Journal of the Siam Society; 20


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English Pages 326 [329] Year 1926

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Table of contents :
JSS_020_1a_Front
JSS_020_1b_Coedes_SiameseVotiveTablets
JSS_020_1c_Wood_FernaoMendezPintoInSiam
JSS_020_1d_Seidenfaden_KhaTongLuang
JSS_020_1e_BurnayCoedes_NotesDEtymologieTai
JSS_020_1f_ReviewOfBooks
JSS_020_1g_NotesOfQuarterMeetingsAccounts
JSS_020_1h_AdditionsToLibrary
JSS_020_2a_Front
JSS_020_2b_PrinceDamrong_IntroductionOfWesternCultureInSiam
JSS_020_2c_Bidyalankarana_PastimeOfRhymeMakingInSiam
JSS_020_2d_Lingat_VieReligieuseDuRoiMongkut
JSS_020_2e_Andersen_JourneyThroughUnfrequentedPartOfAyudhyaDistrict
JSS_020_2f_BourkeBorrowes_FurtherNoteOnPhiTongLuang
JSS_020_2g_PhraWinitWanadorn_PhiTawngLuangofNamWaDistrictNan
JSS_020_2h_ReviewOfBooks
JSS_020_2i_NotesOfQuarter
JSS_020_2j_AdditionsToLibrary
JSS_020_3a_Front
JSS_020_3b_PhyaIndraMontri_MannersAndCustomsOfChinesePeople
JSS_020_3c_Blankwaardt_RelationsBetweenHollandAndSiam
JSS_020_3d_EmblemOfSiamSociety
JSS_020_3e_Notes
JSS_020_3f_AdditionsToLibrary
JSS_020_3g_KernInstituteLeiden
JSS_020_3h_ListOfMembers
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Journal of the Siam Society; 20

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TilE

JOURNAL t

SIAM

W Tlll:

SOCIETY

VoLtr:\fB

:XX

( PAH'l' 1)

BANGKOK 1926 . .I :-;,"ll~"• 1 tn ~f m nlwl'H nf tl w f-lo duty

.lutW 1\l:W.

...

...

TeR, 7.00

THE SIAJ\1\ SOCIETY (FOUNDED 1904) Fur

tl~t• lll\'J»8•,J£amt,a,. almost imagine that tlu~ peoph~ who frntn caves and stupas Ho ma:ny tlmuR&ndH of ganda for the remote futurt:t, the thousanclR of years herH~t~. It almost, m~tnnR tion of these pious peoplt.~ that \Vlu:m, in Religion ho.d paaseld into oblivion, these holy ta.blE}ta hE~arirlg the £orn1ula enunc}iating his dootri.ru'f might K.l'(lUsr~ mindS Ot thE} di&COV(~t'~}l•S &tld th\l.S It~~ tetiaecl and in l)&rll described by Ootnmatld&nt L. I.ajrlC}Uiet·e (9) atld Mr. W. A. Grahatn (a). These which are aJJ of unba.kE;d, or rnerely sundried, clay, ,·u~N'"''''"~"'~~"1

•w..&o;!!\•• A....

(1) lA GMntl Mnd4 tu S'rlllvMfll. (loo. cit, p. 19, note 2). (2) Bti!J. IU Zt~ DOmm,, tVI'M. & 1/l'flll.Mihim, 19l2t p. 188. (8) Po~Wry in SiAm (J~ of ehe Bi«tm Society, Vol. XVI, pa.rt

It pp. 7..8).

(

12

)

