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Mahasiddha

Mahasiddha (Sanskrit: mahāsiddha "great adept; Tibetan: གྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཆེན་པོ, Wylie: grub thob chen po, THL: druptop chenpo) is a term for someone who embodies and cultivates the "siddhi of perfection". A siddha is an individual who, through the practice of sādhanā, attains the realization of siddhis, psychic and spiritual abilities and powers.

Four Mahasiddhas (18th century, Boston MFA). Saraha in top left, Dombhi Heruka top right, Naropa bottom left, and Virupa bottom right.

Mahasiddhas were practitioners of yoga and tantra, or tantrikas. Their historical influence throughout the Indian subcontinent and the Himalayas was vast and they reached mythic proportions as codified in their songs of realization and hagiographies, or namtars, many of which have been preserved in the Tibetan Buddhist canon. The Mahasiddhas are the founders of Vajrayana traditions and lineages such as Dzogchen and Mahamudra.

Robert Thurman explains the symbiotic relationship between Tantric Buddhist communities and the Buddhist universities such as Nalanda which flourished at the same time.[a]

Genealogy and historical dates edit

The exact genealogy and historical dates of the Mahasiddhas are contentious. Dowman (1986) holds that they all lived between 750 and 1150 CE.

Primary tradition edit

 
Eight Mahasiddhas with the bodhisattva Samantabhadra (top); 1st row (l->r): Darikapa, Putalipa, Upanaha; 2nd row: Kokilipa and Anangapa; 3rd row: Lakshmikara; Samudra; Vyalipa.

Abhayadatta Sri is an Indian scholar of the 12th century who is claimed to have recorded the hagiographies of the eighty-four siddhas in a text known as The History of the Eighty-four Mahasiddhas (Sanskrit: Caturasitisiddha pravrtti; Wylie: grub thob brgyad bcu tsa bzhi'i lo rgyus).

Dowman holds that the eighty-four Mahasiddha are spiritual archetypes:

The number eighty-four is a "whole" or "perfect" number. Thus the eighty-four siddhas can be seen as archetypes representing the thousands of exemplars and adepts of the tantric way. The siddhas were remarkable for the diversity of their family backgrounds and the dissimilarity of their social roles. They were found in every reach of the social structure: kings and ministers, priests and yogins, poets and musicians, craftsmen and farmers, housewives and whores.[1]

Reynolds (2007) states that the mahasiddha tradition "evolved in North India in the early Medieval Period (3–13 cen. CE). Philosophically this movement was based on the insights revealed in the Mahayana Sutras and as systematized in the Madhyamaka and Chittamatrin schools of philosophy, but the methods of meditation and practice were radically different than anything seen in the monasteries.[2] He proffers that the mahasiddha tradition "broke with the conventions of Buddhist monastic life of the time, and abandoning the monastery they practiced in the caves, the forests, and the country villages of Northern India. In complete contrast to the settled monastic establishment of their day, which concentrated the Buddhist intelligenzia [sic.] in a limited number of large monastic universities, they adopted the life-style of itinerant mendicants, much as the wandering Sadhus of modern India."[2]

The charnel ground conveys how great mahasiddhas in the Nath and Vajrayana traditions such as Tilopa (988–1069) and Gorakshanath (fl. 11th – 12th century) yoked adversity to till the soil of the path and accomplish the fruit, the "ground" (Sanskrit: āśraya; Wylie: gzhi) of realization:[3]

The charnel ground is not merely the hermitage; it can also be discovered or revealed in completely terrifying mundane environments where practitioners find themselves desperate and depressed, where conventional worldly aspirations have become devastated by grim reality. This is demonstrated in the sacred biographies of the great siddhas of the Vajrayāna tradition. Tilopa attained realization as a grinder of sesame seeds and a procurer for a prominent prostitute. Sarvabhakṣa was an extremely obese glutton, Gorakṣa was a cowherd in remote climes, Taṅtepa was addicted to gambling, and Kumbharipa was a destitute potter. These circumstances were charnel grounds because they were despised in Indian society and the siddhas were viewed as failures, marginal and defiled.[4]

In his study of the Hevajra Tantra, David Snellgrove outlines the typical tantric siddha or yogi. After experiencing the consummation of enlightenment in the embrace of a female consort:

Thereafter the pupil is free to pursue the practice of strenuous meditation and physical self-control, and after five years or more he will perhaps succeed. He receives the five symbolic adornments, crown, ear-rings, necklace, bracelets, girdle, signs of his success. These he wears on those set occasions, the eighth or fifteenth day of the dark-fortnight, when perfected yogins and yoginis come together, to consume the flesh and wine, to sing and dance, and realize their consummation of bliss. He is free from all conventions and wanders as he pleases, knowing no distinction between friend or foe, clean or unclean, good or evil.[5]

Other traditions edit

According to Ulrich von Schroeder, Tibet has different traditions relating to the mahasiddhas. Among these traditions, two were particularly popular, namely the Abhayadatta Sri list and the so-called Vajrasana list. The number of mahasiddhas varies between eighty-four and eighty-eight, and only about thirty-six of the names occur in both lists. In many instances more than one siddha with the same name exists, so it must be assumed that fewer than thirty siddhas of the two traditions actually relate to the same historical persons. In the days when the siddhas of the later Tibetan traditions flourished in India (i.e., between the 9th and 11th centuries), it was not uncommon for initiates to assume the names of famous adepts of the past. Sometimes a disciple would have the same name as his guru, while still other names were based on caste or tribe. In such a context the distinction between siddhas of the same name becomes blurred. The entire process of distinguishing between siddhas with the same name of different texts and lineages is therefore to large extent guesswork. The great variation in phonetic transcription of Indian words into Tibetan may partly be the result of various Tibetan dialects. In the process of copying the Tibetan transcriptions in later times, the spelling often became corrupted to such an extent that the recognition or reconstitution of the original names became all but impossible. Whatever the reasons might be, the Tibetan transcription of Indian names of mahasiddhas clearly becomes more and more corrupt as time passes.[citation needed]

Geographical sites edit

Local folk tradition refers to a number of icons and sacred sites to the eighty-four Mahasiddha at Bharmour (formerly known as Brahmapura) in the Chaurasi complex.[6] The word chaurasi means "eighty-four".

