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The Hungarian who Walked to Heaven | [[The Hungarian who Walked to Heaven]] | ||
By Edward Fox | By Edward Fox | ||
Short Books Publication | Short Books Publication | ||
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In 1819 Alexander Csoma de Koros, a young Hungarian scholar, set off on an odyssey in search of his own identity, or rather of the origins of the Magyar people. He ended up, through a bizarre sequence of events, in a Himalayan monastery – compiling an English dictionary of Tibetan for the British... | In 1819 Alexander Csoma de Koros, a young Hungarian scholar, set off on an odyssey in search of his own identity, or rather of the origins of the Magyar people. He ended up, through a bizarre sequence of events, in a Himalayan monastery – compiling an English dictionary of Tibetan for the British... | ||
Today we have Csoma de Koros to thank for much of what we know about Tibetan culture. Yet the marvel of his life is that, though he spent most of it in crushing hardship in the foothills of the Himalayas, he never set out to be a Tibetologist at all. The desire to travel, as Edward Fox so deftly illustrates, can be a terrible burden on the soul. | Today we have [[Csoma de Koros]] to thank for much of what we know about Tibetan culture. Yet the marvel of his life is that, though he spent most of it in crushing hardship in the foothills of the Himalayas, he never set out to be a Tibetologist at all. The desire to travel, as Edward Fox so deftly illustrates, can be a terrible burden on the soul. | ||
see http://www.theshortbookco.com/book.asp?book_id=31 | see [http://www.theshortbookco.com/book.asp?book_id=31] | ||
[[Category:Translators]] |
Revision as of 19:05, 5 November 2006
The Hungarian who Walked to Heaven By Edward Fox Short Books Publication
Alexander Csoma de Koros
In 1819 Alexander Csoma de Koros, a young Hungarian scholar, set off on an odyssey in search of his own identity, or rather of the origins of the Magyar people. He ended up, through a bizarre sequence of events, in a Himalayan monastery – compiling an English dictionary of Tibetan for the British...
Today we have Csoma de Koros to thank for much of what we know about Tibetan culture. Yet the marvel of his life is that, though he spent most of it in crushing hardship in the foothills of the Himalayas, he never set out to be a Tibetologist at all. The desire to travel, as Edward Fox so deftly illustrates, can be a terrible burden on the soul.
see [1]