Josaphat |
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Saint Josaphat is said to have lived and died in the third or fourth century in India. His story appears to be in many respects a Christianized version of Siddhartha Gautama's story. His name derives from the Sanskrit term bodhisattva via the Middle Persian[?] bodasif. He was popular in the Middle Ages, principally as part of a Christian usage of a Buddhist story about Siddhartha, along with another legendary saint, Saint Barlaam.
Wilfred Cantwell Smith traced the story from a second to fourth-century Sanskrit Mahayana Buddhist text, to a Manichee version, to an Arabic Muslim version, to an eleventh-century Christian Georgian version, to a Christian Greek version, and from there into Western European languages. He should not be confused with Saint Josaphat Kuncevyc[?]; nor should Saint Barlaam be confused with Saint Barlaam of Calabria[?]. See also: List of saints |
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