| Title | Contains Image(s) | Description | Keywords |
|---|---|---|---|
| jaki 邪鬼 | Sk: yaksa. Evil spirits believed to harm human beings and hinder Buddhist teaching. Usually appear in sculptures as small… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jie 慈恵 | Commonly known as Jie Daishi 慈恵大師 or Great Master Jie. The posthumous name of Ryōgen 良源 (912-85), abbot at… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jikkai zu 十界図 | Lit. Picture of the ten realms. In Buddhism the ten realms jikkai 十界 refer to the ten realms of being, which are… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jikokuten 持国天 | Sk: Dhrtarastra. A guardian deity with fierce expression *funnusō 忿怒相,… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jinja Taishō 深沙大将 | Also read Jinja Daishō. Lit. General Deep-Sand. A divinity said to have appeared in a dream to the renowned Chinese… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jizō 地蔵 | Lit. earth repository (Sk: Ksitigarbha). A bodhisattva *bosatsu 菩薩 believed to… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jō-in Amida 定印阿弥陀 | Amida with the jō-in 定印 or *zenjō-in 禅定印 (Sk: dhyanamudra;… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jōdo Goso 浄土五祖 | The Five Chinese Patriarchs of the Pure Land Jōdo 浄土 sect. The sect was organized in Japan by *… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jōdo hensō 浄土変相 | Abbreviation of jōdo hensō zu 浄土変相図. Also known as jōdo mandara 浄土曼荼羅. Pictorial representations, often… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jōdo sanmandara 浄土三曼荼羅 | Lit. three Pure Land Mandalas. Traditionally refers to the three most famous types of *… |
Architecture, Iconography | |
| Jōi Monju 縄衣文殊 | Also read Jōe Monju (Ch: shengyi wenshu). Lit. rope-robed *Monju… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūdai deshi 十大弟子 | Abbreviation of Shaka jūdai deshi 釈迦十大弟子. The Ten Chief Disciples of the historical Buddha *… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jūichimen Kannon 十一面観音 | Sk: Ekadasamukha. Eleven-headed Kannon; a form of *Kannon 観音 with eleven miniature faces… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūni shinshō 十二神将 | Also jūni yakusha taishō 十二薬叉大将, jūni shinshō 十二神王. The twelve protective deities *… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūniten 十二天 | Twelve Deities. A group of tutelary deities consisting of various Hindu gods, which was incorporated into Esoteric Buddhism… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Juntei 准胝 | Sk: Cundi. Also Juntei Butsumo 准胝仏母, Shichigutei Butsumo 七倶胝仏母, or Butsumo Juntei 仏母准胝. … |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūō 十王 | Ten Kings. The ten kings of hell who preside at the gates of the underworld, assigning souls to heaven or hell. The Buddhist… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Jurōjin 寿老人 | ✓ | Ch: Shou laoren. A Chinese Taoist god known as the immortal of the Northern Song and also considered the personification of… |
Art History, Iconography |
| jūroku rakan 十六羅漢 | Sixteen arhats *rakan 羅漢. The saintly ascetics who gathered at the death and… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūroku zenshin 十六善神 | Also read jūroku zenjin. Abbreviation of Shaka jūroku zenshin 釈迦十六善神 or Shaka sanzon jūroku… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| jūsanbutsu 十三仏 | Thirteen Buddhas. A set of thirteen Buddhist deities, including *myōō 明王 (Sk… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| mandara 曼荼羅 | Also written 曼陀羅 or 曼拏羅. Mandala. A diagram that depicts Buddhist deities according to certain geometric formats and… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Maria Kannon マリア観音 | The name used for the images of the Virgin Mary, Mother of Christ in the guise of *Kannon… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Marishiten 摩利支天 | Transliteration of Sanskrit Marici, the name of a Buddhist goddess representing an amalgamation of several Hindu antecedents… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Matarajin 摩多羅神 | The protective deity of the Jōgyō zanmaidō 常行三味堂 of Enryakuji 延暦寺 on Mt. Hiei 比叡 in Kyoto. He is usually portrayed… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Memyō Bosatsu 馬鳴菩薩 | Also popularly known as Manari Myōjin 馬鳴明神 or Sanjin 蚕神 (God of Silkworms). A bodhisattva *… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| mikaeri Amida 見返阿弥陀 | Lit. "Amida looking back." An image of a standing *raigō-in Amida 来迎印阿弥陀… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Mikomori Myōjin 御子守明神 | Also called Komori Myōjin 子守明神 and may appear in the triad known as Mikomori Sannyoshin 御子守三女神 (see below). The deity of… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| mikoshi 神輿 | Also read shin'yo. Also written 御輿. A palanquin used to transport Shinto deities. A mikoshi was believed… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Miroku 弥勒 | Also Jishi 慈氏, lit. "compassionate one" (Sk. Maitreya). A bodhisattva *bosatsu… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| mishōtai 御正体 | A term whose definition falls under three headings. The first refers to representations of specific Shinto deities, often in… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| miya mandara 宮曼荼羅 | Lit. "mandala of a shrine." Devotional paintings (usually on large hanging scrolls) of the landscape of a shrine and its… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Monju 文殊 | An abbreviation of Monjushiri 文殊師利 (also Manjushiri 曼殊室利), which transliterates Sk. Manjusri. Also translated Myōkichijō 妙吉祥… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Muchaku Seshin 無著・世親 | Asanga and Vasubandhu, two 5th century Indian brothers instrumental in founding the Hossō 法相 school of Buddhism. Asanga (Jp… |
Art History, Iconography | |
| Myōken 妙見 | Sk: Sudrsti, also Sonshōō 尊星王 or Hokushin bosatsu 北辰菩薩. Originally a deification of the Polestar, … |
Art History, Iconography | |
| myōō 明王 | Translation of Sanskrit vidyaraja, meaning spell-king. Vidya literally means knowledge, but in Esoteric Buddhism mikkyō… |
Art History, Iconography |
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