Written
Monuments
of the Orient
1(7) 2018
Issued twice a year
Selected materials as a *.PDF file
Melanie Malzahn. A Contrastive Survey of Genres
of Sanskrit and Tocharian Buddhist
Texts — 3
Most Buddhist documents discovered from the 1st millennium Silk Road
cultures are random manuscript fragments from what must once have been huge
monastic libraries and archives. This is especially true for the Sanskrit and Tocharian
texts in this corpus. The methodological advances in digital humanities now make it
possible to investigate the whole available data (that is even very small pieces) by
quantitative analysis. The present paper examines the literary genres of Sanskrit and
Tocharian fragments found side by side in the remains of Buddhist sites. While the
distribution of genres is astonishingly even in most cases, there is a predominance of
canonical literature in Sanskrit on the once hand and a predominance of narrative
literature in Tocharian on the other. The latter fact supports the assumption that the
Tocharian culture freely adopted the Buddho-Indian model beyond mere translation
work and established a distinctive narrative/dramatic genre that incorporates pre-
Buddhist elements.
Key words: Tocharian, Sanskrit Buddhist texts, Buddhist genres
Alexander Zorin. A Dunhuang Tibetan Manuscript of
“Ārya-samādhyagrottama” Kept at the IOM,
RAS — 25
This paper introduces a small Tibetan book from Dunhuang kept at the IOM,
RAS. It is a copy of ’Phags pa ting nge ’dzin mchog dam pa, one of the Buddhist sūtras
that emphasize the importance of the practice of samādhi. Some paleographical features
of the manuscript as well as its contents are characterized. The manuscript presents a
version of ’Phags pa ting nge ’dzin mchog dam pa that is different from those of later
editions of the Tibetan Buddhist Canon. Its comparison with fragments of two other
Dunhuang copies of the same text found in Paris supports my assumption that an old
version of the sūtra did exist.
Key words: Tibetan manuscripts, Dunhuang, Buddhist sūtras, Ārya-samādhyagrottama,
paleography, textology
Ogihara Hirotoshi. A Newly Identified Kuchean
Fragment of the Hariścandrāvadāna
Housed in the Russian Collection — 35
This paper introduces one Kuchean (i.e. Tocharian B) fragment housed in the
Institute of Oriental Manuscripts, Russian Academy of Sciences. The fragment has been
identified as part of the Hariścandrāvadāna. This narrative is in the sixth chapter of the
Daśakarmapathāvadānamālā in Old Uyghur. The colophon of this compilation in Old
Uyghur states that it was translated from the Tocharian A translation, which itself had been
translated from the Tocharian B original. The comparison between this newly identified
Kuchean fragment of the Hariścandrāvadāna and the Old Uyghur version reveals that in
both, discrepancies and parallel parts are observable. Thus, whether this Kuchean
fragment belongs to the Kuchean version of the Daśakarmapathāvadānamālā or is part of
the compilation of Buddhist legends in Kuchean remains uncertain.
Key words: Tocharian, Old Uyghur, Daśakarmapathāvadānamālā,
Hariścandrāvadāna,
Kuchean Buddhism, Avadāna
Sergey Burmistrov. The Concept of Dravya in
Yogācāra and Vaiśeṣika: a Comparative
Philosophical Analysis — 55
The concept of dravya is used both in Buddhism and Brāhmaṇical systems of
philosophy, but its meanings there are quite different. According to Vaiśeṣika as one of
the Brāhmaṇical systems dravya is a real substance independent of any knowing subject
and reality is constituted by relations between substances. In Yogācāra Buddhism, on the
opposite, substances are regarded as mere designations existing only in dependence of a
knowing subject. Any entity may be treated as a substance or a mere conceptualization
depending on a concrete situation with the perspective of nirvāṇa.
Key words: the concept of substance, Abhidharma, Asaṅga, Praśastapāda
Anastasia Stepanova. Who Conquered Spain? The
Role of the Berbers in the Conquest of
the Iberian Peninsula — 78
Categories such as “the Berbers” and “the Arabs” are historical. Their production,
maintenance, and reproduction occur under particular circumstances. As circumstances
change, so do these categories. The role of Arabs in the Medieval History of Maghreb is
usually exaggerated. A number of Berber powerful dynasties emerged during Middle Ages
in Maghreb and al-Andalus. This report is motivated by the desire to trace the process of
the conquest of al-Andalus at the beginning of the 8th c. As we speak about al-Andalus
it worth noting that the Muslims who entered Iberia in 711 were mainly Berbers, and were
led again by a Berber, Tariq ibn Ziyad. May we claim that Berbers formed approximately
65–70% or at least the major part of the Islamic population in Iberia that time? That was
the question that had pushed me to the research. I argue that it’s true, considering the
analysis of the military structure of Arab-Berber army, the comparison that would be made
on basis of the sources related to the topic, from the point of view of Berbers position in the
power hierarchy in Iberia, and through the description of the cultural and historical
background. This study provides an important opportunity to advance the understanding of
the role of the Berbers in the conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, who may be were the ones
who tipped the scales in the favor of Arabs’ tribes.
Key words: North Africa, Maghreb, Berbers, al-Andalus, Arabs, Medieval history
Tatiana A. Pang. The Imperial Patent of the Kangxi
Period in the Collection of the
Institute of Oriental Manuscripts, Russian Academy of Sciences — 88
The article presents publication of the earliest imperial patent kept in the
Manchu collection of the IOM, RAS. The patent is dated by the 55th year of Kangxi
(1716) and was conferred to the member of the imperial family. That fact explains
unusual decoration of the scroll — a hand painted frame with dargons. The patent was
given to Urcen, a son of the Manchu dignitary Sunu, devoted associate of the emperor
Kangxi. Sunu was known as one of the highest Manchu officials who adopted
Christianity, and his sons were also baptized. The patent conferred Urcen a title “general
of the third grade, who protects the state” and the text was written in Manchu and
Chinese.
Key words: Manchu patent, Kangxi period, Sunu, Urcen, Manchu Christians
Anna Turanskaya, Natalia Yakhontova,
Dmitry Nosov. Collection of Manuscripts and Xylographs
in the State Archive of the Republic of Tatarstan — 96
The article presents a brief review of a relatively small collection of
manuscripts and xylographs in the Tibetan, Mongolian and Oirat languages from the
Kazan Theological Academy fund, the State Archive of the Republic of Tatarstan.
Although the collection is quite moderate it includes really interesting materials and has
not attracted the attention of researchers. Its brief catalogue was made by the authors.
Key words: manuscripts, xylographs, catalogue, Kazan Theological Academy, State
Archive of the Republic of Tatarstan
Reviews
Indische Handschriften. Teil 19. Die
Śāradā-Handschriften der Sammlung Janert der Staatsbibliothek — Preußischer Kulturbesitz.
Beschrieben von Gеrhard Ehlers. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2016, 145 p., by Safarali H.
Shomakhmadov — 124