A notebook. Extent and format of original material: 2 files. Physical characteristics: 1 leporello manuscript having 7 openings on side [a] and 8 openings on side [b].
Side [A] of notebook WL-HL-SGG 088. Includes: 1. a prayer for reward [a1]-[a6]; 2. chart [a7]-[a7]. Extent and format of original material: Side [a] of a leporello manuscript having 7 openings. Physical characteristics: Incomplete, unknown number of folds in the beginning and at the end of sid...
Side [B] of notebook WL-HL-SGG 088. Includes: 3. fragment of Abhidhamma quotation [b1]-[b1]; 4. recipe [b2]-[b2]; 5. fragment of a sermon about the Buddha [b3]-[b8]. Extent and format of original material: Side [b] of a leporello manuscript having 8 openings. Physical characteristics: Incomple...
The collection of the Phvat‘ lhuiṅ‘ʺ ’A rheʹ kyoṅʻʺ monastery (pron. Hput-hlaing Ashay-kyaung) represents the remains of a sizeable and well-resourced archive of Buddhist texts. It goes beyond what is ordinary for an average village site and includes all major components that might be found in c...
Single-text Vinaya manuscript being the first bundle in a two-bundle set. Only this bundle survives. Extent and format of original material: 2 files. Physical characteristics: Palm leaf. Gilded folios with red pigment band in the middle. Incomplete, one of the edges slightly gnawed away by rat...
A bilingual translation of Sāriputta's Vinayasaṅgaha or Pāḷimuttakavinayavinicchayasaṅgaha, a twelth-century Sinhalese handbook on monastic discipline. Vinayasaṅgaha presented the explanations of the rules of training adapted mostly from the earlier Samantapāsādikā commentary under thematic head...
A fragment of a single-text Vinaya manuscript being the first bundle in a two-bundle set. Only this part survives. Extent and format of original material: 2 files. Physical characteristics: Palm leaf. Gilded folios with red pigment band in the middle. Incomplete, remaining folios severely dama...
A bilingual translation of Sāriputta's Vinayasaṅgaha or Pāḷimuttakavinayavinicchayasaṅgaha, a twelth-century Sinhalese handbook on monastic discipline. Vinayasaṅgaha presented the explanations of the rules of training adapted mostly from the earlier Samantapāsādikā commentary under thematic head...