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BARLAAM AND JOSAPHAT

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 405 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARLAAM AND JOSAPHAT  , one of the most popular and widely disseminated of

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medieval religious romances, which owes its importance and
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interest to the fact that it is a Christianized version of the story of Gautama Siddharta, the
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Buddha, with which it agrees not only in broad outline but in essential details . The Christian story first appears in Greek among the
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works of John (q.v.) of
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Damascus, who flourished in the early
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part of the 8th century, and who, before he adopted the monastic
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life, had held high office at the court of the
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caliph
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Abu Ja'far al-Mansur, as his
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father
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Sergius is said to have done before him . The outline of the Greek story is as follows:—St Thomas had converted the
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people of India, and of ter the eremitic life originated in
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Egypt, many Indians adopted it . But a powerful pagan king arose who hated and persecuted the Christians, especially the ascetics . After this king, Abenner by name, had long been child-less, a boy greatly desired and matchless in beauty, was born to him and received the name of Josaphat . The king, in his joy, summons astrologers to predict the child's destiny . They foretell glory and prosperity beyond those of all his predecessors . One sage, most learned of all, assents, but intimates that the scene of this glory will be, not the paternal
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kingdom, but another in-finitely more exalted, and that the child will adopt the faith which his father persecutes . The boy shows a thoughtful and devout turn . King Abenner, troubled by this and•by the remembrance of the prediction, selects a secluded city, in which he causes a splendid palace to be built, where his son should abide, attended only by tutors and servants in the flower of youth and
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health . No stranger was to have access, and the boy was to be cognizant of none of the sorrows of humanity, such as poverty, disease, old age or
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death, but only of what was pleasant, so that he should have no inducement to think of the future life; nor was he ever to hear a word of Christ and His religion . Prince Josaphat grows up in this seclusion, acquires all kinds of knowledge and exhibits singular endowments .

At length, on his urgent

prayer, the king reluctantly permits him to pass the limits of the palace, after having taken all precautions to keep painful
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objects out of sight . But through some neglect of orders, the prince one day encounters a leper and a blind man, and asks of his attendants with pain and astonishment what such a spectacle should mean . These, they tell him, are ills to which man is liable . Shall all men have such ills? he asks . And in the end he returns home in deep depression . Another day he falls in with a decrepit old man, and stricken with dismay at the sight, renews his questions and hears for the first time of death . And in how many years, continues the prince, does this
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fate befall man? and must he expect death as inevitable ? Is there no way of escape ? No means of eschewing this wretched state of decay ? The attendants reply as may be imagined; and Josaphat goes home more pensive than ever, dwelling on the certainty of death and on what shall be thereafter . At this time Barlaam, an eremite of
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great sanctity and know-ledge, dwelling in the
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wilderness of Sennaritis, divinely warned, travels to India in the disguise of a merchant, and gains access to Prince Josaphat, to whom he imparts the Christian
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doctrine and commends the monastic life . Suspicion arises and Barlaam departs .

But all attempts to shake the prince's convictions fail . As a last resource the king sends for Theudas, a magician, who removes the prince's attendants and substitutes seductive girls; but all their blandishments are resisted through prayer . The king abandons these efforts and associates his son in the

government . The prince uses his power to promote.religion, and every-thing prospers in his hands . At last Abenner himself yields to the faith, and after some years of penitence dies . Josaphat surrenders the kingdom to a friend called Barachias and departs for the wilderness . After two years of painful search and much buffeting by demons he finds Barlaam . The latter dies, and Josaphat survives as a
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hermit many years . King Barachias afterwards arrives, and transfers the bodies of the two saints to India, where they are the source of many miracles . Now this story is, mutatis mutandis, the story of Buddha . It will suffice to recall the Buddha's
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education in a secluded palace, his encounter successively with a decrepit old man, with a man in mortal disease and poverty, with a dead
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body, and, lastly, with a religious recluse radiant with peace and dignity, and his consequent abandonment of his princely state for the ascetic life in the jungle . Some of the correspondences in the two stories are most minute, and even the phraseology, in which some of the details of Josaphat's
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history are described, almost literally renders the
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Sanskrit of the Lalita Vistara .

