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Difference between revisions of "British Museum scrolls"

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The [[British Museum scrolls]] are a collection of [[Buddhist]] [[books]] found in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} in the early 1990’s and now preserved in the {{Wiki|British Museum}} in {{Wiki|London}}. Written on strips of birch bark and dating from about the 1st century CE, they are the oldest [[Buddhist texts]] in [[existence]].
 
The [[British Museum scrolls]] are a collection of [[Buddhist]] [[books]] found in {{Wiki|Afghanistan}} in the early 1990’s and now preserved in the {{Wiki|British Museum}} in {{Wiki|London}}. Written on strips of birch bark and dating from about the 1st century CE, they are the oldest [[Buddhist texts]] in [[existence]].
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The [[hot]] damp [[Indian]] climate [[caused]] the originals and even [[ancient]] copies of the [[Tipiṭaka]] to disappear centuries ago. {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}’s cold {{Wiki|dry climate}} preserved these [[books]], thus allowing [[scholars]] to verify that the [[Buddha’s]] [[discourses]] as we have them today are substantially the same as those that existed just a few centuries after the [[Buddha]].
 
The [[hot]] damp [[Indian]] climate [[caused]] the originals and even [[ancient]] copies of the [[Tipiṭaka]] to disappear centuries ago. {{Wiki|Afghanistan}}’s cold {{Wiki|dry climate}} preserved these [[books]], thus allowing [[scholars]] to verify that the [[Buddha’s]] [[discourses]] as we have them today are substantially the same as those that existed just a few centuries after the [[Buddha]].
  

Latest revision as of 16:12, 16 February 2024

BritishMuseumScrolls.jpg





The British Museum scrolls are a collection of Buddhist books found in Afghanistan in the early 1990’s and now preserved in the British Museum in London. Written on strips of birch bark and dating from about the 1st century CE, they are the oldest Buddhist texts in existence.


The hot damp Indian climate caused the originals and even ancient copies of the Tipiṭaka to disappear centuries ago. Afghanistan’s cold dry climate preserved these books, thus allowing scholars to verify that the Buddha’s discourses as we have them today are substantially the same as those that existed just a few centuries after the Buddha.

Some of the suttas included in the scrolls are a selection from the Saṃyutta Nikāya, Aṅguttara Nikāya, the Dhammapada, the Itivuttaka and the Sutta Nipāta. Included in the collection are also several medical texts.

Ancient Buddhist Scrolls from Gandhara, Richard Salomon, 1999.

Source

www.buddhisma2z.com