IDNO

P.97032.WIL


Description

On Cech’s list describing prints:
“(58-135 where taken in Lhasa.)
108a-e. “Lhasa street scenes 5.9.33”
Mainly rows of two-storied [sic], terraced buildings; traders with awnings over their stalls.” [printed text]
For more information see Cech’s list.

A Lhasa street scene. A two-story building stands on the right, and a single-story building stands on the left. At the end of the street there is a Chorten. A group of three adults and a girl stand looking at the camera on the right.


Place

C Asia; Tibet; Lhasa


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Williamson, Frederick


Collector / Expedition


Date

5 September 1933


Collection Name

Williamson Collection


Source

Williamson, Margaret


Format

Print Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

Transcription: Transcription: The transcription of this album by Mark Turin and Sara Shneiderman was carried out with reference to Krystina Cech’s catalogue list alone. Alex Nadin has since revised their cataloguing by systematically matching their records to the images. Margaret Williamson’s handwritten captions for photographs have now been transcribed into the Inscription field, and Cech’s descriptions appear in the Description field. Correct entries for Place, Named Person and Other Nos. have also been entered by Alex Nadin. [Sudeshna Guha 29/10/2002]

Context: A chorten (mchod-rten) is literally a ‘receptacle for offerings’. Chortens are most commonly built in memory of great religious figures, to obtain merit for a deceased person or to subjugate demons. A Buddhist chorten is always walked around in a clockwise direction, a practice which gains merit for believers. The detailed symbolism of the chorten is as follows. It is symbolic of the five elements into which a body is resolved upon death. The lowest section typifies the solidity of the earth, above it is water, the fire, air and ether. Tibetan chortens usually have elaborate plinths and above the dome-like ‘water’ section, pyramidal spires of thirteen step-like segments, typical of the thirteen Bodhisattva heavens. [Source: Cech’s list, CJ 27/8/2008]

This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Caspian James 27/8/2008]


FM:231682

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