Art and Ritual Life
Site: | Saylor Academy |
Course: | ARTH101: Art Appreciation |
Book: | Art and Ritual Life |
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Date: | Thursday, 3 April 2025, 10:09 PM |
Introduction
Source: Peggy Blood and Pamela J. Sachant, Art and Ritual Life This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.
Exterior Ritual Spaces
The well-known site of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England, although not completely understood today, provides us with insight into the early evolution of a ritual location. (Figure 10.1) It was developed over the course of some 1,500 years (c. 3,000-1,600 BCE). The site's configuration has astronomical implications, with a design of a ritual offering or sacrifice table and portal placed in relationship to the sunrise at the summer solstice. (Figure 10.2) Its concentric rings were made of wooden posts, earthen ditches, and thirty megaliths, or large stones, each approximately 13 feet high, seven feet wide, and weighing more than 25 tons. In places where two megaliths support another horizontal stone, a dolmen or cromlech is formed. (Figure 10.3) Other parts of stone, wood, and earth were placed in particular spots for which the choice of location and use are now unclear.



How could Stonehenge have been built with prehistoric knowledge and technology? It is believed that the large stones were quarried from twenty-five to 150 miles away, floated, and log rolled to the final site and then placed by creating inclined dirt ramps. (Figure 10.4) Once the upright stones were placed, the spaces were filled with dirt, the capstones rolled into place, and all the dirt was removed. As is clear with these construction methods, it is important to recognize that prehistoric people did not lack the clever mental ability or tireless devotion.
Many sites across England and other parts of Europe show a kinship to it in their use of space and materials and their desire to engage with the cosmos. Stonehenge is the largest of approximately 1,000 stone circles on the British Isles. Their existence and the fact that these sites were used for such a long time gives us some insight into how our earliest known ancestors devised views of the universe and their place in it, as well as how they addressed such issues through artistic expression.
Human societies from widely separated times and locations have constructed strikingly similar forms of symbolic or physical enclosure or elevation of the sacred. The altar is the most simple and expedient means. An altar, found in religious settings and structures to this day, is a piece of liturgical (religious ritual) furniture possessing ancient symbolism primarily as the site of sacrifice, most often in the offering of animals ritually slain for the deity.
It is a short step to placing the altar on a raised platform to accentuate its status. For example, a heiau is a Hawaiian temple composed of a Polynesian-raised earthen or stone temple platform in an enclosed area that might also contain stone markers and cult images. Heiau was used for various reasons: to treat the sick, offer first fruits, control rain, and achieve success in war (for which human sacrifices were made). Heiau is found throughout the Pacific island. This print depicts the heiau at Waimea, on Kauai, one of the Hawaiian islands, as it existed before European occupation. (Figure 10.5) The print was created by artist John Webber (1751-1793, England), who accompanied British explorer Captain James Cook on this third Pacific expedition (1776-1779). Although many Hawaiian Heiau were deliberately destroyed at the official end of the Hawaiian religion in the nineteenth century, some have since been rebuilt and are now public attractions.

Olmec, Mayas, and Aztecs built large temple complexes dedicated to religious worship, which included animal and human sacrifice. One fine example of these large complexes is the Mayan temple at Chichen Itza. It is a four-sided pyramid with staircases of 91 steps on each side, all leading to a temple at the top. The number 91 is no accident: four times 91 equals 364, which, paired with one final step at the top, represents the number of days in the solar year. Quetzalcoatl appears in succeeding Central American religions.
In the Aztec culture, Quetzalcoatl was related to the gods of the wind, of the planet Venus, of the dawn, of merchants, and of arts, crafts, and knowledge. He was also the patron god of the Aztec priesthood, of learning and knowledge.
The gateway is another architectural method for creating or recognizing a ritual or sacred space. Ritual gateways are found more often in Asian religious settings, although any entrance could be considered a marker for a physical and spiritual transition.