It is also very significant that nowhere else, except at Bharmaur in Chamba district, may be seen the living tradition of the Eighty-four Siddhas. In the Chaurasi temple complex, near which the famous temple of goddess Lakshana (8th century A.D.) stands, there once were eighty-four small shrines, each dedicated to a Siddha.[7]

A number of archaeological sacred sites require iconographic analysis in the Chaurasi complex in Chamba, Himachal Pradesh. Although it might be hagiographical accretion and folk lore, it is said that in the reign of Sahil Varman:

Soon after Sahil Varman's accession Brahmapura was visited by 84 yogis/mahasidhas, who were greatly pleased with the Raja's piety and hospitality; and as he had no heir, they promised him ten sons and in due course ten sons were born and also a daughter named Champavati.[This quote needs a citation]

Caturāsiti-siddha-pravrtti edit

The Caturasiti-siddha-pravrtti (CSP), “The Lives of the Eighty-four Siddhas”, compiled by Abhayadatta Sri, a Northern Indian Sanskrit text dating from the 11th or 12th century, comes from a tradition prevalent in the ancient city-state of Campa in the modern state of Bihar. Only Tibetan translations of this Sanskrit text seem to have survived. This text was translated into Tibetan by sMon grub Shes rab and is known as the Grub thob brgyad cu rtsa bzhi’i lo rgyus or “The Legends of the Eighty-four Siddhas”. It has been suggested that Abhayadatta Sri is identical with the great Indian scholar Mahapandita Abhayakaragupta (late 11th–early 12th century), the compiler of the iconographic compendiums Vajravali, Nispannayogavali, and Jyotirmanjari.

The other major Tibetan tradition is based on the list contained in the Caturasiti-siddhabhyarthana (CSA) by Ratnakaragupta of Vajrasana, identical with Bodhgaya (Tib.: rDo rje gdan) located in Bihar, Northern India. The Tibetan translation is known as Grub thob brgyad cu rtsa bzhi’i gsol ’debs by rDo rje gdan pa. There exist several Tibetan versions of the list of mahasiddhas based on the Vajrasana text. However, these Tibetan texts differ in many cases with regard to the Tibetan transcriptions of the Indian mahasiddhas names.[8]

Eighty-Four Mahasiddhas edit

 
Vajradhara Buddha with mahasiddhas

By convention there are eighty-four Mahasiddhas in both Hindu and Tibetan Buddhist traditions, with some overlap between the two lists. The number is congruent with the number of siddhi or occult powers held in the Indian Religions. In Tibetan Buddhist art they are often depicted together as a matched set in works such as thangka paintings where they may be used collectively as border decorations around a central figure.

Each Mahasiddha has come to be known for certain characteristics and teachings, which facilitates their pedagogical use. One of the most beloved Mahasiddhas is Virūpa, who may be taken as the patron saint of the Sakyapa sect and instituted the Lamdré (Tibetan: lam 'bras) teachings. Virupa (alternate orthographies: Birwapa/Birupa) lived in 9th century India and was known for his great attainments.

Some of the methods and practices of the Mahasiddha were codified in Buddhist scriptures known as Tantras. Traditionally the ultimate source of these methods and practices is held to be the historical Buddha Shakyamuni, but often it is a transhistorical aspect of the Buddha or deity Vajradhara or Samantabhadra who reveals the Tantra in question directly to the Mahasiddha in a vision or whilst they dream or are in a trance. This form of the deity is known as a sambhogakaya manifestation. The sadhana of Dream Yoga as practiced in Dzogchen traditions such as the Kham, entered the Himalayan tantric tradition from the Mahasiddha, Ngagpa and Bonpo. Dream Yoga or "Milam" (T:rmi-lam; S:svapnadarśana), is one of the Six Yogas of Naropa.[9]

Four of the eighty-four Mahasiddhas are women.[10] They are:

  • Manibhadra, the Perfect Wife
  • Lakshmincara, The Princess of Crazy wisdom
  • Mekhala, the elder of the 2 Headless Sisters
  • Kanakhala, the younger of the 2 Headless Sisters

List of the Mahasiddhas edit

 
Nagarjuna with 84 Mahasiddhas, Rubin Museum of Art, About 1750

In Vajrayana Buddhism there are eighty-four Mahasiddhas. The list (in alphabetical order) below includes their name and their epithet. An asterisk after their name denotes a female Mahasiddha.

Many Mahasiddhas practiced specific tantras, for example Brahman Kukkuripa (34th in Abhyadatta's list) of Kapilaśakru practiced Cakrasaṃvara Tantra, Monk Virūpa (3) of Somapuri practiced Hevajra for 12 years, Monk Karṇaripa (Aryadeva) (18) of Nālandā practiced Guhyasamāja.

