Begtse Chen
Begtse Chen
Begtse Chen
--Twin Protectors and Guardians of the Buddhist Faith in Tibet and Bhutan
Charles Ta
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Charles Ta
Sharyn Finnegan
Objects as History
--Twin Protectors and Guardians of the Buddhist Faith in Tibet and Bhutan
Protector Begtse Chen and Raven Headed Mahakala are both exquisitely crafted pieces
representative of their respective countries of origin: Mongolia, and Bhutan. They also
beautifully express the beliefs of the peoples that created them under the umbrella of the
Buddhist faith, Chen pertaining to the Geluk school, and Mahakala to the teachings of
Made in Mongolia during the 18th- 19th century, Begtse Chen, the definitive Mongolian
war deity and protector of the Geluk school of Tibetan Buddhism, steps off to the side with an air
of confidence, merciless wrath, and dynamic power. His name Begtse means “coat of mail” and
refers to his protective mail armor resembling the armored garments of a Tibetan warrior. Cast in
a reflective, highly prized pigmented copper alloy and measuring 17 ⅝ x 18 x 5 ¼ inches, Begtse
shines with his wealth while his flowing hair, dark orange-red in color, mimics the embers and
flames of primordial fire and the rays of the sun, which enhances the sculpture’s spiritual effect
and holiness. As a protector deity that does battle with the forces of evil and the wicked and
guards the righteous and faithful, Begtse Chen once held a bow and arrow and a beating heart
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between his hands to exemplify his dominance over earthly life and his tendency towards
violence. His terrifying, monstrous face is a testament to his often misunderstood, misconceived
nature as a wholly aggressive deity bent on total destruction, when in actuality, his hideous
appearance serves only to frighten demons and dark spirits away from the righteous (and if this
does not deter these demons, then his large scorpion-handled sword will). Enhancing his terror is
his iconic crow of five skulls, and his necklace containing fifty severed and bloody heads,
serving to truly scare away any wayward souls looking to cause chaos, havoc, or disorder, while
his scale allows him to be revered as an idol in some temple or altar and used as a keeper and
guardian of sacred texts and artifacts through the large opening on his back. Begtse Chen, the
war deity, embodies the Tibetan Buddhist belief system in protector deities in Mongolia, and
serves as a beacon of justice as well as a guardian of wisdom to all who see and revere him,
The 18th century painting Raven Headed Mahakala possesses a similar sentiment and
theme of the protector deity in Tibetan Buddhism. Made in Bhutan on cloth using precious
ground minerals, Mahakala depicts a dark, surreal, and ominous scene with the founder of the
future Bhutanese monarchy, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyel, meeting with the raven
manifestation of Mahakala, who notably poses gracefully at the center of the painting as a central
deity of utmost importance. Amidst the hellish red inferno of embers and flames, Mahakala,
whose name means “beyond time”, stands as a protector of Dharmapala, “cosmic order” in
Tibetan Buddhism. He is likely within the “eight cremation grounds” he is said to dwell in with
his demons, their red spouses, and his spouse, Kali as they dance to please Mahakala and the
1
Philip and Marcia R. Lieberman. “Tibetan Art”. Tibetan Buddhist Wall Paintings: A Photographic Survey.
https://library.brown.edu/cds/BuddhistTempleArt/TibetanArt8.html. 2003. Accessed April 21, 2017.
