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Padmasambhava

Padmasambhāva ("Born from a Lotus"),[note 2] also known as Guru Rinpoche (Precious Guru) and the Lotus from Oḍḍiyāna, was a tantric Buddhist Vajra master from medieval India who taught Vajrayana in Tibet (circa 8th – 9th centuries).[1][2][3][4] According to some early Tibetan sources like the Testament of Ba, he came to Tibet in the 8th century and helped construct Samye Monastery, the first Buddhist monastery in Tibet.[3] However, little is known about the actual historical figure other than his ties to Vajrayana and Indian Buddhism.[5][1]

Padmasambhāva
Padmasambhava statue at Ghyoilisang peace park, Boudhanath
Born
OccupationVajra master
Known forCredited with founding the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism

Padmasambhava later came to be viewed as a central figure in the transmission of Buddhism to Tibet.[6][5] Starting from around the 12th century, hagiographies concerning Padmasambhava were written. These works expanded the profile and activities of Padmasambhava, now seen as taming all the Tibetan spirits and gods, and concealing various secret texts (terma) for future tertöns.[7] Nyangral Nyima Özer (1124–1192) was the author of the Zangling-ma (Jeweled Rosary), the earliest biography of Padmasambhava.[8][9] He has been called "one of the main architects of the Padmasambhava mythos – who first linked Padmasambhava to the Great Perfection in a high-profile manner."[10][11]

In modern Tibetan Buddhism, Padmasambhava is considered to be a Buddha that was foretold by Buddha Shakyamuni.[2] According to traditional hagiographies, his students include the great female masters Yeshe Tsogyal and Mandarava.[5] The contemporary Nyingma school considers Padmasambhava to be a founding figure.[12][4] The Nyingma school also traditionally holds that its Dzogchen lineage has its origins in Garab Dorje through a direct transmission to Padmasambhava.[13]

In Tibetan Buddhism, the teachings of Padmasambava are said to include an oral lineage (kama), and a lineage of the hidden treasure texts (termas).[14] Tibetan Buddhism holds that Padmasambhava's termas are discovered by fortunate beings and tertöns (treasure finders) when conditions are ripe for their reception.[15] Padmasambhava is said to appear to tertöns in visionary encounters, and his form is visualized during guru yoga practice, particularly in the Nyingma school. Padmasambhava is widely venerated by Buddhists in Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, the Himalayan states of India, and in countries around the world.[6]

History Edit

According to Lewis Doney, while his historical authenticity was questioned by earlier Tibetologists, it is now "cautiously accepted".[4]

Early sources Edit

 
Colossus of Padmasambhava, 123 ft. (37.5 m), high in mist overlooking Rewalsar Lake, Himachal Pradesh, India
 
Fragment of the Testament of Ba at the British Library, with six incomplete lines of Tibetan writing (Or.8210/S.9498A)

One of the earliest chronicle sources for Padmasambhava as a historical figure is the Testament of Ba (Dba' bzhed, c. 9th–12th centuries), which records the founding of Samye Monastery under the reign of King Trisong Detsen (r. 755–797/804).[16].</ref>[4] Other early manuscripts from Dunhuang also mention a tantric master associated with kilaya rituals named Padmasambhava who tames demons, though they do not associate this figure with Trisong Detsen.[17][4]

According to the Testament of Ba, Trisong Detsen had invited the Buddhist abbot and philosopher Śāntarakṣita (725–788) to Tibet to propagate Buddhism and help found the first Buddhist monastery at Samye ('The Inconceivable'). However, certain events like the flooding of a Buddhist temple and lightning striking the royal palace had caused some at the Tibetan court to believe that the local gods were angry.[3]

Śāntarakṣita was sent back to Nepal, but was then asked to return after the anti-Buddhist sentiments had subsided. On his return, Śāntarakṣita brought Padmasambhava who was an Indian tantric adept from Oddiyana.[note 1][18][19][20] Padmasambhava's task was to tame the local spirits and impress the Tibetans with his magical and ritual powers. The Tibetan sources then explain how Padmasambhava identified the local gods and spirits, called them out and threatened them with his powers. After they had been tamed, the construction of Samye went ahead.[3] Padmasambhava was also said to have taught various forms of tantric Buddhist yoga.[21]

When the royal court began to suspect that Padmasambhava wanted to seize power, he was asked to leave by the king.[21] The Testament of Ba also mentions other miracles by Padmasambhava, mostly associated with the taming of demons and spirits as well as longevity rituals and water magic.[4]

Evidence shows that Padmasambhava's tantric teachings were being taught in Tibet during the 10th century. Recent evidence suggests that Padmasambhava already figured in spiritual hagiography and ritual, and was already seen as the enlightened source of tantric scriptures up to 200 years before Nyangrel Nyima Özer (1136–1204),[22] the primary source of the traditional hagiography of Padmasambhava.

Lewis Doney notes that while numerous texts are associated with Padmasambhava, the most likely of these attributions are the Man ngag lta ba'i phreng ba (The Garland of Views), a commentary on the 13th chapter of the Guhyagarbha tantra and the Thabs zhags padma 'phreng (A Noble Noose of Methods, The Lotus Garland), an exposition of Mahayoga. The former work is mentioned in the work of Nubchen Sangye Yeshe (c. 9–10th centuries) and attributed to Padmasambhava.[4]

Development of the mythos Edit

 
Nyangrel Nyima Özer, one of "The Five Tertön Kings"

While in the eleventh and twelfth centuries there were several parallel narratives of important founding figures like Padmasambhava, Vimalamitra, Songtsän Gampo, and Vairotsana, by the end of the 12th century, the Padmasambhava narrative grew to dominate the others, becoming the most influential legend of the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet.[23][7]

The first full biography of Padmasambhava is a terma (treasure text) said to have been revealed by Nyangrel Nyima Özer, abbot of Mawochok Monastery. This biography, The Copper Palace (bka' thang zangs gling ma), was very influential on the Padmasambhava hagiographical tradition. The narrative was also incorporated into Nyima Özer's history of Buddhism, the Flower Nectar: The Essence of Honey (chos 'byung me tog snying po sbrang rtsi'i bcud).[24][4][11][10]

The tertön Guru Chöwang (1212–1270) was the next major contributor to the Padmasambhava tradition, and may have been the first full life-story biographer of Yeshe Tsogyal.[11]

The basic narrative of The Copper Palace continued to be expanded and edited by Tibetans. In the 14th century, the Padmasambhava hagiography was further expanded and re-envisioned through the efforts of the Orgyen Lingpa (1323 – c. 1360). It is in the works of Orgyen Lingpa, particularly his Padma bka' thang (Lotus Testament, 1352), that the "11 deeds" of Padmasambhava first appear in full.[4] The Lotus Testament is a very extensive biography of Padmasambhava, which begins with his ordination under Ananda and contains numerous references to Padmasambhava as a "second Buddha."[4]

Hagiography Edit

 
Thangka of Padmasambhava
 
Statue of Guru Rinpoche, Central Tibet, Tsang Valley, 15th–16th century

According to Khenchen Palden Sherab, there are traditionally said to be nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine biographies of Padmasambhava.[2] They are categorized in three ways: Those relating to Padmasambhava's Dharmakaya buddhahood, those accounts of his Sambhogakaya nature, and those chronicles of his Nirmanakaya activities.[2]

Birth and early life Edit

Hagiographies of Padmasambhava such as The Copper Palace, depict Padmasambhava being born as an eight-year-old child appearing in a lotus blossom floating in Lake Dhanakosha surrounded by a host of dakinis, in the kingdom of Oddiyana.[4][25][note 1]

However there are other birth stories as well, another common one states that he was born from the womb of Queen Jalendra, the wife of king Sakra of Oddiyana and received the name Dorje Duddul (Vajra Demon Subjugator) because of the auspicious marks on his body were identified as those of a demon tamer.[4]

As Nyingma scholar Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche explains:

There are many stories explaining how Guru Padmasambhava was born. Some say that he instantly appeared on the peak of Meteorite Mountain, in Sri Lanka. Others teach that he came through his mother's womb, but most accounts refer to a miraculous birth, explaining that he spontaneously appeared in the center of a lotus. These stories are not contradictory because highly realized beings abide in the expanse of great equanimity with perfect understanding and can do anything. Everything is flexible, anything is possible. Enlightened beings can appear in any way they want or need to.[2]

In The Copper Palace, King Indrabhuti of Oddiyana is searching for a wish fulfilling jewel and finds Padmasambhava, who is said to be an incarnation of Buddha Amitabha. The king adopts him as his own son and Padmasambhava is enthroned as the Lotus King (Pema Gyalpo).[4][25] However, Padmasambhava's khaṭvāṅga staff falls on one of Indrabhuti's ministers, killing him, and Padmasambhava is exiled from the kingdom, which allows him to live as a mahasiddha and practice tantra in charnel grounds throughout India.[4][25][26]

In Himachal Pradesh, India at Rewalsar Lake, known as Tso Pema in Tibetan, Padmasambhava secretly gave tantric teachings to princess Mandarava, the local king's daughter. The king found out and tried to burn both him and his daughter, but it is said that when the smoke cleared they were still alive and in meditation, centered in a lotus arising from a lake. Greatly astonished by this miracle, the king offered Padmasambhava both his kingdom and Mandarava.[27]

Padmasambhava is then said to have returned home with Mandarava and together they converted the kingdom to Vajrayana Buddhism.[4]

They are also said to have travelled together to the Maratika Cave in Nepal to practice long life rituals of Amitāyus.[28] According to Tibetan Buddhist legends of the local Monpa tribe, Chumi Gyatse Falls, also known as the '108 waterfalls' got created after a mythical showdown between Guru Padmasambhava and a high priest of the Bonpa sect that ruled supreme in Tibet and surrounding areas including Arunachal Pradesh in the pre-Buddhist times. The waterfall was formed when Guru Padmasambhava flung his rosary against a rock and 108 streams gushed out.[29][better source needed] Chumi Gyatse waterfall is revered and holy for the Monpas, the Tibetan Buddhists.

