Was Asoka the 'author' of the Asokan Inscriptions?

Textual analysis and comparative discussion on early Buddhist sects and texts.

Was Asoka the 'author' of the Asokan Inscriptions?

Postby Bankei » Fri Apr 16, 2010 11:54 am

Herman Tieken questions a number of assumptions regarding the Asokan inscriptions, including:
- Does Piyadasse = Asoka?
- Where the inscriptions erected after his death?

See "The Role of the So-called Aśoka Inscriptions in the Attempt to Date the Buddha", Rivista di Studi Sudasiatici, Vol 1, 2006

Abstract

The date of the Buddha is calculated on the basis of the date of Aśoka’s consecration. According to one Buddhist tradition this event took place 100 years after the Buddha’s death, according to another tradition 218 later. Aśoka’s dates, in turn, are calibrated by those of the certain Greek kings mentioned in Rock Edict xiii. However, in the present article it is argued that the “Aśoka inscriptions” are not necessarily by Aśoka and that the name Aśoka found in some of the inscriptions is a later insertion.

Full article at http://ejour-fup.unifi.it/index.php/rss ... /view/2456
Bankei
 
Posts: 409
Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2009 4:40 am

Re: Was Asoka the 'author' of the Asokan Inscriptions?

Postby BlackBird » Mon Apr 26, 2010 12:34 am

I would suggest reading Theravada Buddhism by Richard Gombrich - Ol' Dick has some good things to say on this topic.

metta
Jack
"But, Udāyi, let be the past, let be the future, I shall set you forth the Teaching: When there is this this is, with arising of this this arises; when there is not this this is not, with cessation of this this ceases." - Majjhima ii,32

Nanavira Thera's teachings - An existential approach to the Dhamma:
http://bit.ly/LDsGHg
User avatar
BlackBird
 
Posts: 1388
Joined: Fri Apr 17, 2009 12:07 pm
Location: New Zealand


Return to Early Buddhism

Who is online

Registered users: Bhikkhu_Samahita, Bing [Bot], cooran, EmptyShadow, Feathers, Google [Bot], kmath, Lazy_eye, Modus.Ponens, MSNbot Media, retrofuturist, upekha