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* The Buddha's teachings were inscribed on gold plates.<ref>CAF Rhys Davids, ''Psalms of the Brethren'', 90 ff., and note 1</ref> | * The Buddha's teachings were inscribed on gold plates.<ref>CAF Rhys Davids, ''Psalms of the Brethren'', 90 ff., and note 1</ref> | ||
* Prajnaparamita sutra (Buddhist Mahayana text) written on gold plates and placed in a box in a stupa (large burial mounds).<ref>Edward Conze, translator, ''The Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand lines and its verse Summary'' (Calif. 1973), 288.</ref> | * Prajnaparamita sutra (Buddhist Mahayana text) written on gold plates and placed in a box in a stupa (large burial mounds).<ref>Edward Conze, translator, ''The Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand lines and its verse Summary'' (Calif. 1973), 288.</ref> | ||
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* woman writes letter to her lover on gold plates (pattrikamalikhya)<ref>Dandin, ''Dasakumaracaritam'', 35.</ref> | * woman writes letter to her lover on gold plates (pattrikamalikhya)<ref>Dandin, ''Dasakumaracaritam'', 35.</ref> | ||
* says this term can refer to gold plate says this term can refer to gold plate inscribed with invitations to his annaprasana ceremony (first feeding of a newborn) by Gangagovinda Simha, for his grandson, ca. 1800 AD.<ref>Monier Williams, ''Sanskrit English Dictionary'' 581b; cited in ''Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal'' 8 (1966): 243 </ref> | * says this term can refer to gold plate says this term can refer to gold plate inscribed with invitations to his annaprasana ceremony (first feeding of a newborn) by Gangagovinda Simha, for his grandson, ca. 1800 AD.<ref>Monier Williams, ''Sanskrit English Dictionary'' 581b; cited in ''Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal'' 8 (1966): 243 </ref> | ||
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* Chinese Buddhist monk Hieun Tsiang (600AD) says King Kaniska (100AD) caused sacred scriptures to be engraved on sheets of copper, and enclosed in a stone box in a stupa.<ref>George Buhler, ''Indian Paleography'': 115; also in Edward Thomas, ''The History of Buddhist Thought'': 175; and in TW Rhys Davids, ''Buddhism'' (1887): 239; such was found in a stupa erected at site of the Buddha's death, in ''George Malalasekhera, Dictionary of Pali Proper Names'' 1: 655 (from ''CAGI'' 1.714)</ref> | * Chinese Buddhist monk Hieun Tsiang (600AD) says King Kaniska (100AD) caused sacred scriptures to be engraved on sheets of copper, and enclosed in a stone box in a stupa.<ref>George Buhler, ''Indian Paleography'': 115; also in Edward Thomas, ''The History of Buddhist Thought'': 175; and in TW Rhys Davids, ''Buddhism'' (1887): 239; such was found in a stupa erected at site of the Buddha's death, in ''George Malalasekhera, Dictionary of Pali Proper Names'' 1: 655 (from ''CAGI'' 1.714)</ref> | ||
* Buddhist jataka tales (of the Buddha's previous lives) refer to inscriptions of important family records of wealthy merchants, royal edicts, poetic verses and moral maxims, on gold plates (suvannapatta: Jat 4.7; SnA 228, 578; DhA 4.89).<ref>''Ruru jataka; Kurudhamma jataka; Tesakumjataka''; in Pandey, ''Indian Paleography'': 78</ref> | * Buddhist jataka tales (of the Buddha's previous lives) refer to inscriptions of important family records of wealthy merchants, royal edicts, poetic verses and moral maxims, on gold plates (suvannapatta: Jat 4.7; SnA 228, 578; DhA 4.89).<ref>''Ruru jataka; Kurudhamma jataka; Tesakumjataka''; in Pandey, ''Indian Paleography'': 78</ref> | ||
+ | * Buddhist monk Buddhaghosa of Sri Lanka (Ceylon: 5th century AD translator) gives a description of a stupa built by and during reign of King Ajatasatru (contemporary of the historical Buddha; 500 BC) for hoarding relics. Included was a 'prophecy inscribed on a gold plate to the effect that King Asoka (250 BC) would in time to come spread these relics far and wide.'<ref>Sumangala Vilasini, in B.M. Barua, "Stupa and Tomb," in ''Indian Historical Quarterly'' 2 (1926): 26.</ref> | ||
+ | Laws of Manu, states that land grants were to be written on copper plates.<ref>Recent translation is by Wendy Doniger (O’Flaherty) in Penguin Classics</ref> | ||
+ | * A Copper-plate Hoard of the Gupta Period form Bagh. 27 copper plates found July 1982, “in huge copper container covered with a copper lid” “neatly arranged copper sheets”, covering an 87 year span, and five rulers (ix-v) Plate # 8, year 55, refers to forgery of previous grant and editors suggest the hoard may have been hidden together to prevent future forgeries (xviii) “Having heard of the forged grant deed, this charter was produced in sequel and got written. [The King’s] own order” (19, line 9) This grant is to last “permanently, until moon, sun and stars last” Also hereditary from son to grandson and so on Plate 1: Bhulunda grant year 47 King Bhulunda has great compassion towards all living beings; great love, devotion and attachment to Visnu, Lord of suras and asuras ; Visnus arrows spill blood of enemies of the gods; broke the pride of Bali, Namauci, Ravana et al; and the boar avatara…. Plate 11 Bhulunda, year 57 Village given to [authorities of the four vedas] of various families and clans; and are performing voews, austerities, studying…Appendix Plate 1, Bhulunda year 38 “… the order was recounted at the request of the assembly of the brahmanas, on our own verbal direction was put down on the copper plate” (61-2)Plate 25, year 127 Grant is given “for the growth of my merit”, 54, line 4 “The original writing in ink must have contained the usual word samanumantavyam [instead of satamuvanu]. Parts of the writing must have got inadvertently erased and the engraver must have engraved upon the preserved portions of the letters leading to the present reading.” (13, note 1).<ref>''Madhya Pradesh'', ed. K. V. Ramesh and S. P. Tewari (Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India, 1990).</ref> | ||
− | + | ===Persia=== | |
− | + | * gold tablet of Darius<ref>D.C. Sircar, ''Select Inscriptions Bearing on Indian History and Civilization'', Vol. I (1965), 8; cf. ''JAOS'' 51: 229-30; JRAS (1926): 433-6; S. Sen, ''Old Persian Inscriptions'', 114.</ref> | |
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==Best articles to read next== | ==Best articles to read next== |
It is claimed that Joseph's report of finding a record on metal plates is not plausible.