  1. Acinta, the "Avaricious Hermit";
  2. Ajogi, the "Rejected Wastrel";
  3. Anangapa, the "Handsome Fool";
  4. Aryadeva (Karnaripa), the "One-Eyed",(fl. 3rd century CE), Nalanda;
  5. Babhaha, the "Free Lover";
  6. Bhadrapa, the "Exclusive Brahmin";
  7. Bhandepa, the "Envious God";
  8. Bhiksanapa, "Siddha Two-Teeth";
  9. Bhusuku (Shantideva), the "Idle Monk";
  10. Camaripa, the "Divine Cobbler";
  11. Champaka, the "Flower King";
  12. Carbaripa (Carpati) "the Petrifyer";
  13. Catrapa, the "Lucky Beggar";
  14. Caurangipa, "the Dismembered Stepson";
  15. Celukapa, the "Revitalized Drone";
  16. Darikapa, the "Slave-King of the Temple Whore";
  17. Dengipa, the "Courtesan's Brahmin Slave";
  18. Dhahulipa, the "Blistered Rope-Maker";
  19. Dharmapa, the "Eternal Student" (c.900 CE);
  20. Dhilipa, the "Epicurean Merchant";
  21. Dhobipa, the "Wise Washerman";
  22. Dhokaripa, the "Bowl-Bearer";
  23. Dombipa Heruka, the "Tiger Rider";
  24. Dukhandi, the "Scavenger";
  25. Ghantapa, the "Celibate Bell-Ringer";
  26. Gharbari or Gharbaripa, the "Contrite Scholar" (Skt., pandita);
  27. Godhuripa, the "Bird Catcher";
  28. Goraksha, the "Immortal Cowherd";
  29. Indrabhuti, the "Enlightened Siddha-King";
  30. Jalandhara, the "Dakini's Chosen One";
  31. Jayananda, the "Crow Master";
  32. Jogipa, the "Siddha-Pilgrim";
  33. Kalapa, the "Handsome Madman";
  34. Kamparipa, the "Blacksmith";
  35. Kambala (Lavapa), the "Black-Blanket-Clad Yogin";
  36. Kanakhala*, the younger Severed-Headed Sister;
  37. Kanhapa (Krishnacharya), the "Dark Siddha";
  38. Kankana, the "Siddha-King";
  39. Kankaripa, the "Lovelorn Widower";
  40. Kantalipa, the "Ragman-Tailor";
  41. Kapalapa, the "Skull Bearer";
  42. Khadgapa, the "Fearless Thief";
  43. Kilakilapa, the "Exiled Loud-Mouth";
  44. Kirapalapa (Kilapa), the "Repentant Conqueror";
  45. Kokilipa, the "Complacent Aesthete";
  46. Kotalipa (or Tog tse pa, the "Peasant Guru";
  47. Kucipa, the "Goitre-Necked Yogin";
  48. Kukkuripa, (late 9th/10th Century), the "Dog Lover";
  49. Kumbharipa, "the Potter";
  50. Laksminkara*, "The Mad Princess";
  51. Lilapa, the "Royal Hedonist";
  52. Lucikapa, the "Escapist";
  53. Luipada, the "Fish-Gut Eater";
  54. Mahipa, the "Greatest";
  55. Manibhadra*, the "Happy Housewife";
  56. Medhini, the "Tired Farmer";
  57. Mekhala*, the Elder Severed-Headed Sister;
  58. Mekopa, the "Guru Dread-Stare";
  59. Minapa, the "Fisherman";
  60. Nagabodhi, the "Red-Horned Thief'";
  61. Nagarjuna, "Philosopher and Alchemist", a Brahmin, (c. 150 – c. 250 CE);
  62. Nalinapa, the "Self-Reliant Prince";
  63. Nirgunapa, the "Enlightened Moron";
  64. Naropa, the "Dauntless";
  65. Pacaripa, the "Pastrycook";
  66. Pankajapa, the "Lotus-Born Brahmin";
  67. Putalipa, the "Mendicant Icon-Bearer";
  68. Rahula, the "Rejuvenated Dotard";
  69. Saraha, the "Great Brahmin", the teacher of Nagarjuna, eastern India;
  70. Sakara or Saroruha;
  71. Samudra, the "Pearl Diver";
  72. Śāntipa (or Ratnākaraśānti), the "Complacent Missionary";
  73. Sarvabhaksa, the "Glutton";
  74. Savaripa, the "Hunter", held to have incarnated in Drukpa Künleg;
  75. Syalipa, the "Jackal Yogin";
  76. Tantepa, the "Gambler";
  77. Tantipa, the "Senile Weaver";
  78. Thaganapa, the "Compulsive Liar";
  79. Tilopa, the "Great Renunciate"
  80. Udhilipa, the "Bird-Man";
  81. Upanaha, the "Bootmaker";
  82. Vinapa, the "Musician";
  83. Virupa, the "Dakini Master";t neutral.
  84. Vyalipa, the "Courtesan's Alchemist";

Names according to the Abhayadatta Sri tradition edit

According to Ulrich von Schroeder, Tibet has different traditions relating to the mahasiddhas. Among these traditions, two were particularly popular, namely the Abhayadatta Sri list and the so-called Vajrasana list. The number of mahasiddhas varies between eighty-four and eighty-eight, and only about thirty-six of the names occur in both lists. It is therefore also wrong to state that in Buddhism are 84 Mahasiddhas. The correct title should therefore be Names of the 84 Mahasiddhas according to the Abhayadatta Sri Tradition. It should also be clearly stated that only Tibetan translations of this Sanskrit text Caturasiti-siddha-pravrtti (CSP) or The Lives of the Eighty-four Siddhas seem to have survived. This means that many Sanskrit names of the Abhayadatta Sri tradition had to be reconstructed and perhaps not always correctly.

