
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE
- 1 Introduction: Reconstructing a Journey
- 2 From Rajadharma (the King's “Whole Duty”) to Dharmaraja (the “Righteous Ruler”)
- 3 The Brahmanical Theory of Society and Kingship
- 4 The Early Buddhist Conception of World Process, Dharma, and Kingship
- 5 Asoka Maurya: The Paradigm
- 6 Thai Kingship and Polity in Historical Perspective
- 7 The Galactic Polity
- 8 The Kingdom of Ayutthaya: Design and Process
- 9 Asokan and Sinhalese Traditions Concerning the Purification of the Sangha
- 10 The Sangha and the Polity: From Ayutthaya to Bangkok
- 11 The Nineteenth-Century Achievements of Religion and Sangha
- 12 The Sangha Acts of 1902, 1941, and 1963
- PART TWO
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - The Galactic Polity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE
- 1 Introduction: Reconstructing a Journey
- 2 From Rajadharma (the King's “Whole Duty”) to Dharmaraja (the “Righteous Ruler”)
- 3 The Brahmanical Theory of Society and Kingship
- 4 The Early Buddhist Conception of World Process, Dharma, and Kingship
- 5 Asoka Maurya: The Paradigm
- 6 Thai Kingship and Polity in Historical Perspective
- 7 The Galactic Polity
- 8 The Kingdom of Ayutthaya: Design and Process
- 9 Asokan and Sinhalese Traditions Concerning the Purification of the Sangha
- 10 The Sangha and the Polity: From Ayutthaya to Bangkok
- 11 The Nineteenth-Century Achievements of Religion and Sangha
- 12 The Sangha Acts of 1902, 1941, and 1963
- PART TWO
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In this chapter we have to make the transition from the rhetoric of grand religio-politico-moral conceptions of kingship to their implementation and and realization in historical circumstances. But this transition is best made through an intervening term that mediates and unites theory and practice, namely, certain cosmological cum topographical models of the polity that were employed as blueprints of political form.
Cosmological Topography
It is the concept of mandala that prompted me to coin the label “galactic polity.” According to a common Indo-Tibetan tradition, mandala is composed of two elements – a core (manda) and a container or enclosing element (-la). A frequent manifestation of mandala is in the form of designs and diagrams painted on textiles or drawn with powdered colors. Again at quite different levels of symbolization and arrangement great architectural monuments like Borobudur, Bayon and Angkor Wat have been called mandala (Figures 7.4a and 7.4b); the human body has been likened to a mandala; and cosmological schemes of various sorts in both tantric Hinduism and Buddhism have been referred to as mandala (e.g., Vajravarman's elucidation of “the receptacle mandala”). Most interestingly, Kautilya in his Arthashastra also used mandala to discuss the spatial configuration of friendly and enemy states from the point of view of a particular kingdom; that is, mandala as a geopolitical concept. All these examples share the basic format of a central image and surrounding entities, the simplest being quinary grouping.
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- Information
- World Conqueror and World RenouncerA Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand against a Historical Background, pp. 102 - 131Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1976
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