Page 463 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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DISCOVERIES           The discovery of the  reliquary deposit  beneath  the  ruins of a brick pagoda  at  Fufeng, about
                             a hundred  and  ten  kilometers west of Xi'an, is a rare instance  of a perfect match  between  the
       FROM  THE  FAMEN      archaeological  data  and  historical events. The Tang scholar  Han  Yu's diatribe  of 819 protesting
                             the  emperor's  receiving the  relics of the  Buddha in his own palace and  imploring His Majesty
       MONASTERY             to cast  out  such filthy remains so that  the  people  might never again be misled by them, is one
                                                                     1
                             of the  great pieces of Chinese  prose writing.  It was also an important  milestone  in the  events
       AT  FUFENG  AND       leading to the  great  Buddhist persecutions  of 842-845 CE, in which thousands  of Buddhist
                             monasteries  were razed and  hundreds  of thousands  of monks and  nuns  forced to return  to lay

       THE  QINGSHAN         life. The  relics of which Han  Yu complained came from  the  Chongzhensi, renamed  the Famensi,
                             or Monastery of the  Gate  of the  Law, in 1003 under  the  Song  dynasty (960-1279 CE). 2  Founded
       MONASTERY    AT       in 555 under  the  Western Wei dynasty (535-557 CE), the  Famen Monastery rose to extraordi-
                             nary prominence  under the  Tang dynasty (618-907 CE); it was closely  associated  with no  fewer
       LINTONG,              than  seven Tang emperors, including the  notorious  Empress Wu Zetian  (r. 684-705).
                                  In August 1981, after  a period  of heavy rainfall,  the  octagonal,  brick pagoda  of  thirteen
       SHAANXI               stories, which had  endured  for 372 years since  its construction  in 1609, collapsed  in ruins. After
                             the  remains had  been  made safe  in July 1985, the  provincial government decided  to build a
       PROVINCE               replacement, and  an archaeological team  from  Shaanxi province, Fufeng county, and  Baoji city
                             was constituted  to proceed  with an excavation prior to rebuilding. The excavation proper  began
                             on 3 April  1987. Clearing of the  foundations revealed not  only the  circular trench  in which  the
                             brick pagoda  had  stood  but  also the  larger, square foundations of an earlier wooden  pagoda
                              and  steps  leading down to a level corridor  and three successive stone  chambers, the  innermost
                              of which lay beneath  the  core  of the  foundations of both  pagodas.
                                  As the  focus of worship in early Buddhist monasteries, every pagoda  had  its  "foundation
                              deposit," sealed within a stone  casket or  small chamber in the  foundations, where it usually
                              lay undisturbed  until it became  necessary to rebuild the  pagoda  after  its destruction  by fire or
                              lightning, the  ravages of war or religious persecution.  Under such circumstances, the  contents
                              could  be  recovered  and incorporated  in a new deposit  beneath the  restored  or rebuilt  pagoda.
                              In recent  years, numerous foundation deposits  have been  recovered  in the  course  of excava-
                              tions  or repairs; they constitute among the  most valuable evidence  for many aspects of the
                              monasteries to which they belonged.  In the  present  case, the  relic, described  by Han Yu as

                              the  Buddha's "decayed and  rotten bones," was supposed  to be a fingerbone. As found in  the
                              eightfold  set  of caskets (cat.  164), it is a hollow cylinder as thick as a finger and  about  an  inch
                              and  a half long, with the  seven principal  stars  of the  Great  Bear, or Big Dipper, engraved  inside
                              it. Three  facsimiles  were also discovered in the  crypt, one  of them contained  in the jade  coffin
                              within the  crystal sarcophagus  (cat.  162).
                                  The reliquary deposit  appears to have been  specially constructed  to  allow repeated  access
                              from  outside.  During the  Tang dynasty, on no  fewer than  seven occasions  at approximately
                              thirty-year intervals, in  631, 660, 704, 760, 790, 819, and  873, the  relics were recovered  and



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