The Library’s Gandhara Scroll,
one of the world’s oldest Buddhist manuscripts, has been painstakingly
preserved and digitized, making it available to readers online after
years of delicate work. The document, written on a birch bark scroll
about 2,000 years ago, offers rare insight into the eary history of
Buddhism.
The story of its preservation at the Library began in 2003, when the
Library acquired the scroll from a private collector. It arrived, in
pieces, in an ordinary pen case, accompanied by a handwritten note:
“Extremely fragile, do not open unless necessary.” Its digitization was
completed earlier this year by the coordinated efforts by the Digital
Scan Center, Conservation Division and Asian Division.
The scroll originated in Gandhara, an ancient Buddhist kindgom
located in what is today the northern border areas of Afghanistan and
Pakistan. Surviving manuscripts from the Gandharan realm are rare; only a
few hundred are known to still exist.
Understanding the history of the region helps us realize the significance of this scroll. Gandhara
was a major cultural crossroads between Greek, Iranian, and Indian
traditions. The region was under the rule of numerous kings and
dynasties, including Alexander the Great, the Mauryan emperor Ashoka and
the Kushan emperor Kanishka I. Between the reigns of reigns of Ashoka
and Kanishka I, Gandhara became a major seat of Buddhist art,
architecture and learning. One of the region’s most notable
characteristics is the Hellenistic style of its Buddhist sculptures,
including figures of the Buddha with wavy hair, defined facial features,
and contoured robes reminiscent of Greco-Roman deities.
Gandharan scrolls were typically buried in terracotta jars and
interred in a stupa, a dome-shaped structure often containing Buddhist
texts or relics. The Library’s scroll retains 75 to 80 percent of the
original text, missing only its beginning and end. Its preservation is
due in part to the region’s high altitude and dry climate. The
completeness of the scroll makes it noteworthy because many of the other
surviving Gandharan manuscripts are even more fragmentary.
Th scroll is written in Gandhari, a derivative of Sanskrit, and styled in a script known as Kharoshthi, thought have its origins in Aramaic. Kharoshthi reads from top to bottom and right to left.
The Library’s scroll has been called the Bahubuddha Sutra, or “The
Many Buddhas Sutra,” in the scholarship of the University of
Washington’s Richard Salomon, one of the world’s leading experts on
Gandharan Buddhism and the Gandhari language. Salomon explains
that the likely identification of this scroll as the Bahubuddha Sutra
stems from its similarity to a Sanskrit text of the same name found in
the much larger Mahavastu, or “Great Story,” a biography of the Buddha
and his past lives. Locating a very early attestation of the Bahubuddha
Sutra in the Gandhari language thus sheds new light on the formative
period of Buddhist literature.
Many people are probably familiar with the story of Siddhartha
Gautama, who reached enlightenment underneath the Bodhi tree in Bodh
Gaya in eastern India and became the Buddha. He lived about 2,500 years
ago. Various Buddhist traditions, including the very early Mahayana
tradition of ancient Gandhara, also refer to previous buddhas whose
lives stretch across a cosmic understanding of history, eons and eons
before the birth of Siddhartha Gautama. The Library’s Gandharan scroll
is narrated in the voice of the Buddha summarizing very brief
biographies of thirteen buddhas who came before him, followed by his
birth and enlightenment, and ending with the prediction of the future
buddha, Maitreya.
With regard to conservation, it is safe to say that the Gandhara scroll is one of the most complicated and fragile items ever treated
at the Library of Congress. After its arrival in 2003, it took several
years of thought and planning to devise a treatment strategy. A
memorable anecdote from this time period is that the conservator
practiced her unrolling technique on a dried-up cigar—an item that only
approximates the difficulty of working with a compacted birch bark
scroll.
With assistance from a conservator at the British Library who had
worked on similarly ancient materials, the treatment plan was put into
action: Gradual humidification over a few days, careful unrolling by
hand with precision tools on a sheet of inert glass, followed by placing
another sheet of glass on top once the scroll was completely unrolled.
The edges were then sealed. The six largest scroll fragments — which
contained the majority of the text — were placed inside one glass
housing, while another was used for the more than 100 smaller fragments,
some with only parts of a single syllable. Both glass housings were
then placed in specially constructed drop spine boxes designed to
protect the scroll from damage caused by vibration.
Glass housing, shock-absorbing foam, sturdy boxes—all of these
contribute to the scroll’s long-term preservation. But even in its
well-preserved state, the physical scroll is too fragile for public
display. This is the reason for the excitement behind its new digital
reincarnation, a format in which this unique item can be shared with a
global audience.
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/07/now-online-the-gandhara-scroll-a-rare-2000-year-old-text-of-early-buddhism/
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