Posted on Friday 10 October 2003
Scholars decipher a stunning find, an unknown canon in an ancient dialect.
Through
some stunning finds over the last decade, researchers studying early
Buddhist manuscripts at the University of Washington and at the British
Library are confirming a longstanding hypothesis that an ancient
tradition of Buddhist literature existed in Gandhari, a dialect of
Prakrit, an early Indic language that developed from Sanskrit.They are
confident that that canon may soon take its place next to the four
other great traditions of Buddhist texts: the living traditions of
Pali, Chinese, and Tibetan, and the ancient, fragmentary one of
Sanskrit. The Gandhari canon may prove to be a crucial link in
understanding the way Buddhism moved northward along the Silk Road,
into Central and East Asia, even as it largely died out in India, where
it was born in the fifth or fourth century BC. [link]






