Buddhism/Catalogs: Difference between revisions
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Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia; neighbouring parts of Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Malaysia; Ceylon. Language: Pali. | Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia; neighbouring parts of Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Malaysia; Ceylon. Language: Pali. | ||
*Pali Canon; regarded as the Word of the Buddha | *Pali Canon; regarded as the Word of the Buddha; collected editions published in Burma, Cambodia, Ceylon/Sri Lanka and Thailand | ||
* | *commentariescollected editions published in Burma, Ceylon/Sri Lanka and Thailand | ||
*subcommentaries (i.e. commentaries on commentaries) | *subcommentaries (i.e. commentaries on commentaries); collected edition published in Burma | ||
===Northern branch=== | ===Northern branch=== |
Revision as of 12:27, 22 November 2012
Collections of authoritative literature
There is no complete translation of any of these in any Western language.
Southern branch
Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia; neighbouring parts of Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Malaysia; Ceylon. Language: Pali.
- Pali Canon; regarded as the Word of the Buddha; collected editions published in Burma, Cambodia, Ceylon/Sri Lanka and Thailand
- commentariescollected editions published in Burma, Ceylon/Sri Lanka and Thailand
- subcommentaries (i.e. commentaries on commentaries); collected edition published in Burma
Northern branch
Tibet, Bhutan, Mongolia; neighbouring parts of India, Nepal, China, Russia; Kalmykia.
- Kanjur: Tibetan translations of Indian texts regarded as the Word of the Buddha
- Tenjur: Tibetan translations of Indian texts not so regarded (including some works of Indian missionaries written in Tibet)
- Nyingma Gyuwum: texts similar to both the above, but recognized only by the Nyingma school
Eastern branch
China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore, Christmas Island.
- the standard collection is the Taisho Shinshu Daizokyo, which includes (not grouped in separate sections)
- Chinese translations of Indian texts regarded as the Word of the Buddha
- Chinese translations of Indian texts not so regarded
- Chinese texts
- Japanese texts
- In addition, major divisions of Japanese Buddhism have produced collected editions of literature important to them, overlapping the above.