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Hymn to Amitāyus (Amitāyus)

“It expresses in the first person singular the devotee’s faith in the Buddha Amitāyus and the vow to be reborn in Sukhāvatī. The text also mentions the confession of sin.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
293
Maggi 2009 (pages)
382
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Vimalakīrtinirdeśasūtra (VkN)

Sūtra of the teaching of Vimalakīrti. “The Bodhisattva Vimalakīrti, a rich merchant, pretends to be ill and preaches to all who come to visit him: he shows that the Bodhisattva path can be followed not only by monks but also by laymen, illustrates the doctrine of emptiness of existence and the Buddhist way toward liberation, and explains the transcendental nature of the Buddha.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
671
Maggi 2009 (pages)
387
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
35-36

Śūraṅgamasamādhisūtra (Śgs)

Sūtra of the concentration of the heroic march. “The Śgs is concerned with the power of concentration (Sanskrit samādhi), and particularly with the concentration called Śūraṅgama, as a means for both monks and laymen to attain to enlightenment, and exposes the methods of meditation on emptiness.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
2006
Maggi 2009 (pages)
387-389
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
32

Pradakṣiṇasūtra (PS)

Sūtra about circumambulating. “The text [...] is presented as an exposition by the Buddha to the Elder Śāriputra about the advantages deriving from circumambulating and worshipping caityas.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
821
Maggi 2009 (pages)
392-393
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
27

Links

Karmavibhaṅga (KV)

The classification of acts. “[It] deals with the consequences of good and evil deeds in future births.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
795
Maggi 2009 (pages)
393-394
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
25

Anantamukhanirhāradhāraṇīsūtra (Ananta)

Sūtra on the formula of the production of infinite entries [into the doctrine].

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
both
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
327
Maggi 2009 (pages)
397-398
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
18-19

Raśmivimalaviśuddhaprabhānāmadhāraṇī (Rvvp)

Sūtra on the formula called Immaculate and pure beaming splendour.

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
398
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Amr̥taprabhadhāraṇī (Amr̥ta)

Formula of Amr̥taprabha. “Like other similar texts, Amr̥ta is concerned with the protection from diseases and various evils.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
729
Maggi 2009 (pages)
403
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
36

Links

Bodhisattva compendium (BsComp)

“[It] deals with the duties of Bodhisattvas.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Buddhist Doctrinal Compendium
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
2131
Maggi 2009 (pages)
404
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Bhavāṅga text (Bhavāṅga)

Text on the links [in the chain] of existence.

Genre
Buddhist Doctrinal Compendium
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
183
Maggi 2009 (pages)
404
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
37

Links

Ratnadvīpa text (Ratnadvīpa)

Text on the Jewel Island.

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
uncertain
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
469
Maggi 2009 (pages)
404
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
38

Links

Vajrayāna verses (Vajrayāna V)

deśanā texts (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Esoteric Buddhism
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
492
Maggi 2009 (pages)
405
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
39

Links

Vajrayāna verses of Cā Kīmä-śani (Vajrayāna CK)

Genre
Esoteric Buddhism
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
832
Maggi 2009 (pages)
405
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
39

Links

Untitled (Untitled)

Genre
Esoteric Buddhism
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
405
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
39

Links

KBT_34_56

Untitled (lyrical verses) (Untitled)

Genre
Lyric Poetry
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
406-407
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
46

Links

KT2_45_52

Lyrical poem (Lyr)

[It] deals with “the coming of spring, various flowers and birds, songs of the bards (māgadha), and homage to the amorous sports of young lovers”. (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Lyric Poetry
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
2110
Maggi 2009 (pages)
407-408
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
41

Jinshan’s poem (Jinshan)

Genre
Burlesque Poetry
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
104
Maggi 2009 (pages)
410
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Panegyric on King Viśa’ Kīrtta (Viśa’ Kīrtta)

“[It] celebrates the King’s funding, to crown his 16th regnal year (806), of religious activity for the sake of welfare in his reign, then under Tibetan sway.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Panegyric
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
89
Maggi 2009 (pages)
411
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Panegyric on King Viśa’ Saṃgrāma (Viśa’ Saṃgrāma)

