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book: Dunhuang Manuscript Culture
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Dunhuang Manuscript Culture

End of the First Millennium
  • Imre Galambos
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2020
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About this book

Open Access

“Dunhuang Manuscript Culture” explores the world of Chinese manuscripts from ninth-tenth century Dunhuang, an oasis city along the network of pre-modern routes known today collectively as the Silk Roads. The manuscripts have been discovered in 1900 in a sealed-off side-chamber of a Buddhist cave temple, where they had lain undisturbed for for almost nine hundred years. The discovery comprised tens of thousands of texts, written in over twenty different languages and scripts, including Chinese, Tibetan, Old Uighur, Khotanese, Sogdian and Sanskrit. This study centres around four groups of manuscripts from the mid-ninth to the late tenth centuries, a period when the region was an independent kingdom ruled by local families. The central argument is that the manuscripts attest to the unique cultural diversity of the region during this period, exhibiting—alongside obvious Chinese elements—the heavy influence of Central Asian cultures. As a result, it was much less ‘Chinese’ than commonly portrayed in modern scholarship. The book makes a contribution to the study of cultural and linguistic interaction along the Silk Roads.

Author / Editor information

Imre Galambos, University of Cambridge, UK.

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 7, 2020
eBook ISBN:
9783110726572
Hardcover published on:
December 7, 2020
Hardcover ISBN:
9783110723496
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Front matter:
8
Main content:
290
Coloured Illustrations:
75
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