[Buddha-l] Earliest Buddhist literature
Blumenthal, James
james.blumenthal at oregonstate.edu
Thu Mar 9 12:47:57 MST 2006
I believe Richard Solomon and others at the University of Washington have been working on these ancient manuscripts from Gandhara. They have published several books on the topic.
Jim
James Blumenthal
Department of Philosophy
Oregon State University
102-A Hovland Hall
Corvallis, OR 97331
-----Original Message-----
From: buddha-l-bounces at mailman.swcp.com on behalf of L.S. Cousins
Sent: Wed 3/8/2006 9:41 PM
To: Buddhist discussion forum
Subject: Re: [Buddha-l] Earliest Buddhist literature
Kate & Stephen,
The accompanying audio file (which can be downloaded from the top
right of the page) is more informative (and more accurate).
>Scientists uncover rare Buddhist manuscripts
>
>Carbon dating of rare manuscripts from a private collection dubbed
>the "Dead Sea scrolls of Buddhism" may reveal the religion's ancient
>origins.
>
>Fragments of the manuscripts were delicately washed, then carbon
>dated at Sydney's Lucas Heights nuclear reactor.
>
>Scientists found the texts originated from the first and fifth centuries AD.
>
>Dr Mark Allon from the University of Sydney says they are believed
>to be the earliest examples of Buddhist literature in Pakistan and
>Afghanistan.
>
>. . .
>
>Found at:
><http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1587259.htm>http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1587259.htm
The reference seems to be to carbon dating of fragments from the
Senior collection. And the date range found was from 130 to 250 A.D.
This looks as if it confirms the dating of the slightly earlier
British Library material.
Lance Cousins
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