“[It] is followed by way of comparison by the Kaniṣkāvadāna [and it] praises the King, on the occasion of the ceremony performed by monks at the end of the rainy season, for his religious merits imparting spiritual and material well-being to the land of Khotan and for erecting a monastery. Another eulogy of King Viśa Saṃgrāma is found at the beginning of a verse letter.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Panegyric
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
2178
Maggi 2009 (pages)
412
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verses of Prince Tcūṃ-ttehi (Tcūṃ-ttehi)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
722
Maggi 2009 (pages)
377-378
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
37

Deśana (of Prince Tcūṃ-ttehi) (Tcūṃ-ttehi D)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
906
Maggi 2009 (pages)
377
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Homage of Hūyī Kīma-tcūna (Hūyī H)

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
770
Maggi 2009 (pages)
385
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
37-38

Homage to Buddhas (H Buddhas)

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
853
Maggi 2009 (pages)
385
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Triśaraṇa (Triśaraṇa)

Three refuges [the Buddha, the Law, the Community].

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
312
Maggi 2009 (pages)
380
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
38

Invocatory formulae (Invoc)

“The Invocatory formulae [are] for asking Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, Buddhist saints and various deities for well-being and protection against disease, famine and other evils.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
228
Maggi 2009 (pages)
379-380
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
38

Turkish-Khotanese bilingual (Bilingual TK)

“The word-list is a Turkish-Khotanese bilingual, which arranges systematically, and partially glosses in Khotanese, Old Turkish words for parts of the body and technical terms concerned with archery and horse equipment, presumably to be used in military instruction.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Bilingual
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
t
Number of words in Titus
172
Maggi 2009 (pages)
416
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
48

Links

Sanskrit-Khotanese bilingual (Bilingual SK)

“[It] contains Sanskrit words and sentences, partly arranged in groups of related items, that are followed by a Khotanese rendering. It appears as a veritable conversation manual.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Bilingual
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
1165
Maggi 2009 (pages)
416
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
47-48

Links

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra Or. (SuvOr.)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
5580
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra P. (SuvP.)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
1779
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra A (SuvA)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
57
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra B (SuvB)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
61
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra C (SuvC)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
339
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra D (SuvD)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
77
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra E (SuvE)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra F (SuvF)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
85
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra G (SuvG)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
110
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra H (SuvH)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
97
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra Q (SuvQ)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
118
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra S (SuvS)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Chinese-Khotanese bilingual S 5212a (CK bilingual S5212a)

Genre
Bilingual
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
54
Maggi 2009 (pages)
417
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Non attribué (NA)

Genre
Old/Late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Vajracchedikāsūtra (Vajr)

Sūtra which cuts like diamond. “[It is] a summary of the prajñāpāramitā teachings in the form of a dialogue between the Buddha and the Elder Subhūti.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
3467
Maggi 2009 (pages)
371-372
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Aparimitāyuḥsūtra (ApS)

Sūtra of [the Buddha] Aparimitāyus. “The sūtra, which contains an often repeated dhāraṇī (§§12 etc.), is attributed to the preaching of the Buddha Śākyamuni for the lengthening of the lifespan of beings by veneration of the Buddha Aparimitāyus, short form of Aparimitāyurjñānasuviniścitatejorāja (Brilliant king firm in unlimited life and wisdom, another name of the Buddha Amitābha) and of the sūtra itself.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
1682
Maggi 2009 (pages)
396-397
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Bhadrakalpikasūtra (Bk)

Sūtra [of the Buddhas] of the [present] good aeon. “In this text, which belongs to the genre of buddhanāmasūtras (sūtras on the names of the Buddhas), the Buddha Śākyamuni proclaims the advantages that may be expected by “whichever believing noble lad or maiden there may be who may learn, or read, or speak, or write or cause to be written, or who will keep, or hear, or once may do homage to the names of those thousand and five divine Lords” of the good aeon [Bk 209, Konow’s translation].” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
1788
Maggi 2009 (pages)
384
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
20-22

Jīvakapustaka (JP)

