This article discusses some key aspects of the historical and religious background of the period of Kṛtanagara and his aftermath in East Java and Sumatra. Our analysis is based on a comparative study of Sanskrit, Old Javanese, and Tibetan textual sources and artistic vestiges (“medias”) to highlight the transregional networks of tantric Buddhism (“traditions”) that may have contributed to shape the king’s religio-political agenda. Having identified the enigmatic colossal statue at Padang Roco/Sungai Langsat in Dharmasraya (Central-Western Sumatra) as a Mahākāla bearing Śaiva iconographic contaminations, and as a product of Siṅhasāri-period East Java from Sino-Tibetan prototypes, we revive Moens’ (1924: 557) idea of an association between the icon and Kṛtanagara. Adding to the discussion on the Eastern Indian-style icon of Arapacana Mañjuśrī found near Candi Jago, we highlight further parallels that complement and fine-tune the idea advanced by previous scholars about the commonality of the tantric Buddhist paradigms practiced at the courts of Kṛtanagara and Kublai Khan, and propose that their legacy was adopted by the political elites of the subsequent generation in both Nusantara and China.
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ABSTRACT KEYWORDS Introduction Kṛtanagara’s Religious Agenda and its Political Ramifications The Padang Roco Statue: Bhairava or Mahākāla? The Padang Roco Mahākāla as Kṛtanagara’s Wrathful ‘DeificationStatue’ The Candi Jawi Śiva-Buddha Statue: A Parallel Icon? Kṛtanagara’s jinābhiṣeka Nusantara at the Crossroads: Transregional Buddhist Links in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Century The Cult of Mañjuśrī and its Religio-Political Ramifications in Siṅhasāri/Majapahit East Java and Yuan China Conclusion Acknowledgments Primary Sources References