Identification edit

According to Ulrich von Schroeder for the identification of Mahasiddhas inscribed with Tibetan names it is necessary to reconstruct the Indian names. This is a very difficult task because the Tibetans are very inconsistent with the transcription or translation of Indian personal names and therefore many different spellings do exist. When comparing the different Tibetan texts on mahasiddhas, we can see that the transcription or translation of the names of the Indian masters into the Tibetan language was inconsistent and confused. The most unsettling example is an illustrated Tibetan block print from Mongolia about the mahasiddhas, where the spellings in the text vary greatly from the captions of the xylographs.[11] To quote a few examples: Kankaripa [Skt.] is named Kam ka li/Kangga la pa; Goraksa [Skt.]: Go ra kha/Gau raksi; Tilopa [Skt.]: Ti la blo ba/Ti lla pa; Dukhandi [Skt.]: Dha khan dhi pa/Dwa kanti; Dhobipa [Skt.]: Tom bhi pa/Dhu pi ra; Dengipa (CSP 31): Deng gi pa / Tinggi pa; Dhokaripa [Skt.]: Dho ka ra / Dhe ki ri pa; Carbaripa (Carpati) [Skt.]: Tsa ba ri pa/Tsa rwa ti pa; Sakara [Skt.]: Phu rtsas ga’/Ka ra pa; Putalipa [Skt.]: Pu ta la/Bu ta li, etc. In the same illustrated Tibetan text we find another inconsistency: the alternate use of transcription and translation. Examples are Nagarjuna [Skt.]: Na ga’i dzu na/Klu sgrub; Aryadeva (Karnaripa) [Skt.]: Ka na ri pa/’Phags pa lha; and Ghantapa [Skt.]: Ghanda pa/rDo rje dril bu pa, to name a few.[8]

Concordance lists edit

For the identification of individual mahasiddhas the concordance lists published by Ulrich von Schroeder are useful tools for every scholar. The purpose of the concordance lists published in the appendices of his book is primarily for the reconstitution of the Indian names, regardless of whether they actually represent the same historical person or not. The index of his book contains more than 1000 different Tibetan spellings of mahasiddha names.[8]

Tibetan mahasiddhas edit

 
Milarepa on Mount Kailash

Tibetan Buddhist masters of various lineages are often referred to as mahasiddhas (grub thob chen po or tul shug). There is a long tradition of hagiographies of these Tibetan adepts, called namtar. Their deeds were first documented in the 12th century in the Vajryana text Caturasitisiddha - pravrtti.[12]

Important Tibetan mahasiddhas include:

See also edit

  • Charyapada – The oldest literary specimen of Bengali, Assamese, Oriya and Maithili language
  • Matsyendranatha – 10th century Hindu and Buddhist saint and yogi
  • Secret Chiefs – Beings in various occult movements
  • Twilight language – Secret language of tantric traditions

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gray (2007), pp. ix–x: "The Tantric communities of India in the latter half of the first Common Era millennium (and perhaps even earlier) were something like 'Institutes of Advanced Studies' in relation to the great Buddhist monastic 'Universities'. They were research centers for highly cultivated, successfully graduated experts in various branches of Inner Science (adhyatmavidya), some of whom were still monastics and could move back and forth from university (vidyalaya) to 'site' (patha), and many of whom had resigned vows of poverty, celibacy, and so forth, and were living in the classical Indian sannyāsin or sādhu style. I call them the 'psychonauts' of the tradition, in parallel with our 'astronauts', the materialist scientist-adventurers whom we admire for their courageous explorations of the 'outer space' which we consider the matrix of material reality. Inverse astronauts, the psychonauts voyaged deep into 'inner space', encountering and conquering angels and demons in the depths of their subconscious minds."

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Dowman (1985), Introduction.
  2. ^ a b Reynolds (n.d.).
  3. ^ Dudjom Rinpoche (2002), p. 535.
  4. ^ Simmer-Brown (2002), p. 127.
  5. ^ Snellgrove (2010), p. 11.
  6. ^ Hāṇḍā (1994), p. 85.
  7. ^ Hāṇḍā (1994), p. 98.
  8. ^ a b c von Schroeder (2006).
  9. ^ Zhang (1986).
  10. ^ "Names of the 84 Mahasiddhas". Yoniversum.nl. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  11. ^ Egyed (1984)
  12. ^ Rispa, R. (1992). Art and Culture Around 1492: 1992 Seville Universal Exposition. Italy: Centro Publicaciones, Expo '92. p. 303. ISBN 978-8843541126.
  13. ^ Encyclopedia of India. Vol. I to Mira Bai. India: Encyclopaedia Britannica (India) Pvt. Limited. 2008. p. 331.

Works cited edit

  • Dowman, Keith (1985). Masters of Mahamudra: Songs and Histories of the Eighty-four Buddhist Siddhas. SUNY Series in Buddhist Studies. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-88706-160-5.
  • Dudjom Rinpoche (2002). The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History. Translated and edited by Gyurme Dorje with Matthew Kapstein (2nd ed.). Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-087-8.
  • Egyed, Alice (1984). The Eighty-four Siddhas: A Tibetan Blockprint from Mongolia. Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 9630538350.
  • Gray, David B. (2007). The Cakrasamvara Tantra (The Discourse of Sri Heruka): A Study and Annotated Translation. Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0975373460.
  • Hāṇḍā, Omacanda (1994). Buddhist Art & Antiquities of Himachal Pradesh, Upto 8th Century A.D. Indus Publishing. ISBN 9788185182995.
  • Reynolds, John Myrdhin (n.d.). "The Mahasiddha Tradition In Tibet". Vajranatha.com. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  • Simmer-Brown, Judith (2002). Dakini's Warm Breath: The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism. Boston, Massachusetts: Shambhala Publications. ISBN 978-1-57062-920-4.
  • Snellgrove, David (2010). The Hevajra Tantra: A Critical Study. Orchid. ISBN 978-9745241282.
  • von Schroeder, Ulrich (2006). Empowered Masters: Tibetan Wall Paintings of Mahasiddhas at Gyantse. Chicago: Serindia Publications. ISBN 978-1932476248.
  • Zhang, Zhenji, ed. (1986) [1963]. Six yogas of Naropa & teachings on Mahamudra. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 0937938335. OCLC 13457033.