The book of Jīvaka. ͤ“[It is] a teaching of the Buddha to the physician Jīvaka. [...] The work is an otherwise unknown collection of prescriptions taken from various texts and organised by type of preparation in complementary chapters introduced by the Sanskrit augural formula siddham ‘success’ as most of the chapters of the Book of Zambasta. Chapter one (§§ 1–3) contains an antidote (Khotanese agada- from Sanskrit agada-); chapter two (§§ 4–46) deals with drugs mixed with clarified butter (Khotanese gvīha’- rūna- lit. ‘cow oil’, Sanskrit ghr̥ta-); chapter three (§§ 47–73) with drugs mixed with sesame oil (Khotanese kūṃjsavīnaa- rūna-, Sanskrit taila-); and chapter four, that is only partly preserved (§§ 74–93; of § 93 only part of the Sanskrit is extant), with powders (Khotanese cāṇa- from Sanskrit cūrṇa-). [...] For each prescription, the instructions for the preparations are followed by indications on its use.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Medical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
8292
Maggi 2009 (pages)
414-415
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
42-43

Links

Sumukha(nāmadhāraṇī)sūtra (Sum)

Sūtra on the [formula called] Sumukha [Good-faced]. “It is a collection of spells: the Buddha Śākyamuni, requested by the Bodhisattva Vajrapāṇi, preaches the Sumukhadhāraṇī, a series of spells against all kinds of evil and for long life; all Buddhas from all Buddha-fields of the whole world approve of his teaching and announce twenty benefits for anyone who should learn or recite the Sumukhadhāraṇī; the Bodhisattva Vajrapāṇi and other Bodhisattvas and deities then promise to protect anyone who should learn or recite it, and each of them adds a new spell.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
2635
Maggi 2009 (pages)
398-399
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
31-32

Links

Deśanā I (Deśanā I)

“[The two partly identical Deśanā] represent a different tradition contemplating the existence of billions of Buddhas in crores of good aeons. These texts were given the title Deśanā by Shūyo Takubo on account of the promise that “For anyone who orders to write or recites the names of those Lord Buddhas there will be atonement for his acts deserving immediate retribution” [Deśanā I 828–29]” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
1462
Maggi 2009 (pages)
385
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Deśanā II (Deśanā II)

“[The two partly identical Deśanā] represent a different tradition contemplating the existence of billions of Buddhas in crores of good aeons.186 These texts were given the title Deśanā by Shūyo Takubo on account of the promise that “For anyone who orders to write or recites the names of those Lord Buddhas there will be atonement for his acts deserving immediate retribution” [Deśanā I 828–29]” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Non canonical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
495
Maggi 2009 (pages)
385
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Baiṣajyaguruvaiḍūryaprabharājatathāgatasūtra (Bhaiṣ)

Sūtra of the Buddha Bhaiṣajyaguruvaiḍūryaprabharāja [Master of Healing, the King of Beryl Light]. “[It is] an early Mahāyāna text devoted to one of the Buddhas who were the object of special cult. [...] Bhaiṣajyaguru is the Buddha of medicine in all its aspects up to enlightenment as a healing of existence. The sūtra’s four main themes are the twelve vows of Bhaiṣajyaguru as a Bodhisattva—most of which are concerned with cure and assistance to beings afflicted by diseases and worldly sufferings—and a description of his Buddha-field, the benefits for those who hear and invoke his name, the rituals for worshipping him, and the twelve yakṣa generals who offer protection from disease etc. to those who worship the Buddha Bhaiṣajyaguru and his sūtra.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
622
Maggi 2009 (pages)
386
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
22-23

Aśokāvadāna (Aśoka)

The avadāna of Aśoka. “It is a rather free recasting of episodes belonging to the narrative complex of Aśoka. [...] All the narrative elements derive actually from the Kunālavadāna but are arranged differently from the Sanskrit and other known versions and present contaminations with episodes from other parts of the narrative complex of Aśoka.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
1891
Maggi 2009 (pages)
362-364
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
20

Nandāvadāna (Nanda)

Avadāna of Nanda. “[This text] exemplifies the compensation for liberality and the retribution for avarice and is known in Sanskrit. It tells the touching story of the wealthy but exceedingly stingy merchant Nanda and of the liberality of one of his servants. The generous servant is reborn as Nanda’s rich son Candana, whereas Nanda is in time reborn as the blind and misshapen son of a blind beggar-woman. The manuscript breaks off when the boy, at the age of twelve, is sent by his mother to the village to beg alms. (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
898
Maggi 2009 (pages)
365
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
27

Links

Adhyardhaśatikāprajñāpāramitāsūtra (Adhś)

