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The Early Development of Buddhist Literature and Language in India |
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Author |
Cousins, Lance (著)
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Source |
Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies
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Volume | v.5 |
Date | 2013.11 |
Pages | 89 - 135 |
Publisher | Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies |
Publisher Url |
https://www.wolfson.ox.ac.uk/how-get-here
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Location | Oxford, UK [牛津, 英國] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Abstract | After some preliminary considerations concerning orality and writing in India and the date of the Buddha, this article re-examines the questions of where and when a version of the Pali Canon was first set to writing and what were the contents of that collection. It then goes on to examine the origin and evolution of the Māgadha language we now call Pali, seeing it as derived from a written language which was in wide use over the major part of India during the last centuries B.C. rather than directly from spoken dialects. |
Table of contents | Writing in India 93 Oral literature in India 99 Some preliminary considerations 100 What was written down? 101 Proposed ealier divisions of the canonical material 104 Where and when were the texts written down? 108 By whom were the texts written down? 112 Contents of the earliest Canon in Ceylon 113 Summary of the discussion of the writing down of the texts 118 In what language were they written? 118 |
ISSN | 20471076 (P) |
Hits | 162 |
Created date | 2022.04.06 |
Modified date | 2022.04.13 |
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