Buddhist Lotus Blossom Stupa | Sacred Meditation Offering
------------------------------------------------
Size: 24cm(Height) x 12.5cm(Length) x 12.5cm(Width)
Weight: 1.63 kg
Materials: Oxidized Copper Body
------------------------------------------------
About Our Product
This Buddhist Lotus Blossom Stupa is a sacred altar piece crafted from an oxidized copper body, created for Buddhist shrine decor, meditation rooms, temple spaces, and devotional practice. Its tiered base, rounded dome, ornate shrine niche, raised lotus motifs, colorful ritual accents, and elevated spire reflect the beauty of traditional Tibetan stupa design. The form symbolizes spiritual growth, enlightenment, purity, devotion, and inner peace.
The Lotus Blossom Stupa is traditionally connected with Buddha’s birth, representing pure beginnings, awakening potential, and the unfolding path of wisdom. Each detailed motif adds sacred meaning, from the lotus patterns that suggest purity and spiritual rising to the central shrine image that supports prayer, offerings, mantra practice, and mindful reflection. Its oxidized copper surface gives the piece a rich ceremonial presence for peaceful spiritual discipline.
Designed for practitioners, collectors, healers, and lovers of Tibetan Buddhist decor, this stupa brings sacred beauty and intention to any home altar, meditation table, shrine, or spiritual collection. Whether used as a ritual offering piece or given as a meaningful spiritual gift, it invites compassion, clarity, balance, protection, enlightenment, and a calm connection to inner wisdom.
Introduction of Stupa
Before Buddhism, great teachers were buried in mounds. Some were cremated, but sometimes they were buried in a seated, meditative position. The mound of earth covered them up. Thus, the domed shape of the stupa came to represent a person seated in meditation, much as the Buddha was when he achieved Enlightenment and knowledge of the Four Noble Truths. The base of the stupa represents his crossed legs as he sat in a meditative pose. The middle portion is the Buddha’s body, and the top of the mound, where a pole rises from the apex surrounded by a small fence, represents his head. Before images of the human Buddha were created, reliefs often depicted practitioners demonstrating devotion to a stupa.