The Gandhari Dharmapada

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The famous brich-bark manuscript in the Kharosthi script, which contains a recension of the Dharmapada in a Prakrit dialect, has long been familiar to students of early Buddhist literature under the name of Ms. Dutreuil de Rhins. The manuscript, written in the first or second century A.D., is generally considered to be the oldest surviving manuscript of an Indian text. It was discovered near Khotan in Central Asia in 1892, and reached Europe in two parts, one of which went to Russia and the other to France. In 1897 S. Oldenburg published one leaf of the Russian portion; and in 1898 E. Senart edited the French material in the Journal Asiatique, together with facsimiles of the larger leaves, but not of the fragments. Now, almost seventy years after the discovery of the manuscript, it is possible for the first time to place before scholars an edition of the whole of the extant material, together with complete facsimiles.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR John Brough

John Brough (1917-1984) was the most accomplished scholar of Vedic and Buddhist philology and the most sensitive exponent of Sanskrit lyric poetry poetry that Britain has produced. He was Professor of Sanskrit in the University of London from 1948 to 1967 until his death in 1984. He was also a pioneer of Anglo-Japanese collaboration in Buddhist studies.

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Bibliographic information

Title
The Gandhari Dharmapada
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8120817400
Length
xxx+320p+24p., Plates; Index; 26cm.
Subjects