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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life  





2 Selected works  





3 References  





4 Sources  





5 External links  














Emil Schlagintweit






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Emil Schlagintweit (7 July 1835 – 29 October 1904) was a German scholar noted for his work on BuddhisminTibet.

Life

[edit]

Schlagintweit was the youngest of the five Schlagintweit brothers of Munich. His father Joseph Schlagintweit was a wealthy eye-surgeon, his mother died when he was quite young, and he was tutored by Franz Joseph Lauth, later a noted Egyptologist. The brothers' interest in exploration was sparked by Alexander von Humboldt's Cosmos, the first volume of which appeared in 1845, and which led to their explorations of the Alps and in turn to Asia's mountains.[1]

After his brother Hermann's death in 1882, he inherited Schloß Jägersburg, their large estate near Forchheim, and the brothers' collections and papers. Not an explorer himself, he sold 102 Tibetan manuscripts and block-books collected by his brothers to the Bodleian LibraryatOxford University where they remain.[2]

His work was later used by Helena Blavatsky as evidence for her interpretations of "esoteric Buddhism"[dead link] (Blavatsky herself did not approve of the term "esoteric Buddhism," to which she preferred "the Secret Doctrine," Occultism, or Sacred Science).

Selected works

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • ^ "R.H. & A. Schlagintweit - Tibetan Manuscripts". Karchak online catalogue, Oxford.
  • Attribution

    Sources

    [edit]
    [edit]

    Media related to Emil Schlagintweit at Wikimedia Commons


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    This page was last edited on 3 October 2023, at 16:01 (UTC).

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