Activities in Tibet Edit

 
The famous "looks like me" statue of Padmasambhava at Samye which is traditionally said to have been blessed by him personally
 
Entrance to Dawa Puk, Guru Rinpoche's cave, Yerpa, 1993

Padmasambhava hagiographies also discuss the activities of Padmasambhāva in Tibet, beginning with the invitation by King Trisong Detsen to help in the founding of Samye. Padmasambhava is depicted as a great tantric adept who tames the spirits and demons of Tibet and turns them into guardians for the Buddha's Dharma (specifically, the deity Pe har is made the protector of Samye). He is also said to have spread Vajrayana Buddhism to the people of Tibet, and specifically introduced its practice of Tantra.[30][31][4]

The subjection of subduing deities and demons is a recurrent theme in Buddhist literature, as noted also in Vajrapani and Mahesvara and Steven Heine's "Opening a Mountain".[32]

Because of his role in the founding of Samye monastery, the first monastery in Tibet, Padmasambhava is regarded as the founder of the Nyingma school ("Ancients") of Tibetan Buddhism.[33][34][35] Padmasambhava's activities in the Tibet include the practice of tantric rituals to increase the life of the king as well as initiating king Trisong Detsen into tantric rites.[4]

The various biographies also discuss stories of Padmasambhava's main Tibetan consort, princess Yeshe Tsogyal ("Knowledge Lake Empress"), who became his student while living in the court of Trisong Deutsen. She was among Padmasambhava's three special students (along with the King, and Namkhai Nyingpo) and is widely revered in Tibet as the "Mother of Buddhism".[11] Yeshe Tsogyal became a great master with many disciples and is widely considered to be a female Buddha.[36]

Padmasambhava hid numerous termas in Tibet for later discovery with her aid, while she compiled and elicited Padmasambhava's teachings through the posing of questions, and then reached Buddhahood in her lifetime. Many thangkas and paintings depict Padmasambhava with consorts at each side, Mandarava on his right and Yeshe Tsogyal on his left.[37][38]

Many of the Nyingma school's terma texts are said to have originated from the activities of Padmasambhava and his students. These hidden treasure texts are believed to be discovered and disseminated when conditions are ripe for their reception.[13] The Nyingma school traces its lineage of Dzogchen teachings to Garab Dorje through Padmasambhava's termas.[14]

In The Copper Palace, after the death of Trisong Detsen, Padmasambhava is said to have treveled to Lanka in order to convert its blood thirsty raksasa demons to the Dharma. His parting words of advice advocates for the worship of Avalokiteshvara.[4]

Bhutan Edit

 
Paro Taktsang ("Tiger's Nest") monastery

Bhutan has many important pilgrimage places associated with Padmasambhava. The most famous is Paro Taktsang or "Tiger's Nest" monastery which is built on a sheer cliff wall about 900m above the floor of Paro valley. It was built around the Taktsang Senge Samdup (stag tshang seng ge bsam grub) cave where Padmasambhava is said to have meditated.[2]

He is said to have flown there from Tibet on the back of Yeshe Tsogyal, whom he transformed into a flying tigress for the purpose of the trip.[citation needed] Later he travelled to Bumthang district to subdue a powerful deity offended by a local king. According to legend, Padmasambhava's body imprint can be found in the wall of a cave at nearby Kurje Lhakhang temple.[citation needed]

Eight manifestations Edit

 
Guru Senge Dradrog, a wrathful manifestation of Padmasambhava (painting in Tashichho Dzong)
 
Guru Dorje Drolo, Subduer of Demons
 
Bhutanese painted thanka of Guru Nyima Ozer, late 19th century

The eight manifestations are also seen as Padmasambhava's biography that spans 1500 years. As Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche states,

When Guru Padmasambhava appeared on earth, he came as a human being. In order to dissolve our attachment to dualistic conceptions and destroy complex neurotic fixations, he also exhibited some extraordinary manifestations.[2]

In accord, Rigpa Shedra also states the eight principal forms were assumed by Guru Rinpoche at different points in his life. Padmasambhava's eight manifestations, or forms (Tib. Guru Tsen Gye), represent different aspects of his being as needed, such as wrathful or peaceful for example.

The eight manifestations of Padmasambhava belong to the tradition of Terma, the Revealed Treasures (Tib.: ter ma),[2][note 3] and are described and enumerated as follows:[citation needed]

  1. Guru Pema Gyalpo (Wylie: gu ru pad ma rgyal-po, Skt: Guru Padmarāja) of Oddiyana, meaning "Lotus King", king of the Tripitaka (the Three Collections of Scripture), manifests as a child four years after the Mahaparinirvana of Buddha Shakyamuni, as predicted by the Buddha. He is shown with a redish pink complexion and semi-wrathful, seated on a lotus and wearing yellow-orange robes, a small damaru in his right hand and a mirror and hook in his left hand, with a top-knot wrapped in white and streaming with red silk.
  2. Guru Nyima Ozer (Wylie: gu ru nyi-ma 'od-zer, Skrt: Guru Suryabhasa or Sūryaraśmi[39]), meaning "Ray of Sun", the Sunray Yogi, semi-wrathful, manifests in India simultaneously with Guru Pema Gyalpo, often portrayed as a crazy wisdom wandering yogi, numerous simultaneous emanations, illuminates the darkness of the mind through the insight of Dzogchen. He is shown seated on a lotus with left leg bent and with a golden-red complexion, semi-wrathful with slightly bulging eyes, long hair with bone ornaments, moustache and beard, bare-chested with a tiger-skin skirt, right hand holds a khatvanga and left hand is in a mudra, interacting with the sun.
  3. Guru Loden Chokse (Wylie: gu ru blo ldan mchog sred; Skrt: Guru Mativat Vararuci,[39]) meaning roughly "Super Knowledge Holder", peaceful, manifests after Guru Pema Gyalpo departs Oddiyana for the great charnel grounds of India and for all knowledge, the Intelligent Youth, the one who gathers the knowledge of all worlds. He is shown seated on a lotus, white complexion, wearing a white scarf with ribbons wrapped around his head, and a blue-green lotus decorating his hair, holding a damaru in the right hand and a lotus bowl in the left hand.
  4. Guru Padmasambhava (Skt: Guru Padmasambhava), meaning "Lotus Essence", a symbol of spiritual perfection, peaceful, manifests and teaches Mandarava, transforming negative energies into compassionate and peaceful forms. He is shown with a rich white complexion, very peaceful, and wears a red monk's hat, and sits on a lotus with his right hand in a mudra and left hand holding a skull-cup.
  5. Guru Shakya Senge (Wylie: shAkya seng-ge, Skt: Guru Śākyasimha) of Bodh Gaya, meaning "Lion of the Sakyas", peaceful, manifests as Ananda's student and brings King Ashoka to the Dharma, Lion of the Sakyas, embodies patience and detachment, learns all Buddhist canons and Tantric practices of the eight Vidyadharas. He is shown similar to Buddha Shakymuni but with golden skin in red monk's robes, a unishaka, a begging bowl in the left hand and a five-pointed vajra in the right hand.
  6. Guru Senge Dradrog (Wylie: gu ru seng-ge sgra-sgrogs, Skt: Guru Simhanāda,[39]) meaning "The Lion's Roar", wrathful, subdues and pacifies negative influences, manifests in India and at Nalanda University, the Lion of Debate, promulgator of the Dharma throughout the six realms of sentient beings. He is shown as dark blue and surrounded by flames above a lotus, with fangs and three glaring eyes, crown of skulls and long hair, standing on a demon, holding a flaming vajra in the right hand, left hand in a subjugation mudra.
  7. Guru Pema Jungne (Wylie: pad ma 'byung-gnas, Skt: Guru Padmakara), meaning "Born from a Lotus", manifests before his arrival in Tibet, the Vajrayana Buddha that teaches the Dharma to the people, embodies all manifestations and actions of pacifying, increasing, magnetizing and subjugating. As the most depicted manifestation, he is shown sitting on a lotus, dressed in three robes, under which he wears a blue shirt, pants and Tibetan shoes. He holds a vajra in his right hand, and a skull-bowl with a small vase in his left hand. A special trident called a khatvanga leans on the left shoulder representing Yeshe Tsogyal, and he wears a Nepalese cloth hat in the shape of a lotus flower. Thus he is represented as he must have appeared in Tibet.
  8. Guru Dorje Drolo (Wylie: gu ru rDo-rje gro-lod, Skt: Guru Vajra), meaning "Crazy Wisdom", very wrathful, manifests five years before Guru Pema Jungne departs Tibet, 13 emanations for 13 Tiger's Nests caves, the fierce manifestation of Vajrakilaya (wrathful Vajrasattva) known as "Diamond Guts", the comforter of all, imprinting the elements with Wisdom-Treasure, subduer for degenerate times. He is shown dark red, surrounded by flames, wearing robes and Tibetan shoes, conch earrings, a garland of heads, dancing on a tiger, symbolizing Tashi Kyeden, that is also dancing.

Padmasambhava's various Sanskrit names are preserved in mantras such as those found in the Yang gsang rig 'dzin youngs rdzogs kyi blama guru mtshan brgyad bye brag du sgrub pa ye shes bdud rtsi'i sbrang char zhe bya ba.[clarification needed][39][note 4]

Iconography Edit

 
Thangka of Padmasambhava, 19th century, Lhasa, Central Tibet

Padmasambhava has one face and two hands.[40][41] He is wrathful and smiling.[40] He blazes magnificently with the splendour of the major and minor marks.[40] His two eyes are wide open in a piercing gaze.[40] He has the youthful appearance of an eight-year-old child.[41] His complexion is white with a tinge of red.[41] He is seated with his two feet in the royal posture.[40][41][42]

On his head he wears a five-petalled lotus hat,[40][42] which has three points symbolizing the three kayas, five colours symbolizing the five kayas, the sun and moon symbolizing skillful means and wisdom, a vajra top to symbolize unshakable samadhi, and a vulture's feather to represent the realization of the highest view.[41]

Padmasambhava wears a white vajra undergarment. On top of this, in layers, a red robe, a dark blue mantrayana tunic, a red monastic shawl decorated with a golden flower pattern, and a maroon cloak of silk brocade.[40] Also, he wears a silk cloak, Dharma robes and gown.[42] He is wearing the dark blue gown of a mantra practitioner, the red and yellow shawl of a monk, the maroon cloak of a king, and the red robe and secret white garments of a bodhisattva.[41]

In his right hand, he holds a five-pronged vajra at his heart.[40][41][42] His left hand rests in the gesture of equanimity,[40] In his left hand he holds a skull-cup brimming with nectar, containing the vase of longevity that is also filled with the nectar of deathless wisdom[40][41] and ornamented on top by a wish-fulfilling tree.[42]

Cradled in his left arm he holds the three-pointed khatvanga (trident) symbolizing the Princess consort Mandarava, one of his two main consorts.[40][42] who arouses the wisdom of bliss and emptiness, concealed as the three-pointed khatvanga.[41] Other sources say that the khatvanga represents the Lady Yeshe Tsogyal, his primary consort and main disciple.[43] Its three points represent the essence, nature and compassionate energy (ngowo, rangshyin and tukjé).[41][42] Below these three prongs are three severed heads, dry, fresh and rotten, symbolizing the dharmakaya, sambhogakaya and nirmanakaya.[41][42] Nine iron rings adorning the prongs represent the nine yanas.[41][42] Five-coloured strips of silk symbolize the five wisdoms[41] The khatvanga is also adorned with locks of hair from dead and living mamos and dakinis, as a sign that the Master subjugated them all when he practised austerities in the Eight Great Charnel Grounds.[41][42]

Around him within a lattice of five-coloured light, appear the eight vidyadharas of India, the twenty-five disciples of Tibet, the deities of the three roots, and an ocean of oath-bound protectors[42]

Attributes Edit

Pureland paradise Edit

His pureland paradise is Zangdok Palri (the Copper-Coloured Mountain).[44]

Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri Edit

Padmasambhava said:

My father is the intrinsic awareness, Samantabhadra (Sanskrit; Tib. ཀུན་ཏུ་བཟང་པོ). My mother is the ultimate sphere of reality, Samantabhadri (Sanskrit; Tib. ཀུན་ཏུ་བཟང་མོ). I belong to the caste of non-duality of the sphere of awareness. My name is the Glorious Lotus-Born. I am from the unborn sphere of all phenomena. I consume concepts of duality as my diet. I act in the way of the Buddhas of the three times.

