Dunhuang Library Discovered!

Dunhuang Library Discovered! June 25, 2015

Diamond Sutra Frontispiece

It was on this day in 1900 that the Taoist monk Wang Yanlu while trying to salvage ancient religious artwork in one of the ruined Caves of the Thousand Buddhas near Dunhuang, found a hidden door. It opened into another cave now known as the renowned “Library Cave.” In it he found a gigantic archive of documents.

The archeologist Aurel Stein who was the first European to see the collection in 1906, described what he saw. “Heaped up in layers, but without any order, there appeared in the dim light of the priest’s little lamp a solid mass of manuscript bundles rising to a height of nearly ten feet, and filling, as subsequent measurement showed, close on 500 cubic feet. The area left clear within the room was just sufficient for two people to stand in.”

There were 1,100 bundles of scrolls and over 15,000 books in the collection, dating from the fifth to early eleventh centuries of our common era. They primarily touched on Buddhism, but also contained documents relevant to Taoism, Confucianism, Nestorian Christianity, Judaism, Manichaean, and even non-religious areas including astronomy, geography, and music. Of particular popular appeal is the oldest printed book in the world, a copy of the Buddhist Diamond Sutra.

It is near impossible to emphasize the importance of this collection, joining and arguably surpassing the importance of other early twentieth century discoveries such as the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hammadi Library.

Eventually under the direction of Luo Zhenyu, the bulk of the documents were moved to Beijing where today they’re housed at the National Library. However, not before a large number of documents were acquired by various Western scholars, most notably Aurel Stein and Paul Pelliot. Some of these near random selections have passed into private hands, but the majority found homes at the British Library and the Bibliotheque national de France.

Most important for contemporary scholarship an international project to digitize the documents scattered in libraries in both East and West has been begun by the International Dunhuang Project.

So, today calls for celebration, songs, and dancing. To help here is some music from a score found at Dunhuang:


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