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Scribal and authorial openings in Theravada manuscripts: The Evidence of the Nevill Collection

Crosby, Kate

Authors

Kate Crosby



Abstract

Complete manuscripts of Theravāda Buddhist texts almost always open with an auspicious formula in homage to the Buddha. In manuscripts from Sri Lanka, the two most common opening formulae are the expressions of homage to the Buddha so widespread in other contexts, namely: namo tassa bhagavato arahato sammāsambuddhassa ‘Homage to the Blessed Lord, the worthy, fully Awakened one’, and namo buddhāya ‘homage to the Buddha.’ These are usually the opening formulae of the scribe or copyist, and separate from the authorial opening of the text contained in the manuscript. The latter often has its own auspicious or formulaic opening, which is more elaborate than the scribal opening. Although scribal formulae can usually be distinguished from the beginning of the text proper, i.e. the text as created by the author or redactor, as I shall discuss below, the distinction between the two is not always recognised in printed editions of Pali texts and may be unclear or blurred in the manuscripts themselves. In this article, I examine the evidence of Sri Lankan manuscripts, especially those of the Nevill collection of the British Library, to see what they add to our current understanding of scribal and authorial openings.

Citation

Crosby, K. (2012). Scribal and authorial openings in Theravada manuscripts: The Evidence of the Nevill Collection. Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies, 2, 124-145

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Jun 25, 2012
Journal Journal of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies
Electronic ISSN 2047-1076
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Pages 124-145
Publisher URL http://www.jocbs.org/index.php/jocbs/article/view/17



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