464 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [N.S., XVIII, 
In the Abh. of the Phil.-Hist. Class I of the Bavarian 
Academy (Munich, 1875). Reprinted separately. 48 entries. 
8. Emil Schlagintweit. List of Tibetan MSS. in the Wur- 
temburg State Library in Stuttgart (Verzeichniss). 
In the transactions of the philos-pilol. and hist. class of 
the Munich Academy, 1904, pp. 245-270. Reprinted separate- 
ly. 22 entries. 
. Emil Schlagintweit [?]. List of MSS. collected by his 
brothers and incorporated in the Bodleiana in Oxford. 
Schlagintweit (Bericht iiber eine Adresse, etc., p. 659) 
states that his brothers brought home 101 Tibetan items from 
uddhist monasteries in the frontier regions of Central Tibet. 
“A detailed description is in preparation” (1904). Laufer 
(Ein Siithngedicht der Bonpo, p. 1, 1899) mentions a ‘short 
lithographed list’ of these: ‘Tibetan Manuscripts, Schla- 
gintweit Collection.”” Mr. A. Cowley, of the Bodleian, had the 
kindness to inform me in 1918: ‘‘ We havea lithograph ed copy 
of a catalogue of the Tibetan MSS. bought from Dr. Schla- 
gintweit, but we have no spare copy which we can send.” 
10. Lama Phun-tshog Wangdan. A catalogue of Tibetan 
Block-prints and Manuscripts brought from Tibet, by Cri Sarat 
Chandra Das in 1879 and 1882. 
A footnote says: This list was first made in May 1886 by 
Lama Phun-tshog Wangdan. 
Date and place of issue are not given. It is not evident 
that this important list has been officially published. Probab- 
ly Sarat Chandra Das distributed it privately to his literary 
friends. 
The list is divided into two portions, enumerating 165 and 
42 numbers, 207 in all. The 42 works of the second portion 
are said to be in the library of the Government High School 
at Darjeeling. In a note in Schlagintweit’s Bericht, quoted 
above, it is said that the other 165 works arein Calcutta. The 
majority of these have since found a permanent place in the 
Library of the Calcutta University. 
It is a strange coincidence that this very valuable list has 
remained as hidden to the general public as Dr. Thomas’ 
Memorandum. 
ll. P.Ghosha. A nominal list of Tibetan Manuscripts 
and Xylographs in the Library of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 
o date. A very imperfect and incorrect hand-list. 
177 entries of which the first 120 seem to refer to the 
Kanjur. 
12. _H. Wenzel. List of Tibetan MSS. and printed books 
in the Library of the Royal Asiatic Society (of London). 
J.R.AS., 1892. (NewS. 24, pp. 570-9.) 
29 MSS., 18 prints; many incomplete and fragmentary. 
13. Berthold Laufer, List (Verzeichniss) of the Tibetan 


