Amphithéâtre Maurice Halbwachs, Site Marcelin Berthelot
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One of the greatest recent discoveries in the history of Eurasian religions has been the massive rediscovery of Manichaean didactic art, thanks to paintings produced in southern China between the 12th and 14th centuries and then, in circumstances that remain unclear, transported to Japan, where they have been identified as Manichaean in the last ten years.

What does this have to do with Central Asia? A great deal, because these paintings have a demonstrable link with the only previously known Manichaean paintings: those of Qocho in Xinjizang, from the 9th-10th centuries. As Manichaean readings were always based on images, we can be sure that similar things were already being seen in the Manichaean monasteries of Bactria and Sogdiana in the 6th-10th centuries, where in some places (notably Samarkand) they formed an important part of the urban landscape.

Since the beginning of the modern study of Manichaeism, two wild hopes have been pursued: to find where Manichaeism had died out (or perhaps, who knows, was not completely dead?); to find Mani'sArzhang (or Ardahang): the "Image" considered to be one of his nine canonical works.

The last Manichaeans: since 1957 in China (and 1988 in the West), we've known that the last traceable monastery is in Fukien - the province opposite Taiwan - near the great medieval port of Quanzhou; the last inscription is from 1445, the last mention as a "temple of Mani" from 1615, after which, at an unknown date, the site is abandoned, but retaining a statue of Mani still recognizable and identified by an inscription. In fact, there must have been others at the same time, some of which were probably absorbed by Buddhist monasteries. In any case, it was near here, in Fuzhou, that Marco Polo met a group of Manichaeans in 1290, whom he mistook for Christians. It has recently come to light that in a nearby region, a group of Taoist exorcists were still using Manichaean texts transcribed in Chinese, the " Xiapu manuscripts" (where Yoshida was able to retro-transcribe previously unknown Parthian Manichaean prayers!)