The Sixteen Arhats Arrive in the East China
From the collection of the Ruben Museum, mid-19th century.
Private Collection in the Late 18th Century
དགྲ་བཅོམ་གནས་བརྟན་བཅུ་དྲུག་མཆོག།
དགེ་བསྙེན་དྷརྨ་ཏཱ་དང་རྒྱལ་ཆེན་བཞི།
ཕོ་ཉ་འཕགས་པ་ཧྭ་ཤང་བཅས།
རླབས་ཕྲེང་བརྒལ་ཏེ་ཕ་རོལ་ཕྱིན།
གཙུག་ལག་རྒྱལ་པོས་ཕྱག་འཚལ་ལོ།
The sixteen Arhats, distinguished and supremeLay practitioners and the Four Heavenly Kings
Messengers, the venerable High Monk
All the holy beings crossing the ocean to the other shore
Humbly bow to the King of Scriptures
The first incarnation, the great Lin, Yexi Jiacuo
From the collection of the Rubin Museum, 19th century.
From the 9th century, held in the British Library.
“འཕགས་པ་ཉན་ཐོས་ཆེན་པོའི་དུས་ལྡན།
འཁོར་སྟོང་ཆིག་བརྒྱ། གོ་བཞི།”
"Glorious and noble Venerable Jvalamalini
With ten thousand attendants, residing in the fourth quadrant."
This dwelling corresponds to the description in the text written by the Kashmiri master.
Why did the Arhats go to the Eastern Land? Two explanations are provided in Tibetan scriptures. Scholars like Sangye Rabten(གྲགས་པ་ལེགས་གྲུབ་;1646-1708)and others believed that the Arhats went to the Han land to convert and save beings as the Eastern Land was a sinful and chaotic world(སྡིག་ཅན་གནས་). On the other hand, scholars like Yikyi Gyatso and Jiang Gongkangzhu Laitaiye(བློ་གྲོས་མཐའ་ཡས་;1813-1899)believed that the Arhats went to the Eastern Land joyfully in response to invitations from Eastern monarchs and Han monks. In this interpretation, the Eastern monarch refers to the King of Sutras in the Han land, who was believed to be Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty.
Although the motif of "Arhats arriving in the Eastern Land" appears repeatedly in scriptures, the systematic belief in the sixteen Arhats only began to take shape after 654 AD (the fifth year of Emperor Gaozong of the Tang Dynasty). It was in this year that Xuanzang translated the "Sutra on the Meritorious Deeds of the Great Arhat Nirvāṇa" into Chinese. Despite this, the imagination of the Eastern Land, Arhats, and the ocean coexisted in Tibetan culture, possibly related to the dissemination of the belief in Arhats in the region, where both Eastern and Western narratives were present.
"In the Land of the Arhats in the East"
In the mid-eighteenth century, Maureen Zarember wandered.
Author: Robert Linrot (1951- )
Published in 2004
The East transmission is related to images (such as murals in Sakya monastery), while the other two traditions directly influence the subsequent Tibetan "Arhat faith" and its inheritance. The Kadam tradition is preserved in the lineage of Narthang monastery, where each successive head lama is considered the incarnation of an Arhat. Subsequently, the Gelug, Sakya, and Kagyu schools refined the belief system regarding the Arhats ("Practice Rituals of Buddha and Sixteen Arhats"). The Kashmiri masters brought relics of the Buddha (or even some remains) to Tibet, making their religious texts on Arhats the most revered classics in Tibet and the basis for later iconography studies.
"Buddha and the Sixteen Arhats Group Painting: Han Dynasty Monks"
From the late 16th century, in the collection of the Rubin Museum.
At the end of the 18th century, a private collection.
Various strange beasts and supernatural beings in the ocean.