come from Wat Ha·n and Khao Khao in the province of Trang; from Tham Khao Khrom near Jaiya; and from Khao Ok Dc1lu and Tham Guha Svarga at Badalung. Next to the Buddha,, the personage most frequently represented on the impressionR is the Bodhisattva Avalokites'vara. As elsewhere, the 'Profession' appears upon them, but in Sanskrit and not in Pali, from which circumstances it is permissible to conclude that the pilgrims who 1nade and disseminated these tablets professed the doctrines of the Mahayana or Grand Vehicle. Some of the Brah Bimb of the Malay Peninsula recall the style of Indo-Javanese sculpture, which once a matter for surprise, i~ now no longer so since it has been demonstrated how the influence of the Buddhist kingdom of S'rivijaya (Palembang in Sumatra) extended to the shores of the Peninsula, even to the north of Jaiya, between the seventh and twelfth centuries A. D (1). The beautiful statues of Bodhisattvas discovered at Jaiya (2) belong to the highly developed artistic feeling of that kingdom, and to it are also in all probability due many o£ the Bra}). Eimb now in question. Auother fact tending towards the establishment of the relationship between these Erab Birnb and the kingdom of S'rivijaya, and the placing of their date at about the tenth century A.D., is the employment of Nagari characters, originating from Northern India, for inscribing the 'Profession.' It is known that during the eighth and ninth centuries A.D., a migration of which successive stages may be distinguished on the shores of Madras, in Java and in Cambodia, ,carried the alphabet of Northern India to countries which formerly used, and afterwards continued to use, a writing of a very different kind (3). 'rhe kingdmn of S'rivijaya was no stranger to the influence of this migratory wave, for the Sanskrit inscription of Kalasan in Java (778 A.D.) which is in Nagari, emanates from the

(I) G. (2) ~t

\

0CEDES, Le Royaun1;e de (Jrivijc6ya (B.E.F.E.O., I . G. O(EDEs, Bronzes Khmers (Ars Asiatica, V, Pl.

(3) BARTH and BERGAIGNE, d'UJ Cambodve, :p. 348 and following.

XVIII, vi.).

XLVIII). Inscriptions sanskrites de Champa

(

13

)

S'ailendra Dynasty, in other words, from the Palembang kingdom(l). This Nagari alphabet which we have just seen to have been used in J~.tva late in the eighth century A.D., was also in use in Cambodia at the end of the ninth. Furthermore votive tablets with. Sanskrit inscriptions in Nagari, that have been found in :Burma, but of which unfortunately I have not seen reproductions, date, according to M. C. Duroiselle, from the tenth or eleventh century A.D.(2), Hence it appears reasonable to attribute the :Brab. Bimb of the Malay Peninsula to about the ten"th century A.D. TYPE III.-The costume and the general aspect of the individuals represented on the Bral;t :Bimb of the third group leave no doubt as to their relationship with the sculptures of ancient Cambodia. In fact the theme most frequently employed in these (Plate X, right and the moulds in Plate I) is just that which is most common also in Khmer statuary and epigraphy. rrhis theme is a Triad comprising an Individual seated in meditation upon a ' Naga,' a four-armed God, and a Woman. I have attempted to show in my Study of Khmer Bronzes (3), that this Triad represents the Buddha in His metaphysical, not His human, manifestation; the Bodhisattva Avalokites'vara; and Prajnaparamita or 'The Perfection of Wisdom', this last a material presentation of the transcendent Wisdom of the Buddhas. rrhis identification, for the details of which I venture to refer to the above mentioned study, is base~ upon the presence of certain indicative symbols in the hands of .the two acolytes of the Buddha, and of a small image of the Buddha in meditation fixed upon their hair-knots. It is further supported by the fact that this Triad is invoked in the exordium of many Buddhist inscriptions of ancient Cambodia. The abundance of Erab. .Bimb on which this Triad figures is sufficient to prove to us that it was an object of popular reverence.

(1) N. J. KROM, Sumatraansche periode der Jav_aansche Geschiedenis (Transl. in B. E. F. E.-0., XIX, v, pp. 129 and 130). (2) Ann. Rep. of the Arch. 8urv. of Burma, 1912-13, p. 17. (3)

.Ars .Asiatica, vol. V, 1923.

(

14

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TYPE IV-'rho group c>f !rab PHmh of tJw Huklu~lay•t t~pooh (from mid .. twolfth t£> mid-fourtutHlt.h (~tmturit•M A. n.) i~ t·t~tnu,rka,ble for the oxtro.ordiruJ.ry prof:uHion of tht' :8uddha. wa.lkinotablets. bl a.n attitudt~ tlu1.t is bv nu rnp, ~ight ). Found at Wat RaJfg, Ba'dalu~g.-H: 0 m. 09

~Bight, ::8elow:

A.bles,dyi .pliblis;Ja,~d,"by,V,o:pet~sPh,r Pl. id., f (above) falsely ascribed to Raj~~~~ri-. ~~i~-~ .·Ill)~~., £."\tbel.~~~· ;.(.,1;)

,sMP:J;,il:)e4': to

.

( Plate III.