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demons. Mahakala, in his pitch black coloration, and raven-like form is darkness and the finality
of death incarnate, the inspiration for Namgyel’s iconic raven crown that “became the symbol of
Bhutan’s royal dynasty”2. Like Begtse Chen, Mahakala depicts the dark god wearing a crown of
five skulls and a necklace of severed heads. This, fittingly, is an appropriate adornment for a
ferocious, equally misunderstood, and wrathful deity that rules over death itself, the movement
of the embers that surround Mahakala evocating the message that death touches and permeates
all (none are spared!). And, like Begtse Chen, Mahakala depicts the eternal suffering of a poor
soul, writhing in pain at the lower right of the painting, who disobeyed the Buddhist teachings
and walked the path of wickedness, receiving his just punishment under a raven-like god just as
Begtse Chen would instill upon souls of a similar devilish nature. Mahakala, when framed,
serves a similar religious and reverent purpose to Begtse Chen, since the painting, measuring
27.56 x 19.69 inches, is meant to be admired like the precious copper sculpture of the former
deity, and embodies beliefs of death, creation, and the very nature of reality in Bhutanese
Buddhism. Unlike Begtse Chen, however, the painting can only be admired for its detail up close
as opposed to from afar, forcing us as viewers to (possibly strategically) confront the ugly face of
death, darkness, and suffering incarnate from up close and witness every last detail of what
happens to disobedient souls and forces of evil, the close proximity warning us to stay away
Overall, though Begtse Chen and Mahakala share differences in composition, material
style and geographic location, they share remarkable functional, scalar, form-based, thematic,
cultural, and temporal similarities. Both works are bound by the archetypal idea of the “protector
2
Samdrup Rigyal and Alyson Prude. “Chapter 3: Buddhism in Contemporary Bhutan” in The Oxford Handbook of
Contemporary Buddhism, ed. Michael Jerryson. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2017. 70.
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deity”, or “wrathful divinity” that scares demons and evils away with grotesque appearances, and
defeats them with terrifying weapons and powers beyond the reach of man.
Begtse Chen, with his sturdy body armor, the flames that surround him, his monstrous
weapons (like his sword), his now lost bow and arrow and beating human heart, and his
vestments of death and terror, evokes horror in the eyes of a wicked sinner who is doomed to
suffer under the deity’s wrath, according to the principles of Tibetan Buddhism. Chen’s
asymmetrical and exaggerated S-curve (contrapposto), consistently curved lines on his clothes
and hair, and his threatening position (with his right arm and sword raised) enhances the wrathful
terror he evokes. He also conveys excitement, dynamism, and energy with the way his flames
move to the right with speed, and the flames on his sleeves convey movement, cementing his
aggressiveness as a Mongolian war deity. However, the angry deity also stands as a symbol of
enlightenment and wisdom because of his sculpture’s purpose in storing texts and artifacts.
Known as Jamsalan in Mongolia, Chen, interestingly enough, “is known as red Mahakala and
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ranks relatively high in the Sakya protector pantheon of Wisdom Deities” . Begtse Chen is not
only comparably wrathful and equal in stature and power to the raven form of Mahakala, but is
shown to reside in a rank of deities that protect wisdom and sacred objects or lands, which
functionally fits seamlessly into the copper sculpture’s secondary purpose as a storage module, as
if the deity covered in mail and thick armor harbors all the wisdom of the world and of life, in
the spirit of Buddhist tradition. Chen, according to Himalayan Art Resources, “typically stands
atop of a sun disc with the right foot on the corpse of a horse, and the left on a corpse of a man
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and he is completely surrounded by the flames of pristine awareness fire” , though with the
3
Jeff Watt. “Buddhist Protector: Begtse Chen Main Page”. Himalayan Art Resources.
http://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=137. 1998. Accessed April 17, 2017.
4
Jeff Watt. “Begtse Chen (Buddhist Protector)”. Himalayan Art Resources.
