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About the Dzi beads
Dzi made its first appearance during the period between 3000 BC to 1500 BC, in ancient India
where Aryans inhabited. People at that time used to pray piously for
gods’ blessing. They painted incantations, totems and other symbolic
patterns in the ancient Veda (origins of various patterns on today’s
Dzi) on stones to sublimate their spirit. Veda recorded, seriously
tortured by geographical environment and natural calamities, people at
that time prayed to gods for blessing and help, and naturally, “Dzi”
emerged. Meanwhile, they intermingled various medicines with the motif
of incantations and totems into stones in hope to get blessing and help
from gods.
Bead pronounces as DZI in Tibetan language, meaning beauty、authority
and wealth, and reads as "Meiziga " in Sanskrit. However, it was
piously used as a sacrifice to Buddha gods in the 15th year of Zhenguan
(641AD) for Tang Taizong when Wencheng princess married Tibetan King
Songtsen Gampo, Wencheng took one statue of Buddha from India
as dowry. Later, this statue was housed in Jokhang Temple in Lhasa
studded with over hundreds of Dzi Beads by Tibetan people, including
three nine-eyed Dzi Beads, and scores of three-eyed, two–eyed, treasure
bottle Dzi beads (also called immortality bottle Dzi), tiger-stripe
Dzi, etc. At present, it is exhibited as an oblation in the JokhangTemple hall in Lhasa. Historical records suggest that the grassland channel between Yuyuan and Tibet was an important approach for culture exchanges between Tibet
and northern grassland. This channel has already offered service as
early as in the 5th century BC. Long history, beautiful and mysterious
legends along with Tibetan people’s piety for Dzi bead make Dzi bead
passed on from generation to generation and an apple in people’s eyes.
Dzi beads are found mainly in such lands in Himalayas as Tibet, East Tibet , Bhutan , Sikkim
, Ladak, etc, one kind of scarce gem. Tibetan people consider Dzi as
“Tianyanzhu” (divine eye Dzi). It’s said that the history of
"Tianyanzhu" can be traced back to 5,000 years ago. At that time
Tibetan people found a strong magnetic field around this ore, exploited
it and skived it into such forms as pestle, round board, etc. but
technology at that time was so backward that people just got some gray
ores without obvious grains from shallow mine layer. Then, Tibetan
people drew various kinds of lucky patterns (such as treasure bottle,
lotus flower, tiger's stripe, eye line, lines) on them and processed
them with high temperature to deepen pigment on them. If a Dzi bead was
held by a great person who practiced Buddhism or Taoism, it would be
endowed with inconceivable magical power. It’s told that only those
with much felicity have chance to own such a lucky bead.