Stūpas
known as the Hyakuman
Tō
From Japan
Nara period, AD
764 or soon after
A million prayers of
thanks
In an act of Buddhist piety, the Japanese
Empress Shōtoku (reigned AD 764-770) had a million wooden
stūpas like this made.
They were to contain prayers that gave thanks for a victory over
dissidents in the rebellion of Emi-no-Oshikatsu in AD 764. 100,00
of the stūpas were given
to each of the ten great monasteries in the Kansai region. Many
survive in the Hōryū-ji
Temple.
The prayer strips,
printed with wood and copper plates, are the earliest printed
matter surviving from Japan. The British Library have examples of
four different types.
The
centring mark and lathe-marks are clearly visible on the base of
each stūpa. Recently
researchers in Japan have been examining the signatures of the
makers, and it seems that only a small number of woodworkers was
involved.
L. Smith, V. Harris and T. Clark, Japanese art: masterpieces in (London, The British Museum Press, 1990)