dbu rgyan
Tibetan. ‘Crown’ or ‘head ornament’.
Name for the Buddhist Ritual
Crown, i.e. a ritual five-part crown
worn by senior monks and lamas in some sects of
Vajrayana
Buddhism, especially in
Lamaism,
though occasionally also in other
Mahayana
sects in
China
and
Vietnam (fig.), and used during
certain
religious
ceremonies or rituals,
such as
abhisheka,
i.e. unction or anointment
rituals used
in
Tantrism,
amongst others. This diadem-like ornament is made up of five sections,
each containing a depiction of one of the five
dhyani buddhas
or the
Sanskrit
syllables that
correspond
with their names and
represent their essence.
Each section has an arched top and consists of a thin gilded metal panel,
and are attached to each other with a red ribbon or cord. When on the head, the crown's shape
is
reminiscent to that of an open
lotus
flower (fig.).
It is usually worn together with a royal topknot, i.e. a stitched fabric
hu lu
or
nahm tao-shaped
topknot (fig.).
While wearing the crown
(fig.),
the lama or monk visualizes himself as the actual deity he is invoking.
A similar
crown is also used by monks of the
Bön
religion
(fig.),
but normally without the
royal topknot and
often with slightly different
depictions, which are often painted in vivid colours. Bön crowns
may also have five buddhas, but those are generally depicted with
their personal mount or
vahana.
However, today the Tibetan and
Bön
religions are very similar and have all but
assimilated into each other, making distinctions in dress less more
obvious. In
Mahayana
Buddhist
art and
iconography,
the dbu rgyan is often seen on the heads of important monks or deities,
such as the
Four Heavenly Kings
(fig.),
Tripitaka
(fig.),
etc. It may occasionally have other depictions than the five
transcendental buddhas or their Sanskrit corresponding syllables, such
as the Chinese character
Fo (佛), which is
Mandarin for
‘Buddha’.
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