Sūtra on the perfection of wisdom in 150 stanzas. “[The text] alternates sections in Sanskrit, characterised by an abundance of esoteric terms, with sections in late Old Khotanese that extol the esoteric sections and urge that they be studied and honoured.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
67
Maggi 2009 (pages)
374
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
18

Links

Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra (Sdhp)

Sūtra of the lotus of the good Law. “[It is] a complete Late Khotanese metrical summary [of the Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra].” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
1260
Maggi 2009 (pages)
375
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
27-29

Links

Bhadracaryādeśanā (Bcd)

The profession of good course of conduct. “In this devotional text, one of the highest expressions of Mahāyāna piety, the believer, using the first person singular, worships all Buddhas, makes pious vows, undertakes to attain enlightenment and expresses the hope to see the Buddha Amitābha and to be reborn in his pure land Sukhāvatī. The text also contains a confession of sin (st. 12 of the Khotanese version).” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
1489
Maggi 2009 (pages)
375-376
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
20

Links

Ratnakūṭasūtra (Rk)

Sūtra being a heap of jewels. “[It is an] Old Khotanese translation of the Kāśyapaparivarta (The chapter for Kāsyapa). [...] The text, that deals with the ideal of the Bodhisattva and contains a number of parables, is one of the earliest Mahāyānist texts and was regarded as one of their basic texts by the Madhyamaka and Yocagāra philosophical schools.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
237
Maggi 2009 (pages)
380-381
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Sukhāvatīvyūhasūtra (SV)

Sūtra being a description of the Land of Bliss [Sukhāvatī]. “[It] contains the homage and the first lines of the song of Dharmākara, who was to become the Buddha Amitābha, in praise of the Buddha Lokeśvararāja.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
63
Maggi 2009 (pages)
381
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
31

Links

Saṅghāṭasūtra (Sgh)

Sūtra being a pair [of questionings]. “The text, that contains many interesting stories and comparisons, is an instance of the cult of the sacred texts that characterises Mahāyāna Buddhism. It extols the Buddhist Law and particularly the Sgh itself: this is presented as a sūtra that can wipe out sins and bring to enlightenment anybody who hears, writes, learns by heart, recites, understands, honours and worships it. In an episode, the Sgh even takes the form of a seer (Sanskrit ṣi) who rescues a sinner who wants to commit suicide. The second part of the text, where Baiṣajyasena becomes the interlocutor of the Buddha, magnifies the saving virtues of the Law and the Sgh with reference to the beings who are “old” and “young” (“ancient” and “new”) in the cycle of existences and in the teaching of the Buddha.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
both
Number of words in Titus
7752
Maggi 2009 (pages)
382-383
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
29-30

Suvarṇabhāsottamasūtra (Suv)

The excellent sūtra of golden light. “It is a composite work with devotional, philosophical, ethical and legendary contents, that, as shown by Johannes Nobel, has its original core in the Deśanāparivarta (Sanskrit chap. 3), where the confession is expounded by an “excellent drum of golden light” and to which the title Suvarṇabhāsottama must have originally applied.201 It deals, among other things, with the infinity of the life of the Buddha (chap. 2), the doctrine of emptiness (chap. 5), the role of kingship (chap. 12) and the art of medicine (chap. 16), and contains dhāraṇīs (chaps. 7 and 8) and several stories of the Buddha’s former births (Sanskrit jātaka), among which is the story of the Bodhisattva killing himself to serve as food for a hungry tigress (chap. 18).” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
both
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
689
Maggi 2009 (pages)
389-392
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
33-34

Links

Jñānolkadhāraṇī (Jñ)

Formula of [the Buddha] Jñānolka. “[It contains] two dhāraṇīs aimed at protection and deliverance of beings.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
127
Maggi 2009 (pages)
399-400
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
24-25

Mahāsāhasrapramardanī (MSP)

The great destroyer of the infinite [band of demons]. “Six of the fifteen demons causing children’s diseases are depicted and described.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
51
Maggi 2009 (pages)
400-401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Dharmaśarīrasūtra (DhŚ)

Sūtra being the skeleton of the [Buddhist] Law. “The text consists in a list of categories of the Mahāyānist doctrine arranged by number. [...] It is noteworthy in that it contains a reference to various Mahāyāna sūtras that is not found in any of the other versions.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
394-395
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
23

Siddhasāra (Si)

