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To browse Academia. Caroline Humphrey. Berthe Jansen. Dissertation Abstract: This study entitled The Monastery Rules: Buddhist Monastic Organization in Pre-modern Tibet discusses the position of the monasteries in Tibetan societies before the s and how that position was formed and informed by Buddhist and monastic notions.
This research takes as a point of departure the huge impact of monastic Buddhism on society, economy and law, as well as on a wide range of aspects of Tibetan culture and popular religion. Whereas Christian monasticism is only of secondary importance to its faith, Buddhist monasticism is generally seen as primary to Buddhism.
Its importance is brought to the fore both in Buddhist doctrine and practice. This work examines the impact of Buddhist monastic institutions on Tibetan societies by looking at their monastic policies with regard to organization, economy, justice, and public relations. The in-depth study of these texts is supplemented with important information from over twenty interviews, using oral history methods, with elderly Tibetan monks and monks currently involved in monastic organization, collected during fieldwork in India in By combining methods of history, anthropology, and philology, this study demonstrates that the monastic institution was, in many aspects, guided by Buddhist monastic law and that it was averse to instability and upheaval of the existing social system.
To this end, monks needed to behave well, also in order to be respected by the lay-community. This meant that monks, and thereby monasteries, continuously had to adapt their position to their environments and to change how they treated themselves and others. These changes are attested in the monastic guidelines, which contain rules that are largely aimed to change the monastery in order to preserve it.