will never have ever seen before,
all images courtesy of Incunabula, the book is a Sino-Tibetan book
that’s believed to have been printed as early as 1410 in Beijing,
an ancient-book
collector, self-described bibliophile known as Incunabula, is
sharing a thread containing dozens of images showing inside
spreads full of red ink drawings and Ranjana
script,
a
writing system developed in the 11th century, the Gutenberg
Bible, which was printed with movable metal type, dates back to 1454,
nearly 45 years after this woodblock-produced text,
the
ancient book contains impeccably detailed “Sanskrit dhāranīs and illustrations
of protective mantra-diagrams and deities” and a collection of Tibetan Buddhist
recitation texts,
the
black covers are covered in gold-paint drawings featuring “20 icons of
the Tathāgatas,” which roughly translates to “one who has
gone.” And this is another amazing thing about this book, all of the text is
printed twice on each side of the paper, to allow for right-to-left and left-to-right
readings in both the Indo-Tibetan and Chinese styles, respectively!
“During
the early Ming, close relations were established between Tibetan monks and the
imperial court in Beijing. Although not directly part of the Buddhist canon,
this work relates closely to the manner of woodblock carving employed for the
production of the Sino-Tibetan Kangyur,” the collector writes,
to see more of the inside pages in Incunabula’s
thread, and follow the collector’s archival work on Twitter, what an amazing book, and just think all of this was done using woodcuts, not with movable metal type!
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