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copper sculpture, this is not apparent. In a typical situation, however, Begtse Chen mirrors
Mahakala in that the former shines bright with his copper composition and dominates over the
sun with the light of wisdom, while the latter in his painting is comparably much darker, dwells
in the depths of the earth in contrast to the heavens, and rules over the forces of darkness, cosmic
order, and death, and presides over the terrors of the shadows. Thus, the bright reflective nature
of Begtse Chen and the dark, obscure nature of Mahakala contrast each other. They contrast in
terms of usage of color (shiny copper vs opaque ground mineral) and in terms of the "lightness"
and "darkness" of their compositions. Wisdom and death intertwine. Despite this obvious
contrast, both Chen and Mahakala share duties as punishers and wrathful executioners of pain
and suffering. Chen demonstrates his power and warlike demeanour with his left foot over a
man’s corpse just as Mahakala and his demons step their left feet over the wicked soul in the
The painting of Raven Headed Mahakala shares a similar evocation of terror as Begtse
Chen, arguably even more so, considering the black god dominates over the primordial forces of
death, darkness, the unknown, the nothingness and the Void, and resides in his aforementioned
“cremation grounds” where all wicked souls are seemingly tortured in a Dante’s Inferno kind of
scenario. Mahakala as a symbol of our greatest fears, “[belongs] to the upper supramundane
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stratum of dharmapala with status equal to the “fully enlightened Buddha” , evoking the idea of
his duty as a protector of “cosmic order” with the same influence as the Buddha (making him a
form of Brahman). Mahakala thus must be viewed up close and seen for his ugliness so as to
scare the evils and demons that reside within us (so we can walk the path of goodness), his
portrayal in his painting’s obscurity aesthetically makes him fade into the very darkness he rules
over. Begtse Chen arguably can be considered a form of Brahman since he relates to Mahakala,
though he is clearly in a lower order of deities since Mahakala belongs “to the
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krodha-vighnantaka class” (krodha means wrathful) , a rank of deities higher that protect the
cosmos in comparison to Chen’s pantheon of Wisdom protectors (and rightfully so-- without the
cosmos there is nothing). Begtse Chen is thus a considerably lesser form of Brahman, which only
accentuates Mahakala’s sheer terror as a being whose name not only means “beyond time”, but
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also “means the black one-- the darkness” . If this isn’t enough to leave sinners speechless,
Buddhist tradition and texts “tell us that a student who does not respect the Buddha would be
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eaten raw by Mahakala” -- which is not only horrifying in it of itself (the wicked souls being
stomped on by both Chen and Mahakala’s left feet come to mind), but actually makes sense in
the context of Mahakala being another form of, or a being comparable in power to the Buddha.
Disrespecting the Buddha essentially equates to disrespecting Mahakala, one of many deities
keeping the universe in check from evil forces of hatred and destruction. Thus, an offense of this
magnitude (that insults the very fabric of existence) only deserves eternal suffering. To top it all
off, Mahakala’s majesty is illustrated by his open position, his wings spread out in utter
dominion, and his fiery halo surrounding his head (like Chen’s flame-hair) with a similar speed,
aggressive movement, and dance-like motion common to his copper-clad counterpart Begtse
Chen. Once again, we must look closely at Mahakala the painting, and observe the suffering of
the wicked one in the lower right as an example of what happens to the disobedient. We, are
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Ibid. 22.
7
Kurt Behrendt. “The Dark Lord”. 82nd and Fifth-- The Metropolitan Museum of Art
http://82nd-and-fifth.metmuseum.org/the-dark-lord. 2013. Accessed March 23, 2016.
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Ibid.
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encouraged and frightened into obedience lest we fall into the cremation grounds and suffer
forever.
Culturally, both Begtse Chen and Mahakala both hold dominion over the “pristine
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awareness fire” depicted in the flames of Chen’s flowing hair and in the embers of Mahakala’s
cremation grounds, suggesting fire as a symbol of both wisdom (the light of wisdom) and
destruction. Begtse as a Mongolian war god immediately elicits notions of Genghis Khan and the
once powerful Mongolian Empire, while Mahakala, as mentioned, thematically resembles the
idea of the Dantean Satan in his Divine Comedy, devouring traitors and wicked sinners against
Buddha like the latter engorges traitors to God in the deepest bowels of hell. Both are wrathful
towards their enemies Mahakala, in particular, is especially revered in Bhutan as a result of his
raven form, and, as the painting depicts, is directly connected to the culture of the Bhutanese and
even their theocratic political system through what its founder, and its leaders, wear on their
heads-- the Raven Crown, as a symbol of national power, royalty, and religious presence.
dream-turned-legend of the story of the founding of Bhutan after Namgyel’s fleeing from Tibet
in 1616. The Raven Crown: The Origins of the Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan says “a prophetic
dream is said to have come to [Namgyel] during which the guardian deity Mahakala appeared in
his raven form to guide him on the path south to Bhutan, which was now offered to him in its
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entirety by the deity as his “heavenly field” or “religious estate” which reveals the piece as
something political as well as religious (through Bhutan breaking off of Tibet). The legend of
Mahakala presenting to Namgyel the territory of Bhutan for him to form a theocracy relates to
9
Jeff Watt. “Begtse Chen (Buddhist Protector)”. Himalayan Art Resources.