Further reading edit

  • Downs, H. R. (1999). "The Mahasiddha Linedrawings of H. R. Downs". KeithDowman.net. Retrieved 2015-03-21. Also in Dowman (1986).
  • Lopez, Donald (2019). Seeing the Sacred in Samsara: An Illustrated Guide to the Eighty-Four Mahāsiddhas. Boulder, CO: Shambhala Publications. ISBN 9781611804041.
  • Moudud, Hasna Jasimuddin (1992). "The Caraypadas — the Yoga Songs and Poetry of the Maha Siddhas". A Thousand Year Old Bengali Mystic Poetry. Bangladesh: University Press. ISBN 9840511939.
  • White, David Gordon (1998). The Alchemical Body: Siddha Traditions in Medieval India (1st ed.). University Of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226894997.
  • Yuthok, Lama Choedak (1997). (PDF). Canberra, Australia: Goram Publications. ISBN 0-9587085-0-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-02-01.

External links edit

  • The 84 Indian Adepts of Abhayadatta System
  • Mahasiddha: Buddhist Tantric Teachers of India

mahasiddha, sanskrit, mahāsiddha, great, adept, tibetan, wylie, grub, thob, chen, druptop, chenpo, term, someone, embodies, cultivates, siddhi, perfection, siddha, individual, through, practice, sādhanā, attains, realization, siddhis, psychic, spiritual, abili. Mahasiddha Sanskrit mahasiddha great adept Tibetan ག བ ཐ བ ཆ ན པ Wylie grub thob chen po THL druptop chenpo is a term for someone who embodies and cultivates the siddhi of perfection A siddha is an individual who through the practice of sadhana attains the realization of siddhis psychic and spiritual abilities and powers Four Mahasiddhas 18th century Boston MFA Saraha in top left Dombhi Heruka top right Naropa bottom left and Virupa bottom right Mahasiddhas were practitioners of yoga and tantra or tantrikas Their historical influence throughout the Indian subcontinent and the Himalayas was vast and they reached mythic proportions as codified in their songs of realization and hagiographies or namtars many of which have been preserved in the Tibetan Buddhist canon The Mahasiddhas are the founders of Vajrayana traditions and lineages such as Dzogchen and Mahamudra Robert Thurman explains the symbiotic relationship between Tantric Buddhist communities and the Buddhist universities such as Nalanda which flourished at the same time a Contents 1 Genealogy and historical dates 2 Primary tradition 3 Other traditions 4 Geographical sites 5 Caturasiti siddha pravrtti 6 Eighty Four Mahasiddhas 6 1 List of the Mahasiddhas 6 2 Names according to the Abhayadatta Sri tradition 6 3 Identification 6 4 Concordance lists 7 Tibetan mahasiddhas 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksGenealogy and historical dates editThe exact genealogy and historical dates of the Mahasiddhas are contentious Dowman 1986 holds that they all lived between 750 and 1150 CE Primary tradition edit nbsp Eight Mahasiddhas with the bodhisattva Samantabhadra top 1st row l gt r Darikapa Putalipa Upanaha 2nd row Kokilipa and Anangapa 3rd row Lakshmikara Samudra Vyalipa Abhayadatta Sri is an Indian scholar of the 12th century who is claimed to have recorded the hagiographies of the eighty four siddhas in a text known as The History of the Eighty four Mahasiddhas Sanskrit Caturasitisiddha pravrtti Wylie grub thob brgyad bcu tsa bzhi i lo rgyus Dowman holds that the eighty four Mahasiddha are spiritual archetypes The number eighty four is a whole or perfect number Thus the eighty four siddhas can be seen as archetypes representing the thousands of exemplars and adepts of the tantric way The siddhas were remarkable for the diversity of their family backgrounds and the dissimilarity of their social roles They were found in every reach of the social structure kings and ministers priests and yogins poets and musicians craftsmen and farmers housewives and whores 1 Reynolds 2007 states that the mahasiddha tradition evolved in North India in the early Medieval Period 3 13 cen CE Philosophically this movement was based on the insights revealed in the Mahayana Sutras and as systematized in the Madhyamaka and Chittamatrin schools of philosophy but the methods of meditation and practice were radically different than anything seen in the monasteries 2 He proffers that the mahasiddha tradition broke with the conventions of Buddhist monastic life of the time and abandoning the monastery they practiced in the caves the forests and the country villages of Northern India In complete contrast to the settled monastic establishment of their day which concentrated the Buddhist intelligenzia sic in a limited number of large monastic universities they adopted the life style of itinerant mendicants much as the wandering Sadhus of modern India 2 The charnel ground conveys how great mahasiddhas in the Nath and Vajrayana traditions such as Tilopa 988 1069 and Gorakshanath fl 11th 12th century yoked adversity to till the soil of the path and accomplish the fruit the ground Sanskrit asraya Wylie gzhi of realization 3 The charnel ground is not merely the hermitage it can also be discovered or revealed in completely terrifying mundane environments where practitioners find themselves desperate and depressed where conventional worldly aspirations have become devastated by grim reality This is demonstrated in the sacred biographies of the great siddhas of the Vajrayana tradition Tilopa attained realization as a grinder of sesame seeds and a procurer for a prominent prostitute Sarvabhakṣa was an extremely obese glutton Gorakṣa was a cowherd in remote climes Taṅtepa was addicted to gambling and Kumbharipa was a destitute potter These circumstances were charnel grounds because they were despised in Indian society and the siddhas were viewed as failures marginal and defiled 4 In his study of the Hevajra Tantra David Snellgrove outlines the typical tantric siddha or yogi After experiencing the consummation of enlightenment in the embrace of a female consort Thereafter the pupil is free to pursue the practice of strenuous