Pañcika: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Comb with Pancika and Hariti, Khotan - Etnografiska museet - Stockholm, Sweden - DSC00931.JPG|thumb|right|Comb with Pancika and Hariti, Khotan]] |
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'''Pañcika''' (Chinese: '''般闍迦''') is a Buddhist demon ([[Rakshasa#Rakshasas_in_Buddhist_lore|''rakshasa'']]), the consort of [[Hariti|Hariti/Kishimojin]], with whom he is said to have fathered 500 children. |
'''Pañcika''' (Chinese: '''般闍迦''') is a Buddhist demon ([[Rakshasa#Rakshasas_in_Buddhist_lore|''rakshasa'']]), the consort of [[Hariti|Hariti/Kishimojin]], with whom he is said to have fathered 500 children. |
Revision as of 13:53, 8 August 2015
Pañcika (Chinese: 般闍迦) is a Buddhist demon (rakshasa), the consort of Hariti/Kishimojin, with whom he is said to have fathered 500 children.
According to the Mahavamsa, Pancika was the commander-in-chief of the Yakṣa army of Vaiśravaṇa (Bishamonten), and had another 27 Yakṣa generals under his orders.
Pancika was often represented holding a lance and a bag of jewels (or money), together with Hariti, in the Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara,[1] where they illustrated marital love following the intervention of the Buddha. The two figures "were very popular in Gandhara in the latter part of the second century, and their statues are many."[2] When depicted holding a spear, he also signals his role as the chief of the Yakṣas. The iconography of Pancika was eventually merged with that of Vaisravana.[3]
References
- ^ The gods of northern Buddhism: their history and iconography, Alice Getty, Courier Dover Publications, 1988, p. 157, ISBN 978-0-486-25575-0 at Google Books
- ^ Sir John Marshall, The Buddhist Art of Gandhara, New Delhi: Oriental Books Reprint Corporation, 1980, p, 104.
- ^ Louis, Frederic (1995), Buddhism, Flammarion Iconographic Guides, Paris: Flammarion, pp. 244–245, ISBN 2-08-013582-1.