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Long-Distance Trade And The Transmission Of Buddhism Through Northern Pakistan, Primarily Based On Kharoṣṭhī And Brāhmī Inscriptions
Author Neelis, Jason Emmanuel (著)
Date2001.01
Pages292
PublisherUniversity of Washington
Publisher Url https://www.washington.edu/
LocationSeattle, WA, US [西雅圖, 華盛頓州, 美國]
Content type博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionUniversity of Washington
DepartmentAsian Languages and Literature
AbstractThis study examines the symbiotic relationship between the development of transregional long-distance trade networks and the early long-distance transmission of Buddhism from northwestern South Asia through the territory of the Northern Areas of Pakistan to eastern Central Asia and China. Recent discoveries of thousands of graffiti inscriptions written in the Kharosthl and Brahml scripts and petroglyphs of Buddhist images along ancient capillary routes through the Upper Indus, Gilgit and Hunza valleys illustrate patterns of long-distance travel and
cultural contact during the first millennium CE.
Inscriptions and rock drawings are situated in the contexts of the physical environment, religious traditions, languages, literature, and ethnography of northern Pakistan, which was a dynamic multicultural crossroads rather than an isolated enclave. An overview of regional history based on archaeological, epigraphic and literary sources focuses on migrations and political developments, particularly during the periods of the Sakas and Kusanas in the early centuries CE and the period of the Patola Sahis in the seventh to early eighth centuries CE. The broad historical overview demonstrates that control of frontiers between northern Pakistan and neighboring areas of Afghanistan and Kashmir has been repeatedly contested.
A survey of graffiti and petroglyph complexes examines Kharosthl and Brahml inscriptions from Haldeikish and Alam Bridge in detail. Names, titles, dates, and formulae reflect the diversity of visitors and local inhabitants who recorded their arrival and sometimes drew auspicious designs. Buddhist images of stupas, Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, and jatakas, often labeled “religious offerings” in Brahml inscriptions, established the presence of Buddhism at rudimentary shrines in places lacking stupas or monasteries. Graffiti and petroglyphs provide evidence for capillary networks which directly connected the major arteries of the Uttarapatha and Daksinapatha in the Indian subcontinent with the silk routes of eastern Central Asia, which were linked with overland and maritime networks for long-distance trade. High-value/lowvolume trade in precious commodities was closely related to the process of early
long-distance transmission of Buddhism from South Asia through the mountain transit zone of northern Pakistan, where surplus resources for supporting Buddhist institutions were initially unavailable.
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Created date2023.03.08
Modified date2023.03.08



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