meditation and physical self control and after five years or more he will perhaps succeed He receives the five symbolic adornments crown ear rings necklace bracelets girdle signs of his success These he wears on those set occasions the eighth or fifteenth day of the dark fortnight when perfected yogins and yoginis come together to consume the flesh and wine to sing and dance and realize their consummation of bliss He is free from all conventions and wanders as he pleases knowing no distinction between friend or foe clean or unclean good or evil 5 Other traditions editAccording to Ulrich von Schroeder Tibet has different traditions relating to the mahasiddhas Among these traditions two were particularly popular namely the Abhayadatta Sri list and the so called Vajrasana list The number of mahasiddhas varies between eighty four and eighty eight and only about thirty six of the names occur in both lists In many instances more than one siddha with the same name exists so it must be assumed that fewer than thirty siddhas of the two traditions actually relate to the same historical persons In the days when the siddhas of the later Tibetan traditions flourished in India i e between the 9th and 11th centuries it was not uncommon for initiates to assume the names of famous adepts of the past Sometimes a disciple would have the same name as his guru while still other names were based on caste or tribe In such a context the distinction between siddhas of the same name becomes blurred The entire process of distinguishing between siddhas with the same name of different texts and lineages is therefore to large extent guesswork The great variation in phonetic transcription of Indian words into Tibetan may partly be the result of various Tibetan dialects In the process of copying the Tibetan transcriptions in later times the spelling often became corrupted to such an extent that the recognition or reconstitution of the original names became all but impossible Whatever the reasons might be the Tibetan transcription of Indian names of mahasiddhas clearly becomes more and more corrupt as time passes citation needed Geographical sites editLocal folk tradition refers to a number of icons and sacred sites to the eighty four Mahasiddha at Bharmour formerly known as Brahmapura in the Chaurasi complex 6 The word chaurasi means eighty four It is also very significant that nowhere else except at Bharmaur in Chamba district may be seen the living tradition of the Eighty four Siddhas In the Chaurasi temple complex near which the famous temple of goddess Lakshana 8th century A D stands there once were eighty four small shrines each dedicated to a Siddha 7 A number of archaeological sacred sites require iconographic analysis in the Chaurasi complex in Chamba Himachal Pradesh Although it might be hagiographical accretion and folk lore it is said that in the reign of Sahil Varman Soon after Sahil Varman s accession Brahmapura was visited by 84 yogis mahasidhas who were greatly pleased with the Raja s piety and hospitality and as he had no heir they promised him ten sons and in due course ten sons were born and also a daughter named Champavati This quote needs a citation Caturasiti siddha pravrtti editThe Caturasiti siddha pravrtti CSP The Lives of the Eighty four Siddhas compiled by Abhayadatta Sri a Northern Indian Sanskrit text dating from the 11th or 12th century comes from a tradition prevalent in the ancient city state of Campa in the modern state of Bihar Only Tibetan translations of this Sanskrit text seem to have survived This text was translated into Tibetan by sMon grub Shes rab and is known as the Grub thob brgyad cu rtsa bzhi i lo rgyus or The Legends of the Eighty four Siddhas It has been suggested that Abhayadatta Sri is identical with the great Indian scholar Mahapandita Abhayakaragupta late 11th early 12th century the compiler of the iconographic compendiums Vajravali Nispannayogavali and Jyotirmanjari The other major Tibetan tradition is based on the list contained in the Caturasiti siddhabhyarthana CSA by Ratnakaragupta of Vajrasana identical with Bodhgaya Tib rDo rje gdan located in Bihar Northern India The Tibetan translation is known as Grub thob brgyad cu rtsa bzhi i gsol debs by rDo rje gdan pa There exist several Tibetan versions of the list of mahasiddhas based on the Vajrasana text However these Tibetan texts differ in many cases with regard to the Tibetan transcriptions of the Indian mahasiddhas names 8 Eighty Four Mahasiddhas editThis section contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource January 2022 nbsp Vajradhara Buddha with mahasiddhasBy convention there are eighty four Mahasiddhas in both Hindu and Tibetan Buddhist traditions with some overlap between the two lists The number is congruent with the number of siddhi or occult powers held in the Indian Religions In Tibetan Buddhist art they are often depicted together as a matched set in works such as thangka paintings where they may be used collectively as border decorations around a central figure Each Mahasiddha has come to be known for certain characteristics and teachings which facilitates their pedagogical use One of the most beloved Mahasiddhas is Virupa who may be taken as the patron saint of the Sakyapa sect and instituted the Lamdre Tibetan lam bras teachings Virupa alternate orthographies Birwapa Birupa lived in 9th century India and was known for his great attainments Some of the methods and practices of the Mahasiddha were codified in Buddhist scriptures known as Tantras Traditionally the ultimate source of these methods and practices is held to be the historical Buddha Shakyamuni but often it is a transhistorical aspect of the Buddha or deity Vajradhara or Samantabhadra who reveals the Tantra in question directly to the Mahasiddha in a vision or whilst they dream or are in a trance This form of the deity is known as a sambhogakaya manifestation The sadhana of Dream Yoga as