CoJS Newsletter • March 2014 • Issue 9  I n 1873 Georg Bühler, then Education Inspector of the Bombay Presidency based in Surat, sent a letter to Albrecht Weber of the University of Berlin on ‘The Sacred Scriptures of the Jainas’ which detailed the Sanskrit titles of 45 Āgamas of the Mūrtipūjaka Śvetāmbara tradition under seven subheadings: I. 11 Angas, II. 12 Upângas, III. 10 Payannas, IV. 6 Chhedasūtras, V. Nandīsūtram, VI. Aṇuyogadvārasūtram, VII. 4 Mūlasūtras. The purpose of the letter, presented here for the first time (Figure 1), 1 was to provide information on the key texts of a literary tradition that was still almost unknown outside India to enable Weber to make recommendations for the purchase of selected Jaina manuscripts for the Royal Library in Berlin, with permission of the British authorities. Although its sources and history are not entirely clear, this list of the sacred scriptures of the Jainas was first published by Hermann Jacobi (1879: 14, n. 2) 2 and subsequently canonised in all modern handbooks (in one way or another: including or excluding texts lost or added before or after the last council). 3 It has, however, frequently been noted that the number and contents of the ‘canon’ of the Śvetāmbaras, ostensibly codified in the 5th century at the council of Valabhī, were and still are in constant flux. 4 An early list of 45 somewhat similar titles has been traced in the Vicārasāraprakaraṇa, a 14th century text of Ācārya Pradyumnasūri. Yet, there is ‘no tradition of the fixed established uniform titles’ 5 as presented in modern textbooks and Āgama editions. 6 The impact of Weber’s letter on the emergence of contemporary textbook clichés of the Jaina tradition 1 ‘Die heiligen Schriften der Jainas,’ Königliche Bibliothek zu Berlin, Acta betr. Den Ankauf von Sanskrit Handschriften durch Herrn Profes- sor Dr. Bühler in Surat, No. III.4.44 1872-, pp. 25-8. 2 In contrast to Weber, Jacobi incorrectly assumed at the time that ‘Nirayāvalī’ is a heading and not an independent text. 3 Cf. A. Weber, ‘Über die heiligen Schriften der Jaina,’ Indische Studi- en 16 (1883) 226; H. v. Glasenapp. Der Jainismus. Hildesheim: Georg Olms 1925, 92-8; W. Schubring, Die Lehre der Jainas. Nach den al- ten Quellen dargestellt. Berlin: Walter De Gruyter & Co., 1935, § 41 (46 texts); Muni Puṇyavijaya et al., ‘Introduction,’ Nandisuttaṃ and Aṇuogaddārāiṃ. Bambaī: Mahāvīra Jaina Vidyālaya, 1968, pp. 25f.; P. Dundas, The Jains. London: Routledge, 2002, pp. 73-6 (47+ texts); P.S. Jaini, The Jaina Path of Purification. Berkeley: University of Califor- nia Press, 1979, pp. 47-9 (60 texts). 4 ‘[W]e do not possess even a list regarding the scriptures codified at the Valabhī council’ (H.R. Kapadia, A History of the Canonical Litera- ture of the Jainas. Ahmedabad: Shwetambar Murtipujak Jaina Board- ing, 1941/2000, p. 66). 5 Muni Puṇyavijaya, ‘A Note on Jaina Āgamas,’ Paiṇṇayasuttāiṃ. Part I. Bambaī: Mahāvīra Jaina Vidyālaya, 1984, pp. 71f.; A. M. Bhojak, ‘Introduction,’ ibid., p. 76 n. 1 refers to the Vicārasāraprakaraṇa. 6 See K. Bruhn ‘Āvaśyaka-Studies I,’ Studien zum Jainismus und Bud- dhismus. Ed. K. Bruhn & A. Wezler, Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1981, p. 12. The Correspondence of the Modern Founders of Jaina Studies Peter Flügel ________________________________________________________________________________ and its scriptures and the co-evolution of the field of Jaina Studies and Jaina modernism in the 19th and early 20th centuries demonstrates the significance of a better understanding of and the concerns and interactions of the pioneers of Jaina Studies in Europe such as Weber (1825-1901), Bühler (1837-1898), Hoernle (1841-1918), Pischel (1849-1908), Jacobi (1850-1937), Klatt (1852- 1903), Hultzsch (1857-1927), Leumann (1859-1931), Winternitz (1863-1937), Hertel (1872-1955), Guérinot (1872-1929), Schubring (1881-1969), Alsdorf (1904- 1978) and their Indian collaborators. Ernst Windisch’s Geschichte der Sanskrit-Philologie und Indischen Altertumskunde. I-III (Strassburg: Trübner, 1917-1921) still remains the principal source of information on the early years of Jaina Studies. However, long-term inquiries by the present writer on the unpublished correspondence of European Jainologists and Jaina mendicants, which is preserved only in fragments in Indian and European archives, 7 have unearthed many previously unknown letters of the pioneers of Jaina studies, presumed lost; in particular in 7 New search engines such as Kalliope and the British Library India Office Private Papers Catalogue are increasingly helpful for the iden- tification of rare letters and other private papers. See Verbundkatalog Nachlässe und Autographen. Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin. http://kalliope. staatsbibliothek-berlin.de/ Figure 1 First page of Bühler's letter of 1873