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A Scholarly Imprint: How Tibetan Astronomers Brought Jesuit Astronomy to Tibet |
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Author |
Lobsang Yongdan (著)
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Source |
East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine
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Volume | v.45 |
Date | 2017 |
Pages | 91 - 117 |
Publisher | Brill |
Publisher Url |
http://www.brill.nl/
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Location | Leiden, the Netherlands [萊登, 荷蘭] |
Content type | 期刊論文=Journal Article |
Language | 英文=English |
Note | Author Affiliation: Bonn University, Germany. |
Abstract | The European Jesuits’ mission to China during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries is considered a world-historical event that played an important role in the transmission of knowledge between the West and the East. In spite of its historical significance, it was long assumed that the Jesuit mission to China and its scientific scholarship had never reached the mountainous regions of Tibet. As I have described elsewhere, this was not the case. Between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Tibetans not only translated a large number of the Jesuits’ works into Tibetan, they also reformed the Tibetan calendar in accordance with the Jesuit-influenced calendar of the Qing. How did it happen and in which way? It was a twofold process achieved partially with Qing imperial sponsorship and partially on the Tibetans’ own initiative, sometimes even in a low-key, indirect and secretive way. In this article, I shall look at how a Tibetan Buddhist astronomer at the imperial court in Beijing wrote a manual for predicting solar and lunar eclipses. I will also look at how some Tibetan astronomers brought this imperial knowledge, apparently without explicit imperial approval, to the monasteries in Amdo, the North-East of Tibet, which mostly lies today in the Chinese provinces of Qinghai and Gansu, as well as how Tibetan astronomers in this region reformed their calendars according to the Jesuits’ astronomical system. Finally, I will describe how this tradition, in spite of recent political upheaval and tragedies, is still alive and practiced in Tibet. |
Table of contents | Abstract 91 Background 92 A Tibetan Buddhist Astronomer in Beijing 96 A Spherical Earth in Tibet 102 How did the rGya rtsis snying bsdus come to Tibet? 104 The Spread of the Study of Jesuit Astronomy 109 Conclusion 111 References 113 Works in Tibetan and Chinese 113 Secondary Sources in English 115 |
ISSN | 1562918X (P) |
Hits | 77 |
Created date | 2024.03.13 |
Modified date | 2024.03.13 |

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