practiced in Dzogchen traditions such as the Kham entered the Himalayan tantric tradition from the Mahasiddha Ngagpa and Bonpo Dream Yoga or Milam T rmi lam S svapnadarsana is one of the Six Yogas of Naropa 9 Four of the eighty four Mahasiddhas are women 10 They are Manibhadra the Perfect Wife Lakshmincara The Princess of Crazy wisdom Mekhala the elder of the 2 Headless Sisters Kanakhala the younger of the 2 Headless SistersList of the Mahasiddhas edit nbsp Nagarjuna with 84 Mahasiddhas Rubin Museum of Art About 1750In Vajrayana Buddhism there are eighty four Mahasiddhas The list in alphabetical order below includes their name and their epithet An asterisk after their name denotes a female Mahasiddha Many Mahasiddhas practiced specific tantras for example Brahman Kukkuripa 34th in Abhyadatta s list of Kapilasakru practiced Cakrasaṃvara Tantra Monk Virupa 3 of Somapuri practiced Hevajra for 12 years Monk Karṇaripa Aryadeva 18 of Nalanda practiced Guhyasamaja Acinta the Avaricious Hermit Ajogi the Rejected Wastrel Anangapa the Handsome Fool Aryadeva Karnaripa the One Eyed fl 3rd century CE Nalanda Babhaha the Free Lover Bhadrapa the Exclusive Brahmin Bhandepa the Envious God Bhiksanapa Siddha Two Teeth Bhusuku Shantideva the Idle Monk Camaripa the Divine Cobbler Champaka the Flower King Carbaripa Carpati the Petrifyer Catrapa the Lucky Beggar Caurangipa the Dismembered Stepson Celukapa the Revitalized Drone Darikapa the Slave King of the Temple Whore Dengipa the Courtesan s Brahmin Slave Dhahulipa the Blistered Rope Maker Dharmapa the Eternal Student c 900 CE Dhilipa the Epicurean Merchant Dhobipa the Wise Washerman Dhokaripa the Bowl Bearer Dombipa Heruka the Tiger Rider Dukhandi the Scavenger Ghantapa the Celibate Bell Ringer Gharbari or Gharbaripa the Contrite Scholar Skt pandita Godhuripa the Bird Catcher Goraksha the Immortal Cowherd Indrabhuti the Enlightened Siddha King Jalandhara the Dakini s Chosen One Jayananda the Crow Master Jogipa the Siddha Pilgrim Kalapa the Handsome Madman Kamparipa the Blacksmith Kambala Lavapa the Black Blanket Clad Yogin Kanakhala the younger Severed Headed Sister Kanhapa Krishnacharya the Dark Siddha Kankana the Siddha King Kankaripa the Lovelorn Widower Kantalipa the Ragman Tailor Kapalapa the Skull Bearer Khadgapa the Fearless Thief Kilakilapa the Exiled Loud Mouth Kirapalapa Kilapa the Repentant Conqueror Kokilipa the Complacent Aesthete Kotalipa or Tog tse pa the Peasant Guru Kucipa the Goitre Necked Yogin Kukkuripa late 9th 10th Century the Dog Lover Kumbharipa the Potter Laksminkara The Mad Princess Lilapa the Royal Hedonist Lucikapa the Escapist Luipada the Fish Gut Eater Mahipa the Greatest Manibhadra the Happy Housewife Medhini the Tired Farmer Mekhala the Elder Severed Headed Sister Mekopa the Guru Dread Stare Minapa the Fisherman Nagabodhi the Red Horned Thief Nagarjuna Philosopher and Alchemist a Brahmin c 150 c 250 CE Nalinapa the Self Reliant Prince Nirgunapa the Enlightened Moron Naropa the Dauntless Pacaripa the Pastrycook Pankajapa the Lotus Born Brahmin Putalipa the Mendicant Icon Bearer Rahula the Rejuvenated Dotard Saraha the Great Brahmin the teacher of Nagarjuna eastern India Sakara or Saroruha Samudra the Pearl Diver Santipa or Ratnakarasanti the Complacent Missionary Sarvabhaksa the Glutton Savaripa the Hunter held to have incarnated in Drukpa Kunleg Syalipa the Jackal Yogin Tantepa the Gambler Tantipa the Senile Weaver Thaganapa the Compulsive Liar Tilopa the Great Renunciate Udhilipa the Bird Man Upanaha the Bootmaker Vinapa the Musician Virupa the Dakini Master t neutral Vyalipa the Courtesan s Alchemist Names according to the Abhayadatta Sri tradition edit According to Ulrich von Schroeder Tibet has different traditions relating to the mahasiddhas Among these traditions two were particularly popular namely the Abhayadatta Sri list and the so called Vajrasana list The number of mahasiddhas varies between eighty four and eighty eight and only about thirty six of the names occur in both lists It is therefore also wrong to state that in Buddhism are 84 Mahasiddhas The correct title should therefore be Names of the 84 Mahasiddhas according to the Abhayadatta Sri Tradition It should also be clearly stated that only Tibetan translations of this Sanskrit text Caturasiti siddha pravrtti CSP or The Lives of the Eighty four Siddhas seem to have survived This means that many Sanskrit names of the Abhayadatta Sri tradition had to be reconstructed and perhaps not always correctly Identification edit According to Ulrich von Schroeder for the identification of Mahasiddhas inscribed with Tibetan names it is necessary to reconstruct the Indian names This is a very difficult task because the Tibetans are very inconsistent with the transcription or translation of Indian personal names and therefore many different spellings do exist When comparing the different Tibetan texts on mahasiddhas we can see that the transcription or translation of the names of the Indian masters into the Tibetan language was inconsistent and confused The most unsettling example is an illustrated Tibetan block print from Mongolia about the mahasiddhas where the spellings in the text vary greatly from the captions of the xylographs 11 To quote a few examples Kankaripa Skt is named Kam ka li Kangga la pa Goraksa Skt Go ra kha Gau raksi Tilopa Skt Ti la blo ba Ti lla pa Dukhandi Skt Dha khan dhi pa Dwa kanti Dhobipa Skt Tom bhi pa Dhu pi ra Dengipa CSP 31 Deng gi pa Tinggi pa Dhokaripa Skt Dho ka ra Dhe ki ri pa Carbaripa Carpati Skt Tsa ba ri pa Tsa rwa ti pa Sakara Skt Phu rtsas ga Ka ra pa Putalipa Skt Pu ta la Bu ta li etc In the same illustrated Tibetan text we find another inconsistency the alternate use of transcription and translation Examples are Nagarjuna Skt Na ga i dzu na Klu sgrub Aryadeva Karnaripa Skt Ka na ri pa Phags pa lha and Ghantapa Skt Ghanda pa rDo rje dril bu pa to name a few 8 Concordance lists edit For the identification