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Originally published in 1957 and forming a companion volume to The
Balavariani, this volume provides valuable research into the
biography of Gautama Buddha and its influence on medieval Christian
thought. This work, the romance of Barlaam and Josaphat, was
included by Caxton in The Golden Legend and inspired the episode of
the Caskets in Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice; its heroes
were venerated as Saints. Over a century ago, however, the legend
was finally identified as an adaptation of episodes from the life
and ministry of the Buddha. The first part of the book is devoted
to tracing the development and migration of the Barlaam and
Josaphat legend from its original Buddhist environment to the West.
The second part is a translation of the Georgian text – the first
published in any Western European language. The volume therefore
gives one of the oldest Near Eastern versions of the story.
Originally published in 1966, the full Georgian text of the oldest
version of this Christian version of this matchless classic of
Oriental wisdom literature is made accessible to a wider readership
in an English translation. Based on a unique manuscript preserved
in the Greek Patriarchate at Jerusalem, this rendering should
appeal to those interested in comparative religion, Buddhism,
medieval Christianity, the history of monasticism and in the
literature of the Georgians and other ancient nations of the former
Soviet Union.
Originally published in 1966, the full Georgian text of the oldest
version of this Christian version of this matchless classic of
Oriental wisdom literature is made accessible to a wider readership
in an English translation. Based on a unique manuscript preserved
in the Greek Patriarchate at Jerusalem, this rendering should
appeal to those interested in comparative religion, Buddhism,
medieval Christianity, the history of monasticism and in the
literature of the Georgians and other ancient nations of the former
Soviet Union.
Originally published in 1957 and forming a companion volume to The
Balavariani, this volume provides valuable research into the
biography of Gautama Buddha and its influence on medieval Christian
thought. This work, the romance of Barlaam and Josaphat, was
included by Caxton in The Golden Legend and inspired the episode of
the Caskets in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice; its heroes
were venerated as Saints. Over a century ago, however, the legend
was finally identified as an adaptation of episodes from the life
and ministry of the Buddha. The first part of the book is devoted
to tracing the development and migration of the Barlaam and
Josaphat legend from its original Buddhist environment to the West.
The second part is a translation of the Georgian text - the first
published in any Western European language. The volume therefore
gives one of the oldest Near Eastern versions of the story.
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