The Gandhāran birch-bark scrolls preserve the earliest remains of
Buddhist literature known today and provide unprecedented insights into
the history of Buddhism. This volume presents three manuscripts from the
Bajaur Collection (BC), a group of nineteen scrolls discovered at the
end of the twentieth century and named after their findspot in
northwestern Pakistan. The manuscripts, written in the Gāndhārī language
and Kharoṣṭhī script, date to the second century CE. The three
scrolls--BC 4, BC 6, and BC 11--contain treatises that focus on the
Buddhist concept of non-attachment. This volume is the first in the
Gandhāran Buddhist Texts series that is devoted to texts belonging to
the Mahāyāna tradition.
There are no known versions of these texts in other Buddhist traditions,
and it is assumed that they are autographs. Andrea Schlosser provides an
overview of the contents of the manuscripts and discusses their context,
genre, possible authorship, physical layout, paleography, orthography,
phonology, and morphology. Transliteration and translation of the texts
are accompanied by notes on difficult terminology, photographs of the
reconstructed scrolls, an index of Gāndhārī words with Sanskrit and Pali
equivalents, and a preliminary transliteration of the scroll BC 19.
The ebook edition of Three Early Mahāyāna Treatises of Gandhāra is
openly available at DOI 10.6069/9780295750750.