The title of the pillar is 大秦景教宣元至本經 "Sutra on the Origin of Origins of Daqin Luminous Religion", one of the Jingjiao Documents.[2] The pillar was erected in 814-815 CE, and moved to another location in 829 CE, as explained in one part of the inscriptions.[3] The "sutra" which starts with a Trisagion (Qadishā Alāhā) was dedicated to a deceased Lady An (安氏太夫人) of Sogdian descent. The inscription tells about her ancestors who came from Bukhara in Central Asia; her relatives and clergymen from the Luoyang Daqin Monastery, who attended the funeral service also had typical Sogdian surnames such as Mi (米, origin of Maymurgh) and Kang (康, of Samarkand, or historically Kangju).[4]
Detail of the rubbing of the pillar, showing a cross on a lotus flower flanked by angels (depicted in the form of apsaras)
Detail of the rubbing of the pillar, showing a cross on a lotus flower flanked by angels (depicted in the form of apsaras)
^Li, Tang; Winkler, Dietmar W., eds. (2020). Artifact, Text, Context: Studies on Syriac Christianity in China and Central Asia. "orientalia – patristica – oecumenica" series (vol. 17). Zürich: LIT Verlag. pp. 126–127. ISBN978-3-643-91195-7.
SIR E. A. WALLIS BUDGE, KT., THE MONKS OF KUBLAl KHAN EMPEROR OF CHINA (1928) - contains reproductions of early photographs of the stele where it stood in the early 20th century (from Havret etc.)