The inscription on the Shaka triad describes, in essence, a legend that the statue was created as a life-size replica of Prince Shôtoku himself. It was made, it is said, at the time of his death, as a prayer for his ascent into the Pure Land. Mention is also made of the death about the same time of Prince Shôtoku’s mother and his principle wife, whom we can conclude are represented as the two attendants. So we have here Shôtoku deified as Shaka, an association already uncovered in the pagoda grotto. This special symbolism may be the key to unlocking many unsolved riddles about the iconography of this mysterious statue. The left-hand gesture of Shaka, for example, is found in no other Buddhist image. Equally baffling are the nut-like objects held in each hand by the attendants.
 
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