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Gandhara scroll Online
Gandhara scroll
- Contains information on the parallel lives of fifteen buddhas:
Dīpaṅkara, Sarvābhibhū, Padmottara, Atyuccagāmin, Yaśottara,
Śākyamuni [I], Tiṣya, Vipaśyin, Śikhin, Viśvabhū, Krakucchanda,
Konākamuni, Kāśyapa, Śākyamuni [II] (also known as Siddhartha
Gautama), and Maitreya. The scroll gives the buddhas' predictions of
Śākyamuni's future coming as the Buddha; his four courses of training
under the other buddhas; their lifespans; eons in which they lived;
social class into which they were born; their assemblies of disciples;
and duration of their teachings.
-
"The ancient kingdom of Gandhara (today's
Afghanistan and Pakistan) is the source of the oldest Buddhist
manuscripts in the world, as well as the oldest manuscripts from South
Asia in existence. Acquired in 2003, the Library's Gandhara scroll
roughly dates between the first century BCE and first century CE. Its
language is Gandhari, a derivative of Sanskrit, and the script is called
Kharoshthi. Scholars have informally called this scroll the Bahubuddha
Sutra, or 'The Many Buddhas Sutra,' because it resembles a text with a
similar name in Sanskrit. The scroll discusses the lives of fifteen
buddhas. The text is narrated by Shakyamuni Buddha who gives very short
biographies of thirteen buddhas who came before him, followed by his
birth and emergence as Shakyamuni Buddha, and ending with the prediction
of the future buddha, Maitreya. The biographies contain other
information, such as how long each buddha lived, how each predicted the
eventual appearance of Shakyamuni Buddha, what social class the buddha
was born into, and how long his teachings endured"-- Provided by Library
of Congress Asian Division staff.
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