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- Title
Sacred Circle: Symbol of Wholeness in Traditional Persian Art and Architecture.
- Authors
Darabimanesh, Fariba
- Abstract
Jung wrote extensively about the archetypal mandala symbol as an expression in many cultures of the centrality and nature of the interplay between human consciousness and divine consciousness. This article investigates—how in Persia, for millennia—the archetypal symbol of the mandala has been widespread in many expressions of the sacred arts. My research outlines the importance of the archetypal mandala symbol in Persian religio‐aesthetic history from the first unearthed stone carvings of Persia's ancient foundations until the more recent, breathtakingly marvellous ceilings of traditional Persian architecture today. From the artistic expressions of first religious beliefs of ancient Persia—Mithraism—and through the development of the Zoroastrian faith until the subsequent rise of Christianity and then Islam, Persian sacred art illustrates the Jungian idea that wholeness sought in the journey of individuation is often expressed through archetypal symbols of circles that articulate basic truths about the divine interplay with humanity.
- Subjects
IRAN; RELIGIOUS art; FAITH development; STONE carving; IRANIAN history; SIGNS &; symbols
- Publication
Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2023, Vol 68, Issue 5, p894
- ISSN
0021-8774
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1468-5922.12954