That's great.

Color photos of the same manuscript, made a few years ago in Kathmandu, are in 
circulation among some specialists (one of whom once shared them with me) but I 
don't know who made them nor whether there is any limit on making them public.

Best wishes,

Arlo Griffiths

________________________________
From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of David and 
Nancy Reigle via INDOLOGY <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2024 3:29 AM
To: Indology <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha manuscript

I have now scanned the 1981 facsimile reproduction of this manuscript, and 
Lubomir has kindly uploaded it to Archive.org. The link is:

https://archive.org/details/sarva-tathagata-tattva-sangraha

Best regards,

David Reigle
Colorado, U.S.A.

On Thu, Jan 4, 2024 at 11:22 AM David and Nancy Reigle 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
First, thank you to Ryan Conlon for finding the listing of this manuscript that 
I could not find in the catalogue of the Nepalese-German Manuscript Cataloging 
Project, and for providing a link to it. This is very helpful.

Next, as I suspected, there is only one old manuscript of the 
Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha, not two. Daisy Cheung made this clear in an 
off-list reply to me. Thank you to her for that. She then provided additional 
information about it:

"For a new description of the Sanskrit MS of the STTS available see Tanemura 
2020: (75)ff.

Tamenura, Ryugen 種村隆元. 2020. 
‘Saravatathāgatatattvasaṃgrahaの説くāveśa儀礼—金剛界大マンダラ章「成就が生じるための印に関する智」校訂テキストおよび和訳注—’.
 智山学報 69: 71–97.

"Tanemura 2020 can be downloaded here:
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/chisangakuho/69/0/69_0071/_pdf/-char/ja

It made no sense to me that there would be two very old manuscripts of this 
text, both discovered independently in the same library, first by Tucci in 1932 
and then by David Snellgrove and John Brough in 1956. That was one reason for 
my inquiry, the other being a wish to obtain scans of this manuscript. The 
description of this manuscript by Tucci as being in late Gupta characters, and 
the description of this manuscript by Horiuchi as being in Siddham characters, 
led de Jong in his review (cited in my opening post) to assume two different 
manuscripts.

It is now clear that the manuscript reproduced in facsimile by Lokesh Chandra 
and David Snellgrove in 1981 is the same as the manuscript that was microfilmed 
by the Nepal-German Manuscript Preservation Project listed at the link provided 
by Ryan Conlon. If no one has a scan of this manuscript, now almost impossible 
to obtain from Kathmandu, or even a scan of the 1981 published facsimile of it, 
I will try to scan this facsimile and post it.

Thanks and best regards,

David Reigle
Colorado, U.S.A.
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