The perfect selection. “Of the original thirty-one chapters, the still extant ones are those on the theoretical foundations (1), on drugs (2), on food (3: up to § 3.26.12), on piles and genital fistulae (13: from § 13.27), on yellow disease (14), on hiccoughs and uncomfortable breathing (15: §§ 15.1 and 15.15–23), on swollen testicles (18: from § 18.53), on dry excrement and heart diseases (19), on madness and epilepsy (20), on diseases due to wind (one of the three humours of Indian medicine together with bile and phlegm) and on rheumatism (21), on liquor disease (22), on erysipelas (23), on swellings (24), on healing wounds (25), and on diseases of the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, teeth and throat (26: §§ 26.0–68 and 26.75–90).” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Medical
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
both
Number of words in Titus
17908
Maggi 2009 (pages)
415-416
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
43-45

Vajrayāna text (Vajrayāna T)

Treatise on the rosary (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Esoteric Buddhism
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
906
Maggi 2009 (pages)
405
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
39

Links

Mañjuśrīnairātmyāvatārasūtra (Mañj)

Sūtra for Mañjuśrī on the realisation of [the doctrine of] selflessness. 'It is a compilation on the Mahāyānist doctrine that there is no inherently existent self [...], which draws on varioussources including earlier Khotanese literature.' (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Buddhist Doctrinal Compendium
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
6445
Maggi 2009 (pages)
357-358
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Invocation of Prince Tcū-syau (Tcū-syau)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
627
Maggi 2009 (pages)
380
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
39

Links

The Book of Zambasta (Z)

Genre
Buddhist Doctrinal Compendium
Old/Late
old
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
30296
Maggi 2009 (pages)
348-357
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

The Book of Vimalakīrti (Vim)

Genre
Buddhist Doctrinal Compendium
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
2020
Maggi 2009 (pages)
359-360
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Sudhanāvadāna (Sudh)

The avadāna of Sudhana. “The avadāna is presented as the Buddha's narration of one of his earlier lives told to his former wife Yaśodharā, who could not tolerate living separated from him. It tells in verse the love of prince Sudhana and of the kinnarī (fairy) princess Manoharā, their separation due to the plot of a wicked brahmin, Sudhana’s adventurous journey to the land of the kinnaras in search of his wife, and their final reunion (Sudhana was the Buddha, Manoharā was Yaśodharā).” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
6163
Maggi 2009 (pages)
361-362
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
30-31

Kaniṣkāvadāna (Kaniṣka)

Avadāna of Kaniṣka. “The preserved part, in prose, contains two episodes: that of the four lokapālas (the guardian deities of the cardinal points of the world) disguised as boys building a stūpa (Buddhist monument usually meant to contain relics) of mud and of King Kaniṣka who has a stūpa and a monastery built; and the fragmentary episode of Kaniṣka’s spiritual adviser Aśvaghoṣa casting a lump of clay on the newly built stūpa and of the subsequent appearing of an image of the Buddha confirming Aśvaghoṣa’s enlightenment within the present aeon.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
364
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

KT2_57_2

Love Story (LSt)

“It tells about the love of a householder’s son and a minister’s daughter.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
423
Maggi 2009 (pages)
365-366
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Rāmāyaṇa (Rāma)

“The Khotanese text opens by contrasting the short, seven-year duration of the teaching of the three first Buddhas of the Bhadrakalpa (good aeon)—Krakasunda, Kanakamuni and Kāśyapa—with the long duration of the teaching of Śākyamuni Buddha, which resulted from the long exertion endured by him as a Bodhisattva. Among his achievements was his life as Rāma, as we are told in the final identification of Rāma with Śākyamuni and of his brother and companion Lakṣmaṇa with the future Buddha Maitreya, the fifth and last Buddha of the Bhadrakalpa. The story is as follows: in the opening episode, not found in the Sanskrit Rāmāyaṇa of Vālmīki, Paraśurāma revenges his father by killing King Daśaratha, Rāma’s father, and then goes on killing kings and setting up brahmans; he is in turn killed by Rāma and Lakṣmaṇa; the rākṣasa Daśagrīva has his daughter exposed because it was predicted that she would cause the downfall of his city; after she has been brought up by a hermit, Rāma and Lakṣmaṇa fall in love with her, but she is abducted by Daśagrīva; then the two brothers, with the help of the monkeys led by Naṇḍa, cross the ocean, conquer Laṅkā and defeat Daśagrīva; but Sītā, in order to prove she had remained pure, descends into the earth, so they go back to Jambudvīpa.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
3243
Maggi 2009 (pages)
367-368
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
41

