tuis.
(Tuis.)
#1
xvi notes on contributors
2015); “Spells and Magical Practices as Reflected in the Early Chinese Buddhist
Sources (c. 300–600 CE) and their Implications for the Rise and Development
of Esoteric Buddhism.” In Chinese and Tibetan Tantric Buddhism, edited by
Meir Sahar and Yael Bentor (forthcoming, 2016).
Monica Strinu
finished her diploma thesis on depictions of deities from the founding phase
of Tabo in the context of cultural history at the University of Vienna in 2013.
Since 2007 she has worked as an archive assistant and graphic designer at the
Western Himalaya Archive Vienna, part of the national research network
“The Cultural History of the Western Himalaya from the 8th Century” and the
“Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Documentation of Inner and South
Asian Cultural History” at the Institute for Art History at the University of
Vienna. Her research interests include Western Himalayan art from the 10th to
13th centuries and digital art history.
Gertraud Taenzer
is an independant scholar. Her current research interests are old Tibetan wood-
slips of the Southern Taklamakan and the Tsaidam Basin and the secular man-
uscripts of the post Tibetan period (period of Guiyi jun rule) from Dunhuang.
Her publications include “The ’A zha Country under the Tibetans in the 8th
and 9th Century: A Survey of Land Registration and Taxation Based on a
Sequence of Three Manuscripts of the Stein Collection from Dunhuang”. In
Scribes, Texts, and Rituals in Early Tibet and Dunhuang, edited by Brandon
Dotson, Kazushi Iwao and Tsuguhito Takeuchi, 25–43. Wiesbaden: Reichert
Verlag, 2013.
Sam van Schaik
is based at the British Library, and is currently a Principle Investigator in
the project Beyond Boundaries: Religion, Region, Language and the State
(funded by the European Research Commission). His previous research proj-
ects include Tibetan Chan, Tibetan and Chinese paleography, and the Tibetan
Tan tric manuscripts from Dunhuang. He also occasionally lectures at the
School of Oriental and African Studies. His recent publications include: Tibetan
Zen-Discovering a Lost Tradition. Boston: Shambhala, 2015; with Imre Galambos.
Manuscripts and Travellers: The Sino Tibetan Documents of a Tenth Century
Buddhist Pilgrim. Berlin, Boston: de Gruyter, 2012; Tibet: A History. London: Yale
University Press, 2011.