(http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/images/7.%20Cao%27an-Mani.jpg)
7. Statue of Mani (C2) from Wang Lianmao, Return to the City of Light (Fuzhou, 2000) p. 130.
(http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/images/1.%20Cao%27an.jpg)
1. Manichaean shrine on Huabiao Hill near Quanzhou. (C1, photo M. Wilson 2004)
"Measuring 1.54 (h) x 0.85 (w) 0.11 (d) m, the statue exhibits a number of typically Manichaean features and in particular the symbol of two knots. The local Manichaeans were nick-named the followers or sons of the “Two Knots” during the Song period. The garment also manifest a number of details similar to those worn by a Manichaean leader and his followers as shown on a wall-painting which was removed by Albert von Le Coq from a Manichaean site in Chotcho in Central Asia to Berlin where it was sadly destroyed by Allied bombing during the Second World War (Fig. 8). Scholars have noted that the visage of the statue is different from that of the Buddha as normally depicted in statues or paintings in the Far East. The cheeks of the Mani-figure are fleshy and his eyebrows are raised. He is also bearded and his lips are exceptionally thin. The head of the statue was said to have origially exuded a moustache or side-burns but these were had been knocked off by a zealous Buddhist monk over half a century ago to make the statue more ‘Buddha-like’
The halo effect behind the statue is also uncommon for a Buddha-statue in China, but in Central Asia it is found with Buddhas associated with Light. The painstakingly accurate non-Buddhist features of the statue of Mani bears out He Qiaoyuan’s statement that the sect in Quanzhou took the trouble to locate an original statue of Mani in a curio shop in one of the northern capitals of China in which Manichaeans from Central Asia were well established during the Tang Dynasty."
(http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/images/7.%20Cao%27an-Mani.jpg)
7. Statue of Mani (C2) from Wang Lianmao, Return to the City of Light (Fuzhou, 2000) p. 130.
(http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/images/1.%20Cao%27an.jpg)
1. Manichaean shrine on Huabiao Hill near Quanzhou. (C1, photo M. Wilson 2004)
Love the Art and Architecture! it has a softness about it that's very comforting to me.
(http://www.gnosis.org/images/manitxt.gif)
Page from an illustrated Manichaean hymn manuscript, found in Central Asia and probably dating to the eleventh century.