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Difference between revisions of "How are mantras written?"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
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  [[Sanskrit]] and [[Pali]] “scriptures” were both originally passed on orally. [[Sanskrit]] was a sacred [[Language]] of the Brahmins, in which their ancient teachings were passed down from father to son.
 
  [[Sanskrit]] and [[Pali]] “scriptures” were both originally passed on orally. [[Sanskrit]] was a sacred [[Language]] of the Brahmins, in which their ancient teachings were passed down from father to son.
  
[[Pali]] was originally just a regular [[Language]] spoken in the towns and villages of some area of northern [[India]] at the time of [[The Buddha]]. We’re not sure precisely which area that would have been. It was just one of many languages in which the teachings of [[The Buddha]] were communicated and memorized.
+
[[Pali]] was originally just a regular [[Language]] spoken in the towns and villages of some area of northern [[India]] at the time of The [[Buddha]]. We’re not sure precisely which area that would have been. It was just one of many languages in which the teachings of The [[Buddha]] were communicated and memorized.
  
 
Originally neither [[Language]] had a written [[Form]] and when, after the passage of many centuries, scriptures in both languages were committed to [[Writing]] there was a large variety of scripts available. [[India]] is a huge country, and many forms of script had evolved in the different regions into which these languages had spread. In addition, the [[Pali]] oral teachings had been carried well outside of [[India]] and were therefore written in Burmese, Thai, and Sinhalese scripts, not to mention Mongolian and of course Devanagari back home in [[India]]. There are even carvings of [[Pali]] texts in Aramaic, the [[Language]] of Christ. Then of course Buddhist teachings were translated into Tibetan, Chinese, and Japanese.
 
Originally neither [[Language]] had a written [[Form]] and when, after the passage of many centuries, scriptures in both languages were committed to [[Writing]] there was a large variety of scripts available. [[India]] is a huge country, and many forms of script had evolved in the different regions into which these languages had spread. In addition, the [[Pali]] oral teachings had been carried well outside of [[India]] and were therefore written in Burmese, Thai, and Sinhalese scripts, not to mention Mongolian and of course Devanagari back home in [[India]]. There are even carvings of [[Pali]] texts in Aramaic, the [[Language]] of Christ. Then of course Buddhist teachings were translated into Tibetan, Chinese, and Japanese.

Latest revision as of 17:00, 12 September 2013

Mantras03.jpg

by Bodhipaksa

 Sanskrit and Pali “scriptures” were both originally passed on orally. Sanskrit was a sacred Language of the Brahmins, in which their ancient teachings were passed down from father to son.

Pali was originally just a regular Language spoken in the towns and villages of some area of northern India at the time of The Buddha. We’re not sure precisely which area that would have been. It was just one of many languages in which the teachings of The Buddha were communicated and memorized.

Originally neither Language had a written Form and when, after the passage of many centuries, scriptures in both languages were committed to Writing there was a large variety of scripts available. India is a huge country, and many forms of script had evolved in the different regions into which these languages had spread. In addition, the Pali oral teachings had been carried well outside of India and were therefore written in Burmese, Thai, and Sinhalese scripts, not to mention Mongolian and of course Devanagari back home in India. There are even carvings of Pali texts in Aramaic, the Language of Christ. Then of course Buddhist teachings were translated into Tibetan, Chinese, and Japanese.

Shakya-siddham.JPG

So to cut a long story short, there isn’t one Form of Writing in which mantras are written!

A good resource for seeing the mantras from this site in various scripts, but principally the ancient India Siddham script is Visible Mantra. They even have examples in Klingon and Elvish!

Here’s an example of the Shakyamuni mantra in Siddham from Visible Mantra.