Another translation of Guru Rinpoche's statement is:

My father is wisdom and my mother is voidness.
My country is the country of Dharma.
I am of no caste and no creed.
I am sustained by perplexity; and I am here to destroy lust, anger and sloth.

— Guru Padmasambhava[2]

Associated practices Edit

From the earliest sources to today, Padmasambhava has remained closely associated with the Kila (phurba) dagger and also with the deity Vajrakilaya (a meditation deity based on the kila).[4]

Vajra Guru mantra Edit

 
The Vajra Guru Mantra inscribed on a rock
 
The Vajra Guru Mantra in Lanydza and Tibetan script

The Vajra Guru mantra is:

Oṃ āḥ hūṃ vajra guru padma siddhi hūṃ[40]

Like most Sanskrit mantras in Tibet, the Tibetan pronunciation demonstrates dialectic variation and is generally Om Ah Hung Benza Guru Pema Siddhi Hung.

In the Tibetan Buddhist traditions, particularly in Nyingma, the Vajra Guru mantra is held to be a powerful mantra engendering communion with the Three Vajras of Padmasambhava's mindstream and by his grace, all enlightened beings.[45] The 14th century tertön Karma Lingpa wrote a famous commentary on the mantra.[46]

According to the great tertön Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo, the basic meaning of the mantra is:

It begins with OṂ ĀḤ HŪṂ, which are the seed syllables of the three vajras (of body, speech and mind). Vajra signifies the dharmakāya since [like the adamantine vajra] it cannot be 'cut' or destroyed by the elaborations of conceptual thought. Guru signifies the sambhogakāya, which is 'heavily' laden with the qualities of the seven aspects of union. Padma signifies the nirmāṇakāya, the radiant awareness of the wisdom of discernment arising as the lotus family of enlightened speech. Remembering the qualities of the great Guru of Oḍḍiyāna, who is inseparable from these three kāyas, pray with the continuous devotion that is the intrinsic display of the nature of mind, free from the elaboration of conceptual thought. All the supreme and ordinary accomplishments—Siddhi—are obtained through the power of this prayer, and by thinking, "HŪṂ! May they be bestowed upon my mindstream, this very instant!"[40]

Seven Line Prayer Edit

The Seven Line Prayer to Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche) is a well-known prayer that is recited by many Tibetans daily and is said to contain the most sacred and important teachings of Dzogchen:[46]

ཧཱུྃ༔ ཨོ་རྒྱན་ཡུལ་གྱི་ནུབ་བྱང་མཚམས༔
པདྨ་གེ་སར་སྡོང་པོ་ལ༔
ཡ་མཚན་མཆོག་གི་དངོས་གྲུབ་བརྙེས༔
པདྨ་འབྱུང་གནས་ཞེས་སུ་གྲགས༔
འཁོར་དུ་མཁའ་འགྲོ་མང་པོས་བསྐོར༔
ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་རྗེས་སུ་བདག་བསྒྲུབ་ཀྱི༔
བྱིན་གྱིས་བརླབ་ཕྱིར་གཤེགས་སུ་གསོལ༔
གུ་རུ་པདྨ་སིདྡྷི་ཧཱུྃ༔[47][note 5]
Hūṃ! In the north-west of the land of Oḍḍiyāna
In the heart of a lotus flower,
Endowed with the most marvellous attainments,
You are renowned as the ‘Lotus-born’,
Surrounded by many hosts of ḍākinīs
Following in your footsteps,
I pray to you: Come, inspire me with your blessing!
guru padma siddhi hūṃ.[47]

Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso composed a famous commentary to the Seven Line Prayer called White Lotus. It explains the meaning of the prayer in five levels of meaning intended to catalyze a process of realization. These hidden teachings are described as ripening and deepening, in time, with study and with contemplation.[48] There is also a shorter commentary by Tulku Thondup.[49]

Cham dances Edit

 
Jakar tshechu, Guru Tshengye, and Guru Rinpoche with two helpers and six manifestations

The life of Padmasambhava is widely depicted in the Cham dances which are masked and costumed dances associated with religious festivals in the Tibetan Buddhist world.[50] In Bhutan, the dances are performed during the annual religious festivals or tshechu.

Terma cycles Edit

There are numerous Terma cycles which are believed to contain teachings of Padmasambhava.[51] According to Tibetan tradition, the Bardo Thodol (commonly referred to as the Tibetan Book of the Dead) was among these hidden treasures, subsequently discovered by a Tibetan tertön, Karma Lingpa (1326–1386).

Tantric cycles related to Padmasambhava are not just practiced by the Nyingma, they even gave rise to a new offshoot of Bön which emerged in the 14th century called the New Bön. Prominent figures of the Sarma (new translation) schools such as the Karmapas and Sakya lineage heads have practiced these cycles and taught them. Some of the greatest scholars who revealed teachings related to Padmasambhava have been from the Kagyu or Sakya lineages. The hidden lake temple of the Dalai Lamas behind the Potala Palace, called Lukhang, is dedicated to Dzogchen teachings and has murals depicting the eight manifestations of Padmasambhava.[52]

Five main consorts Edit

 
Padmasambhava in yab-yum form with a spiritual consort

Many of the students gathered around Padmasambhava became advanced Vajrayana tantric practitioners, and became enlightened. They also founded and propagated the Nyingma school. The most prominent of these include Padmasambhava's five main female consorts, often referred to as wisdom dakinis, and his twenty five main students along with king Trisong Detsen.

Padmasambhava had five main female tantric consorts, beginning in India before his time in Tibet and then in Tibet as well. When seen from an outer, or perhaps even historical or mythological perspective, these five women from across South Asia were known as the Five Consorts. That the women come from very different geographic regions is understood as a mandala, a support for Padmasambhava in spreading the dharma throughout the region.

Yet, when understood from a more inner tantric perspective, these same women are understood not as ordinary women but as wisdom dakinis. From this point of view, they are known as the "Five Wisdom Dakinis" (Wylie: Ye-shes mKha-'gro lnga). Each of these consorts is believed to be an emanation of the tantric yidam, Vajravārāhī.[53] As one author writes of these relationships:

Yet in reality, he [Padmasambhava] was never separate from the five emanations of Vajravarahi: the Body-emanation, Mandarava; the Speech-emanation, Yeshe Tsogyal; the Mind-emanation, Shakyadema; the Qualities-emanation, Kalasiddhi; and the Activity-emanation, Trashi [sic] Chidren.[54]

In summary, the five consorts/wisdom dakinis were:

  • Yeshe Tsogyal of Tibet, who was the emanation of Vajravarahi's Speech (Tibetan: gsung; Sanskrit: vāk);
  • Mandarava of Zahor, northeast India, who was the emanation of Vajravarahi's Body (Tibetan: sku; Sanskrit: kāya);
  • Belwong Kalasiddhi of northwest India, who was the emanation of Vajravarahi's Quality (Tibetan: yon-tan; Sanskrit: gūna);
  • Belmo Sakya Devi of Nepal, who was the emanation of Vajravarahi's Mind (Tibetan: thugs; Sanskrit: citta); and
  • Tashi Kyeden (or Kyedren or Chidren), sometimes called Mangala, of Bhutan and Tiger's Nest caves, is an emanation of Vajravarahi's Activity (Tibetan: phrin-las; Sanskrit: karma).[note 6] Tashi Kyeden is often depicted with Guru Dorje Drolo.[2]

While there are very few sources on the lives of Kalasiddhi, Sakya Devi, and Tashi Kyedren, there are extant biographies of both Yeshe Tsogyal and Mandarava that have been translated into English and other western languages.

Twenty-five main students Edit

Padmasambhava has twenty five main students (Tibetan: རྗེ་འབངས་ཉེར་ལྔ, Wylie: rje 'bangs nyer lnga) in Tibet during the Nyingma's school's Early Translation period. These students are also called the "Twenty-five King and subjects" and "The King and 25" of Chimphu.[55] In Dudjom Rinpoche's list,[56] and in other sources, these include:

  • King Trisong Detsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེའུ་བཏཟན, Wylie: khri srong lde'u btzan)
 
Denma Tsémang
  • Denma Tsémang (Tibetan: ལྡན་མ་རྩེ་མང, Wylie: ldan ma rtse mang)[57]
  • Nanam Dorje Dudjom, Dorje Dudjom of Nanam (Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ་བདུད་འཇོམ, Wylie: rdo rje bdud 'joms)[58] (image on Wikimedia commons)
  • Drokben Khyechung Lotsawa (Tibetan: ཁྱེའུ་ཆུང་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ, Wylie: khye'u chung lo tsā ba)
  • Lasum Gyelwa Changchup, Gyalwa Changchub of Lasum (Tibetan: ལ་སུམ་རྒྱལ་བ་བྱང་ཆུབ, Wylie: la sum rgyal ba byang chub)[59] (image on Wikimedia commons)
  • Gyalwa Choyang (Tibetan: རྒྱལ་བ་མཆོག་དབྱངས, Wylie: rgyal ba mchog dbyangs)[60]
  • Dre Gyelwei Lodro, Gyalwe Lodro of Dré (Tibetan: རྒྱལ་བའི་བློ་གྲོས, Wylie: rgyal ba'i blo gros)[61]
  • Nyak Jnanakumara, Jnanakumara of Nyak(Tibetan: གཉགས་ཛཉའ་ན་ཀུ་མ་ར, Wylie: gnyags dzny' na ku ma ra)[62]
  • Kawa Paltsek (Tibetan: སྐ་བ་དཔལ་བརྩེགས, Wylie: ska ba dpal brtsegs)[63]
  • Karchen Za, Khandro Yeshe Tsogyal the princess of Karchen (Tibetan: མཁར་ཆེན་བཟའ་མཚོ་རྒྱལ, Wylie: mkhar chen bza' mtsho rgyal)
  • Langdro Konchok Jungue, Konchog Jungné of Langdro (Tibetan: ལང་གྲོ་དཀོན་མཆོག་འབྱུང་གནས, Wylie: lang gro dkon mchog 'byung gnas)[64]
  • Sogdian Lhapel, Lhapal the Sokpo (Tibetan: སོག་པོ་ལྷ་དཔལ, Wylie: sog po lha dpal)[65]
  • Namkhai Nyingpo (Tibetan: ནམ་མཁའི་སྙིང་པོ, Wylie: nam mkha'i snying po)
  • Nanam Zhang Yeshe De (Tibetan: ཞང་ཡེ་ཤེས་སྡེ, Wylie: zhang ye shes sde)
  • Lhalung Pelgi Dorje, Lhalung Pelgyi Dorje (Tibetan: ལྷ་ལུང་དཔལ་གྱི་རྡོ་རྗེ, Wylie: lha lung dpal gyi rdo rje)[66]
 
