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020 _a9789355725677 (HB)
041 _aeng
080 _a94(34)
_bTIE
100 _aTieken, Herman
245 _aThe Asoka Inscriptions
_b: Analysing a Corpus
260 _bPrimus Books
_c2023
_aNew Delhi
300 _axiv, 488p.
504 _aIncludes Bibliography (467-484) and Index
520 _aThe Aśoka Inscriptions: Analyzing a Corpus attempts a textual and literary analysis of the inscriptions of Aśoka—the oldest in India—and their relationship as a corpus. Unique in both content and format, the inscriptions primarily engage with ideas of good kingship and dhamma rather than with donations made or the celebration of territorial conquests, the usual topics of later inscriptions. They are also characterized by a division that determined their distribution across the realm: the Rock Edict Series (consisting of fourteen edicts) was intended for people living near the borders of Aśoka’s realm while the Pillar Edict Series (six in number) was meant for people living at the empire’s centre. Meant to be part of a project to commemorate Aśoka, the inscriptions also testify to the existence of an epistolary tradition in the subcontinent, as the texts themselves were selected by later Maurya kings from the letters sent by Aśoka to his representatives across the empire. A detailed study of the texts also allows a fresh look at many old problems such as those concerning the monument commemorating the Buddha’s birth, mentioned in the Lumbinī inscription, while raising new questions like the apparently random order of the individual edicts of the Rock Edict Series in Erragudi, which differs significantly from those at other sites
650 _aAncient history
650 _aKings and rulers
650 _aAsoka Maurya
690 _aGeneral
942 _cBK
_01
999 _c60141
_d60141