National Heritage |
World Cultural Heritage |
| - Seokguram - |
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Preface
A small but noble pantheon of divinities symbolizing
Buddhist philosophy and aestheticism, Seokguram is a
structure of sublime beauty culminating religious belief,
science and fine arts which flowered in the golden age
of Asian art
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Overlooking the East Sea far ahead beyond the mountain
ridges from the southeastern tip of the Korean Peninsula,
Seokguram stands as a proud testimony to Korea's brilliant
tradition of classical Buddhist sculpture. A small but
noble pantheon of divinities symbolizing Buddhist philosophy
and aestheticism, the eighth-century cave temple is
a structure of sublime beauty culminating religious
belief, science and fine arts which flowered in the
golden age of Asian art. Seokguram is located near the
tummit of Mt. Tohamsan, east of the historic city of
Gyeongju, capital of the Silla dynasty (57B.C.-A.D.935).
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It is reached after an hour-long walk up a steep,
winding mountain path over some 4km from Bulguksa, another
famous temple dating to the eighth century when Silla
was at the peak of its strength. The capital of Silla
rivalled in splendor the Dang capital of Jangan and
its culture shared in the international character of
Dang at this time when all of East Asia enjoyed unprecedented
peace and prosperity.
Buddhism first reached Korea in the fourth century through
China but it truly flowered only after the court of
Silla officially recognized it as the state religion.
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After Silla unified the peninsula in the mid-seventh
century by conquering the rival states of Goguryeo and
Baekje, Buddhism not only served a religious function
but was looked upon as a protective force. Temples of
magnificent scale were erected in and around Gyeongju
as they were regarded as a supernatural defense against
external threats and bastions of national consciousness.
According to the scant historical records available
today, both Seokguram and Bulguksa, the two supreme
accomplishments of Silla Buddhist architecture, were
built under the supervision of Kim Dae-seong, who came
from the royal family and served as prime minister under
the reign of King Gyeongdeok.
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The construction began in 742, the year after Kim
resigned from his top position in court. He died in
774 without seeing the completion of the historic projects
several years later under the reign of King Hyegong.
As a complement to Bulguksa, which was dedicated to
the present generation, the granite temple of Seokguram
is said to have been intended to honor those who had
been Kim's parents in his previous life. Whoever the
patron or whatever the motivation, Seokguram was apparently
designed as a private chapel for royalty considering
its scale, philosophical depth and aesthetic standard,
whereas Bulguksa, a grand complex of various worship
halls and pagodas, was intended as a state monastery
to serve the public.
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Too small and cozy to have been conceived as a place
for congregation in spite of the enormous resources
required for its construction, the grotto shrine represents
a pinnacle of religious sculpture not only in Korea
but in all of East Asia.
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One of Korea's most popular tourist destinations drawing
thousands of visitors from home and abroad daily, Seokguram
recalls the long journey Buddhism made from its homeland
of India through central Asia and China to Korea. A
gem of ancient Buddhist architecture punctuating the
eastern terminal of the Silk Road, the shrine testifies
to the enthusiasm and sacrifice of early Korean monk
pilgrims who risked their lives to experience firsthand
the exotic traditions of their faith in the faroff land
of India. Buddhist grottos are generally believed to
have originated in ancient India.
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They are divided largely into two Kinds according
to form and purpose: caitya, literally a "sanctuary"
or a hall containing a sacred object to be worshipped
such as a small stupa or a Buddha image; and vihara,
a monastery or shelter for monks, often with chapels
for images or a stupa placed in the central court which
also served as a place for instruction. Grottos in th
caitya style were later adopted by the chinese in the
hundreds of caves stretching over a mile along the cliffs
of Dunhuang and the sandstone hills of Yungang. Seokguram,
with a rectangular antechamber leading to a circular
domed main chamber, resembles ancient Indian cave temples.
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Though inspired by the cave temples of ancient India
and China, Seokguram differs in construction to its
prototypes which were mostly built by digging into hillsides
and carving on natural rocks. korea's topographical
features comprising solid rock beds probably made it
impossible to import the idea of the sculptors of Karle
or Ajanta, who carved thousands of figures, stupas and
apse ends out of the soft conglomerate rock and clay.
Instead, an incredible artificial cave was assembled
with granite on the heights of a mountain some 750meters
above sea level, an architectural technique without
precedent the world over.
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| Apex of Korean Buddhist Sculpture
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Highlighted by the majestic seated Buddha with a serene,
all-knowing expression as the primary object of worship,
Seokguram enshrines an impressive assembly of 40 different
divinities embodying various aspects of Buddhist teaching.
The grotto chapel, in spite of the diversity of the
icons ensconced, has a unique feeling of peace and unity
resulting in an intense spiritual impression. The prominent
skill for handling solid granite aside, modern scientists
investigating the source of this rare sensation of sacred
harmony discovered that the Silla architects employed
the geometric theories of the golden rectangle and symmetry.
