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Material Objects Related to Body and Health

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Buddhist monks played an important role in the use and spread of chair, ... Tea drinking became fashionable among literati officials in the south during the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Material Objects Related to Body and Health


1
Material Objects Related to Body and Health
  • Objects having only tenuous connection with
    Buddhism, but have much bearing on monks
  • Chair, sugar, and tea in China
  • Buddhist monks played an important role in the
    use and spread of chair, sugar, and tea in China.

2
Sitting and Chairs before Buddhism
  • Before the mid-Tang (8th century), people sat on
    mats spread on the ground or on bed
  • Preferred method of sitting was kneeling
  • On casual occasions, one could sit cross-legged

3
Sitting, eating, vessels, and furniture
  • Sitting with food placed on mats
  • Length, height, and size of vessels were
    generally larger
  • Sitting with food placed on low tables
  • Smaller bowls, plates, and cups were used
  • Use of chair caused the changes of other things
    such as windows, screens, ceiling heights,
    clothing, gestures, ways of interacting etc.

4
Monks and Chairs
  • Beginning the 6th century or earlier, monks sat
    on chairs, often referred to as corded-chairs
  • Sitting on chairs cross-legged was form of
    seated-meditation
  • It was to avoid the distraction caused by
    crawlers such as poisonous snakes, spiders,
    insects etc

5
  • chairs spread from monasteries to living rooms,
    particularly in late Tang and Song households

6
Monks and Sugar in China
  • Evidence indicates that monks were probably the
    first persons who demonstrated sophisticated
    knowledge of sugar refining
  • Sugar frost (known in the West as sugar candy,
    coffee crystals, or rock candy) was invented by a
    monk

7
Chairs made for footbinding
8
Sugar-production in monasteries
  • Monasteries often possessed large fields and
    mills, making it possible to
  • Cultivate sugarcane
  • Extract juice from the cane
  • Why did monks pay attention to sugar
    manufacturing?
  • Probably because of their life style they had to
    follow the rule of eating two meals a day before
    noon
  • Sugarcane juice helped keep their energy

9
Sweeteners and Sugar
  • Chinese used maltose and honey as sweeteners in
    the pre-Tang period
  • Monks first acquired the knowledge of
    sugar-making and were dispatched by Tang court to
    Indian monastery to learn the technique
  • The steady stream of monks traveling between
    China and India accounted for the transfer of the
    sugar-making technology

10
Beginning of Tea Manufacturing
  • Scholars generally agree that tea manufacture
    (cultivation and using their leaves) originated
    in China.
  • Tea cultivation and drinking throughout the world
    can for the most part be traced to China
  • Even pronunciations of the words for tea in all
    modern languages derive ultimately from Chinese
  • The modern Chinese word of tea, however, did not
    become the standard word for the plant until the
    eighth century

11
Tea Drinking in China
  • Tea drinking became fashionable among literati
    officials in the south during the 3rd to the 6th
    centuries
  • It became common after the 7th century (Tang
    dynasty), and popular in the 10th century

12
  • Tea drinking spread widely to major cities of
    China
  • State levied tax on tea, indicating the thriving
    trade in tea leaves
  • Poets composed verses praising merits of tea,
    creating a new genre of literaturetea poetry

Tea tools unearthed at the Famen Temple, Tang
Dynasty
13
Buddhism Helped Spread Tea
  • The first Chinese author of tea, Lu Yu (b. 733),
    was raised by a monk and maintained close
    contacts with monks throughout his life

14
  • Tea in monasteries popular because of
  • its medicinal properties
  • its value as a stimulant,
  • Used as an aid in staying alert during meditation
  • Monasteries offered tea to visiting literati
    officials

15
Monks, Tea, and Ruling Elite
  • Since the Tang, Tea and poems have constituted
    gift-exchange between monks and literati
  • Emperors rewarded monks who served the throne
    with gifts of teas

16
  • By the end of the eighth century, tea attained
    the status of incense and paper in scholar-monks
    workday
  • Monks in later periods were credited with
    inventing some famous tea and teapots

17
Tea and Asian Culture
  • In the end of 12th century, Japanese Zen monk,
    Myoan Eisai learned methods of growing and
    brewing tea in China,
  • He promoted tea drinking in Japan
  • Kissa yojoki ( Drinking Tea for Health or
    Drink tea and prolong life)
  • Tea is most popular beverage in Asian countries

18
Other Material Objects
  • Those symbolizing the dignity and authority of
    king, general
  • Rectangular dharma banner (dhavaja),
  • Long and strip-shape banner
  • Panoply

19
  • Those used in rituals
  • Incense, incense plate, incense burner, incense
    table
  • Lamp
  • Candle
  • Wood-fish, bell, drum, chime, cymbal
  • Those of multiple functions
  • Fly whisk
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