Pagoda

views updated Jun 27 2018

Pagoda (poss. from dāgaba, ‘relic-container’, via Portuguese). Buddhist structure, developed from the Indian stūpa, and often a name for a stūpa. Its many variations contain characteristic features in common: they are usually raised and narrow structures, with four or eight sides, with several levels and prominent eaves. On the top is a post with many rings encircling it. Pagodas, like stūpas, contain relics (śarīra) of a/the Buddha, or of a famous teacher/master. They express the Buddhist cosmos in symbolic form. A pagoda is thus a maṇḍala in its own right.

In the history of Buddhist architecture, the placing of the pagoda is the issue which then dominates the overall layout and design of Buddhist temple areas and monasteries. The geographical solutions to the problem are diverse, but always provide a clue to the religious priorities of the community and age involved.

pagoda

views updated May 23 2018

pagoda. European term for a tall structure, often polygonal on plan, of several separately roofed stories marked by upturned eaves, fretwork brackets, and, often, ornaments resembling bells (campanulae) suspended from the eaves. Based on Chinese templetowers, pagodas were used as garden-buildings in the C18 Chinoiserie manner (e.g. Chambers's Pagoda at Kew Gardens, London).

Bibliography

Conner (1979);
Honour (1961);
Impey (1977);
Lampugnani (ed.)& Dinsmoor (1986);
Jane Turner (1996)

pagoda

views updated May 29 2018

pagoda Eastern temple in the form of a multi-storeyed, tapering tower. The basic design is either square or polygonal, and each storey is a smaller replica of the one beneath. The storeys often have wide, overhanging roofs, and the buildings are usually made of wood, brick, or stone. Pagodas originated in India and spread with the diffusion of Buddhism to China, Korea, and Japan.

pagoda

views updated May 29 2018

pa·go·da / pəˈgōdə/ • n. a Hindu or Buddhist temple or sacred building, typically a many-tiered tower, in India and the Far East. ∎  an ornamental imitation of this.

pagoda

pagoda

views updated May 21 2018

pagoda a Hindu or Buddhist temple or sacred building, typically a many-tiered tower, in India and the Far East. Recorded from the late 16th century, the word comes from Portuguese pagode, perhaps based on Persian butkada ‘temple of idols’, influenced by Prakrit bhagodī ‘divine’.
pagoda-tree a mythical tree humorously supposed to produce pagodas, in this sense gold or silver coins formerly current in southern India; the expression shake the pagoda-tree meant to make a fortune in India under the East India Company.

pagoda

views updated May 21 2018

pagoda idol temple; idol; coin of S. India (from the figure thereon). XVII (pagod(e) XVI). — Pg. pagode, prob. ult. — Pers. butkada idol temple, f. but idol + kada habitation.