Seokguram is meticulously designed to guide the faithful
into the holy and of the Buddha, a mysterious spiritual
journey to the realm of nirvana in a limited span of
time and space. In ancient times when there was no transportation,
everybody was supposed to walk up the rugged, serpentine
mountain path. The journey was to begin at the foot
of Mt.Tohamsan which was considered a holy mountain
by the people of Silla, or, symbolically, it begin from
Bulguksa which straddles the mountain's western midslope.
After climbing up the mountain for an hour or so, the
pilgrim was to quench his thirst with the icy cold water
gushing up from a fountain in front of the shrine
Passing the arched entrance into the rectangular antechamber
and proceeding through a slightly narrower corridor,
their walls decorated with a legion of bas-relief images
of various guardian deities, the worshiper would leave
the secular world behind and abe prepared to face to
Buddha in the main rotunda. An image of serenity and
power, the Buddha is seated cross-legged on a lotus
throne, with his eyes half-closed in meditation and
a faint smile on his lips.
The Buddha is surrounded by bodhisattvas, arhats and
ancient Indian gods carved in high relief on the wall
of the circular hall. Here the ancient Silla architects
probably borrowed the concept of the early Indian stupas
and the mounded graves of Gyeongju but in a reversed
form to create a "hollowed stupa." Inside
the shrine, with the dim light making subtle changes
to the texture of the granite carvings as he moves,
the worshiper could walk around the Buddha and possibly
face himself and experience nirvana to realize that
life and death can be one in the void of nothingness.
The construction method of Seokguram remains a wonder
for modern architects. Hundreds of granite pieces of
various shapes and sizes were assembled to form the
cave. No mortar was used; the stones are held together
by stone rivets. Natural ventilation was provided to
control the temperature and humidity inside the cave,
though the wisdom of ancient architects failed to be
conveyed in the process of its preservation in modern
times.
The main rotunda, believed to stand for heave in contrast
to the earth which is represented by the rectangular
antechamber, measures 6.84 to 6.58 meters in diameter.
It has a drum built of 10 granite slabs, upon which
15 granite panels with sculpted images of bodhisattvas,
arhats and ancient Indian gods form the circular wall.
Above these icons and separated by lintel, there are
10 niches, each containing miniature statues of seated
bodhisattvas and faithfuls. Slightly tilted toward the
back from the center of the rotunda is a round lotus
pedestal, on which th Buddha sits facing the antechamber
across the corridor. The domed ceiling is capped with
a round granite plate decorated with a lotus design.
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| The Buddha and Other Deities |
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The elegant and majestic main buddha of Seokguram epitomizes
the aestheticism of Korean Buddhist sculpture. An enigmatic
combination of masculine strength and feminine beauty
and a personification of divine and human natures, the
Buddha represents Korean Buddhist sculpture at the zenith
of classical realism.
Chiselled out of a single granite block, the 3.5-meter-high
Buddha image envisages Seokgamoni, the Historic Buddha,
at the moment of enlightenment. He is seated in a cross-legged
position on a 1.34-meter-high lotus pedestal, with his
right foot exposed as it lays across his left knee.
His hands are poised in a mudar touching the earth to
call it to witness his realization of enlightenment.
The Buddha has tightly curled hair and a distinct usnisa,
the protuberance on the top of the head symbolizing
his supreme wisdom. Beneath the broad forehead the double
eyebrows are shaped like crescent moons and the eyes
are half-shut gazing vaguely ahead in deep meditation.
He wears a faint smile and his body is rounded and voluminous
as though inflated by an inner force.
The robust torso is draped in a flowing robe with gentle
folds exposing the right shoulder in respect of early
Indian customs. The drapery is obviously a Korean interpretation
of the Indian prototype of a tightly-clinging robe.
The fan-shaped folds about the legs also indicate the
Gupta-period Indian influence. The details of the robe
covering the right arm and chest are realistically portrayed.
The lotus pedestal on which the Buddha sits consists
of three sections. The upper and lower sections are
round and decorated with lotus petals, while the narrower
central section is octagonal with eight small pillars
supporting the upper section at each point of the octagon.
The pedestal is place on a round foundation. A big granite
roundel a adorned with lotus petals around the rim is
set on the wall behind the Buddha, creating the illusion
of an aureole around his head. This is one of the distinct
features of Seokguram. The nimbus is normally attached
to the back or the head of most other Buddha images
The Buddha lord it over an assembly of three bodhisattvas,
ten disciples and two Hindu gods carved in relief on
the wall of the rotunda as well as the ten miniature
statues of bodhisattvas, saints and faithfuls seated
in the niches above, at the level of his eyes. On the
two wall of the corridor leading out to the antechamber
are relief figures of the Four Heavenly Kings, two,
on each side, Two powerful bas-relief images of Vajrapanis,
the fierce guardians of temples, stand vigil on either
side of the entrance to the passageway and the Eight
Guardian Deities decorate the walls of the antechamber,
four on each side.