Palgyi Senge
  • Shuphu Pelgi Senge, Palgyi Senge (Tibetan: དཔལ་གྱི་སེང་གེ, Wylie: dpal gyi seng ge)[67]
  • Karchen Palgyi Wangchuk (Tibetan: དཔལ་གྱི་དབང་ཕྱུག, Wylie: dpal gyi dbang phyug)[68]
  • Odren Pelgi Wangchuk, Palgyi Wangchuk of Odren (Tibetan: འོ་དྲན་དཔལ་གྱི་དབང་ཕྱུག, Wylie: 'o dran dpal gyi dbang phyug)[69]
  • Palgyi Yeshe (Tibetan: དཔལ་གྱི་ཡེ་ཤེས, Wylie: dpal gyi ye shes)
  • Ma Rinchen-chok, Rinchen Chok of Ma (Tibetan: རྨ་རིན་ཆེན་མཆོག, Wylie: rma rin chen mchog)[70]
  • Nubchen Sangye Yeshe (Tibetan: སངས་རྒྱས་ཡེ་ཤེས, Wylie: sangs rgyas ye shes), reincarnated as Tsasum Lingpa[71]
  • Shubu Palgyi Senge (Tibetan: ཤུད་བུ་དཔལ་གྱི་སེང་གེ, Wylie: shud bu dpal gyi seng ge)
  • Vairocana, Vairotsana, the great translator (Tibetan: བཻ་རོ་ཙ་ན, Wylie: bai ro tsa na)
  • Yeshe Yang (Tibetan: ཡེ་ཤེས་དབྱངས, Wylie: ye shes dbyangs)[72]
  • Gyelmo Yudra Nyingpo, Yudra Nyingpo of Gyalmo (Tibetan: ག་ཡུ་སྒྲ་སྙིང་པོ, Wylie: g.yu sgra snying po)

Also, but not listed in the 25:

  • Vimalamitra (Tibetan: དྲུ་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན, Wylie: dru med bshes gnyen)
  • Tingdzin Zangpo (Tibetan: ཏིང་འཛིན་བཟང་པོ, Wylie: ting 'dzin bzang po)[73] (image on Wikimedia commons)

In addition to Yeshe Tsogyal, 15 other women practitioners became accomplished Nyingma masters during this Early Translation period of the Nyingma school:[56][13]

  • Tsenamza Sangyetso
  • Shekar Dorjetso
  • Tsombuza Pematso
  • Melongza Rinchensho
  • Ruza Tondrupma
  • Shubuza Sherampa
  • Yamdrokza Choki Dronma
  • Oceza Kargyelma
  • Dzemza Lhamo
  • Barza Lhayang
  • Chokroza Changchupman
  • Dronma Pamti Chenmo
  • Rongmenza Tsultrim-dron
  • Khuza Peltsunma
  • Trumza Shelmen

Gallery Edit

Biographies in English Edit

  • Adzom Drukpa. Biography of Orgyen Guru Pema Jungne. Translated by Padma Samye Ling. Dharma Samudra.
  • Chokgyur Lingpa, Orgyen (1973). The Legend of the Great Stupa and the Life Story of the Lotus Born Guru. Translated by Keith Dowman. Dharma Publishing.
  • Chokgyur Lingpa (2016). "The Wish-Fulfilling Tree". The Great. Translated by Phakchok Rinpoche. Lhasey Lotsawa Publications.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon (1999). "A Short Biography of Padmasambhava". Dakini Teachings. Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang. Rangjung Yeshe Publishing.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon (2005). The Vajra Garland and the Lotus Garden: Treasure Biographies of Padmakara and Vairochana. Translated by Yeshe Gyamtso. KTD Publications.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgön (2019). Following in Your Footsteps: The Lotus-Born Guru in Nepal. Translated by Neten Chokling Rinpoche & Lhasey Lotsawa Translations. Rangjung Yeshe Publishing.
  • Lotsawa, Lhasey (2021). Following in Your Footsteps: The Lotus-Born Guru in India. Rangjung Yeshe.
  • Orgyen Padma (2004). The Condensed Chronicle. Translated by Tony Duff. Padma Karpo Translation Committee.
  • Sogyal Rinpoche (1990). Dzogchen and Padmasambhava. Rigpa International.
  • Yeshe Tsogyal (1978). The Life and Liberation of Padmasambhava. Padma bKa'i Thang. (Parts I & II). Translated by Gustave-Charles Toussaint; Kenneth Douglas; Gwendolyn Bays. Dharma Publishing. ISBN 0-913546-18-6 and ISBN 0-913546-20-8.
  • Yeshe Tsogyal (1993). Binder Schmidt, M.; Hein Schmidt, E. (eds.). The Lotus-Born: The Life Story of Padmasambhava. Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang. Boston: Shambhala Publications. Reprint: Boudhanath: Rangjung Yeshe Publications, 2004. ISBN 962-7341-55-X.
  • Yeshe Tsogyal (2009). Padmasambhava Comes to Tibet. Translated by Tarthang Tulku. Dharma Publishing.
  • Taranatha (2005). The Life of Padmasambhava. Translated by Cristiana de Falco. Shang Shung Publications.
  • Zangpo, Ngawang (2002). Guru Rinpoché: His Life and Times. Snow Lion Publications.

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c For debate on its geographical location, see also the article on Oddiyana.
  2. ^ Sanskrit पद्मसम्भव Padmasambhava; Tibetan: པདྨ་འབྱུང་གནས།, Wylie: pad+ma 'byung gnas (EWTS)); Mongolian ловон Бадмажунай, lovon Badmajunai, Chinese: 莲花生大士 (pinyin: Liánhuāshēng)
  3. ^ For the eight manifestations as terma, see Watt 1999.
  4. ^ See also image and description in Watt 1999.
  5. ^ A common transliteration used by Western practitioners reads:

    HUNG. OR GYAN YUL GYI NUB JANG TSAM
    PAD MA GE SAR DHONG PO LA.
    YA TSAN CHHOG GI NGO DRUB NYEY
    PAD MA JUNG NAY ZHEY SU DRAG
    KHOR DU KHA DRO MANG PÖ KOR
    KHYED KYI JEY SU DAG DRUB KYIY.
    JIN GYIY LOB KHYIR SHEK SU SOL.[1]

    The same text with audio can be found at [2], p. 5.

  6. ^ Tibetan Wylie transliteration and Sanskrit transliteration are found in Dowman 1984, p. 193.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Kværne 2013, p. 168.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Palden Sherab Rinpoche 1992
  3. ^ a b c d van Schaik 2011, pp. 34–5.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Doney 2015.
  5. ^ a b c van Schaik 2011, pp. 34–5, 96–8.
  6. ^ a b Buswell & Lopez 2013, p. 600.
  7. ^ a b van Schaik 2011, p. 96.
  8. ^ Doney 2014.
  9. ^ Dalton 2004.
  10. ^ a b Germano 2005.
  11. ^ a b c d Gyatso 2006.
  12. ^ Harvey 2008, p. 204.
  13. ^ a b c Palden Sherab Rinpoche & Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 1998.
  14. ^ a b Palden Sherab Rinpoche & Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 2013.
  15. ^ Fremantle 2001, p. 19.
  16. ^ van Schaik & Iwao 2009.
  17. ^ van Schaik 2011, pp. 34–5, 96–8, 273.
  18. ^ Meulenbeld 2001, p. 93.
  19. ^ Kazi 2020, p. 45.
  20. ^ van Schaik 2011, p. 80.
  21. ^ a b van Schaik 2011, p. 35.
  22. ^ Cantwell & Mayer 2013, p. 22.
  23. ^ Davidson 2005, pp. 229, 278.
  24. ^ Hirschberg 2013.
  25. ^ a b c Trungpa 2001, pp. 26–27
  26. ^ Morgan 2010, p. 208.
  27. ^ Samten Lingpa 1998.
  28. ^ Buffetrille 2012.
  29. ^ Arunima 2022.
  30. ^ Snelling 1987.
  31. ^ Harvey 1995.
  32. ^ Heine 2002.
  33. ^ Norbu & Turnbull 1987, p. 162.
  34. ^ Snelling 1987, p. 198.
  35. ^ Snelling 1987, p. 196, 198.
  36. ^ Changchub & Nyingpo 2002, p. xxxvii.
  37. ^ Meulenbeld 2001, p. 52.
  38. ^ Huntington & Bangdel 2004, p. 150.
  39. ^ a b c d Boord 1993, p. 115.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Wangpo 2022.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Drakpa 2022.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Patrul Rinpoche 2022.
  43. ^ Huntington & Bangdel 2004, p. 358.
  44. ^ Yeshe Tsogyal 1993, pp. 252–53.
  45. ^ Sogyal Rinpoche 1992, pp. 386–389.
  46. ^ a b Karma Lingpa 2022.
  47. ^ a b "Seven Line Prayer". Lotsawa House. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  48. ^ Mipham 2007, p. [page needed].
  49. ^ Tulku Thondup 1995, p. [page needed].
  50. ^ Dobson 2004.
  51. ^ Laird 2006, p. 90.
  52. ^ Baker 2001.
  53. ^ Dowman 1984, p. 265.
  54. ^ Changchub & Nyingpo 2002, pp. 3–4.
  55. ^ Palden Sherab Rinpoche & Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 2008, p. 179.
  56. ^ a b Dudjom Rinpoche 2002, pp. 534–537.
  57. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Denma Tsemang". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  58. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Nanam Dorje Dudjom". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  59. ^ Dorje, Gyurme (August 2008). "Lasum Gyelwa Jangchub". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  60. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Gyelwa Choyang". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  61. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Gyelwai Lodro". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  62. ^ Garry, Ron (August 2007). "Nyak Jñānakumara". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  63. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Kawa Peltsek". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  64. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Langdro Konchok Jungne". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  65. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Sokpo Pelgyi Yeshe". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  66. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Lhalung Pelgyi Dorje". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  67. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Lang Pelgyi Sengge". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  68. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Kharchen Pelgyi Wangchuk". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  69. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Odren Pelgyi Wangchuk". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  70. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Ma Rinchen Chok". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  71. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (December 2009). "Nubchen Sanggye Yeshe". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  72. ^ Mandelbaum, Arthur (August 2007). "Yeshe Yang". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  73. ^ Leschly, Jakob (August 2007). "Nyang Tingdzin Zangpo". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 19 August 2013.

