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

(Tuis.) #1
314 Bibliography

Vitali, Roberto. Early Temples of Central Tibet. London: Serindia Publications, 1990.


———. The Kingdoms of Gu.ge Pu.hrang according to mNga’.ris rgyal.rabs by Gu.ge
mkhan.chen Ngag.dbang grags.pa. Dharamsala: Tho.ling gtsug.lag.khang lo.gcig.
stong ’khor.ba’i rjes.dran.mdzad sgo’i go.sgrig tshogs.chung, 1996.
Vohra, Rohit. “Ethno-Historicity of the Dards in Ladakh-Baltistan: Observations and


Analysis.” In Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the 4thSeminar of the International
Association for Tibetan Studies. Schloss Hohenkammer—Munich 1985, edited by
Helga Uebach and Jampa L. Panglung, 529–546. Munich: Kommission für
Zentralasiatische Studien Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1988.
———. Petroglyphs in Purig Area of Ladakh. Grosbous: Ethnic Unlimited, 2005.


von Gabain, Annemarie. “Buddhistische Türkenmission.” In Asiatica: Festschrift
Friedrich Weller. Zum 65. Geburtstag gewidmet von seinen Freunden, Kollegen und
Schülern, edited by Johannes Schubert and Ulrich Schneider, 161–173. Leipzig:
Harrassowitz, 1954.


———. “Der Buddhismus in Zentralasien.” In Religionsgeschichte des Orients in der
Zeit der Weltreligionen, edited by Bertold Spuler, 496–514. Leiden, Köln: Brill, 1961.


von Le Coq, Albert. Türkische Manichaica aus Chotscho 3. Nebst einem christlichen
Bruchstück aus Bulayïq. Berlin: Verlag der Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1922.


von Schroeder, Ulrich. Buddhist Sculptures in Tibet. 2 vols. Hong Kong: Visual Dharma
Publications, 2001.
Vorob’eva, Margarita, Lev Nicolaevich Men’shikov, Yuan Xizhen, and Chen Huaping,


ed. Ecang Dunhuang hanwen xiejuan xulu 俄藏敦煌漢文寫卷序錄 [Catalogue of
the Chinese Manuscripts of Dunhuang kept in Russia]. Shanghai: Shanghai guji
chubanshe, 1999.
Vovin, Alexander. “Did the Xiong-nu speak a Yeniseian Language?” Central Asiatic


Journal 44.1 (2000): 87–104.
Walter, Mariko Namba. Sogdians and Buddhism. Philadelphia: University of


Pennsylvania, 2006. Accessed August 29, 2013. http://www.sino-platonic.org/com
plete/spp174_sogdian_buddhism.pdf.

Wang, Eugene Y. Shaping the Lotus Sūtra: Buddhist Visual Culture in Medieval China.
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2005.


Wang, Michelle. “From Dhāraṇī to Mandala: A Study of Mogao Cave 14 and Esoteric
Buddhist Art of the Tang Dynasty (618–907).” PhD diss., Harvard University, 2008.
———. “Changing Conceptions of ʻMaṇḍalaʼ in Tang China: Ritual and the Role of


Images.” Material Religion 9.2 (2013): 196–217.
Wang Seng 王森. Minzu tushuguan zang fanwen beiyejing mulu 民族図書館


藏梵文贝叶经目录 [Catalogue of Sanskrit Manuscripts Preserved in the China
Ethnic Library]. No place, 1985. (Published as an appendix of Hu- von Hinüber
2006).
Free download pdf