Jātakastava (JS)

Praise of the [Buddh'as former] births. “Aim of the work is to extol the virtues of the Bodhisattva by means of extremely concise summaries of fifty-two stories from fifty-one jātakas (two episodes are taken from the story of Prince Viśvantara), most of which have been traced elsewhere. The jātakas are preceded by a prologue ( JS 1–10) and followed by an epilogue ( JS 164–69).” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Avadāna Literature
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
3979
Maggi 2009 (pages)
369-370
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
24

Links

Hr̥dayasūtra (Hr̥daya)

The heart sūtra. “[It is] a highly condensed summary of the philosophical teachings of the prajñāpāramitā.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
372-373
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
24

Links

KT3_46

Mahāprajñāpāramitāsūtra (MPPS)

Large sūtra on the perfection of wisdom. ”[It is] a complete commentary on the shorter recension of the Hr̥dayasūtra [...]. Some of the doctrinal statements contained in this Khotanese text indicate that its author belonged to the Vijñānavāda school.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
3099
Maggi 2009 (pages)
373-374
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
25-26

Links

Avalokiteśvaradhāraṇī (Avdh)

Formula of Avalokiteśvara. “The conventional title was invented by Harold W. Bailey on account of the central position of the Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara in the text and of a dhāraṇī that occurs towards the end of the text and opens with a homage to him as the foremost of Bodhisattvas.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
1980
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401-403
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Panegyric on King Viśa’ Dharma (Panegyric)

“[It] opens with a lengthy Vajrayānist invocation mentioning the Buddha Vairocana, [and] was written on the occasion of an embassy the King sent to Dunhuang in his 5th regnal year (982) to ask for the hand of a Chinese princess.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Panegyric
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
946
Maggi 2009 (pages)
411-412
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Itinerary (Itin)

“It is the description of a southward journey through Gilgit and Chilās to Kashmir, which at that time was under the rule of King Abhimanyugupta (958–72 CE)” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Geography
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
Maggi 2009 (pages)
412-413
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

KT2_14a

Karmāṃ deśana (KD)

The confession of acts. “[It] deals with the confession of acts from a Mahāyānistic point of view: only by recognising the unsubstantiality of all things and, thus, also of one’s acts (Sanskrit karman) and their fruition (Sanskrit vipāka), does one obtain removal of one’s karmas and enlightenment.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Mahāyāna Sūtra
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
1605
Maggi 2009 (pages)
378-379
Emmerick 1992 (pages)
38

Verse Letter Ch 00329 (VL329)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
54
Maggi 2009 (pages)
408
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 2027 (VL P2027)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
618
Maggi 2009 (pages)
408
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 2785 (VL P2785)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
240
Maggi 2009 (pages)
408
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 2891 (VL P2891)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
474
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 2897 (VL P2897)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
484
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 2925 (VL P2925)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
544
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 4099v (VL P4099v)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
189
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 4649 (VL P4649)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
229
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Verse Letter P 5536 (VL P5536)

Genre
Verse Letter
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
verse
Number of words in Titus
37
Maggi 2009 (pages)
409
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Apotropaic dhāraṇī Kha i.89a (Apo Kha i.89a)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
19
Maggi 2009 (pages)
400
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Apotropaic text Kha i.53 (Apo Kha i.53)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
19
Maggi 2009 (pages)
400
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Documents (Doc)

Genre
Administrative
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
3813
Maggi 2009 (pages)
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Omen Hedin 17 (Omen H17)

“[It] foretell[s] the consequences of pains in various parts of the body.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
Number of words in Titus
234
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Omen Hedin 22 (Omen H22)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
71
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Omen Hardinge 078.2 (Omen Ha 078)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
37
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Omen Kha vi.4.l (Omen Kha)

“[It] predict[s] the outcome of twitches of various parts of the body.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
116
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links

Omen Or 11252 (Omen Or)

“[It] forecast[s] people’s fate on the basis of the year of the duodecimal animal cycle in which they are born.” (Maggi 2009)

Genre
Apotropaic or omen
Old/Late
late
Verse/Prose
prose
Number of words in Titus
461
Maggi 2009 (pages)
401
Emmerick 1992 (pages)

Links