Academic Frontier Project
Establishment of the Research Centre for the Buddhist Manuscripts copied
in the Nara and Heian Periods
The Buddhist manuscripts copied in the Nara Period amount to more than
one thousand scrolls. These are believed to have served as the basis for
the manuscripts later made during the Heian and Kamakura Periods, of which
over ten thousand copies have survived to this day. For many generations,
the tendency has been to regard these ancient manuscripts as sources of
secondary value which could merely offer supplementary materials not found
in the traditional editions of the Buddhist Canon printed in China and
Korea beginning with the 10th century. Recent research has proved, however,
that these manuscripts are not only faithful replicas of the Chinese originals
which circulated during the Tang Dynasty but also reflect the basic aspects
of the Sui and Tang Buddhism. These ancient manuscripts, no doubt representing
the flower of the Japanese Buddhist culture of the time, actually constitute
a corpus which can vie with the famous Dunhuang collections. Their value
as a textual body can be compared to the modern Taisho Canon, which doubtless
counts as one of Japan's major contributions to the spread and study of
Buddhism in our days. Unfortunately, however, no major effort to gather
and survey the whole corpus of Nara and Heian manuscripts has been undertaken
so far. Besides, not a few of them are now hosted in collections overseas.
A complete inventory of all these manuscripts, whether in Japan or abroad,
remains a strong desideratum.
The International College for Postgraduate Buddhist Studies in association
with other academic institutions as well as with Buddhist temples, museums,
research institutes, etc. in Japan and abroad plans to survey the exact
location and take digital pictures of all these manuscripts in order to
re-construct the traditional corpus of texts recorded in the Zhengyuan
Era Catalogue. It is hoped that this will provide new foundations for the
study of the textual traditions of the Eastern Buddhist cultural sphere.