[INDOLOGY] Paul Dundas (1952-2023)

peter bisschop pcbisschop at googlemail.com
Mon Apr 10 09:49:59 UTC 2023


Dear members of the list,
It is with profound sadness that we, his former Sanskrit colleagues at the
University of Edinburgh, have to share the news of the passing of Paul
Dundas on Wednesday 5 April at the age of 70.
Paul started studying Sanskrit and Prakrit as an undergraduate at the
University of Edinburgh with Michael Coulson and had a short period as a
postgraduate at the University of Cambridge with among others, John Brough
and K.R. Norman, before accepting the post in Sanskrit at Edinburgh in
1976, where he continued to teach and research throughout his entire career
until his retirement as reader only a few years ago. He was a member of the
Council of the Pali Text Society, and the recipient of the Prakrit
Jñānabhāratī International award in 2019. Paul was a towering figure in the
field of Jain and Prakrit studies and will be known to most scholars and
students as the author of *The Jains*, of which the first edition appeared
in 1992 and which continues to be the most reliable introduction to Jainism
to the present day. From his many other publications in the field we would
like to single out *History, Scripture and Controversy in a Medieval Jain
Sect*, published in 2007, a book of vast and penetrating learning with a
relevance far beyond that of medieval Jainism alone. But Paul also had a
great passion for all things Sanskrit, reading across the entire spectrum
of Sanskrit literature. Testimony to this is his wonderful translation of
Māgha's *Śiśupālavadha*, published in the Murty Classical Library of India
in 2017, the first complete English translation of this truly difficult
Sanskrit Mahākāvya. His latest publication appeared in 2022, in the Eivind
Kahrs felicitation volume *Jñānapraśaṃsā*: “Sectarian Confrontation as
Theatrical Diversion: Observations on Yaśaścandra’s
*Mudritakumudacandraprakaraṇa* and the Jain Debate at Aṇahillapaṭṭana”.
Paul was still actively engaged in several other projects. His death is a
great loss to the field.
Paul was one of the most learned and well read persons we have known. He
was also most generous and kind, and we will sorely miss his presence and
humour.
Our thoughts are with his partner, Rowan Flett.
Peter Bisschop, Leiden
John Brockington, Kidlington
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