Shinto is an ancient religion native to Japan. The main focus of Shinto is the veneration of the deeds and images of ancestors in home shrines. In public places, torii, or Shinto gateways, are often found marking the sites of important ancient events or framing beautiful views. The "floating gate," so named because when the tide is high, it is surrounded by water and appears to float, of the Itsukushima Shrine near Hiroshima, is a good example. (Figures 10.6 and 10.7) The entrance gate was erected in 1168; it has been destroyed, redesigned, and rebuilt several times.

The Sacred Interior
Sacred interior spaces offer advantages over exterior sites, such as platforms and gateways. In particular, they offer controlled access to the ritual space, for example, as we saw with complexes such as the Temple of Horus at Edfu and the Temple of Hephaestus in Athens, Greece, and they permit a new level of control over who is admitted. The nature of an interior space may also act as a metaphor for a personal encounter with the sacred within oneself.
We have noted that architectural forms have often been adopted and adapted according to how they serve the group or congregational needs. Many religious centers meet a variety of purposes and needs so they might include spaces or separate buildings for schools, meeting rooms, and any type of subsidiary accommodations. We will look, however, primarily at the basic distinctions among architectural forms that articulate and address the ritual and practical needs of the group.
It should be added that many practices are personal and individual and so may not require any sort of separate building; some may use a space within another building or a room or corner within the home. Also, many rituals have been conceived as addressing a natural setting, such as an open field, a sacred grove of trees, a grotto or cave, or a specific spring, lake, or seaside spot. (Figure 10.8)

Some of the basic features within many churches and temples reflect these notions. Although there are many exceptions, the layout of a structure most often relates to the four directions of the compass, and the sites of most sacred precincts address the rising and setting of the sun. Altars are usually placed in the east. Over time, some adaptations have been made to accommodate other considerations; for example, a church or temple might be situated near a sacred mountain or a place where a miraculous occurrence took place. With these ideas in mind, we will briefly survey a few important types and features.
Features and Forms
Innumerable symbolic features are associated with worship; a few are basic to identifying a building or site associated with a specific belief system. We quickly recognize and identify the distinctive implications of a steeple (church tower and spire) or a minaret, or the form of a stupa or pagoda, and we can sometimes discern how these and other expressions came into use and accrued significance. (Figures 10.9 and 10.10)
The Islamic minaret was developed as a tower associated with a mosque that was used primarily to issue the call to prayer (and to help ventilate the building). In the past, the imam, or prayer leader, charged with the ritual task would climb to its summit and intone the adhan five times each day, making the call in all directions so that the surrounding community would be notified; now, electronic speaker systems achieve this function. But the minaret has other implications and uses, as well. (Figure 10.11)
It has become a striking visual symbol of the very
presence of the mosque and of Islam's presence in the community; over
time, many mosque complex designs have incorporated multiple minarets,
most often four, with one at each corner of the main structure. The
visual significance may have been further accentuated to rival the
Christian presence of a nearby steeple or bell tower.
The
bell tower has been used similarly to announce the onset of Christian
services by ringing at specific times. Public clocks are sometimes
added, with the function of noting the time, ringing or chiming a tune
on the hour, the half-hour, or the quarter-hour. Because churches were
often community centers, the bells could also give public notice of
celebration, mourning, or warnings of emergencies like fire.
In the Middle
Ages, controlling the bell ringing could be a political issue,
especially as urban communities developed governments and sought
independence from local churches in certain ways. At Tournai, Belgium,
such struggles notably led to visual combat of towers on the
town skyline. The city's civic leaders there were granted the right to
control the bell ringing for community notices and built a separate
tower away from the church located on the town square. The Church
countered by renovating the church building to include four bell towers, thereby asserting its own rights to identify with the
task. (Figure 10.12)
The steeple or bell tower visually implies a Christian presence and is generally part of the church building, usually on the façade. Over time, builders have added multiple towers, as they did at Tournai and elsewhere. Doing so emphasized the width of the façade, or other parts of the building, such as the transept, the "arms" in a Latin cross plan church, or the crossing, where the "arms" meet.
