TibSchol was launched on 1 July 2021. In the 54 months since the start of the project, the team has completed the survey of the initial textual corpus consisting of more than 530 works, accessible as reproductions of handwritten manuscripts. Colophons were studied, and further biographical research was conducted to place scholastic authors on the map, reconstructing their personal network, and assessing their place(s) of activity. Texts have also been mined for intertextual references, benefiting from our Handwritten Text Recognition models for Tibetan cursive script trained on the platform Transkribus. The collection of references to other texts written by 11th-13th century scholastics is expanding our understanding of the range of individuals’ specialized learning and the thematic focus of scholarly compositions in that period.
Data on over 1200 scholars and more than 1000 works and their manuscripts has been integrated in a prosopographical database, which is linked to a bibliographical library on Zotero and a library of textual fragments in TEI format. The dataset is public and is still being curated. Data visualization in graph format is currently in development.
Thematic inquiries into scholastic tools have addressed discussions on the theory of definition and the differentiations at play in the Madhyamaka two-truth framework. Explorations related to hermeneutics have addressed the Tibetan classifications of Indian tenet systems and the question of scholarly authority and of Tibetan compositions claimed to be translations of Indian works. The development of a rules-based method of public argumentation has been investigated. Works that provide evidence of a growing gulf in Tibet between scholastics and scholars who rejected this approach have also been examined. Interdisciplinary dialogue was fostered with scholars of medieval studies, in particular specialists of Latin scholasticism.
The TibSchol team has organized and co-organized four workshops and two symposia, most recently the international symposium “In and around early Tibetan scholasticism” (Vienna, 4-6 June 2025) that hosted 15 high-ranking speakers. TibSchol members have organized panels at major conferences in the field – notably the 16th Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies (Prague, 3–9 July 2022) and the XXth Congress of the International Association of Buddhist Studies (Leipzig, 10–15 August 2025) – as well as at the Leeds International Medieval Congress (Leeds, 7–10 July 2025), where the PI also had the honor of delivering a keynote lecture. In addition, research results were presented in 55 presentations (including 7 invited lectures) and nine articles have appeared.