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The Buddha Carita By Asvaghosa Or Act Of Buddha

800.00

Author Edward B. Cowell
Publisher New Bharatiya Book Corporation
Language Sanskrit Text With English Translation
Edition 2nd edition, 2023
ISBN 978-81-87418-78-8
Pages 352
Cover Hard Cover
Size 14 x 3 x 22 (l x w x h)
Weight
Item Code NBBC0061
Other Dispatched in 1-3 days

 

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Description

The Buddha Carita By Asvaghosa Or Act Of Buddha The Sanskrit text of the Buddha Carita was published at the beginning of last year in the ‘Anecdota Oxoniensia,’ and the following English translation is now included in the series of ‘Sacred Books of the East.’ It is an early Sanskrit poem written in India on the legendary history of Buddha, and therefore contains much that is of interest for the history of Buddhism, beside its special importance as illustrating the early history of classical Sanskrit literature.

It is ascribed to Aśvaghoşa; and, although there were several writers who bore that name, it seems most probable that our author was the contemporary and spiritual adviser of Kanishka in the first century of our era. Hiouen Thsang, who left India, in A.D. 645, mentions him with Deva, Nāgārjuna, and Kumāralabdha, ‘as the four suns which illumine the world; but our fullest account is given by I- tsing, who visited India in 673. He states that Aśvaghoşa was an ancient author who composed the Alaṁkāra-śāstra and the Buddha-Carita-Kavya, the latter work being of course the present poem. Beside these two works he also composed the hymns in honour of Buddha and the three holy beings Amitābha, Avalokiteśvara, and Mahāsthāna, which were chanted at the evening service of the monasteries. ‘In the five countries of India and in the countries of the Southern ocean they recite these poems, because they express a store of ideas and meaning in a few 2 words. A solitary stanza (VIII, 13) is quoted from the Buddha Carita in Rāyamukuta’s commentary on the Amarakośa I, 1. 1, 2, and also by Ujjvaladatta in his commentary on the Unādi-sūtras I, 156; and five stanzas are quoted as from Aśvaghosa in Vallabhadeva’s Subhāṣitāvali, which bear a great resemblance to his style, though they are not found in the extant portion of this poem.

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