For example, at
Lincoln Cathedral in England, towers are placed on either side of the
façade, and another marks the crossing. (Figure 10.13) Some steeples and
towers associated with Christian use, however, have been erected
independently of other buildings. For example, the Campanile, or bell tower, by Giotto in Florence follows the Italian tradition of
erecting the tower adjacent to the church. (Figure 10.14)
More specific features of the church and stupa structures, among others, include space within or outside for circumambulating and walking around a sacred object. In medieval churches that featured a display of relics and accommodated pilgrim visitation, the ambulatory might be altered to allow visitors to walk around a ring or succession of chapels at the end of the church where the apse was located. (Figure 10.15)
At the Sanchi Stupa, provisions were made for the devotee to walk
around the fence surrounding the stupa, then enter one of the gateways
and circumambulate the mound on the ground level, then climb the stairs
and circumambulate again on a walkway attached to its exterior surface. Since the stupa is an earthen
mound faced with masonry, it has no interior space accessible to the
practitioner, and all rituals are accomplished outside.
The provisions for making an offering of animals ritually slain
for the deity can be seen in the ruins of the Anu or White Temple in
Uruk (c. 3,000 BCE), today Iraq, which stood atop the ziggurat there. The sanctuary chamber
included a large altar table with channels along a sloped ditch to carry
away the blood and other fluids resulting from the ritual sacrifice.
Other types of sacrificial altars were provided for fire rituals that
involved offerings to a deity of an animal, grain, oil, or other
substances, as can be seen in this Roman relief depiction of the
sacrifice of a bull. (Figure 10.16) Some of these altars were part of
temple complexes, while others were found in homes and used for private
devotions. Larger ritual fires are also part of the practices among some
sects and are still in use; bonfires are a related practice.
Ritual
ablutions, or cleansings, also have artistic accommodations in the
forms of fountains and pools, which were once a standard part of
Christian atrium courtyards that marked the entryways to churches and
are frequently provided in courtyards for mosques. Vestiges
are found in holy water fonts that still stand at portals to Catholic
churches, where the practitioner dips the fingers and makes the sign of
the cross. Also related are baptismal fonts or tanks used for the ritual
cleansing, which, along with other ceremonial rites, signifies entry into some faiths. (Figure. 10.17)
Another type of symbolic
liturgical furniture that appears in many worship contexts and is given
considerable artistic attention is the pulpit, or minbar, as it is
called in Islamic centers. It is the site of preaching, reading
scriptures, and other addresses to congregations and is, sometimes,
very elaborately adorned. (Figures 10.18 and 10.19)
Sculptural and Painted Expressions of Belief
Beyond
the types of symbolic features and forms we have explored, there exists
a tremendous variety of objects expressing common or personal beliefs
and devotions. In many instances, they adorn temples, synagogues, and
churches; at other times, they were designed to be used in private or
family settings. Even the sects with the most austere attitudes about
the use of art, such as the Shakers, have a design aesthetic that is
related to the belief system of finding creative solutions in the
functionality of the form. (Figure 10.20) Many artistic efforts
have been applied to religious expression, often entailing that the most lavish and sumptuous goods should be provided for these
purposes.

Sculptures,
paintings, drawings, prints, film, video, performance art, and visual
demonstrations have all been brought into service. They
might vary as to whether they embody a point of doctrine or a shared
tenet, express a personal veneration for a deity or holy personage,
or offer a viewpoint about exuberance or restraint; regardless, they
have abounded. Often, they also epitomize the sentiment of a cultural
moment in a particular place or the development of a particular line of
thought in theology, philosophy, or devotional practice.