Aside from the main Buddha, the Eleven-faced Avalokitesvara,
or the Bodhisattva of Compassion, standing at the center
of the back wall of the rotunda, probably draws the
greatest admiration among all the deities in the shrine.
This graceful Avalokitesvara, standing 2.18 meters high
on an opulent lotus base, wears a crown decorated with
the heads of ten bodhisattvas and a central Amitabha,
or the Buddha of Boundless Light. He is dressed in flowing
robes and decked with resplendent jewelry. He holds
a vase containing a single lotus blossom in his left
hand and a long beaded necklace in his right hand, Standing
right at the back of the Buddha, this is the only figure
facing straight ahead while the faces of all other images
are portrayed obliquely.
Ten arhats, or the disciples of Seokgamoni, are lined
up beside the Eleven-faced Avalokitesvara, five on each
side. They have distinctly different countenances with
sharp noses and deep-set eyes and bony bodies that are
easily traced to the Indian ascetics depicted under
Greek influence. Wearing ankle-length saris, each of
the shaven-headed arhats holds a small object like a
book, a bottle or an alms bowl, or has hands poised
in a symbolic gesture.
Two elegant bodhisattvas stand next to the arhats, one
on either side. They are the popular Manjusri, the representation
of divine wisdom, who holds a small cup in his hand,
and his companion Samantabhadra holding a book. Next
come the two famous Indian devas, Mahabrahmanah(Brahma)
and Sakradevanam Indra(Indra), with their egg-shaped
haloes.
Standing to the left of the entrance of the rotunda,
Brahma holds a whisk in his right hand and a small bottle
in his left hand. Indra, standing on the opposite side
to the right of the entrance, holds a whisk in his right
hand and a ritual thunderbolt in his left hand The corridor
leading to the main hall features the Four Heavenly
Kings, the guardians of the four corners of the heavens
who are often found at Korea temple gate. They are presented
two on each side of the corridor. They are clad in armor
and flowing robes, each trampling a demon and carrying
an object such as a sword or a small stupa. The demons
vary in shape and posture. Traces of paint remain in
the recessed portions of the demons.
Two horrific Vajrapanis guard the rotunda on the outside
of the corridor, one on each side of its entrance. Deriving
from Indian mythology, the fierce temple protectors
with bulging eyes and big mouths, look intimidating,
each raising one arm with the hand clenched in a tight
fist. The muscular torsos are naked and a skirt is hung
at the waist. Exhibiting terrifying strength, they are
carved in deep relief and almost appear to stand apart
from the wall.
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| Legend of a Filial son |
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In the small village of Moryang-ri on the western outskirts
of Gyeongju, there lived a poor woman named Gyeongjo
who had an odd-looking son. The villagers made fun of
the child as he had a big head and a flat forehead,
that looked like a wall. They called him Dae-seong,
meaning "big wall."
The boy's mother was too poor to feed him so she gave
him to a rich neighbor named Bogan as a farm hand. Dae-seong
worked so hard that his master was moved and gave him
a small piece of a rice paddy. About this time , a virtuous
monk named Jeomgae from Heungnyongsa temple, visited
Bogan and asked for a donation for a big ceremony at
his temple. As Bogan handed him fifty rolls of hemp
cloth, the monk bowed in appreciation and said that
the Buddha would repay his generosity by blessing him
ten thousand times the worth of his donation.
Dae-seong overheard this and ran home and told his mother,
"Now we are poor, and if we do not give something
to the temple, we will be poorer in our next lives.
Why don't we give our little rice field for the ceremony
so that we may have a great reward in our afterlives?"
His mother readily consented and donated their rice
field to the temple.
Dae-seong died a few months later. On the night of his
death, a voice from heaven was heard above the house
of Prime Minister Kim Mun-ryang. The voice said that
Dae-seong, a good boy from Moryang-ri, would be born
to Kim's family. Kim's wife conceived at the time the
heavenly voice was heard and gave birth to a boy. The
child kept his left hand tightly clenched for seven
day after his birth. When he opened his fist at last,
they found the two characters for Dae-seong written
in gold on his palm. They gave him his old name and
invited his mother of his previous life to take care
of him.
Dae-seong grew up into a strong man who loved hunting.
One day he climbed Mt.Tohamsan and there he killed a
big bear. As he was sleeping in a village at the foot
of the mountain that night, the bear's ghost appeared
in his dream and threatened to kill and eat him unless
he built a temple for him. Dae-seong built a temple
on the spot where he killed the bear and named it Jangsusa,
meaning the Temple of Long Life. From that time he gave
up hunting.