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  • Tulku Thondup (1995). . Enlightened Journey: Buddhist Practice as Daily Life. Shambhala Publications, Inc. ISBN 978-1570626074. Archived from the original on 7 January 2008.
  • Trungpa, Chögyam (2001), Crazy Wisdom, Boston: Shambhala Publications, ISBN 0-87773-910-2
  • van Schaik, Sam (2011). Tibet: A History. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-19410-4.
  • van Schaik, Sam; Iwao, Kazushi (2009). "Fragments of the Testament of Ba from Dunhuang". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 128 (3): 477–487. ISSN 0003-0279.
  • Watt, James (January 1999). "Padmasambhava – 8 Forms: Dorje Drolo". Himalayan Art Resources. Retrieved 26 December 2022.

Sadhanas and commentaries Edit

  • Drakpa, Chökyi (17 March 2022). "A Torch for the Path to Omniscience: A Word by Word Commentary on the Text of the Longchen Nyingtik Preliminary Practices". Lotsawa House. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  • Karma Lingpa (4 May 2022). "The Benefits of the Vajra Guru Mantra and an Explanation of Its Syllables: A Treasure Text Revealed by Tulku Karma Lingpa". Lotsawa House. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  • Mipham (2007). White Lotus: An Explanation of the Seven-line Prayer to Guru Padmasambhava. Translated by Padmakara Translation Group. Shambhala. ISBN 978-1590305119.
  • Patrul Rinpoche (28 June 2022). "Brief Guide to the Stages of Visualization for the Ngöndro Practice". Lotsawa House. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  • Wangpo, Jamyang Khyentse (7 April 2022). "Illuminating the Excellent Path to Omniscience: Notes on the Longchen Nyingtik Ngöndro". Lotsawa House. Retrieved 20 December 2022.

Further reading Edit

  • Bischoff, F. A. (1978). Ligeti, Louis (ed.). "Padmasambhava est-il un personnage historique?" [Is Padmasambhava a historical figure?]. Csoma de Körös Memorial Symposium. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó: 27–33. ISBN 963-05-1568-7.
  • Guenther, Herbert V. (1996). The Teachings of Padmasambhava. Leiden: E.J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-10542-5.
  • Jackson, D. (1979). "Review: The Life and Liberation of Padmasambhava (Padma bKaí thang)". The Journal of Asian Studies. 39: 123–25. doi:10.2307/2053510. JSTOR 2053510. S2CID 161669619.
  • Padmasambhava (1994). Schmidt, Marcia Binder (ed.). Advice from the Lotus-Born: A Collection of Padmasambhava's Advice to the Dakini Yeshe Tsogyal and Other Close Disciples. Rangjung Yeshe Publications. ISBN 978-9627341208.
  • Thondup, Tulku (1986). Hidden Teachings of Tibet: An Explanation of the Terma Tradition of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism. London: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 978-0861710416.
  • Wang, S. A. (1975). "Can Man Go Beyond Ethics?: The System of Padmasambhava". The Journal of Religious Ethics. 3 (1): 141–155. JSTOR 40017721.

External links Edit

  •   Quotations related to Padmasambhava at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Padmasambhava (category) at Wikimedia Commons

