查詢結果分析
來源資料
頁籤選單縮合
題 名 | 兩尊臺灣南部的早期鎮殿媽造像=Two Early Matzu Sculptures at the Main Hall of Two Mazu Temples in Southern Taiwan |
---|---|
作 者 | 林春美; | 書刊名 | 南藝學報 |
卷 期 | 5 2012.12[民101.12] |
頁 次 | 頁65-105 |
分類號 | 272.71 |
關鍵詞 | 媽祖; 龍鳳冠; 九龍冠; 盤領龍袍; Mazu; The patroness of sailors; Crown decorated with dragon and phoenix; Crown decorated with 9 dragons; Garment with dragon pattern and band collar; |
語 文 | 中文(Chinese) |
中文摘要 | 媽祖傳說於11世紀末以里中巫身份興起,12世紀末晉封為妃,到18世紀上半漸有天后稱謂。其神像造形也因封號,在頭飾與服裝間起變化。本文以明代后妃服飾為基礎,探討兩尊臺灣南部較早的鎮殿媽,輔以15-18世紀相關媽祖書刊插畫。結果顯示:臺南市開基鎮殿媽屬17世紀下半葉的天妃造形,其花冠延續明代渦形翠雲樣,組成菱形如意雲於冠身正中,兩側飾以尖雲蓮瓣;其袍服與搭配件承襲傳統:大帶紐從胸腹之間垂下、垂在最外層。北港朝天媽的頭飾在花冠頂增列九龍,冠側飾翔鳳,屬后級的九龍二鳳冠。兩尊媽祖雖皆著龍紋盤領袍,但朝天媽蔽膝完整呈現帝王級正面坐龍於立水壽山之上,僅呈現大帶紐末端,屬18世紀下半葉的天后造形。 |
英文摘要 | The cult of Mazu, the patroness of sailors, originated as a female village shaman at the end of the 11th century in neighborhood of Putian, near Xinghua, Fujian Province. At the end of the 12th century Mazu got the honoured title of ”princess” and kept it until the first half of 18th century, when the higher title of ”heavenly empress” was bestowed. The form of Mazu figure was altered because of the new title, by varying the head dress and costume. In order to understand the iconography of two early Mazu sculptures at main hall of temples in Southern Taiwan, this research takes the costume of Ming empress and princess as the basis, included the illustration from the books of Mazu legend and stories between the 15th and the 18th century as reference. The analysis has shown several key points: the Mazu sculpture in 'The First Grounded Mazu Temple' in Tainan City could be dated back to the second half of the 17th century Her head dress reflects the typical decoration as auspicious cloud on the middle of the crown with lotus leaves on both sides. Her costume and the style of her accessories continued the traditional manner: the tie band for the apron (bixi) hung under the breast and the rest band descended on the surface layer, down to the ground. The sculpture of Chaotian Mazu at Chaotian Temple in Beigang wears a crown decorated with nine dragons in parallel and two flying phoenixes behind the ears. Such kind of dragon decoration belongs to the empress. Both Mazu sculptures wear the decorated dragon garment in one piece, similarly to caftan, but with band collar. The evident difference by Chaotian Mazu, dated back to the second half of 18th century, is in the description of a sitting dragon in the front above the sea weave with protruded rocks on the apron, whose design patented to the emperor only. Such kind of appearance symbolized Mazu as ”heavenly empress”. |
本系統中英文摘要資訊取自各篇刊載內容。