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The
British Museum scrolls are a collection of Buddhist books
found in Afghanistan in the early 1990's and now preserved in the
British Museum in London. Written on strips of birch bark and dating
from about the 1st century CE, they are the oldest
Buddhist texts in existence. The hot damp Indian climate caused the
originals and even ancient copies of the Tipiṭaka to disappear
centuries ago. Afghanistan's cold dry climate miraculously preserved
these books, thus allowing scholars to verify that the Buddha's
discourses as we have them today are substantially the same as those
that existed just a few centuries after the Buddha. Some of the
suttas included in the scrolls are a selection from the
Saṃyutta Nikaya, Aṅguttara Nikāya , the
Dhammapada, the Itivuttaka and the Sutta Nipāta.
Included in the collection are also several medical texts.
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