Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Tibetan Fond of the Center of Oriental Manuscripts and Xylography of the Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan Studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Characteristics, Classification of the Medical Collection

View through CrossRef
This article offers a description and subject classification of the medical texts collection from the Tibetan fond of the Center for Oriental Manuscripts and Xylographs of the Institute of Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (COMX IMBTS SB RAS). One of its main tasks has been to identify and attribute medical texts in the Tibetan collection, which is comprised of over 40,000 texts acquired from private libraries of the Buddhist clergy of Buryatia. Intensive source work has resulted in creation of a separate collection of medical texts, which includes 508 manuscripts and xylographs registered under 222 storage cyphers. All texts have been thematically classified into 11 groups according to genre of medical literature. This classification reflects the preferences of Buryat physicians in choosing particular works. Although the collection is relatively small, it contains important texts of Tibetan medicine. The article focuses on classification of the most common in Buryatia commentaries on the rGyud bzhi. The authors have identified several terms that Tibetans used for this category of texts, such as sdong 'grems, mchan' grel, bru 'grel, lhan thabs. In general, the texts in the collection are in line with Tibetan medical tradition and correspond to the level of education in the Buryat Buddhist monasteries. Electronic catalogue and data base compiled by the authors facilitate further study of the Tibetan-language medical sources by Tibetan, Mongolian, and Buryat authors. Medical texts should be available to specialists so that new approaches to their classification and systematization may be developed and rational legacy of Oriental medicine may be incorporated in contemporary medical practice. This will allow to study interinfluence of medical traditions, to determine regional, ethnic, and cultural features of medical literary tradition.
Title: Tibetan Fond of the Center of Oriental Manuscripts and Xylography of the Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan Studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences: Characteristics, Classification of the Medical Collection
Description:
This article offers a description and subject classification of the medical texts collection from the Tibetan fond of the Center for Oriental Manuscripts and Xylographs of the Institute of Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (COMX IMBTS SB RAS).
One of its main tasks has been to identify and attribute medical texts in the Tibetan collection, which is comprised of over 40,000 texts acquired from private libraries of the Buddhist clergy of Buryatia.
Intensive source work has resulted in creation of a separate collection of medical texts, which includes 508 manuscripts and xylographs registered under 222 storage cyphers.
All texts have been thematically classified into 11 groups according to genre of medical literature.
This classification reflects the preferences of Buryat physicians in choosing particular works.
Although the collection is relatively small, it contains important texts of Tibetan medicine.
The article focuses on classification of the most common in Buryatia commentaries on the rGyud bzhi.
The authors have identified several terms that Tibetans used for this category of texts, such as sdong 'grems, mchan' grel, bru 'grel, lhan thabs.
In general, the texts in the collection are in line with Tibetan medical tradition and correspond to the level of education in the Buryat Buddhist monasteries.
Electronic catalogue and data base compiled by the authors facilitate further study of the Tibetan-language medical sources by Tibetan, Mongolian, and Buryat authors.
Medical texts should be available to specialists so that new approaches to their classification and systematization may be developed and rational legacy of Oriental medicine may be incorporated in contemporary medical practice.
This will allow to study interinfluence of medical traditions, to determine regional, ethnic, and cultural features of medical literary tradition.

Related Results

Diachronic Study on the Origin of Mongolian word алим “apple” in Terms of Phonology, Morphology, Semantics and Linguistic Distribution
Diachronic Study on the Origin of Mongolian word алим “apple” in Terms of Phonology, Morphology, Semantics and Linguistic Distribution
In this paper we attempted to find out the origin of Mongolian word алим “apple” in terms of phonology, morphology, semantics and linguistic distribution. As a result of the resear...
Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy
Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy
Since the mid-1980s, the study of Tibetan Buddhist philosophy has greatly expanded. The volume of available publications now surpasses the scope even of most specialists in the fie...
The Mongolian Local Knowledge on Plants Recorded in Mongolia and Amdo and the Dead City of Khara-Khoto and Its Scientific Value
The Mongolian Local Knowledge on Plants Recorded in Mongolia and Amdo and the Dead City of Khara-Khoto and Its Scientific Value
Abstract Background: There is a plentiful amount of local knowledge on plants hidden in the literature of foreign exploration to China in modern history. Mongolia and Amdo ...
THE CONTRIBUTION OF BUDDHIST MONKS IN THE PREPARATION OF PALM LEAF MANUSCRIPTS
THE CONTRIBUTION OF BUDDHIST MONKS IN THE PREPARATION OF PALM LEAF MANUSCRIPTS
In the past, writing on palm leaf manuscripts has been a rich and enduring tradition in Sri Lanka, and these manuscripts are among the country's foremost historical sources. Howeve...
Buddhist Art and Architecture in India
Buddhist Art and Architecture in India
As Leoshko demonstrates in her Sacred Traces: British Explorations of Buddhism in South Asia (2003), the early development of historical study of Buddhist art and architecture in I...
Bibliographic Database “Sources in traditional medicine in Tibet languages”
Bibliographic Database “Sources in traditional medicine in Tibet languages”
The collection of the Institute of Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences Siberian Branch is based on Tibet and Mongolian books accumulated by g...

Back to Top