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Buddhist$10042$ - перевод на голландский

RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS IN BUDDHISM
Buddhist symbols; Buddhist iconography; Buddhist symbol
  • Peacock Gable, [[Wat Phra That Doi Suthep]], [[Chiang Mai]]
  • Lotus and triratna at Sanchi
  • Burmese Buddha feet
  • left
  • Two Burmese Buddhist monks
  • aṣṭamaṅgala]] symbols
  • The development of the [[Butkara Stupa]]; note the addition of more elaborate chatras (royal umbrella)
  • left
  • Tibetan ritual conch shell trumpet with dragon
  • Eight types of Tibetan stupas
  • Tibetan painting of a Buddhist elephant
  • A ''viśvavajra'' or "double vajra" appears in the emblem of [[Bhutan]]
  • Endless knot in a Burmese Pali Manuscript
  • [[Ensō]] Calligraphy by Kanjuro Shibata XX
  • [[Buddhist flag]]
  • Naga]] clan, a [[Gandhara]] artwork, second century CE.
  • left
  • alt=
  • A Japanese "[[wooden fish]]" (''mokugyo''), a wooden percussion instrument used in chanting
  • left
  • Lotus motif from Sanchi complex
  • [[Mandala]] of Vajradhatu (the vajra realm)
  • Mani stones
  • Bodhi tree from [[Sanchi]] complex topped with a ''chatra'' (royal umbrella)
  • left
  • Lion faced Dakini, wrathful emanation of guru Rinpoche. Painting on the walls of 17th century Tawang Monastery, Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh, India.
  • Snow Lion, one of the types of Lions in Buddha symbolism.
  • Satavahana]] period
  • left
  • Tibetan Buddhists with prayer beads (mala)
  • Buddha Amitābha]]. Nepal, 17th century.
  • A Chinese Metal Cup stand with the eight auspicious symbols (14th century)
  • Japanese scroll depicting various mudras

Buddhist      
n. boedhist (tot boedhisme behoren)
Buddhist monk         
  • Two monks in orange robes
  • A [[Cambodia]]n monk in his robes
  • A bonze farmer
  • Tibetan monks.
FULLY ORDAINED MALE BUDDHIST MONASTIC
Bhikshu; Buddhist monk; Bhikkhus; Gelong; Bhikku; Bonze (Buddhism); Bikshu; Buddhist monks; Bonzes; Buddhist priest; Bhikkus; Bonze
Boedhisten monnik
sacred places         
  • Saint Catherine Labouré]]
  • Taoist]] tablet household shrine dedicated to [[Bixia Yuanjun]] (1850–1860), [[Bankfield Museum]]
  • Buddhist shrine On the banks of [[Tso Moriri]], Ladkah, 2010
  • Shrine hall inside Taoist Temple, [[Fung Ying Seen Koon]] in Hong Kong
  • arabsque]].
  • Main Buddhist shrine in [[Wat Phra Si Rattana Mahathat]]
  • Shrine of Qubrat Hamran, South Arabia, dating from the 15th or 16th century.
  • Terraces]] on [[Mount Carmel]], [[Haifa]].
  • Data Durbar Shrine]], [[Lahore]], Pakistan
  • [[Church of Sweden]] reliquary shrine of Saint [[Bridget of Sweden]] in [[Vadstena]]
HOLY OR SACRED PLACE, WHICH IS DEDICATED TO A SPECIFIC DEITY
Shrines; Enshrined; Shrines of Our Lady and the Saints in Great Britain and Ireland; Sacred Sites; Sacred places; Buddhist shrine; Sacred city; Christian shrines
heilige plaatsen (plaatsen met een hoge religieuze waarde)

Определение

Bonze
·noun A Buddhist or Fohist priest, monk, or nun.

Википедия

Buddhist symbolism

Buddhist symbolism is the use of symbols (Sanskrit: pratīka) to represent certain aspects of the Buddha's Dharma (teaching). Early Buddhist symbols which remain important today include the Dharma wheel, the Indian lotus, the three jewels and the Bodhi tree.

Buddhism symbolism is intended to represent the key values of the Buddhist faith. The popularity of certain symbols has grown and changed over time as a result of progression in the followers ideologies. Research has shown that the aesthetic perception of the Buddhist gesture symbol positively influenced perceived happiness and life satisfaction.

Anthropomorphic symbolism depicting the Buddha (as well as other figures) became very popular around the first century CE with the arts of Mathura and the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara. New symbols continued to develop into the medieval period, with Vajrayana Buddhism adopting further symbols such as the stylized double vajra. In the modern era, new symbols like the Buddhist flag were also adopted.

Many symbols are depicted in early Buddhist art. Many of these are ancient, pre-Buddhist and pan-Indian symbols of auspiciousness (mangala). According to Karlsson, Buddhists adopted these signs because "they were meaningful, important and well-known to the majority of the people in India." They also may have had apotropaic uses, and thus they "must have been a way for Buddhists to protect themselves, but also a way of popularizing and strengthening the Buddhist movement."

At its founding in 1952, the World Fellowship of Buddhists adopted two symbols to represent Buddhism. These were a traditional eight-spoked Dharma wheel and the five-colored flag.