18

)

'ruE O&JUT MIRAOI..E n!l'

Lefl: Origin unknuwn(O. At, Uu' thu Y11 clhct/m/rrt,(t, inHCription in Chinoae lettorH roughly

hl,hlt~t

•"""M,}l,n,nBrn

appt\&nl Indi.tut or Indo.. before

baking.-H : 0 xn. 143.

Right:

From Itajaptlri.

tion in letters e.irnilar to but in relief and CJLrofuHy uxt:~r&t(4).-H : 0 rn. 10. Oentre: 'rhe Buddha., lvith yo~,·~·.,... ,.. supported by three elepluttlt•R of tc)uohing tlu~ Earth. l3uddhtMJ. it1 seated

throne attitude

tlu:~ mntt pas ancien, on dom1erait du m~me coup de lu, cmu;iHtl.t.nce a l'hypothElHO quo ~b't.l "cont" repose sur sb't.l "enfilor, fttil'll tulll ligature". A notre connaisHttncL~, 011 no tnm vo de cnrrcHptmchtntH do ~tl't.l ttvt!C h} ~::~ens de "cent" qn'en hwtien: h6i5, en ta'i noir: lu1i ll et tm ta'i blanc: roi 4 , mais da.us co uernier clialecte Heu~wntent a;ueo le mot qui Rignijie "1:Jiast1'e"(2), ce qui est capita.l au point de vuu P.emantiqne. Amours, on tt un mot t·aclica.lement different, mais comrnun a tons les dialectes, et dont leH formes, la ot't nous connaissonH loR Hystemes toniqueH, concordent pour le ton, Hoit: Ahom : pii:l.:,-Shan: ]Jd/.:1,-Khamti : 1.Jri!o 1 (le ton est donne dana le dictionnn.iro shan de Cnshiug, nmiH uous no counaissonH que tt.·es imparf:o,itemont leA tons khamti),-'l'a1 blanc: J)(Zli:l,-rl'ho: piilcl,NU.ng: palcl,-Dioi: prZl, avce la chute de la gntturale finale apres une longue, phenomena bien connu on dioi(B). rJ:outes ces formes

"

(1) :Pour l11 not~~otion des tons, nons adOJ)tons dans cos twtes le systcme t'ropoao et suivi par M. ll . .M:ASl'l "ligature de cent Hapeques" 11 SiamoiH : * W'Um.l:: "arge11t He comptrutt p!Ll' lig!'Lture (do cent)" > u~::: "uno piece do cet ltrgcnt, nne sapequu." lVIn.llwurouHcment, il ne faut pas He dissimulcr qu'un emprunt ue pent paH He prouvcr a Hi bon compte. Il t!~Udl'l1it conna1Lre Je:; nmlin. et leur histoire mieux que nons nc leH commiHsons actuellemont. :MaiH nom.; avons la dn moiuH un exemple de plus d'une relation posHihlo entm le nom clu nomhre "cent" ot colui de h "ligature (de pieceR do monnaie percees)". Pour demontrer d'une faticl uo

~~~

Nynt•txiquo do

"'l:: et do J1 •

ll.): pins lo vm·ho ILIICjlHll

il

e11t.

prc'pmu'• Hont t

c•troitoment unis ot. fot·mcmt 1,!1'0\lpn. An ecmtmiro, photH)tiqntmwnt, ~1 RO rn.ttlttllto ll CO qni lt1 prtit~i·clt•. ])n p]w; iJ llllt ::mivi cl'nuo pa11Hil ot; porto \ttl nccent d'intensit•'· Ntmt~ 1wous In mt plnhwm!mu 1lt1 flh, PariH, for Il'mncc. ·4. MnHHl'H. Kully ttud WnJHh of Ningu.pure, for tho StraitK SettlmmmtK and Federo.ted Mrdtty StttteH. Nugotitttions are tLlHo being earriocl un for the appointment of tLll tLgent in Inr1itt. In SitLm itHelf, eopiuH of ttll tho Sociuty'~:~ pnblieo.tionK ean 1m ohtn,ined ttt the Orieutrtl StoreK Ltd., Bangkok, m· upon ttpplication to tho Bangkok ~riruoK PreHH Ltd., tLH wull 1111, of conrl:le, ttt the room:-; of tho Socioty. 8'l'A'I'EMgN't'

mr

AccouNT.

Het:oiptH on tlw wholu woru eon:-;id.eJ:ttl>ly in n.dvance of thmm for 1924, and t1H tho t.lXp