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Tibetan Documents concerning Chinese Turkestan. V: (a) The Dru-gu (Great Dru-gu and Drug-cun; the Dru-gu cor and the Bug cor; the Dru-gu and Ge-sar; the title Bog-do; conclusion); (b) the Hor; (c) the Phod-kar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

Some texts mentioning the Dru-gu have been given above (1927, pp. 68, 80, 85, 808; 1929, pp. 78 sqq., 559, 560, 583; 1930, pp. 56, 84–5, 274, 281), and reference was made to the divergent views of Colonel Waddell and Professor Pelliot, the former having identified the Dru-gu with the Tu-yü-hun of Chinese history, and the latter with the Turkish Uigurs. The name Drug-gu was first made known by Rockhill, who cited (The Life of the Buddha, p. 240) from the Tibetan Annals of Khotan a reference to a destructive invasion of the Khotan country by that people during the reign of King Vijaya-Kīrti, whose date is not known, but who evidently belonged to a comparatively early generation. The name of the Dru-gu king appears as 'A-no-śos or 'A-no-mo-śoṅ. From the same Annals some further citations were given in an appendix to Sir A. Stein's Ancient Khotan (pp. 581–3).

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1931

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References

page 808 note 1 Repeated in error.

page 813 note 1 bgyi ?

page 818 note 1 Crossed out.

page 822 note 1 Innermost Asia, pp. 566–86. For authorities Bee Klaproth, , Sprache und Schrift der Uigur, pp. 44 sqq.Google Scholar; Chavannes, , T'oung-Pao, 1907, pp. 210 sqq.Google Scholar; Franke, O., Eine chinesische Tempelinschrift aus Idikutšahri bei Turfan (Berlin Academy Abhandlungen, 1907), pp. 7 sqqGoogle Scholar.

page 825 note 1 For the frequency of mountain names meaning merely the “mountain of such and such a place” (and the same applies no doubt, to other large natural features), see Conway, , Climbing in the Karakoram, pp. 172, 297Google Scholar.

page 825 note 1 In the passage quoted from the Chinese by Bushell, in JRAS., 1882, p. 454Google Scholar, the Tibetan king speaks of “one desert only, which horsemen can canter across in ten days”, as the best approach to this region from Tibetan territory.

page 827 note 1 Ancient Khotan, p. 580.

page 828 note 1 i.e. among the Mons, a non-Tibetan people, usually associated with the western parts of Tibet and the lower Himalaya. See the dictionaries, and also Schiefner, , Eine tibetische Lebensbeschreibung Çaâkjamunis, p. 328Google Scholar; Laufer, , Klu° Bum bsdus pai sfiinpo, pp. 94 sqq.Google Scholar; Francke, A. H., Antiquities of Western Tibet, vol. iGoogle Scholar (index).