TY - JOUR T1 - The Mahāsūtras and the Wall Paintings of Kucha AU - HIYAMA, Hiromi HABATA and Satomi JO - Acta Via Serica PY - 2025 DA - 2025/6/29 DO - 10.22679/avs.2025.10.2.005 AB - Among the large corpus of Buddhist sūtra-texts, the existence of a category/group of sūtras transmitted by laypeople (upāsaka/upāsika) in cooperation with monastics (bhikṣu/bhikṣuṇī) was well established during the early oral phase of the transmission of Buddhism. This category was called mahāsūtras in the Sarvāstivāda tradition, and its details were listed in several texts. The contents of the mahāsūtras are appropriate for laypeople to understand the teaching of the Buddha. Besides, the texts often contain dhāraṇī, therefore had a function as protective texts (rakṣā). As previous art-historical studies have revealed, some of the narrative subjects, which are illustrated in the wall paintings decorating the Buddhist rock-cut monasteries of Kucha, are recounted in the mahāsūtras. This paper explores whether and how the mahāsūtras are related to the iconographical program of the Buddhist caves of Kucha.