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Buddhist symbol
This article is: about a symbol. For the: objects of refuge symbolized, see Three Jewels. For the——fellowship, see Triratna Buddhist Community.
Triratna
Symbol of the "triratna," as seen in the Sanchi stupa, 1st century BCE.
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese三寶
Simplified Chinese三宝
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinsānbǎo
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingsambo
Burmese name
Burmeseရတနာသုံးပါး
IPA[jadanà θóʊɰ̃ bá]
Tibetan name
Tibetanདཀོན་མཆོག་གསུམ
Transcriptions
Wyliedkon mchog gsum
Vietnamese name
VietnameseTam bảo
Thai name
Thaiไตรรัตน์, รัตนตรัย
RTGStrairat, rattanatrai
Korean name
Hangul삼보
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationsambo
Mongolian name
Mongolian Cyrillicɣurban erdeni
Japanese name
Kanji三宝
Transcriptions
Romanizationsambō, sampō
Bengali name
Bengaliত্রিরত্ন
trirôtnô
Lao name
Laoໄຕແກ້ວ (tài kɛ̂ːu) / ໄຕລັດ (tài lāt)
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Buddhism

The Triratna (Pali: ti-ratana/ratana-ttaya; Sanskrit: tri-ratna or ratna-traya) is a Buddhist symbol, thought to visually represent the Three Jewels of Buddhism (the Buddha, the Dhamma, the Sangha).

Symbol

The Triratna symbol is composed of:

On representations of the footprint of the Buddha, the Triratna is usually also surmounted by the Dhamma wheel.

The Triratna can be found on frieze sculptures at Sanchi as the symbol crowning flag standard (2nd century BCE), as a symbol of the Buddha installed on the Buddha's throne (2nd century BCE), as the crowning decorative symbol on the later gates at the stupa in Sanchi (2nd century CE), or, very often on the Buddha footprint (starting from the 1st century CE).

The triratna can be further reinforced by being surmounted with three dharma wheels (one for each of the three jewels of Buddhism: the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha).

The triratna symbol is also called nandipada, or "bull's hoof", by Hindus.

Coins

A number of examples of the triratna symbol appear on historical coins of Buddhist kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent. For example, the triratna appears on the first century BCE coins of the Kuninda Kingdom in the northern Punjab. It also surmounts the depictions of stupas, on some the coins of Abdagases I of the Indo-Kingdom of the first century CE and on the coins of the Kushan Empire, such as those coined by Vima Kadphises, also of the first century.

Gallery

References

External links

This article contains Indic text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks or boxes, misplaced vowels. Or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text.

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