padmasambhava, padmasambhāva, born, from, lotus, note, also, known, guru, rinpoche, precious, guru, lotus, from, oḍḍiyāna, tantric, buddhist, vajra, master, from, medieval, india, taught, vajrayana, tibet, circa, centuries, according, some, early, tibetan, sou. Padmasambhava Born from a Lotus note 2 also known as Guru Rinpoche Precious Guru and the Lotus from Oḍḍiyana was a tantric Buddhist Vajra master from medieval India who taught Vajrayana in Tibet circa 8th 9th centuries 1 2 3 4 According to some early Tibetan sources like the Testament of Ba he came to Tibet in the 8th century and helped construct Samye Monastery the first Buddhist monastery in Tibet 3 However little is known about the actual historical figure other than his ties to Vajrayana and Indian Buddhism 5 1 PadmasambhavaPadmasambhava statue at Ghyoilisang peace park BoudhanathBornOddiyana note 1 OccupationVajra masterKnown forCredited with founding the Nyingma school of Tibetan BuddhismPadmasambhava later came to be viewed as a central figure in the transmission of Buddhism to Tibet 6 5 Starting from around the 12th century hagiographies concerning Padmasambhava were written These works expanded the profile and activities of Padmasambhava now seen as taming all the Tibetan spirits and gods and concealing various secret texts terma for future tertons 7 Nyangral Nyima Ozer 1124 1192 was the author of the Zangling ma Jeweled Rosary the earliest biography of Padmasambhava 8 9 He has been called one of the main architects of the Padmasambhava mythos who first linked Padmasambhava to the Great Perfection in a high profile manner 10 11 In modern Tibetan Buddhism Padmasambhava is considered to be a Buddha that was foretold by Buddha Shakyamuni 2 According to traditional hagiographies his students include the great female masters Yeshe Tsogyal and Mandarava 5 The contemporary Nyingma school considers Padmasambhava to be a founding figure 12 4 The Nyingma school also traditionally holds that its Dzogchen lineage has its origins in Garab Dorje through a direct transmission to Padmasambhava 13 In Tibetan Buddhism the teachings of Padmasambava are said to include an oral lineage kama and a lineage of the hidden treasure texts termas 14 Tibetan Buddhism holds that Padmasambhava s termas are discovered by fortunate beings and tertons treasure finders when conditions are ripe for their reception 15 Padmasambhava is said to appear to tertons in visionary encounters and his form is visualized during guru yoga practice particularly in the Nyingma school Padmasambhava is widely venerated by Buddhists in Tibet Nepal Bhutan the Himalayan states of India and in countries around the world 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early sources 1 2 Development of the mythos 2 Hagiography 2 1 Birth and early life 2 2 Activities in Tibet 2 3 Bhutan 3 Eight manifestations 4 Iconography 5 Attributes 5 1 Pureland paradise 5 2 Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri 6 Associated practices 6 1 Vajra Guru mantra 6 2 Seven Line Prayer 6 3 Cham dances 6 4 Terma cycles 7 Five main consorts 8 Twenty five main students 9 Gallery 10 Biographies in English 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Citations 12 3 Works cited 12 3 1 Sadhanas and commentaries 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditAccording to Lewis Doney while his historical authenticity was questioned by earlier Tibetologists it is now cautiously accepted 4 Early sources Edit nbsp Colossus of Padmasambhava 123 ft 37 5 m high in mist overlooking Rewalsar Lake Himachal Pradesh India nbsp Fragment of the Testament of Ba at the British Library with six incomplete lines of Tibetan writing Or 8210 S 9498A One of the earliest chronicle sources for Padmasambhava as a historical figure is the Testament of Ba Dba bzhed c 9th 12th centuries which records the founding of Samye Monastery under the reign of King Trisong Detsen r 755 797 804 16 lt ref gt 4 Other early manuscripts from Dunhuang also mention a tantric master associated with kilaya rituals named Padmasambhava who tames demons though they do not associate this figure with Trisong Detsen 17 4 According to the Testament of Ba Trisong Detsen had invited the Buddhist abbot and philosopher Santarakṣita 725 788 to Tibet to propagate Buddhism and help found the first Buddhist monastery at Samye The Inconceivable However certain events like the flooding of a Buddhist temple and lightning striking the royal palace had caused some at the Tibetan court to believe that the local gods were angry 3 Santarakṣita was sent back to Nepal but was then asked to return after the anti Buddhist sentiments had subsided On his return Santarakṣita brought Padmasambhava who was an Indian tantric adept from Oddiyana note 1 18 19 20 Padmasambhava s task was to tame the local spirits and impress the Tibetans with his magical and ritual powers The Tibetan sources then explain how Padmasambhava identified the local gods and spirits called them out and threatened them with his powers After they had been tamed the construction of Samye went ahead 3 Padmasambhava was also said to have taught various forms of tantric Buddhist yoga 21 When the royal court began to suspect that Padmasambhava wanted to seize power he was asked to leave by the king 21 The Testament of Ba also mentions other miracles by Padmasambhava mostly associated with the taming of demons and spirits as well as longevity rituals and water magic 4 Evidence shows that Padmasambhava s tantric teachings were being taught in Tibet during the 10th century Recent evidence suggests that Padmasambhava already figured in spiritual hagiography and ritual and was already seen as the enlightened source of tantric scriptures up to 200 years before Nyangrel Nyima Ozer 1136 1204 22 the primary source of the traditional hagiography of Padmasambhava Lewis Doney notes that while numerous texts are associated with Padmasambhava the most likely of these attributions are the Man ngag lta ba i phreng ba The Garland of Views a commentary on the 13th chapter of the Guhyagarbha tantra and the Thabs zhags padma phreng A Noble Noose of Methods The Lotus Garland an exposition of Mahayoga The former work is mentioned in the work of Nubchen Sangye Yeshe c 9 10th centuries and attributed to Padmasambhava 4 Development of the mythos Edit nbsp Nyangrel Nyima Ozer one of The Five Terton Kings While in the eleventh and twelfth centuries there were several parallel narratives of important founding figures like Padmasambhava Vimalamitra Songtsan Gampo and Vairotsana by the end of the 12th century the Padmasambhava narrative grew to dominate the others becoming the most influential legend of the introduction of Buddhism to Tibet 23 7 The first full biography of Padmasambhava is a terma treasure text said to have been revealed by Nyangrel Nyima Ozer abbot of Mawochok Monastery This biography The Copper Palace bka thang zangs gling ma was very influential on the Padmasambhava hagiographical tradition The narrative was also incorporated into Nyima Ozer s history of Buddhism the Flower Nectar The Essence of Honey chos byung me tog snying po sbrang rtsi i bcud 24 4 11 10 The terton Guru Chowang 1212 1270 was the next major contributor to the Padmasambhava tradition and may have been the first full life story biographer of Yeshe Tsogyal 11 The basic narrative of The Copper Palace continued to be expanded and edited by Tibetans In the 14th century the Padmasambhava hagiography was further expanded and re envisioned through the efforts of the Orgyen Lingpa 1323 c 1360 It is in the works of Orgyen Lingpa particularly his Padma bka thang Lotus Testament 1352 that the 11 deeds of Padmasambhava first appear in full 4 The Lotus Testament is a very extensive biography of Padmasambhava which begins with his ordination under Ananda and contains numerous references to Padmasambhava as a second Buddha 4 Hagiography Edit nbsp Thangka of Padmasambhava nbsp Statue of Guru Rinpoche Central Tibet Tsang Valley 15th 16th centuryAccording to Khenchen Palden Sherab there are traditionally said to be nine thousand nine hundred and ninety nine biographies of Padmasambhava 2 They are categorized in three ways Those relating to Padmasambhava s Dharmakaya buddhahood those accounts of his Sambhogakaya nature and those chronicles of his Nirmanakaya activities 2 Birth and early life Edit Hagiographies of Padmasambhava such as The Copper Palace depict Padmasambhava being born as an eight year old child appearing in a lotus blossom floating in Lake Dhanakosha surrounded by a host of dakinis in the kingdom of Oddiyana 4 25 note 1 However there are other birth stories as well another common one states that he was born from the womb of Queen Jalendra the wife of king Sakra of Oddiyana and received the name Dorje Duddul Vajra Demon Subjugator because of the auspicious marks on his body were identified as those of a demon tamer 4 As Nyingma scholar Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche explains There are many stories explaining how Guru Padmasambhava was born Some say that he instantly appeared on the peak of Meteorite Mountain in Sri Lanka Others teach that he came through his mother s womb but most accounts refer to a miraculous birth explaining that he spontaneously appeared in the center of a lotus These stories are not contradictory because highly realized beings abide in the expanse of great equanimity with perfect understanding and can do anything Everything is flexible anything is possible Enlightened beings can appear in any way they want or need to 2 In The Copper Palace King Indrabhuti of Oddiyana is searching for a wish fulfilling jewel and finds Padmasambhava who is said to be an incarnation of Buddha Amitabha The king adopts him as his own son and Padmasambhava is enthroned as the Lotus King Pema Gyalpo 4 25 However Padmasambhava s khaṭvaṅga staff falls on one of Indrabhuti s ministers killing him and Padmasambhava is exiled from the kingdom which allows him to live as a mahasiddha and practice tantra in charnel grounds throughout India 4 25 26 In Himachal Pradesh India at Rewalsar Lake known as Tso Pema in Tibetan Padmasambhava secretly gave tantric teachings to princess Mandarava the local king s daughter The king found out and tried to burn both him and his daughter but it is said that when the smoke cleared they were still alive and in meditation centered in a lotus arising from a lake Greatly astonished by this miracle the king offered Padmasambhava both his kingdom and Mandarava 27 Padmasambhava is then said to have returned home with Mandarava and together they converted the kingdom to Vajrayana Buddhism 4 They are also said to have travelled together to the Maratika Cave in Nepal to practice long life rituals of Amitayus 28 According to Tibetan Buddhist legends of the local Monpa tribe Chumi Gyatse Falls also known as the 108 waterfalls got created after a mythical showdown between Guru Padmasambhava and a high priest of the Bonpa sect that ruled supreme in Tibet and surrounding areas including Arunachal Pradesh in the pre Buddhist times The waterfall was formed when Guru Padmasambhava flung his rosary against a rock and 108 streams gushed out 29 better source needed Chumi Gyatse waterfall is revered and holy for the Monpas the Tibetan Buddhists Activities in Tibet Edit nbsp The famous looks like me statue of Padmasambhava at Samye which is traditionally said to have been blessed by him personally nbsp Entrance to Dawa Puk Guru Rinpoche s cave Yerpa 1993Padmasambhava hagiographies also discuss the activities of Padmasambhava in Tibet beginning with the invitation by King Trisong Detsen to help in the founding of Samye Padmasambhava is depicted as a great tantric adept who tames the spirits and demons of Tibet and turns them into guardians for the Buddha s Dharma specifically the deity Pe har is made the protector of Samye He is also said to have spread Vajrayana Buddhism to the people of Tibet and specifically introduced its practice of Tantra 30 31 4 The subjection of subduing deities and demons is a recurrent theme in Buddhist literature as noted also in Vajrapani and Mahesvara and Steven Heine s Opening a Mountain 32 Because of his role in the founding of Samye monastery the first monastery in Tibet Padmasambhava is regarded as the founder of the Nyingma school Ancients of Tibetan Buddhism 33 34 35 Padmasambhava s activities in the Tibet include the practice of tantric rituals to increase the life of the king as well as initiating king Trisong Detsen into tantric rites 4 The various biographies also discuss stories of Padmasambhava s main Tibetan consort princess Yeshe Tsogyal Knowledge Lake Empress who became his student while living in the court of Trisong Deutsen She was among Padmasambhava s three special students along with the King and Namkhai Nyingpo and is widely revered in Tibet as the Mother of Buddhism 11 Yeshe Tsogyal became a great master