The first major post-pandemic meeting took place in the form of a midterm workshop on ‘Institutionalised Religion and Asceticism in South and Southeast Asia in the Pre-Modern Period’, again held in Berlin (01-04/03/2022), which gathered a significant part of our international team with several members and guests attending in person, plus a large attendance online. Presentations were made about the progress in almost all sub-projects of the action as well as about the organisation of the work (task-forces), tools, and practicalities. Several team members elaborated specifically on the theme of cenobitic institutions in the Hindu tradition called maṭha.
Another workshop took place in Pondicherry (30/01/2023 to 03/02/2023). The central theme of this workshop was how Hindu institutions served as centres of learning.
Core-members of the project carried on with the writing of the various forms of project documentation. The DHARMA Encoding Guide of Critical Editions, which had been under development for 3 years, was finally finished and released in April 2023. Further guides are still under construction (DHARMA Metadata Guide, DHARMA Authority Lists Guide). See
https://dharma.hypotheses.org/guides(se abrirá en una nueva ventana).
Various tools already set up have been used:
- the GitHub repository for collaborating on the encoding of texts, which at the time of reporting contains, besides various other files and guidelines, 1682 XML files of epigraphical editions at various stages of completion, as well as 659 XML files reused from earlier projects, 19 XML files of critical editions and 27 XML files of diplomatic editions of manuscript-transmitted texts to be disseminated and displayed on the project’s database;
- a Zotero library, for managing the bibliographical references of the project, which at this time contains approximately 17,000 bibliographical entries;
- the blog (
https://dharma.hypotheses.org(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)) serving as the primary communication and dissemination channel of the project, which is regularly updated.
OA digital editions of major epigraphical publications (Annual Report on Indian Epigraphy, South Indian Inscriptions, Epigraphia Carnatica, Répertoire onomastique de l’épigraphie javanaise) have been made accessible on the temporary website of the project.
Other current or completed tasks concern the management of and the workflow for the metadata of the inscriptions we are editing, the authority lists for ancient place-names and personal names and for controlled vocabularies, as well as the development of the project’s database (the online website for publication and search of DHARMA digital editions of inscriptions and transmitted texts).
Collaboration took place with activities of other projects: Shivadharma (ERC no. 803624), Japanese VIHARA project (JSPS), Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (University of Hamburg).
DHARMA members also participated in non-DHARMA workshops/conferences and produced several publications under the aegis of DHARMA. See:
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/DHARMA/browse/latest-publications(se abrirá en una nueva ventana).
DHARMA archaeological operations continued in Bangladesh and Cambodia, and started in Indonesia (Bumiayu).