To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, [[../CriticalSources|click here]]
In the past critics of the Book of Mormon have attacked the alleged absurdity of the Book of Mormon having been written on golden plates and its claim of the existence of an early sixth century B.C. version of the Hebrew Bible written on brass plates. Today, however, critics almost universally admit that there are numerous examples of ancient writing on metal plates. Ironically, some critics now claim instead that knowledge of such plates was readily available in Joseph Smith's day. Hugh Nibley's 1952 observation seems quite prescient: "it will not be long before men forget that in Joseph Smith's day the prophet was mocked and derided for his description of the plates more than anything else." [1]
Lehi sent his sons back to Jerusalem to obtain scriptures engraved on "brass plates" (1 Nephi 3 and 4). Later we read that Lehi and his son, Nephi, kept records on metal "plates" (1 Nephi 6 and 9). These incidences raise the question: Did others in Lehi's Jerusalem inscribe records on metal plates?This lack of metal inscriptions from Judea could be interpreted to mean that (1) Judeans did not write on metal plates, or (2) archaeology has not found artifacts which would support the practice of writing on metal plates in seventh-century BC Jerusalem. Alternative 2 seems to have been the problem, for inscribed silver plates have been excavated only recently.
The use of metal plates upon which records are inscribed is fairly well attested throughout the Middle and Far East from many centuries before to many centuries after Lehi, but none so far appear to be from Lehi's seventh-century BC Judea.
Most contemporary Old Testament scholars question whether Moses wrote the Pentateuch, but the Book of Mormon affirms Moses' authorship. Questions arise as to how Jeremiah's prophecies appeared on the brass plates and what the nature of the Book of the Law was. According to the brass plates Laban and Lehi were descendants of Manasseh. How then did they come to be living in Jerusalem? The brass plates, on which may be found lost scripture, may have been the official scripture of the ten tribes.
Recent reevaluation of the evidence now points to the fact that the Book of Mormon's description of sacred records written on bronze plates fits quite nicely in the cultural milieu of the ancient eastern Mediterranean.
One of the earliest known surviving examples of writing on "copper plates" are the Byblos Syllabic inscriptions (eighteenth century B.C.), from the city of Byblos on the Phoenician coast. The script is described as a "syllabary [which] is clearly inspired by the Egyptian hieroglyphic system, and in fact is the most important link known between the hieroglyphs and the Canaanite alphabet."[2]
It would not be unreasonable to describe the Byblos Syllabic texts as eighteenth century B.C. Semitic "bronze plates" written in "reformed Egyptian characters."[3]
Walter Burkert, in his study of the cultural dependence of Greek civilization on the ancient Near East, refers to the transmission of the practice of writing on bronze plates (Semitic root dlt) from the Phoenicians to the Greeks. "The reference to 'bronze deltoi [plates, from dlt ]' as a term [among the Greeks] for ancient sacral laws would point back to the seventh or sixth century [B.C.]" as the period in which the terminology and the practice of writing on bronze plates was transmitted from the Phoenicians to the Greeks.[4]
Students of the Book of Mormon will note that this is precisely the time and place in which the Book of Mormon claims that there existed similar bronze plates which contained the "ancient sacred laws" of the Hebrews, the close cultural cousins of the Phoenicians.
Burkert also maintains that "the practice of the subscriptio in particular connects the layout of later Greek books with cuneiform practice, the indication of the name of the writer/author and the title of the book right at the end, after the last line of the text; this is a detailed and exclusive correspondence which proves that Greek literary practice is ultimately dependent upon Mesopotamia. It is necessary to postulate that Aramaic leather scrolls formed the connecting link."[5]
Joseph Smith wrote that "the title page of the Book of Mormon is a literal translation, taken from the very last leaf, on the left hand side of the collection or book of plates, which contained the record which has been translated."[6]
This idea would have been counterintuitive in the early nineteenth century when "Title Pages" appeared at the beginning, not the end, of books.
Why, then, did Joseph claim the Book of Mormon practiced subscriptio—writing the name of the author and title at the end of the book? If the existence of the practice of subscriptio among the Greeks represents "a detailed and exclusive correspondence which proves that Greek literary practice is ultimately dependent upon Mesopotamia [via Syria]," as Burkert claims, cannot the same thing be said of the Book of Mormon—that the practice of subscriptio represents "a detailed and exclusive correspondence" which offers proof that the Book of Mormon is "ultimately dependent" on the ancient Near East?
There are many examples from India:
Laws of Manu, states that land grants were to be written on copper plates.[38]
The best article(s) to read next on this topic is/are:
Notes
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