with many disciples and is widely considered to be a female Buddha 36 Padmasambhava hid numerous termas in Tibet for later discovery with her aid while she compiled and elicited Padmasambhava s teachings through the posing of questions and then reached Buddhahood in her lifetime Many thangkas and paintings depict Padmasambhava with consorts at each side Mandarava on his right and Yeshe Tsogyal on his left 37 38 Many of the Nyingma school s terma texts are said to have originated from the activities of Padmasambhava and his students These hidden treasure texts are believed to be discovered and disseminated when conditions are ripe for their reception 13 The Nyingma school traces its lineage of Dzogchen teachings to Garab Dorje through Padmasambhava s termas 14 In The Copper Palace after the death of Trisong Detsen Padmasambhava is said to have treveled to Lanka in order to convert its blood thirsty raksasa demons to the Dharma His parting words of advice advocates for the worship of Avalokiteshvara 4 Bhutan Edit nbsp Paro Taktsang Tiger s Nest monasteryBhutan has many important pilgrimage places associated with Padmasambhava The most famous is Paro Taktsang or Tiger s Nest monastery which is built on a sheer cliff wall about 900m above the floor of Paro valley It was built around the Taktsang Senge Samdup stag tshang seng ge bsam grub cave where Padmasambhava is said to have meditated 2 He is said to have flown there from Tibet on the back of Yeshe Tsogyal whom he transformed into a flying tigress for the purpose of the trip citation needed Later he travelled to Bumthang district to subdue a powerful deity offended by a local king According to legend Padmasambhava s body imprint can be found in the wall of a cave at nearby Kurje Lhakhang temple citation needed Eight manifestations Edit nbsp Guru Senge Dradrog a wrathful manifestation of Padmasambhava painting in Tashichho Dzong nbsp Guru Dorje Drolo Subduer of Demons nbsp Bhutanese painted thanka of Guru Nyima Ozer late 19th centuryThe eight manifestations are also seen as Padmasambhava s biography that spans 1500 years As Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche states When Guru Padmasambhava appeared on earth he came as a human being In order to dissolve our attachment to dualistic conceptions and destroy complex neurotic fixations he also exhibited some extraordinary manifestations 2 In accord Rigpa Shedra also states the eight principal forms were assumed by Guru Rinpoche at different points in his life Padmasambhava s eight manifestations or forms Tib Guru Tsen Gye represent different aspects of his being as needed such as wrathful or peaceful for example The eight manifestations of Padmasambhava belong to the tradition of Terma the Revealed Treasures Tib ter ma 2 note 3 and are described and enumerated as follows citation needed Guru Pema Gyalpo Wylie gu ru pad ma rgyal po Skt Guru Padmaraja of Oddiyana meaning Lotus King king of the Tripitaka the Three Collections of Scripture manifests as a child four years after the Mahaparinirvana of Buddha Shakyamuni as predicted by the Buddha He is shown with a redish pink complexion and semi wrathful seated on a lotus and wearing yellow orange robes a small damaru in his right hand and a mirror and hook in his left hand with a top knot wrapped in white and streaming with red silk Guru Nyima Ozer Wylie gu ru nyi ma od zer Skrt Guru Suryabhasa or Suryarasmi 39 meaning Ray of Sun the Sunray Yogi semi wrathful manifests in India simultaneously with Guru Pema Gyalpo often portrayed as a crazy wisdom wandering yogi numerous simultaneous emanations illuminates the darkness of the mind through the insight of Dzogchen He is shown seated on a lotus with left leg bent and with a golden red complexion semi wrathful with slightly bulging eyes long hair with bone ornaments moustache and beard bare chested with a tiger skin skirt right hand holds a khatvanga and left hand is in a mudra interacting with the sun Guru Loden Chokse Wylie gu ru blo ldan mchog sred Skrt Guru Mativat Vararuci 39 meaning roughly Super Knowledge Holder peaceful manifests after Guru Pema Gyalpo departs Oddiyana for the great charnel grounds of India and for all knowledge the Intelligent Youth the one who gathers the knowledge of all worlds He is shown seated on a lotus white complexion wearing a white scarf with ribbons wrapped around his head and a blue green lotus decorating his hair holding a damaru in the right hand and a lotus bowl in the left hand Guru Padmasambhava Skt Guru Padmasambhava meaning Lotus Essence a symbol of spiritual perfection peaceful manifests and teaches Mandarava transforming negative energies into compassionate and peaceful forms He is shown with a rich white complexion very peaceful and wears a red monk s hat and sits on a lotus with his right hand in a mudra and left hand holding a skull cup Guru Shakya Senge Wylie shAkya seng ge Skt Guru Sakyasimha of Bodh Gaya meaning Lion of the Sakyas peaceful manifests as Ananda s student and brings King Ashoka to the Dharma Lion of the Sakyas embodies patience and detachment learns all Buddhist canons and Tantric practices of the eight Vidyadharas He is shown similar to Buddha Shakymuni but with golden skin in red monk s robes a unishaka a begging bowl in the left hand and a five pointed vajra in the right hand Guru Senge Dradrog Wylie gu ru seng ge sgra sgrogs Skt Guru Simhanada 39 meaning The Lion s Roar wrathful subdues and pacifies negative influences manifests in India and at Nalanda University the Lion of Debate promulgator of the Dharma throughout the six realms of sentient beings He is shown as dark blue and surrounded by flames above a lotus with fangs and three glaring eyes crown of skulls and long hair standing on a demon holding a flaming vajra in the right hand left hand in a subjugation mudra Guru Pema Jungne Wylie pad ma byung gnas Skt Guru Padmakara meaning Born from a Lotus manifests before his arrival in Tibet the Vajrayana Buddha that teaches the Dharma to the people embodies all manifestations and actions of pacifying increasing magnetizing and subjugating As the most depicted manifestation he is shown sitting on a lotus dressed in three robes under which he wears a blue shirt pants and Tibetan shoes He holds a vajra in his right hand and a skull bowl with a small vase in his left hand A special trident called a khatvanga leans on the left shoulder representing Yeshe Tsogyal and he wears a Nepalese cloth hat in the shape of a lotus flower Thus he is represented as he must have appeared in Tibet Guru Dorje Drolo Wylie gu ru rDo rje gro lod Skt Guru Vajra meaning Crazy Wisdom very wrathful manifests five years before Guru Pema Jungne departs Tibet 13 emanations for 13 Tiger s Nests caves the fierce manifestation of Vajrakilaya wrathful Vajrasattva known as Diamond Guts the comforter of all imprinting the elements with Wisdom Treasure subduer for degenerate times He is shown dark red surrounded by flames wearing robes and Tibetan shoes conch earrings a garland of heads dancing on a tiger symbolizing Tashi Kyeden that is also dancing Padmasambhava s various Sanskrit names are preserved in mantras such as those found in the Yang gsang rig dzin youngs rdzogs kyi blama guru mtshan brgyad bye brag du sgrub pa ye shes bdud rtsi i sbrang char zhe bya ba clarification needed 39 note 4 Iconography Edit nbsp Thangka of Padmasambhava 19th century Lhasa Central TibetPadmasambhava has one face and two hands 40 41 He is wrathful and smiling 40 He blazes magnificently with the splendour of the major and minor marks 40 His two eyes are wide open in a piercing gaze 40 He has the youthful appearance of an eight year old child 41 His complexion is white with a tinge of red 41 He is seated with his two feet in the royal posture 40 41 42 On his head he wears a five petalled lotus hat 40 42 which has three points symbolizing the three kayas five colours symbolizing the five kayas the sun and moon symbolizing skillful means and wisdom a vajra top to symbolize unshakable samadhi and a vulture s feather to represent the realization of the highest view 41 Padmasambhava wears a white vajra undergarment On top of this in layers a red robe a dark blue mantrayana tunic a red monastic shawl decorated with a golden flower pattern and a maroon cloak of silk brocade 40 Also he wears a silk cloak Dharma robes and gown 42 He is wearing the dark blue gown of a mantra practitioner the red and yellow shawl of a monk the maroon cloak of a king and the red robe and secret white garments of a bodhisattva 41 In his right hand he holds a five pronged vajra at his heart 40 41 42 His left hand rests in the gesture of equanimity 40 In his left hand he holds a skull cup brimming with nectar containing the vase of longevity that is also filled with the nectar of deathless wisdom 40 41 and ornamented on top by a wish fulfilling tree 42 Cradled in his left arm he holds the three pointed khatvanga trident symbolizing the Princess consort Mandarava one of his two main consorts 40 42 who arouses the wisdom of bliss and emptiness concealed as the three pointed khatvanga 41 Other sources say that the khatvanga represents the Lady Yeshe Tsogyal his primary consort and main disciple 43 Its three points represent the essence nature and compassionate energy ngowo rangshyin and tukje 41 42 Below these three prongs are three severed heads dry fresh and rotten symbolizing the dharmakaya sambhogakaya and nirmanakaya 41 42 Nine iron rings adorning the prongs represent the nine yanas 41 42 Five coloured strips of silk symbolize the five wisdoms 41 The khatvanga is also adorned with locks of hair from dead and living mamos and dakinis as a sign that the Master subjugated them all when he practised austerities in the Eight Great Charnel Grounds 41 42 Around him within a lattice of five coloured light appear the eight vidyadharas of India the twenty five disciples of Tibet the deities of the three roots and an ocean of oath bound protectors 42 Attributes EditPureland paradise Edit Main article Pure land His pureland paradise is Zangdok Palri the Copper Coloured Mountain 44 Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri Edit Padmasambhava said My father is the intrinsic awareness Samantabhadra Sanskrit Tib ཀ ན ཏ བཟང པ My mother is the ultimate sphere of reality Samantabhadri Sanskrit Tib ཀ ན ཏ བཟང མ I belong to the caste of non duality of the sphere of awareness My name is the Glorious Lotus Born I am from the unborn sphere of all phenomena I consume concepts of duality as my diet I act in the way of the Buddhas of the three times Another translation of Guru Rinpoche s statement is My father is wisdom and my mother is voidness My country is the country of Dharma I am of no caste and no creed I am sustained by perplexity and I am here to destroy lust anger and sloth Guru Padmasambhava 2 Associated practices EditFrom the earliest sources to today Padmasambhava has remained closely associated with the Kila phurba dagger and also with the deity Vajrakilaya a meditation deity based on the kila 4 Vajra Guru mantra Edit nbsp The Vajra Guru Mantra inscribed on a rock nbsp The Vajra Guru Mantra in Lanydza and Tibetan scriptThe Vajra Guru mantra is Oṃ aḥ huṃ vajra guru padma siddhi huṃ 40 Like most Sanskrit mantras in Tibet the Tibetan pronunciation demonstrates dialectic variation and is generally Om Ah Hung Benza Guru Pema Siddhi Hung In the Tibetan Buddhist traditions particularly in Nyingma the Vajra Guru mantra is held to be a powerful mantra engendering communion with the Three Vajras of Padmasambhava s mindstream and by his grace all enlightened beings 45 The 14th century terton Karma Lingpa wrote a famous commentary on the mantra 46 According to the great terton Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo the basic meaning of the mantra is It begins with OṂ AḤ HuṂ which are the seed syllables of the three vajras of body speech and mind Vajra signifies the dharmakaya since like the adamantine vajra it cannot be cut or destroyed by the elaborations of conceptual thought Guru signifies the sambhogakaya which is heavily laden with the qualities of the seven aspects of union Padma signifies the nirmaṇakaya the radiant awareness of the wisdom of discernment arising as the lotus family of enlightened speech Remembering the qualities of the great Guru of Oḍḍiyana who is inseparable from these three kayas pray with the continuous devotion that is the intrinsic display of the nature of mind free from the elaboration of conceptual thought All the supreme and ordinary accomplishments Siddhi are obtained through the power of this prayer and by thinking HuṂ May they be bestowed upon my mindstream this very instant 40 Seven Line Prayer Edit The Seven Line Prayer to Padmasambhava Guru Rinpoche is a well known prayer that is recited by many Tibetans daily and is said to contain the most sacred and important teachings of Dzogchen 46 ཧ ཨ ར ན ཡ ལ ག ན བ བ ང