Dae-seong was moved by the heavenly grace. He built
the beautiful Bulguksa in memory of his parents of the
present life and the wonderful cave temple of Seokguram
for his parents of the previous life. He invited the
two distinguished monks Sillim and Byohun to supervise
these temples. He had his fathers and mothers represented
among the icons at these temples in gratitude for bringing
him up as a useful man.
After the great stone Buddha for Seokguram was finished,
Dae-seong was working on a large piece of stone for
the ceiling of the main hall when it suddenly broke
into three pieces. He wept bitterly over this and fell
into sleep. During the night, gods descended from heaven
and restored the stone to its original condition. Dae-seong
awoke with joy and climbed the southern peak of Mt.Tohamsan,
where he burned incense and worshiped the deities. People
called the place Hyangnyong, or Incense peak, thereafter.
The erudite monk historian lryeon(1206-1289) had the
wondrous skill of interweaving legend and fact in his
book which serves as an invaluable source of information
for students of early Korean history. While most readers
of his book today would find it difficult to believe
in the reincarnation of Kim Dae-seong, visitors to Seokguram
can see crack dividing the round capstone on the main
rotunda's domed ceiling clearly into three pieces. South
of the temple, there also exists a peak called Hyangnyong.
Another important history book, Samguk Sagi(History
of the Three Kingdoms), compiled by Kim Bu-sik in 1145,
identifies the founder of Bulguksa and Seokguram as
Kim Dae-seong who served as prime minister in 745-750
under King Gyeongdeok. He was the son of Kim Mun-ryang
who was also prime minister in 706-711 under King Seongdeok,
according to the oldest extant book on Korean history.
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| The Unsolved Questions of Preservation |
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Seokguram has had its share of turmoil in Korea's history
over the centuries. It lost much of its religious and
artistic splendor during the Joseon period (1392-1910)
when its Confucianoriented rulers suppressed Buddhism.
The remote mountain grotto was left seriously damaged
toward the turn of the century. It underwent repair
three times earlier this century under the japanese
colonial government.
The first round of repairs was carried out from 1913
to 1915. Without sufficient study of its structure,
the cave was almost completely dismantled and reassembled
and a fatal mistake was committed in the process. The
entire structure was encase with cement about two meters
thick, which resulted in water leaks and erosion of
the sculptures because the cave could no longer "breathe."
Seokguram went through considerable "torture"
in the name of preservation in the following decades.
In 1917, drainage pipes were buried above the dome to
channel rainwater out of the cave. As the leaks continued
in spite of the pipes, however, another round of repair
was conducted in 1920 to 1923. Waterproof asphalt was
applied to the surface of the concrete mass this time.
But water continued to leak and dew formed, and in 1927
the Japanese government-general eventually employed
the unthinkable method of spraying hot stem on the granite
surface to get rid of moss.
As the preservation of Seokguram continued to pose serious
problems with high humidity inside the shrine, the government
of the late President Park Jeong-hui instructed an in-depth
investigation of its structure to be carried out in
the early 1960s. Extensive renovation was undertaken
based on the study from 1962 to 1964. The problem of
temperature and humidity control was resolved to a remarkable
extent by using mechanical systems.
Nevertheless, the wooden superstructure built over the
antechamber remains a mind-boggling question for many
who believe Seokguram originally did not have such a
structure blocking the magnificent sunrise over the
East Sea from the view of Seokgamoni, aside from cutting
off the air flow into the cave. A glass wall keeping
the visitors from the main chamber is another point
of debate regarding the contradiction concepts of the
preservation of the shrine and its availability for
religious worship and aesthetic appreciation.
Two statues in the niches of the wall of the main chamber
and a miniature marble pagoda which is believed to have
stood in front of the Eleven-faced Avalokitesvara at
the back of the Buddha image remain missing. They disappeared
in the early years of Japanese occupation.
geographically removed from China by Goguryeo to the
north and Baekje to the west, Silla was the last of
the three ancient Korean Kingdoms to accept Buddhism.
But as soon as King Beopheung recognized it as the state
religion in 528, it spread quickly through out the country,
The 13th century historian monk, lryeon, wrote that,
by the mid-sixth century in Gyeongju and its vicinity,
"the golden roofs of temples glittered against
the sky like the Milky Way and lotus-crowned pagodas
stood in unending lines like flights of wild geese."
All these temples vanished in the turbulent course of
history, but the description vividly conveys how enthusiastically
the early Buddhists erected temples and pagodas around
the capital of their thriving kingdom. Today, Bulguksa
offers a glimpse of the splendor of Silla's state temples,
although all of its present wooden shrines are in the
much later Joseon style and much of its antique flavor
was lost in massive rehabilitation work carried out
in the 1970s.
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