Transfer of Buddhism Across Central Asian Networks (7th to 13th Centuries)

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buddhism in the west uyghur kingdom and beyond 249

Further titles derive from Chinese ones such as vapšı (< Chin. fashi 法師

‘dharma master’ = Skt. dharmabhāṇaka ‘the one who proclaims the dharma’),301

samtso (< Chin. 三藏 sanzang ‘(master of ) the tripiṭaka’)302 or bahšı (< Chin.

boshi 博士 ‘teacher’), the latter title being copied into Mongolian.303 We

even find a Sogdian title moč(a)k (< Sogd. mwck), slightly damaged in the

manuscript.304

3 Conclusion

The summary of Uyghur Buddhism in the West Uyghur Kingdom and its adja-

cent regions given in this article could not touch upon other important issues

such as the role of lay Buddhists in general and the importance of donors in

particular. Doctrinal peculiarities were only briefly mentioned. A future his-

tory of Buddhism in the West Uyghur Kingdom would have to include an

attempt to evaluate the relationship between Buddhist centres in the Turfan

region and their respective differences on a local level. What, for instance, was

the relationship between the winter capital in Kara Kočo and the monastic

dwellings in rather remote places such as Toyok, Sängim or Bäzäklik? Are there

certain characteristics of Buddhism at the different sites such as a predilection

for Pure Land Buddhism or for certain genres of texts? Was the influence of lay

Buddhism more pronounced at one place than at another?

301 Zieme, Religion und Gesellschaft, 44.
302 Mirsultan, Aysima, Die alttürkische Xuanzang-Biographie X, nach der Handschrift von
Paris, Peking und St. Petersburg sowie nach dem Transkript von Annemarie v. Gabain ediert,
übersetzt und kommentiert (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2010), 315.
303 On the semantics of this title in later texts see the excellent treatment in Doerfer, Gerhard,
Türkische und mongolische Elemente im Neupersischen unter besonderer Berücksichtigung
älterer neupersischer Geschichtsquellen, vor allem der Mongolen- und Timuridenzeit. Vol. 2
(Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner, 1965), 271–277 (No. 724).
304 Zieme, Peter, “Zwei neue alttürkische Saddharmapuṇḍarīka-Fragmente,” Altorientalische
Forschungen 16.2 (1989): 377–378 [reprint: Fragmenta Buddhica Uigurica: Ausgewählte
Schriften von Peter Zieme, ed. Simone-Christiane Raschmann and Jens Wilkens
(Berlin: Klaus Schwarz, 2009), 74–75]. Further titles are dealt with in Zieme, Peter, “Sur
quelques titres et noms des bouddhistes turcs,” in L’Asie Centrale et ses voisins. Influences
réciproques, ed. Rémy Dor (Paris: Inalco, 1990), 131–139 [reprint: Fragmenta Buddhica
Uigurica: Ausgewählte Schriften von Peter Zieme, ed. Simone-Christiane Raschmann and
Jens Wilkens (Berlin: Klaus Schwarz, 2009), 574–582].

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