10
Michael Aris. The Raven Crown: The Origins of Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan. Chicago: Serindia Publications.
2005. 56.
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his representation and dominion over death and the darkness (death to Bhutan’s future enemies
and Tibetan rulers, that is). Because of this, it is only sensible that the headpiece of the future
founder of Bhutan (and that of his so-called successors) would resemble a raven crown (in order
to honor Mahakala in his raven form). Returning to the idea of Mahakala, like Begtse Chen, as a
wrathful deity, enemies to Bhutan could be considered obstacles to the Buddhist faith, and
therefore “evils” that must be defeated by the dark skinned deity through the power of the raven
crown (infused with Mahakala’s power). In fact, the raven crown worn by the theocrats of
Bhutan “was conceived more as a magic battle helmet… [and] intended to associate the gods
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permanently with its wearer” -- as if Mahakala were protecting the wearer of the crown like the
protector deity that he is defeating evils and demons of all kinds and forms. Thus, the painting of
Raven Headed Mahakala almost or entirely transcends its pure functional purpose and aesthetic
and becomes something tangible in the raven crown itself. Mahakala, in a sense, retains his role
as a protector deity of the Tibetan Buddhist faith, but is fused with a physical object that acts as a
sacred helm of power, a revered storage module of ultimate power that ensures victory and
defense to the wearer just as Begtse Chen acts as a revered storage module of wisdom, sacred
texts, and artifacts. The fact Namgyel is painted above Mahakala (who is the central deity here),
places the founder of Bhutan as a wise figure who emulates the role of a teacher according to the
composition and structure of Tibetan scroll paintings (similar, of course, to Mahakala, which is a
cloth painting), Mahakala himself dwarfing Namgyel in size and focus. Namgyel may also be
considered a root deity since he is placed in the middle to the top of the painting, who speaks the
original teachings of Mahakala like the root deity spouts the teachings of the central figure in a
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Ibid. 56.
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Tibetan scroll painting. Namgyel, like Begtse Chen, harbors wisdom. Begtse Chen and Mahakala
Personally, I absolutely love the Raven Headed Mahakala and its true significance in
regards to Tibetan Buddhism. The fact that both Chen and Mahakala serve as protector deities
against evil demons relates to my own self on a personal level-- I tend to be protective of the
people that I love, and tend to go off on a passionate tangent when talking about ideas of justice,
as well as how the world should be or could be. I absolutely despise injustice that goes
unpunished and would gladly defend my friends and family from some outside terror-- such as
bullies in school. Something of the sort happened in the sixth grade when I was in Catholic
school and I witnessed my best friend, who was South African, being bullied for his race and
apparent weakness. Despite the fact that my best friend was crying, no one in the class, not even
my teacher did anything. Enraged, I eventually mustered the courage to shove the bully out of the
classroom while denouncing his cruel behavior, lock him, and tell him to report himself to the
school’s principal. Needless to say, I got the bully expelled and protected my best friend, and
thus acted like both Begtse Chen and Mahakala as protectors of the oppressed and the good.
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Bibliography:
Aris, Michael. The Raven Crown: The Origins of Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan.
Behrendt, Kurt. “The Dark Lord”. 82nd and Fifth-- The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Lieberman, Philip and Marcia R. “Tibetan Art”. Tibetan Buddhist Wall Paintings: A Photo-
Rigyal, Samdrup, and Alyson Prude. “Chapter 3: Buddhism in Contemporary Bhutan” in The
Watt, Jeff. “Buddhist Protector: Begtse Chen Main Page”. Himalayan Art Resources.
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