Cover image for Building a religious empire : Tibetan Buddhism, bureaucracy, and the rise of the Gelukpa
Building a religious empire : Tibetan Buddhism, bureaucracy, and the rise of the Gelukpa
Title:
Building a religious empire : Tibetan Buddhism, bureaucracy, and the rise of the Gelukpa

Encounters with Asia

Encounters with Asia.
Author:
Sullivan, Brenton, author.
ISBN:
9780812252675
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, [2021]
Physical Description:
280 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Series:
Encounters with Asia

Encounters with Asia.
Contents:
Chapter 1. The Geluk School's Innovative Use of Monastic Constitutions -- Chapter 2. Administering a Monastery for the "Common Good" -- Chapter 3. Institutionalizing Tantra -- Chapter 4. The Systematization of Doctrine and Education -- Chapter 5. Singing Together in One Voice -- Conclusion -- Appendix. Monastic Constitutions to the Mid-Eighteenth Century
Abstract:
"This book focuses on the story of the Geluk (Tibetan Dge lugs) school of Tibetan Buddhism, the most widespread school of Tibetan Buddhism, best known through its symbolic head, the Dalai Lama. The vast majority of the monasteries in Tibet and Inner Mongolia-a landscape that makes up a third of the territory of today's China-as well as those in Mongolia are Geluk monasteries. Historically, these monasteries were some of the largest in the world, and even today some of the largest Geluk monasteries house thousands of monks both in Tibet and in exile in India. To understand how this came to pass, this book reveals the compulsive efforts by Geluk lamas in the early modern period to prescribe and control a proper way of living the life of a Buddhist monk and to define a proper way of administering the monastery. These lamas drew on the sort of administrative techniques usually associated with state-making-standardization, record-keeping, the conscription of young males, the concentration of manpower in central cores, and so on-thereby earning the moniker "lama official" or "Buddhist bureaucrat" (Tibetan bla dpon). They also thereby succeeded in establishing a relatively uniform and resilient network of monasteries stretching from Ladakh to Lake Baikal, from Beijing to the Caspian Sea"-- Provided by publisher.
Genre:
Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Field 805:
npmlib 11000357 BQ7576 S85 yh
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