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Study on Bulseol-daebo-bumo-eunjunggyeong (Eonhae) Published from Mangyeong-am, Hoeryeong-bu, Hamgyeongbuk-do in 1766

  • Journal of Studies in Bibliography
  • Abbr : JSB
  • 2020, (83), pp.129~149
  • DOI : 10.17258/jib.2020..83.129
  • Publisher : Korean Society of Bibliography
  • Research Area : Interdisciplinary Studies > Library and Information Science
  • Received : August 20, 2020
  • Accepted : September 13, 2020
  • Published : September 28, 2020

Park, Cheol-Min 1

1한국학중앙연구원

Accredited

ABSTRACT

This study introduced newly discovered Bulseol-daebo-bumo-eunjunggyeong(Onhae) (henceforth, Hoeryeongbon) published from Mangyeong-am, Hoeryeong-bu, in 1766 (King Yeongjo’s 42th year) and examined the institution holding it, the transmission course, bibliographic items of the woodblock-book, the line, the publication motive and the spelling characteristics of the Korean annotation sentence. Hoeryeongbon was collected by Jessie Mclaren who lived in Korea during the Japanese Colonial Period and transmitted to Australia, and then donated to the National Library of Australia in 1984, via the hands of his daughter, Rachel. It is now collected by the Maclaren library in the National Library of Australia. Given the sutra painting, Korean annotation sentence and introduction, the woodblock-book belongs to the line of Huibangsa>Donghwasa>Gobangsa, and the Gobangsa woodblock-book, among them, is regarded as a direct source text. Different from the existing woodblock-books, Hoeryeongbon exhibits some spelling characteristics in its Korean annotation sentence: most of consonant clusters disappeared; aspiration was reflected, for example, ‘고’ was engraved as ‘코’. Hoeryeongbon, one of 42 kinds of Bulseoldaebobumoeunjunggyeong (Onhae), is valuable, in that it can be used to show that the publication activity in Hoeryeong, Hamgyeongbuk-do, which has been observed in the woodblock list (冊板目錄) of Gosachwaryo (攷事撮要) was continuously performed even in the late Joseon dynasty and investigate engravers (刻手), donors (施主者), etc. around Hamgyeong-do in the mid-18th century.

Citation status

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