George Cedes and K. Ananda Coomaraswamy made astute observations on the cult of defied royalty in South Asia for the first time. The cult of devaraja or God King was the Cambodian state religion, while it may have originated in Java under the great Shrivijaya Empire at a time when it exercised some control over Cambodia and Siam. Of the thirteen temples attributed to the Khmer Kings in Cambodia six were certainly dedicated, between the ninth and eleventh centuries, to the royal linga. A seventh, Angkor Wat, became the mausoleum of its founder Suryavarman it. And, finally, Bayon, built at the end of the twelfth century was installed with the image of Jayabuddha, named after Jayavarman VII. The focus of the new cult instituted by Jayavarman it was a deity known in Khmer language as ‘the master of the world who is the king’, the equivalent in Sanskrit being devaraja. The Cambodian version in similar to the Hindu cult of the world Ruler, the Chakravartin. In Asia the king did became god, and all power, religious and secular, was centred in him. The task of tracing the Devaraja Cult is simplified in a series of Temple Mountains where the consecrated image is associated by its name with the kingly founder, thus revealing ‘several devaraja’ in a flourishing cult. In the cult, a unique image created in a particular era was passed on to the successor. The hypothesis of a single devaraja venerated as a deity throughout the centuries ought to raise some difficulties. The deveraja cult in India as elsewhere in Asia is unique when considered as a philosophical and religious conception that coincides with the veneration of ancestors and guardians of the soil. I seems that the originality of the devaraja cult lay in the integration of the personal cult of the king into a system in which the deification of the eternal principle of royalty was adopted to ensure stability, peace and prosperity. On 27th and 28th March, 2001 distinguished scholars gathered in the National Museum, New Delhi, to discuss the influences of the royal cult in Asian art and architecture, which merits greater attention. The proceedings published in the volume. It is hoped, is a fitting tribute to Dr. Grace Mac Cann Morley, who encouraged advancement of knowledge in order to place the material culture of India in its historical and cultural context.
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God & King: The Devaraja Cult in South Asian Art and Architecture
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR Arputha Rani Sengupta
Arputha Rani Sengupta is Associate Professor in History of Art at the National Museum Institute, Deemed University in New Delhi. She has lectured widely and published extensively her writings on diverse aspects of art in journals and contributed to leading publications, including the IGNCA. Her book on Art of Terracotta focuses on Cult and Cultural Synthesis in India. She investigates it further in her forthcoming book on the Buddhist Jewellery. Sengupta was Assistant Professor in History of Fine Arts in Stella Maris College at Chennai and at Lasbrey Teachers' College at Imo State in Nigeria. She specializes in cross cultural currents and globalisation during the early Buddhist period in India. She is currently writing on the Symbols and Substitutes in the Early Buddhist Art of India under ICHR grant. She has coordinated several symposiums on art in NMI and is editor of God and King: Devaraja Cult. She has studied Art History in the University of Madras, Chennai, Rabindra Bharati University, Kolkata and University of Washington, Seattle. A versatile practicing artist, she has exhibited extensively and has received several awards for her paintings.
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Bibliographic information
Title
God & King: The Devaraja Cult in South Asian Art and Architecture
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8189233262
Length
xxiv+154p., Figures; Plates; Bibliography; 25cm.
Subjects
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