An
example is the elegant and graceful Bodhisattva Guanyin, a spiritual
figure of compassion and mercy, created in China in the eleventh or
twelfth centuries during the Liao Dynasty (907-1125). (Figure 10.21)
The
sculpture acts as a compassionate guide for the Buddhist devotee who
would look to such an elevated being for loving guidance on the
spiritual journey. The ideas of patron saints or dedicated intercessors
like the Virgin Mary were popular in the West, as well, especially
during the Middle Ages, an era when great riches were often lavished on
images of veneration for these spiritually accomplished models of
sanctity. The graceful Virgin of Jeanne d'Evreux was a gift in the early
twelfth century from the French queen to the Abbey of Saint-Denis, the
site for royal burial at the time. (see Figure 10.22)
The young mother, playfully engaged with her divine infant son, was
rendered with striking and inspiring emotional effect.

In
Christian churches of the Middle Ages, and for some denominations
today, the sculptural embellishment of the interior not only showed the
respect of believers but also provided considerable food for devotional
thought, often in the form of Bible stories, tales of the saints, and
theological ruminations. Such was the case at the French Romanesque
Vézelay Abbey (1096-1150). (Figure 10.23) The tympanum above the portal
contains a relief sculpture by Gislebertus depicting the Last Judgment,
with Christ sitting in the center. (Figures 10.24 and 10.25)
The capitals
on the piers in the interior have lively depictions of Old Testament
tales such as Jacob and the Angel and other scenes such as the
Conversion of St. Eustace, a Roman general who, while hunting, saw a
vision of a crucifix between a stag's antlers and adopted Christianity.
(Figures 10.26 and 10.27) These are all told through delightful,
puppet-like Romanesque figural forms. Visual stories such as these were
meant to reinforce the importance of remaining true to God despite
challenges to their faith in this lifetime.
Ritual and Devotional Objects
In devotional centers where philosophical or religious beliefs allow the use of figural imagery, cult statues and other images of deities or persons associated with the ideology are important focal points for worshippers. Some, like the cross, are essential statements; others play subsidiary roles designed for amplifying or enhancing the spiritual experience and providing additional opportunities for contemplation or stimulus of devotional response.
As we have noted,
Buddhist and Hindu temple complexes often have a great array of
portrayals of deities and/or spiritual leaders, as befits polytheistic
religions. Part of the complaint of the Protestant revolt was that
Christian churches had become too similar in spirit to polytheistic
cults, with the wide selection of saints comprising a system that seemed
no longer sufficiently focused on the central singular God. Part of the
effect, in artistic terms, was that the decoration of many Protestant
churches changed character as well as liturgical focus eliminating many
of the lavish accouterments that had accrued around Catholic ritual.
While few general rules exist for Christian decoration, Catholic churches usually have a large and prominent crucifix above the
main altar where the Mass/Eucharist, the primary religious ritual for
Catholics, is celebrated; Protestant sites are more likely to have a
plainer cross or none at all and are unlikely to have an altar.
Throughout the ages, the character of the crucifix has seen tremendous
variation, from an expression of the extreme suffering of Christ to a
much more iconic expression of the belief behind the symbol. Between the
time of Christianity's legitimization in 313 CE and the tenth century,
for example, representations of Christ on the cross generally showed him
as alive, having gloriously defied death. Crosses also varied
considerably in scale.
The
Gero Crucifix (c. 965-970), now placed over a side altar in Cologne
Cathedral, Germany, compared to others of its era, was very large at six
feet, two inches, and was considered to be provocative in eliciting
contemplation of the suffering of Christ. (Figure 10.28) Over the next
several centuries, depictions of Christ on the cross in northern
Europe would increasingly emphasize the agony of the human being in the
throes of death, as opposed to his everlasting triumph, in ever more
graphic portrayals of the event central to Catholic worship and to the
liturgy of Mass. (Figure 10.29) The range of emotional content in
Christian imagery is vast and ever-changing. This diversity is a typical
characteristic for objects related to devotional use, as the
nature of active faith is to grow and change, ever producing fresh new expressions.
The
variety of liturgical equipment conceived for Christian rituals
over the centuries provided a great outlet for inventiveness. While some
versions of ritual objects were simple and utilitarian in design, others
clearly spurred flights of great fancy and flair. An important symbolic
and functional object in all worship centers is the candlestick, and a
tremendous variety was created.
