The Buddhist Religion: A Historical Introduction

(Sean Pound) #1
314 AN OVERVIEW OF THE BUDDHIST SCRIPTURES

XXIV. Catalogs, vol. 55, 40 texts. Successive catalogs of the Canon begin-
ning with that ofSeng-yu published in 515 c.E.

C. The Tibetan Canon


I. Bka'-'gyur (Kanjur) ("Translation ofBuddha-word"). The number of
volumes and order of sections differ slightly from edition to edition.
The following is according to the Snar-thang (Narthang) version.


  1. Vinaya, 13 vols.

  2. Prajfiii-piiramita, 21 vols.

  3. Avatm]'lsaka, 6 vols.

  4. Ratnakufa, 6 vols. A set of 49 Mahayana Sutras.

  5. Sutra, 30 vols., 270 texts, three-quarters Mahayana Sutras and one-
    quarter Hinayana ones.

  6. Tantra, 22 vols., over 300 texts.
    II. Bstan-'gyur (Tenjur) ("Translation ofTeachings"). In the Peking
    edition, this consists of224 volumes and 3,626 texts, divided into:

  7. Stotras (hymns of praise), 1 vol., 64 texts.

  8. Commentaries on mantras, 86 vols., 3,055 texts.

  9. Commentaries on Sutras, 137 vols., 567 texts.
    a. Prajfiii-piiramitii commentaries, 16 vols.
    b. Miidhyamika treatises, 17 vols.
    c. Yogacara treatises, 29 vols.
    d. Abhidharma, 8 vols.
    e. Miscellaneous, 4 vols.
    f. Vinaya Commentaries, 16 vols.
    g. Tales and dramas, 4 vols.
    h. Technical treatises: logic (21 vols.), grammar (1 vol.), lexicogra-
    phy and poetics (1 vol.), medicine (5 vols.), chemistry and
    sundry (1 vol.), supplement (old and recent translations,
    indices; 14 vols.).

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