Pali Canon/Timelines: Difference between revisions
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*c. 544: according to tradition, compilation of the Canon, with comparatively small amounts of material added later | *c. 544: according to tradition, compilation of the Canon, with comparatively small amounts of material added later | ||
*c. 480–c. 400: according to most scholars, approximate dates of the Buddha, from whose teachings the Canon gradually developed | *c. 480–c. 400: according to most scholars, approximate dates of the Buddha, from whose teachings the Canon gradually developed | ||
*4th century: according to Professor Warder, average date of the Canon | *4th century: according to the late Professor Warder, average date of the Canon | ||
*last century: according to most authorities, Canon written down from oral tradition; some scholars say little or nothing was added after this | *last century: according to most authorities, Canon written down from oral tradition; some scholars say little or nothing was added after this | ||
Revision as of 11:50, 20 February 2014
BC
- c. 544: according to tradition, compilation of the Canon, with comparatively small amounts of material added later
- c. 480–c. 400: according to most scholars, approximate dates of the Buddha, from whose teachings the Canon gradually developed
- 4th century: according to the late Professor Warder, average date of the Canon
- last century: according to most authorities, Canon written down from oral tradition; some scholars say little or nothing was added after this
AD
- 2nd century: according to the late Professor Nakamura, earliest possible date for completion of the Canon
- 5th century: Buddhaghosa, most important commentator on the Canon; according to Professor Samuel, the Canon itself largely derives from his and his colleagues' work; it seems from the context that what he means by this is that they were largely responsible for the choice of material from the much larger corpus in circulation at that time
- 8th or 9th century: oldest known manuscript fragment of the Canon
- 1881: Pali Text Society founded in England by T. W. Rhys Davids to print the Canon and other texts
- 1900: first complete printed edition of the Canon appears in Burma in 38 volumes
- 1988: digitization of the Canon completed in Thailand