Abstract

In Tibetan history and culture, horses were among the most important animals, if not the most important of all. Horses were the mounts that provided transport, particularly for the nobility and kings, allowing them to travel more quickly and comfortably. Horses were also used for hunting, postal services, and to build a cavalry for warfare. In addition, they played a role in various entertainments, including horse racing, games, and parades. The unusually large number of manuscripts on horses attests to the value of horses in the Tibetan imaginaire compared to other animals that lived in the company of the people on the High Plateau, in Tibet itself, and in Tibetan cultural areas. This article begins with an outline of the uses and benefits of horses in Tibetan culture. It touches upon the animal’s role as the mount of Tibetan kings and debates regarding horses’ mental faculties. Then it presents a survey of the content of various manuscripts on equine studies based on sources from three stages: (1) the earliest Tibetan sources from Dunhuang; (2) translations from Indian texts; and (3) extensive compendia that merges all of the knowledge on horses available at the time of their composition. It analyzes the style and content of books that indicate the approach of the authors to the topic of “horse” and points to their view of horses in relation to Tibetan culture and Buddhism. Moreover, the books’ content mirrors the various functions and applications of horses in Tibet and India. It reveals the purpose of these books in general and illustrates the relation between textuality and orality. The study demonstrates the link between hippology and hippiatry, and the development of equine studies in Tibet. It shows the influence of humans on horse medicine and, moreover, contributes to an improved understanding of the development of Tibetan medical sciences in general.

Highlights

  • Humans, horses and dogs have the same perception.mi rta khyi gsum/rnam shes gcigThis popular Tibetan saying points to the relation between humans and two species living under their care and protection

  • Indian texts; and (3) extensive compendia that merges all of the knowledge on horses available at the time of their composition. It analyzes the style and content of books that indicate the approach of the authors to the topic of “horse” and points to their view of horses in relation to Tibetan culture and Buddhism

  • Hippology is a vast topic within the field of Tibetan horse medicine

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Summary

Introduction

Horses and dogs have the same perception. This popular Tibetan saying points to the relation between humans and two species living under their care and protection. Yeshe Paljor (Sum pa mkhan po Ye shes dpal ’byor, 1704–1788) composed the rGya gar pa’i lugs bstun rta dpyad dpal g.yang (Glorious Examination of Horses according to the Indian Tradition) With their focus on hippological topics, both texts indicate that, originally, scholars compiled them for a different purpose than recording knowledge regarding horse cures. Scholars discovered them in the 20th century in Nepal.9 These comprehensive compilations deal with, I am tempted to say, anything related to equine studies; they contain practical advice on treatment, as found is the earliest manuscripts, and the hippological theories of the sources translated from Indian texts. For a survey on Dreckapotheke-remedies in Tibetan medicine, see (Maurer 2017)

Hippiatric Manuscripts
Hippological Manuscript
Summary
Translated Texts from India
Survey of the Contents
Names of Bodily Parts
Conclusion
The Nepalese Manuscripts
Manuscript
The Hippological Sections
The Hippiatric Sections
Pulse Diagnosis
Urine Analysis
Eye Diagnosis
Physiology
41 The so-called xylograph Bacot 44 also refersthe to horses’
Conclusions
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