas-relief published here-with is the most realistic and the fullest illustration of the legend among all the representations known to us.(4) ------------------------------ 1. J. Ph. Vogel, Etudes de sculpture bouddhique, III. In: BEFEO, 1908, pp. 492-500, fig. 5. Cf. also: The same, Cat. Mus. Mathura, p. 167. The item is numbered N 2. 2. Pl. VI, cp. p. 125. 3. See: Burgess, AMI, I, pl. 68, 1, right uppermost panel; Sahni and Vogel, Cat. Sarnath Museum, nos. C (a) 3, 18, 10, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and D (b) 10. For a Pala sculpture from Jagdispur, distr. Patna (ancient Magadha territory), see: Foucher, Art greco-bouddhique, II, fig. 500, PP. 545 and 610. The same, Etude sur l'iconographie bouddhique de l'lnde, 1000, pp. 86 and 157, figs. 20-30, pl. III, 2. An interesting piece is published by Prof. Vogel, Note on a Buddhist Sculpture from Kandy, Ceylon, in JASB, N.S., vol. XI (1915), pp. 297--303, and pls. XX-XXIV. The last plate illustrates a bas-relief of Pagan where, however, the scene of the descent is utterly damaged. 4. Cf. further: Foucher, Une liste indienne des du Buddha. (Ecole Pratique.des Hautes Etudes, Section des Sciences Religieuses), Paris, 1908, pp. 1-32, especially p. 21, no. 45, where a few further references are found --A Nepalese representation dated 1621 A.D. is illustrated in Buddhist India, vol. II (1928), p. 138f.-- A remarkable rendering is found in Mythologie Asiatique Illustree, 1928, p. 129.