Object Details
Culture
Thai
Date
15-16th century; Ayudhya Period
Medium
Bronze
Dimensions
Height: 8 3/8 inches (21.3 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Alexander B. Griswold
Object
Number
76.063.016
A popular Thai term for the Buddha wearing a crown is Phra Chao Song Khruang, “a lord wearing orname(…)
A popular Thai term for the Buddha wearing a crown is Phra Chao Song Khruang, “a lord wearing ornaments.” While standard depictions of the Buddha tend to show him without adornment, signifying his renunciation of material wealth and earthly desires, crowned images of the Buddha became popular in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries throughout Southeast Asia. One explanation for this change is linked to the iconography of the bodhisattva Maitreya, worshipped both as the Buddha of the next age and as a transcendent bodhisattva, a divine being who has chose to remain on earth to help others attain enlightenment. The adorned Buddha may thus be linked to representations of bodhisattvas in early Indian Buddhist art, in which they are commonly depicted as regal, bejeweled figures.