NUMISMATICS HELPED WESTERN STUDY OF BUDDHISM Pubblico Deposited

Contenuto dell'articolo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 15, April 11, 2004, Article 19

    NUMISMATICS HELPED WESTERN STUDY OF BUDDHISM

    A book review in The Japan Times notes the role of
    numismatics in the west's discovery of the origins of
    Buddhism. The book in question is "Buddha and the Sahibs:
    The Men Who Discovered India's Lost Religion" by Charles
    Allen. John Murray, 2003, 322 pp., £8.99 (paper).

    "The story begins with a botanist. At the end of the 18th
    century, a Scottish doctor named Francis Buchanan was
    employed to carry out surveys of Burma and Nepal, neither
    of them with ease, the latter with great difficulty, while on
    missions to those countries. While he was engaged on this,
    he obtained glimpses of a new religion.

    It was a new religion to the British, employees of the Honorable
    East India Company (EICo), but an old one to the subcontinent
    where it had been born. Its fate was curious: Like Christianity,
    this faith had faded from its land of origin, but been taken up with
    enthusiasm in surrounding countries, and extended its influence,
    in varying forms, over most of a continent. It was now about to
    be rediscovered.

    "Discovered," in this context, means by Europeans and the
    Western world."

    "Some of the unsolved mysteries were contained in inscriptions
    that nobody could read. A talented young Englishman named
    James Prinsep, who contributed much to the welfare of ordinary
    Indians and was adept at acquiring languages, managed to break
    the code on one important column. This had wider consequences
    than at first appeared. "Prinsep's unlocking of the Delhi No. 1
    script . . . remains unquestionably the greatest single advance
    in the recovery of India's lost past," says the author.

    Numismatics also formed a part of the Prinsep's investigation,
    and Allen explains in detail some of mysteries that he unraveled.
    When he died, still a young man but exhausted by his work, the
    native people, independently of the British, "raised a subscription
    of their own to build a ghat in his memory." Prinsep's Ghat still
    exists, on the banks of the Ganges in Benares, though it is now
    "popularly known as Princes Ghat."

    "Because of these remarkable men's work, "by the end of 1836
    the Indian origins of Buddhism had been established beyond
    doubt."

    To read the full article, see: Buddhism Origin Article

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2004-04-11
Volume
  • 7

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Autore NNP