The Old Tibetan Annals contain Tibet's oldest extant history. Primarily
a bureaucratic register of events, it is the single most reliable source
for the history of the first half of the Tibetan Empire (c. 600-850 CE).
This record was maintained more or less contemporaneously with the
events it describes, with entries added at the end of each year from 650
to 764. In each yearly entry, the Old Tibetan Annals record information
such as the summer and winter residences of the Tibetan emperor, where
the summer and winter political councils were convened, who convened
them, and what measures were taken. Visits from foreign dignitaries,
military engagements, dynastic marriages, the birth of a future
sovereign, deaths of important figures, and the performance of funeral
rites for the royal family are also recorded. This volume offers an
annotated translation of the Old Tibetan Annals along with a
transliteration of the Tibetan text and photographic reproductions of
the original Dunhuang documents. A long introduction serves to place the
Old Tibetan Annals within its cultural and historical context by
exploring the history of the Tibetan Empire, as well as its political
geography and administrative practices. A set of appendices follows the
translation, of which an index of the place names mentioned in the
Annals is especially useful. The indices and a glossary render the
Annals easily accessible, and the photographic reproductions give
scholars access to the original text. Gedruckt mit Unterstutzung des
Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung