Pali Canon/Bibliography
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner. For formatting, consider using automated reference wikification.
Editions of the Canon
As no full bibliography seems to be available, this listing may be incomplete.
- Sinhalese textual family: as Theravada mainly spread from Ceylon to SE Asia, this is in a sense the oldest, with the qualification that parts of the Canon were lost and had to be reimported
- [BJT]: Buddhajayanti Tripitaka Granthamālā/Series (Sinhalese/English title pages; the word jayanti does not appear in Pali dictionaries and has several meanings in Sinhalese), 52 volumes in 58, Sinhalese script with Sinhalese translation on facing pages, published under the patronage of (the government of) Ceylon/Sri Lanka (various wordings in different volumes), [Colombo?], 1957-1989. Apparently lacking in coordination between editors of different volumes.[1].
- Pali text series published by the trustees of the Simon Hewavitarne Bequest. This includes texts other than the Canon
- At least one volume has appeared in the All-Ceylon Buddhist Congress Tripiṭaka Pāḷi Series.
- Burmese textual family: this involves a fair amount of "normalization"
- 38 volumes, Burmese script, Philip H. Ripley, Haṃsavatī Press, Rangoon, 1900. The first complete printed edition of the Canon, it was copied from the inscriptions approved by the 5th Council. Sponsored by the British authorities
- Burmese script, Tampadipa Time Press, 1912
- Chaṭṭha Saṅgīti Piṭaka [6th Council Pitaka; this council was held in Rangoon from 1954 to 1956 by all 5 Theravada countries], 40 volumes. As of 1968, the Burmese government did not permit any other edition to be published. German Pali scholar Professor Dr Oskar von Hinüber describes CSP as an excellent edition.[3]
- Nālandā Devanāgarī Pāli Granthamālā/Series (devanagari/English title pages), ed Bhikkhu J. Kashyap, 39 volumes in 41, devanagari script, Pali Publication Board (Government of Bihar), [Nalanda, Bihar, India?], 1957–1961. Based mainly on the 6th Council edition.
- Mahācūḷātepiṭakaṃ, 45 volumes, Thai script, Mahācūḷālaṅkaraṇarājavidyālaya [Mahachulalongkorn Royal University], [Bangkok?], 1960-1990; based on the 6th Council edition.
- Mahāsaṅgīti Tipiṭaka Buddhavasse 2500 [Great Council Tipiṭaka in Buddha Year 2500; the council ended at the beginning of 2500 in the calendar used in Burma and Ceylon, though it was still 2499 in Thailand], 40 volumes, Latin script, Dhamma Society Fund [sponsored by the Supreme Patriarch of Thailand], Bangkok, 2005. Text transcribed from the 6th Council edition, but more collation; a few differences in volume divisions.
- digital version at [9]
- A devanagari printing of the VRI has been published (c. 1993-8), with commentaries and subcommentaries added.
- Thai–Khmer textual family: according to Professor von Hinüber, intermediate between the Sinhalese and Burmese editions.[4] According to Dr Wynne,[5] in general, close to the Burmese.
- 39 volumes, Thai script, with tone markers, 1893/4. The first printed edition of the Canon, but incomplete, probably because not all was ready by the jubilee. A review of this edition was published in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, new series, volume XXX.
- Mon script, Bangkok, 1940; states that it is based on the above.[6]
- Syāmaraṭṭhassa Tepiṭakaṃ [Tepiṭaka of the Kingdom of Siam], 45 volumes, Thai script, without tone markers; completion of 1893/4 edition
- [1st edition], Mahāmakuṭarājavidyālaya [Mahamongkut Royal University], Bangkok, 1925–1928
- [2nd edition/printing], c. 1960: more collation
- reissues also known in 1980 and 1995
- Braḥ Traipiṭakapāḷi, 110 volumes, Khmer script, with Khmer translation on facing pages, [Cambodian Royal National Library], Phnom Penh, 1931-1969. The Khmers Rouges burnt every set in the country, with only a few surviving elsewhere.
- Dayyaraṭṭhassa Saṅgītitepiṭakaṃ [Thai Kingdom Council Tepiṭaka], 45 volumes, Thai script, 1987
- The Bhumibalo project aims at printing all Pali texts surviving in manuscripts in Thailand
- Eclectic editions
- Pāli Canon in Pāli (Tipiṭaka), Latin script, Pali Text Society, Bristol, 56 volumes; the standard Western scholarly edition, originally issued 1877-1927; a few volumes replaced by new editions, and index volumes added, since then; according to Dr Wynne,[7] in general, fairly close to the Sinhalese
- The Dhammakaya project (Thailand) has so far produced only a sample volume
Translations
- Pali Canon in English Translation, 1895- , in progress, 42 volumes so far, Pali Text Society, Bristol; for details see website.
Selections:
- Some Sayings of the Buddha According to the Pali Canon, ed & tr F.L. Woodward, Oxford World Classics, 1924; reprinted Buddhist Society, London, 1974; from the first two pitakas
- The Life of Gotama the Buddha, Compiled Exclusively from the Pali Canon, ed & tr E. H. Brewster, Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner, London, 1926; from the first two pitakas
- The Word of the Buddha: an Outline of the Teachings of the Buddha in the Words of the Pali Canon, ed & tr Nyanatiloka, 1935: [10]; from all five nikayas
- The Lion's Roar: an Anthology of the Buddha's Teachings Selected from the Pāḷi Canon, ed & tr David Maurice, Rider, London, 1962; American printing Citadel, New York, 1967; from all three pitakas
- The Life of the Buddha As It Appears in the Pali Canon, the Oldest Authentic Record, ed & tr Nanamoli, Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka, 1972: [11]; from the first two pitakas
- In the Buddha's Words: an Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon, ed & tr Bodhi, Wisdom Pubns, 2005: [12]; from the first four nikayas
- Buddhist Meditation: an Anthology of Texts from the Pali Canon, ed & tr Sarah Shaw, Routledge, 2006: [13]; from the last two pitakas
- Wings to Awakening: an Anthology from the Pali Canon, ed & tr Thanissaro Bhikkhu, 2011: [14]; from all five nikayas
Secondary sources
Books specifically about the Canon:
- History of Pali Literature, B. C. Law, volume I; [15]
- Analysis of the Pali Canon, Russell Webb, Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka; [16]; includes extensive bibliography
- Guide to Tipitaka, Ko Lay, originally published in Burma, reprinted in India, Malaysia, Taiwan and Thailand, now online at numerous web pages, e.g. [17], [18], [19], [20]
- Matthew Meghaprasara, New Guide to the Tipitaka. A Complete Reference to the Pâli Buddhist Canon, Delhi, Sangha of Books, 2013
More general books:
- Pali Literature, K. R. Norman, Otto Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden, 1983
- Handbook of Pali Literature, Oskar von Hinüber, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, 1996
Notes
- ↑ The Numerical Discourses of the Buddha, Wisdom Publications/Pali Text Society, 2012, page 1691, note 747
- ↑ The Numerical Discourses of the Buddha, Wisdom Publications, 2012, notes 533, 584, 1338
- ↑ Handbook of Pali Literature, de Gruyter, Berlin, 1996, pages 3f
- ↑ Journal of the Siam Society, volume 71, pages 75f
- ↑ Thai International Journal of Buddhist Studies, volume IV (2013), page 136
- ↑ Indo-Iranian Journal, volume 11, page 311
- ↑ Thai International Journal of Buddhist Studies, volume IV (2013), page 136