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Relic (Buddhism)
A physical remain or object associated with the Buddha or other holy figures; housed and venerated in reliquary monuments such as stupas.
Stupa
A Buddhist reliquary monument, typically a domed mound containing relics, designed to be experienced primarily from the outside through ritual movement and viewing.
Circumambulation
A key Buddhist devotional practice of walking around a sacred object (such as a stupa), typically clockwise, turning movement into worship.
Anda (stupa dome)
The mound-like dome of a stupa; can symbolize cosmic form (e.g., a world mountain) and the Buddha’s presence.
Harmika
A small square, railing-like element on top of a stupa dome, often interpreted as a sacred enclosure.
Chatras
Stacked umbrella forms on a central mast atop a stupa, signaling honor and sometimes suggesting ascending levels of existence.
Vedika
A railing that defines and separates sacred space around a stupa, helping channel and organize circumambulatory movement.
Torana
A monumental gateway to a stupa complex, often covered with narrative relief sculpture that teaches Buddhist stories as devotees enter.
Great Stupa at Sanchi
A major early Buddhist stupa site (begun Maurya period; expanded later) whose meaning is distributed across dome, railings, and especially narrative toranas, emphasizing movement-based devotion.
Aniconism (early Buddhist)
A tendency in early Buddhist art to avoid depicting the Buddha in full human form, representing him instead through symbols (e.g., empty throne, footprints, Bodhi tree, dharmachakra).
Gandhara
A region (present-day Pakistan/Afghanistan) that became a major center of Buddhist art where anthropomorphic Buddha images flourished, shaped by trade networks and cross-cultural exchange.
Kushan Empire
The empire under which Gandhara became a prominent center of Buddhist art production, supporting the spread and visual development of Buddhist imagery.
Anthropomorphic Buddha image
A fully human-form depiction of the Buddha (prominent in Gandharan art), making the Buddha visually present and accessible for devotion and teaching.
Ushnisha
A cranial bump shown on Buddha images, serving as an identifying mark associated with enlightened status.
Urna
A mark on the Buddha’s forehead used as an identifying feature in anthropomorphic representations, especially in Gandharan examples.
Mandapa
In Hindu temple architecture, a pillared hall used for gathering and ritual activity; a transitional space leading toward the inner sanctuary.
Garbhagriha
The innermost Hindu temple sanctuary (“womb chamber”) that houses the deity’s image (murti); the most sacred point of the temple.
Darshan
A central Hindu devotional concept: the act of seeing and being seen by the deity; temple layouts often frame and control this encounter.
Shikhara
The curving tower form typical of many Nagara (north Indian) Hindu temples, visually marking the deity’s dwelling as a cosmic peak.
Vimana
The stepped, pyramidal tower form typical of many Dravida (south Indian) Hindu temples, emphasizing vertical sacred presence over the sanctuary.
Taj Mahal
A monumental Mughal mausoleum complex in Agra commissioned by Shah Jahan for Mumtaz Mahal, using symmetry, garden planning, and rich materials to communicate paradise imagery, commemoration, and imperial authority.
Mausoleum
A monumental tomb; for the Taj Mahal, this funerary function shifts interpretation toward commemoration, paradise symbolism, and dynastic messaging rather than congregational worship.
Charbagh
A quadripartite garden plan associated with Persian/Islamic ideas of paradise; at the Taj Mahal it stages the approach and frames the tomb in an idealized, ordered landscape.
Pietra dura
Intricate inlay technique using semi-precious stones set into marble to form designs (often floral at the Taj Mahal), contributing to paradise imagery and material splendor.
Calligraphy (Islamic art)
A prestigious art form often featuring Qur’anic passages; at the Taj Mahal it fuses decoration with sacred text, reinforcing religious meaning and refinement.