One of the most elaborate was
the enormous seven-branched candelabra cast of gem-studded bronze and
covered with a mass of imagery of saints, plants, animals, and angels,
with the whole immense and tangled array supported on four large
dragon-form feet. The complexity of
the iconography, as well as the intricacy of the work, is befuddling.
Candleholders were not simply basic pieces of equipment but also
carriers of implications for the spiritual quest and the nature of
religious inspiration, at least in part based on the symbolism of light
as a representation of the Holy Spirit, purity, and peace.
Service
objects for the altar table also received a great deal of attention,
respect, and their fair share of artistic ingenuity. The chalice of Doña
Urraca, from Spain, exemplifies spolia, the re-use of precious objects
and materials from the past. (Figure 10.30) As daughter and sister to
kings, Doña Urraca oversaw monasteries and made provisions for their
liturgies with lavish equipment. Made up of two antique onyx vessels for
the base and cup, the chalice was fashioned with gem-studded bands and
inscribed as a gift from Doña Urraca to the palace chapel in Léon,
Spain.
An ivory situla, or small bucket, is another liturgical object
used for sprinkling holy water in blessing at the Mass and other
rituals, accomplished by dipping a sprinkler or a spray of leaves or
straw into the vessel and flicking the water across the crowd. (Figure
10.31) This example is finely carved out of ivory with scenes from the
life of Christ and supplied with bands and inlay of gilt copper.
Additional liturgical equipment includes vestments; these often have
received great attention, as well. (Figure 10.32) This 14th-century example from England is of velvet embroidered with silk, metal
thread, and seed pearls that ornament scenes from the life of the Virgin
Mary.
Special attention was also paid to books of Scriptures, as well as
those that were used for the Mass and other ceremonies. In the Middle
Ages, the pages of books had to be created as manuscripts on parchment
or vellum, as we have observed be- fore; they were frequently supplied
with lavish and showy covers, particularly those that might be used by
important people or for important occasions. The commissioning of such
was another deep and significant expression of faith due to the sacred
writings they contained, the value of all liturgical equipment, and the
merit accrued by donating riches for spiritual purposes.
The
front and back covers of the Lindau Book Gospels were created at two
different times and places with somewhat different design ideas. It was created by
the Limbourg Brothers (Herman, Paul, and Johan, active 1402-1416,
Netherlands) for John, Duke of Berry, a French prince. Throughout its
heavily illustrated pages or leaves, it is brightly colored, carefully
inscribed, and replete with depictions of the Duke and of his many
architectural and land holdings. It is well known for its calendar pages
that depict activities associated with the changing seasons of the
year, such as this scene of January showing the Duke seated in
resplendent blue to the right at a sumptuous feast. (Figure 10.34)

A significant visual spiritual event
is the ritual creation of a sand mandala, often performed for a specific
occasion by a group of Tibetan Buddhist monks. However, other spiritual and cultural groups create related works. (Figure
10.35) Systematically building a complex mandala involves a carefully
planned and meticulously executed approach with specific pictorial implications. Basically a diagram of the Buddhist
conception of the universe, mandalas might vary in expression of
particular beliefs, teachings, or purposes.
The process can take several weeks; on its completion, it is destroyed and
ritually discarded, perhaps in a fire or a lake, to symbolize the
fleeting nature of the material world. An impressive and colorful
spectacle to witness, it is accompanied by additional sensual
stimulation from the sounds of chanting and the scraping of the colors
for the design, as well as the fragrance of flowers and incense.
Masks and Ritual Behavior
Masks are found in all cultures throughout history. Early human cultures were primarily nomadic, so the portability of masks and other ritual objects may have been an important feature of their design and partly why they are so prevalent. Masks and the rituals in which they function may have been among the earliest ways in which humans acknowledged the objects and forces of nature as spirits or conscious beings.
The design of a mask is determined by its functions, and these functions are determined by the religious worldview of the culture in which they are made. In animist cultures, the forces of nature, objects, and animals are all thought to have spirits or essences. Rituals are performed that are aimed to please or guide these spirits in the hope that they will bring good fortune or that will help the culture avoid calamity.