of individual mahasiddhas the concordance lists published by Ulrich von Schroeder are useful tools for every scholar The purpose of the concordance lists published in the appendices of his book is primarily for the reconstitution of the Indian names regardless of whether they actually represent the same historical person or not The index of his book contains more than 1000 different Tibetan spellings of mahasiddha names 8 Tibetan mahasiddhas editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mahasiddha news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Milarepa on Mount KailashTibetan Buddhist masters of various lineages are often referred to as mahasiddhas grub thob chen po or tul shug There is a long tradition of hagiographies of these Tibetan adepts called namtar Their deeds were first documented in the 12th century in the Vajryana text Caturasitisiddha pravrtti 12 Important Tibetan mahasiddhas include Padmasambhava who is said to have brought Buddhism to Tibet and tamed the harmful spirits of Tibet converting them to Buddhism 13 Yeshe Tsogyal Padmasambhava s consort Marpa the translator 1012 1097 a lay scholar yogi who is a key figure in the Kagyu lineage Machig Labdron 1055 1149 a female mahasiddha the founding figure of the Chod Wylie gcod lineage Milarepa c 11th 12th century a wilderness yogi one of the most revered figures in Tibetan Buddhism Longchenpa a key figure of the Nyingma school Je Tsongkhapa is considered a mahasiddha in the Gelug school Thangtong Gyalpo Drukpa Kunley Tsangnyon Heruka The Madman Heruka from Tsang 1452 1507 Shabkar Tsokdruk Rangdrol 1781 1851 Jigme Lingpa an important terton treasure revealer See also editCharyapada The oldest literary specimen of Bengali Assamese Oriya and Maithili language Matsyendranatha 10th century Hindu and Buddhist saint and yogi Secret Chiefs Beings in various occult movements Twilight language Secret language of tantric traditionsNotes edit Gray 2007 pp ix x The Tantric communities of India in the latter half of the first Common Era millennium and perhaps even earlier were something like Institutes of Advanced Studies in relation to the great Buddhist monastic Universities They were research centers for highly cultivated successfully graduated experts in various branches of Inner Science adhyatmavidya some of whom were still monastics and could move back and forth from university vidyalaya to site patha and many of whom had resigned vows of poverty celibacy and so forth and were living in the classical Indian sannyasin or sadhu style I call them the psychonauts of the tradition in parallel with our astronauts the materialist scientist adventurers whom we admire for their courageous explorations of the outer space which we consider the matrix of material reality Inverse astronauts the psychonauts voyaged deep into inner space encountering and conquering angels and demons in the depths of their subconscious minds References editCitations edit Dowman 1985 Introduction a b Reynolds n d Dudjom Rinpoche 2002 p 535 Simmer Brown 2002 p 127 Snellgrove 2010 p 11 Haṇḍa 1994 p 85 Haṇḍa 1994 p 98 a b c von Schroeder 2006 Zhang 1986 Names of the 84 Mahasiddhas Yoniversum nl Retrieved 2015 03 21 Egyed 1984 Rispa R 1992 Art and Culture Around 1492 1992 Seville Universal Exposition Italy Centro Publicaciones Expo 92 p 303 ISBN 978 8843541126 Encyclopedia of India Vol I to Mira Bai India Encyclopaedia Britannica India Pvt Limited 2008 p 331 Works cited edit Dowman Keith 1985 Masters of Mahamudra Songs and Histories of the Eighty four Buddhist Siddhas SUNY Series in Buddhist Studies Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 88706 160 5 Dudjom Rinpoche 2002 The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism Its Fundamentals and History Translated and edited by Gyurme Dorje with Matthew Kapstein 2nd ed Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 087 8 Egyed Alice 1984 The Eighty four Siddhas A Tibetan Blockprint from Mongolia Akademiai Kiado ISBN 9630538350 Gray David B 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0975373460 Haṇḍa Omacanda 1994 Buddhist Art amp Antiquities of Himachal Pradesh Upto 8th Century A D Indus Publishing ISBN 9788185182995 Reynolds John Myrdhin n d The Mahasiddha Tradition In Tibet Vajranatha com Retrieved 2015 03 21 Simmer Brown Judith 2002 Dakini s Warm Breath The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism Boston Massachusetts Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 1 57062 920 4 Snellgrove David 2010 The Hevajra Tantra A Critical Study Orchid ISBN 978 9745241282 von Schroeder Ulrich 2006 Empowered Masters Tibetan Wall Paintings of Mahasiddhas at Gyantse Chicago Serindia Publications ISBN 978 1932476248 Zhang Zhenji ed 1986 1963 Six yogas of Naropa amp teachings on Mahamudra Ithaca NY Snow Lion Publications ISBN 0937938335 OCLC 13457033 Further reading editDowns H R 1999 The Mahasiddha Linedrawings of H R Downs KeithDowman net Retrieved 2015 03 21 Also in Dowman 1986 Lopez Donald 2019 Seeing the Sacred in Samsara An Illustrated Guide to the Eighty Four Mahasiddhas Boulder CO Shambhala Publications ISBN 9781611804041 Moudud Hasna Jasimuddin 1992 The Caraypadas the Yoga Songs and Poetry of the Maha Siddhas A Thousand Year Old Bengali Mystic Poetry Bangladesh University Press ISBN 9840511939 White David Gordon 1998 The Alchemical Body Siddha Traditions in Medieval India 1st ed University Of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226894997 Yuthok Lama Choedak 1997 Lamdre Dawn of Enlightenment PDF Canberra Australia Goram Publications ISBN 0 9587085 0 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 02 01 External links editThe 84 Indian Adepts of Abhayadatta System Mahasiddha Buddhist Tantric Teachers of India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mahasiddha amp oldid 1178328929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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