More than that, thevery word Joasaph or Josaphat (Arabic, Yudasatf) is a corruption of Bodisat due to a confusion between the Arabic letters for Y and B, and Bodisatva is a

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common title for the Buddha in the many birth-stories that clustered round the life of the sage . There are good rtasons for thinking that the Christian story did not originate with John of Damascus, and a strong case has been made out by Zotenberg that it reflects the religious struggles and disputes of the early 7th century in
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Syria, and that the Greek text was edited by a monk of Saint Saba named John, his version being the source of all later texts and
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translations . How much older than this the Christian story is, we cannot tell, but it is interesting to remember that it embodies in the form of a speech the " Apology " of the 2nd-century philosopher Aristides . After its appearance among the writings of John of Damascus, it was incorporated with Simeon Metaphrastes' Lives of the Saints (c . 950), and thence gained great vogue, being translated into almost every
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European language . A famous Icelandic version was made for Prince Hakon early in the 13th century . In the East, too, it took on new life and Catholic missionaries freely used it in their propaganda . Thus a Tagala (Philippine)
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translation was brought out at
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Manila in 1712 . Besides furnishing the early playwrights with material for miracle plays, it has supplied episodes and apologues to many a writer, including Boccaccio, John Gower and Shakespeare . Rudolph of
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Ems about 1220
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expanded it into a long poem of 16,000 lines, celebrating the victory of Christian over
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heathen teaching . The heroes of the
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romance have even attained saintly rank . Their names were inserted by Petrus de Natalibus in his Catalogus Sanctorum (c .

1380), and

Cardinal Baronius included them in the official Martyrologium authorized by
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Sixtus V.(1585-159o) under the date of the 27th of November . In the Orthodox Eastern Church " the
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holy Josaph, son of Abener, king of India " is allotted the 26th of August . Thus unwittingly Gautama the Buddha has come to official recognition as a saint in two great branches of the Catholic Church, and no one will say that he does not deserve the honour . A church dedicated Divo Josaphat in Palermo is probably not the only one of its kind . The identity of the stories of Buddha and St Josaphat was re-cognized by the historian of Portuguese India, Dipgo do Couto (1542-1616), as may be seen in his history (Dec. v. liv. vi. cap . 2) . In
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modern times the honour belongs to Laboulaye (1859), Felix Liebrecht in 186o putting it beyond dispute . Subsequent researches have been carried out by Zotenberg, Max Muller, Rhys Davids, Braunholtz and Joseph Jacobs, who published his Barlaam and Josaphat in 1896 . BAR-LE-DUC, a
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town of north-eastern France, capital of the department of Meuse, 50 M . E.S.E. of Chalons-sur-
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Marne, on the main
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line of the Eastern railway between that town and
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Nancy . Pop . (1906) 14,624 .

The

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lower, more modern and busier part of the town extends along a narrow valley, shut in by wooded or
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vine-clad hills, and is traversed throughout its length by the Ornain, which is crossed by several bridges . It is limited towards the north-east by the canal from the Marne to the Rhine, on the south-west by a small arm of the Ornain, called the Canal
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des Usines, on the
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left
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bank of which the upper town (Ville Haute) is situated . The Ville Haute, which is reached by staircases and steep narrow thoroughfares, is intersected by a long, quiet street, bordered by houses of the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries . In this quarter are the remains (16th century) of the chateau of the dukes of Bar, dismantled in 167o, the old
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clock-tower, and the college, built in the latter
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half of the 16th century . Its church of St
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Pierre (14th and 15th centuries) contains a skilfully-carved effigy in white stone of a half-decayed corpse, the
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work of Ligier Richier (1500-1572), a pupil of Michelangelo—erected to the memory of Rene de Chalons (d . 1544) . The lower town contains the official buildings and two or three churches, but these are of little interest . Among the statues of distinguished natives of the town is one to Charles Nicolas Oudinot, whose house serves as the hotel-de-ville . Bar-le-Duc has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a board of trade arbitrators, a lycee, a training-college for girls, a chamber of commerce, a branch of the Bank of France and an
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art museum . The
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industries of the town include iron-founding and the manufacture of machinery, corsets,
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hosiery,
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flannel goods, jam and wall-paper, and
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brewing, cotton spinning and
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weaving, leather-dressing and dyeing . Wine,
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timber and iron are important articles of commerce . Bar-le-Duc was at one time the seat of the countship, later duchy, of Bar, the history of which is given below .

Though probably of

ancient origin, the town was unimportant till the loth century when it became the residence of the
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counts .

End of Article: BARLAAM AND JOSAPHAT
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