Contemporary African tribal rituals generally center on a number of life issues: birth, puberty, courtship, marriage, the harvest, the hunt, illness, royalty, death, and ancestors. In Burkina Faso, animal masks enter the community to purify its members and protect them from harm. (Figure 10.36) In Nigeria, Yoruba Egungun, or masquerades, involve both masks and costumes. (Figure 10.37)
Costumes are made from layers of cloth chosen not only to demonstrate the family's wealth and status but also to connect the wearer to the spirits of ancestors who return to the community to advise and punish wrongdoing. Once completely concealed, the wearer is possessed by and assumes the power of the ancestor through dance: as the pieces of cloth lift, they bestow blessings.
Due to a generally harsh climate not conducive to agriculture, Inuit cultures located in the Arctic regions of North America subsisted mainly on fish and other sea-dwelling animals, including whales. Early 20th-century explorer and anthropologist Knud Rasmussen asked his guide, an Inuit shaman, about Inuit religious beliefs. He responded that "we don't believe; we fear."
While it is a myth that Inuit elders were sent off into the wild to die (elders were and still are highly valued members of the tribe), many of the totemic and mask images of this culture are warnings against the dangers of making bad choices in a cold, harsh, and unforgiving environment. In this circa 1890 image, a Yupik (Eskimo) shaman exorcises evil spirits from a young boy; note the complex mask and large claws. (Figure 10.38)

Mardi Gras, French for "Fat Tuesday," is the day of Christian celebrations immediately before Ash Wednesday. Today, it is commonly considered the season of festivals, or carnivals, extending from Epiphany (Three Kings' Day, when the Magi attested to the infant Christ's divinity) on January 6 each year to the actual day of Mardi Gras, that is, the day before Lent begins. Originally associated with pagan rites of spring, the renewal of life, and fertility, Mardi Gras dates back as a Christian rite to the Middle Ages in Europe when people ate as plentifully as they could before the fasting and lean eating that took place during Lent.
The associated festivities were a time to ignore normal standards of behavior and celebrate the excesses of life. Often dressed in masks and costumes as a means of casting aside one's identity and social restrictions, the carnivals of Mardi Gras allowed a sense of freedom rarely known in societies that upheld a strict social hierarchy. (Figures 10.39 and 10.40) We could discuss many more such visual experiences in the context of spiritual and philosophical ideas about the artistic expressions we devise to reflect our beliefs about mortality and immortality and how we connect these notions for ourselves. Suffice it to say that we can stay aware of the pervasive nature of art and visual experience in reflecting them.
Funerary Spaces and Grave Goods
Archaeologists have dated the earliest burial sites found worldwide to around 100,000 BCE, though some argue that certain ones are as old as 300,000 BCE. A considerable body of art related to funerary customs and beliefs has been found at such sites. In many instances, it is much more extensive than other evidence of how people lived. This disparity is likely due to the general respect given to sites of tombs and burial grounds.
Usually considered sacred places, they have often been left intact when other parts of a settlement have been destroyed and rebuilt. These places, and the ways they are marked, decorated and furnished, supply us with a good deal of data to explore for insights into beliefs and practices related to burial practices and the afterlife, including how the people prepared for both during their lifetimes. Burial sites often include grave goods, such as personal possessions of the buried individual, as well as food, tools, objects of adornment, and even a variety of household goods.
The Etruscans and their culture, predecessors to the Romans on the Italian peninsula, existed from c. 800 BCE until conquered by the Romans in 264 BCE. They are well known for their highly developed burial practices and the elaborate provisions they made for the afterlife. They created a type of mound tomb known as a tumulus, made from tufa, a relatively soft mineral/rock substance that is easy to cut and carve but hardens to become very strong. (Figure 10.41) Like the Egyptians, the Etruscans grouped their tombs into a necropolis, but they were not reserved for the highly born.
Within each tomb, the Etruscans created and decorated chambers in ways that showed what they expected would happen in the "next lifetime." (Figure 10.42) They expected to rejoin their family and friends and continue many of their ordinary activities and their celebrations. (Figure 10.43) Some tombs were supplied with a complete stock of household furnishings; others showed scenes of athletic or leisure activities, and still others, ritual banquets. Their terra cotta sarcophagi included portraits of individuals and couples who expected to reunite and continue their married life in the afterlife. (Figure 10.44)



In other cultures, as we have seen, the wealthy and powerful were provided with exquisitely detailed tombs and mausolea. The Samanid Mausoleum (892-943) was created in what is today Bukhara, Uzbekistan, for a Muslim amir, or prince, of the Persian Samanid dynasty (819-999). (Figure 10.45) Islamic religious traditions forbid the construction of a mausoleum over a burial site; this is the earliest departure from the tradition. The carved brickwork shows the remarkably refined design and craftsmanship.
Screen Shot 2019-10-11 at 8.15.46 PM.pngIn ancient China, tombs for the important and the wealthy were very richly appointed, and it is clear that the expectations for the afterlife included a need for food and other sustenance, as well as ongoing ritual appeasement of deities and evil spirits. Artisans' remarkable skills at casting bronze were put to use for a variety of fine vessels for food and wine, altars for ritual, and various other objects. (Figure 10.46)
Also included were jade amulets, tools, and daggers. Some tombs were laid out like a household of the living, and nested coffins were decorated with mythological and philosophical motifs similar to those on the bronzes and jades. In the tomb of a woman known as Lady Dai (Xin Zhui, c. 213-163 BCE), a fine silk funerary banner carried mythological symbolism of her life and death as well as a depiction of her and her coffin. (Figure 10.47) The expectation for musical enjoyment was exemplified in tombs that enclosed elaborate sets of tuned bells and a carving showing how they would be arranged and played.

The Terracotta Army of Qin Shi Huang (r. 247-210 BCE), who unified China and ruled as the first Emperor of the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BCE), is another dramatic example of craft, devotion, and ritual meant to honor the dead. The figures were first uncovered in 1974 by local farmers in the Shaanxi Province. The Terracotta Army is a now famous collection of more than 8,000 life-sized, fired clay sculptures of warriors in battle dress standing at attention, along with numerous other figures, pieces of equipment, and animals, such as horses, around the mausoleum of Emperor Qin Shi Huang, from whom China's name originates. (Figures 10.48 and 10.49) It is believed the figures were intended to protect the emperor in the afterlife.
Research has shown that the figures were created in local workshops in an assembly-line fashion. Heads, arms, torsos, and legs were created separately, modified to give individual character, and assembled. The figures were then placed in rows according to rank. They were originally brightly colored and held weapons. It is believed that most of these weapons were looted shortly after the creation of the Terracotta Army.
Finally, we will take a brief glimpse at a remarkable tomb complex developed over time near Beijing, China, for the emperors of the Ming Dynasty (1369-1644). (Figure 10.50)
A series of 13 tomb complexes cover more than twenty-five square miles of land on a site nestled on the north side of a mountain, where, according to Feng Shui principles of harmonizing humans with their environment, it would be best situated to ward off evil spirits. The layout includes a number of ceremonial gateways leading to "spirit paths." (Figures 10.51 and 10.52).
The walkways are lined with various large sculptures of guardian animals that would also foster protection for the emperors, each of whom had a large and separate tomb complex within the precincts. Mostly unexcavated as yet, the findings so far reveal burial sites that resembled the imperial palaces in form with throne rooms, furnishings, and thousands of artifacts, including fine silks and porcelains. Again the expectation of continued power, prestige, and enjoyment of life's pleasures is clear.
Before You Move On
Key Concepts
When designing a building for sacred purposes, its many features are determined by the requirements of specific rituals and cult usage. Meeting individual or community needs determines the most defining elements of design and plan. If space is needed for large gatherings, it might be accomplished either out-of-doors or within a building. If an outdoor arrangement serves the purpose, it may or may not require a building.
For instance, as we noted with Greek
temples, cult rituals were performed in the open area outside the
structure that housed the deity. Similarly, Buddhist stupas were set
into a complex where devotees could approach the stupa and visit subsidiary shrines or other buildings.
Some might house cult statues for deities or include libraries
for scriptures, treasuries, dining halls, or other features of use or
interest.
Often the grounds of a sacred complex will emphasize natural
features of the settings used for contemplation, such as gardens or
wooded pathways, fountains, pools, and lakes. These might include
careful and meaningful arrangements of statues, iconic imagery, or
rocks, trees, and plants. Monastery complexes often provide for all the
activities needed to sustain the community, providing for their sacred
and social activities in the community and individually while accommodating visitors.
From the
earliest times, art and architecture have been used to express human beliefs about life and
death and provide for worship, burial, and memorial needs.
Basic differences in worship centers are related to ritual purposes, and
the forms provide for rites performed by individuals or
congregations. The settings and décor express the distinctive
doctrine and beliefs of the sect that worships there. Burial sites and
centers reflect the customs for treating human remains and the
beliefs about what will happen to the individuals after death.
Objects
created for worship centers and for individual contemplation and
devotion are also designed to refer to specific beliefs and inspire
believers in religious practices. The religious architecture and
the artworks also emphasize and glorify the central beings and
concepts of the belief system, often with elaborate or lavish artistic
expression.
Key Terms
Altar: a sacrificial or offertory table.
Animist: the belief that spirits are associated with objects in the natural world.
Burial Mounds: early cultural collections of skeletal remains and grave goods.
Cromlech: a circular arrangement of megaliths.
Dolmen: a large upright stone or marker.
Effigy Mounds: earth mounds formed in the shape of animals or symbols.
Egungun: a general term for Yoruba masquerade rituals.
Elevated Platform: a raised area intended to confer status.
Gateway: a structure intended to mark a passage from one state, world, or phase to another.
Grave Goods: artifacts interred with deceased members of family or tribes.
Imam: the Islamic prayer leader charged with issuing the call to prayer at appointed times.
Mandala: a ritual diagram with cosmic significance. Includes circular or circular components designed for contemplating specific teachings or tenets related to the particular belief system. Varieties are used by diverse sects of Hinduism, Buddhism, Native American tribal worship, and others.
Mausolea: plural of mausoleum. An above-ground structure designed for the entombment of the deceased.
Megalith: literally, "large stone."
Minaret: a tower, usually tall and slender, associated with a mosque and signifying Islamic presence in a location.
Pagoda: a Buddhist structure in China, Japan, and elsewhere that signifies the practice of Buddhism. The form evolved from the burial mound conception of the Stupa that appeared in India as the primary structural symbol of the belief system. It spread to China and took on the native architectural form of the watchtower.
Portal: an exceptionally grand entrance, most often referring to a cathedral or other church architecture.
Ritual Mask: masks used in religious or secular ceremonial events.
Sacred Interior: interior spaces devoted to ritual or ceremony invoking the highest good.
Sacred: held as the highest good.
Sarcophagi: plural of the sarcophagus, a burial container, usually of stone or other masonry material, often embellished with sculptural decoration.
Stonehenge: a famous arrangement of vertical stones from prehistoric Britain.
Stupa: a Buddhist monument signifying the presence of relics of Sakyamuni Buddha or sacred objects associated with the beliefs. Formed of an earthen mound faced with brick, stone, or stucco. Worshippers circumambulate outside the stupa rather than enter it.
Temple Mound: earthen mounds formed to elevate a ceremony, ritual, or elite.
Terra Cotta: porous low-fired ceramic.
Terracotta Army: famous arrangement of 6,000 clay soldiers meant to guard the grave of the first emperor of China.
Toranas: stone structures placed at the Buddhist Stupa at Sanchi and at other stupa sites, which form gateways to the circular path around the stupa.