མཚམས པད ག སར ས ང པ ལ ཡ མཚན མཆ ག ག དང ས ག བ བར ས པད འབ ང གནས ཞ ས ས ག གས འཁ ར ད མཁའ འག མང པ ས བས ར ཁ ད ཀ ར ས ས བདག བས བ ཀ བ ན ག ས བར བ ཕ ར གཤ གས ས གས ལ ག ར པད ས ད ཧ 47 note 5 Huṃ In the north west of the land of Oḍḍiyana In the heart of a lotus flower Endowed with the most marvellous attainments You are renowned as the Lotus born Surrounded by many hosts of ḍakinis Following in your footsteps I pray to you Come inspire me with your blessing guru padma siddhi huṃ 47 Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso composed a famous commentary to the Seven Line Prayer called White Lotus It explains the meaning of the prayer in five levels of meaning intended to catalyze a process of realization These hidden teachings are described as ripening and deepening in time with study and with contemplation 48 There is also a shorter commentary by Tulku Thondup 49 Cham dances Edit nbsp Jakar tshechu Guru Tshengye and Guru Rinpoche with two helpers and six manifestationsThe life of Padmasambhava is widely depicted in the Cham dances which are masked and costumed dances associated with religious festivals in the Tibetan Buddhist world 50 In Bhutan the dances are performed during the annual religious festivals or tshechu Terma cycles Edit There are numerous Terma cycles which are believed to contain teachings of Padmasambhava 51 According to Tibetan tradition the Bardo Thodol commonly referred to as the Tibetan Book of the Dead was among these hidden treasures subsequently discovered by a Tibetan terton Karma Lingpa 1326 1386 Tantric cycles related to Padmasambhava are not just practiced by the Nyingma they even gave rise to a new offshoot of Bon which emerged in the 14th century called the New Bon Prominent figures of the Sarma new translation schools such as the Karmapas and Sakya lineage heads have practiced these cycles and taught them Some of the greatest scholars who revealed teachings related to Padmasambhava have been from the Kagyu or Sakya lineages The hidden lake temple of the Dalai Lamas behind the Potala Palace called Lukhang is dedicated to Dzogchen teachings and has murals depicting the eight manifestations of Padmasambhava 52 Five main consorts EditSee also Dakini Yeshe Tsogyal and Mandarava nbsp Padmasambhava in yab yum form with a spiritual consortMany of the students gathered around Padmasambhava became advanced Vajrayana tantric practitioners and became enlightened They also founded and propagated the Nyingma school The most prominent of these include Padmasambhava s five main female consorts often referred to as wisdom dakinis and his twenty five main students along with king Trisong Detsen Padmasambhava had five main female tantric consorts beginning in India before his time in Tibet and then in Tibet as well When seen from an outer or perhaps even historical or mythological perspective these five women from across South Asia were known as the Five Consorts That the women come from very different geographic regions is understood as a mandala a support for Padmasambhava in spreading the dharma throughout the region Yet when understood from a more inner tantric perspective these same women are understood not as ordinary women but as wisdom dakinis From this point of view they are known as the Five Wisdom Dakinis Wylie Ye shes mKha gro lnga Each of these consorts is believed to be an emanation of the tantric yidam Vajravarahi 53 As one author writes of these relationships Yet in reality he Padmasambhava was never separate from the five emanations of Vajravarahi the Body emanation Mandarava the Speech emanation Yeshe Tsogyal the Mind emanation Shakyadema the Qualities emanation Kalasiddhi and the Activity emanation Trashi sic Chidren 54 In summary the five consorts wisdom dakinis were Yeshe Tsogyal of Tibet who was the emanation of Vajravarahi s Speech Tibetan gsung Sanskrit vak Mandarava of Zahor northeast India who was the emanation of Vajravarahi s Body Tibetan sku Sanskrit kaya Belwong Kalasiddhi of northwest India who was the emanation of Vajravarahi s Quality Tibetan yon tan Sanskrit guna Belmo Sakya Devi of Nepal who was the emanation of Vajravarahi s Mind Tibetan thugs Sanskrit citta and Tashi Kyeden or Kyedren or Chidren sometimes called Mangala of Bhutan and Tiger s Nest caves is an emanation of Vajravarahi s Activity Tibetan phrin las Sanskrit karma note 6 Tashi Kyeden is often depicted with Guru Dorje Drolo 2 While there are very few sources on the lives of Kalasiddhi Sakya Devi and Tashi Kyedren there are extant biographies of both Yeshe Tsogyal and Mandarava that have been translated into English and other western languages Twenty five main students EditPadmasambhava has twenty five main students Tibetan ར འབངས ཉ ར ལ Wylie rje bangs nyer lnga in Tibet during the Nyingma s school s Early Translation period These students are also called the Twenty five King and subjects and The King and 25 of Chimphu 55 In Dudjom Rinpoche s list 56 and in other sources these include King Trisong Detsen Tibetan ཁ ས ང ལ འ བཏཟན Wylie khri srong lde u btzan nbsp Denma TsemangDenma Tsemang Tibetan ལ ན མ ར མང Wylie ldan ma rtse mang 57 Nanam Dorje Dudjom Dorje Dudjom of Nanam Tibetan ར ར བད ད འཇ མ Wylie rdo rje bdud joms 58 image on Wikimedia commons Drokben Khyechung Lotsawa Tibetan ཁ འ ཆ ང ལ ཙ བ Wylie khye u chung lo tsa ba Lasum Gyelwa Changchup Gyalwa Changchub of Lasum Tibetan ལ ས མ ར ལ བ བ ང ཆ བ Wylie la sum rgyal ba byang chub 59 image on Wikimedia commons Gyalwa Choyang Tibetan ར ལ བ མཆ ག དབ ངས Wylie rgyal ba mchog dbyangs 60 Dre Gyelwei Lodro Gyalwe Lodro of Dre Tibetan ར ལ བའ བ ག ས Wylie rgyal ba i blo gros 61 Nyak Jnanakumara Jnanakumara of Nyak Tibetan གཉགས ཛཉའ ན ཀ མ ར Wylie gnyags dzny na ku ma ra 62 Kawa Paltsek Tibetan ས བ དཔལ བར གས Wylie ska ba dpal brtsegs 63 Karchen Za Khandro Yeshe Tsogyal the princess of Karchen Tibetan མཁར ཆ ན བཟའ མཚ ར ལ Wylie mkhar chen bza mtsho rgyal Langdro Konchok Jungue Konchog Jungne of Langdro Tibetan ལང ག དཀ ན མཆ ག འབ ང གནས Wylie lang gro dkon mchog byung gnas 64 Sogdian Lhapel Lhapal the Sokpo Tibetan ས ག པ ལ དཔལ Wylie sog po lha dpal 65 Namkhai Nyingpo Tibetan ནམ མཁའ ས ང པ Wylie nam mkha i snying po Nanam Zhang Yeshe De Tibetan ཞང ཡ ཤ ས ས Wylie zhang ye shes sde Lhalung Pelgi Dorje Lhalung Pelgyi Dorje Tibetan ལ ལ ང དཔལ ག ར ར Wylie lha lung dpal gyi rdo rje 66 nbsp Palgyi SengeShuphu Pelgi Senge Palgyi Senge Tibetan དཔལ ག ས ང ག Wylie dpal gyi seng ge 67 Karchen Palgyi Wangchuk Tibetan དཔལ ག དབང ཕ ག Wylie dpal gyi dbang phyug 68 Odren Pelgi Wangchuk Palgyi Wangchuk of Odren Tibetan འ ད ན དཔལ ག དབང ཕ ག Wylie o dran dpal gyi dbang phyug 69 Palgyi Yeshe Tibetan དཔལ ག ཡ ཤ ས Wylie dpal gyi ye shes Ma Rinchen chok Rinchen Chok of Ma Tibetan ར ར ན ཆ ན མཆ ག Wylie rma rin chen mchog 70 Nubchen Sangye Yeshe Tibetan སངས ར ས ཡ ཤ ས Wylie sangs rgyas ye shes reincarnated as Tsasum Lingpa 71 Shubu Palgyi Senge Tibetan ཤ ད བ དཔལ ག ས ང ག Wylie shud bu dpal gyi seng ge Vairocana Vairotsana the great translator Tibetan བ ར ཙ ན Wylie bai ro tsa na Yeshe Yang Tibetan ཡ ཤ ས དབ ངས Wylie ye shes dbyangs 72 Gyelmo Yudra Nyingpo Yudra Nyingpo of Gyalmo Tibetan ག ཡ ས ས ང པ Wylie g yu sgra snying po Also but not listed in the 25 Vimalamitra Tibetan ད མ ད བཤ ས གཉ ན Wylie dru med bshes gnyen Tingdzin Zangpo Tibetan ཏ ང འཛ ན བཟང པ Wylie ting dzin bzang po 73 image on Wikimedia commons In addition to Yeshe Tsogyal 15 other women practitioners became accomplished Nyingma masters during this Early Translation period of the Nyingma school 56 13 Tsenamza Sangyetso Shekar Dorjetso Tsombuza Pematso Melongza Rinchensho Ruza Tondrupma Shubuza Sherampa Yamdrokza Choki Dronma Oceza Kargyelma Dzemza Lhamo Barza Lhayang Chokroza Changchupman Dronma Pamti Chenmo Rongmenza Tsultrim dron Khuza Peltsunma Trumza ShelmenGallery Edit nbsp Thangka of Guru Pema Jungne nbsp Padmasambhava statue in Hemis Monastery Ladakh India nbsp The Holy Statue of Guru Padmasambhava at Samdruptse Namchi Sikkim India nbsp Statue of Guru Rinpoche Padmasambhava in his meditation cave at Yerpa Tibet nbsp Guru Rinpoche hand print embedded in the rock at Pharping Kathmandu nbsp Mantra of Padmasambhava in Tibetan scriptBiographies in English EditAdzom Drukpa Biography of Orgyen Guru Pema Jungne Translated by Padma Samye Ling Dharma Samudra Chokgyur Lingpa Orgyen 1973 The Legend of the Great Stupa and the Life Story of the Lotus Born Guru Translated by Keith Dowman Dharma Publishing Chokgyur Lingpa 2016 The Wish Fulfilling Tree The Great Translated by Phakchok Rinpoche Lhasey Lotsawa Publications Kongtrul Jamgon 1999 A Short Biography of Padmasambhava Dakini Teachings Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang Rangjung Yeshe Publishing Kongtrul Jamgon 2005 The Vajra Garland and the Lotus Garden Treasure Biographies of Padmakara and Vairochana Translated by Yeshe Gyamtso KTD Publications Kongtrul Jamgon 2019 Following in Your Footsteps The Lotus Born Guru in Nepal Translated by Neten Chokling Rinpoche amp Lhasey Lotsawa Translations Rangjung Yeshe Publishing Lotsawa Lhasey 2021 Following in Your Footsteps The Lotus Born Guru in India Rangjung Yeshe Orgyen Padma 2004 The Condensed Chronicle Translated by Tony Duff Padma Karpo Translation Committee Sogyal Rinpoche 1990 Dzogchen and Padmasambhava Rigpa International Yeshe Tsogyal 1978 The Life and Liberation of Padmasambhava Padma bKa i Thang Parts I amp II Translated by Gustave Charles Toussaint Kenneth Douglas Gwendolyn Bays Dharma Publishing ISBN 0 913546 18 6 and ISBN 0 913546 20 8 Yeshe Tsogyal 1993 Binder Schmidt M Hein Schmidt E eds The Lotus Born The Life Story of Padmasambhava Translated by Erik Pema Kunsang Boston Shambhala Publications Reprint Boudhanath Rangjung Yeshe Publications 2004 ISBN 962 7341 55 X Yeshe Tsogyal 2009 Padmasambhava Comes to Tibet Translated by Tarthang Tulku Dharma Publishing Taranatha 2005 The Life of Padmasambhava Translated by Cristiana de Falco Shang Shung Publications Zangpo Ngawang 2002 Guru Rinpoche His Life and Times Snow Lion Publications See also EditBardo Thodol Tibetan Book of the Dead Epic of King Gesar East and Central Asian epic cycle Padmasambhava Mahavihara monastery Buddhist Monastery in Odisha IndiaReferences EditNotes Edit a b c For debate on its geographical location see also the article on Oddiyana Sanskrit पद मसम भव Padmasambhava Tibetan པད འབ ང གནས Wylie pad ma byung gnas EWTS Mongolian lovon Badmazhunaj lovon Badmajunai Chinese 莲花生大士 pinyin Lianhuasheng For the eight manifestations as terma see Watt 1999 See also image and description in Watt 1999 A common transliteration used by Western practitioners reads HUNG OR GYAN YUL GYI NUB JANG TSAM PAD MA GE SAR DHONG PO LA YA TSAN CHHOG GI NGO DRUB NYEY PAD MA JUNG NAY ZHEY SU DRAG KHOR DU KHA DRO MANG PO KOR KHYED KYI JEY SU DAG DRUB KYIY JIN GYIY LOB KHYIR SHEK SU SOL 1 The same text with audio can be found at 2 p 5 Tibetan Wylie transliteration and Sanskrit transliteration are found in Dowman 1984 p 193 Citations Edit a b Kvaerne 2013 p 168 a b c d e f g h i j Palden Sherab Rinpoche 1992 a b c d van Schaik 2011 pp 34 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Doney 2015 a b c van Schaik 2011 pp 34 5 96 8 a b Buswell amp Lopez 2013 p 600 a b van Schaik 2011 p 96 Doney 2014 Dalton 2004 a b Germano 2005 a b c d Gyatso 2006 Harvey 2008 p 204 a b c Palden Sherab Rinpoche amp Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 1998 a b Palden Sherab Rinpoche amp Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 2013 Fremantle 2001 p 19 van Schaik amp Iwao 2009 van Schaik 2011 pp 34 5 96 8 273 Meulenbeld 2001 p 93 Kazi 2020 p 45 van Schaik 2011 p 80 a b van Schaik 2011 p 35 Cantwell amp Mayer 2013 p 22 Davidson 2005 pp 229 278 Hirschberg 2013 a b c Trungpa 2001 pp 26 27 Morgan 2010 p 208 Samten Lingpa 1998 Buffetrille 2012 Arunima 2022 Snelling 1987 Harvey 1995 Heine 2002 Norbu amp Turnbull 1987 p 162 Snelling 1987 p 198 Snelling 1987 p 196 198 Changchub amp Nyingpo 2002 p xxxvii Meulenbeld 2001 p 52 Huntington amp Bangdel 2004 p 150 a b c d Boord 1993 p 115 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Wangpo 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Drakpa 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k Patrul Rinpoche 2022 Huntington amp Bangdel 2004 p 358 Yeshe Tsogyal 1993 pp 252 53 Sogyal Rinpoche 1992 pp 386 389 a b Karma Lingpa 2022 a b Seven Line Prayer Lotsawa House Retrieved 26 December 2022 Mipham 2007 p page needed Tulku Thondup 1995 p page needed Dobson 2004 Laird 2006 p 90 Baker 2001 Dowman 1984 p 265 Changchub amp Nyingpo 2002 pp 3 4 Palden Sherab Rinpoche amp Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche 2008 p 179 a b Dudjom Rinpoche 2002 pp 534 537 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Denma Tsemang The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Nanam Dorje Dudjom The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Dorje Gyurme August 2008 Lasum Gyelwa Jangchub The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Gyelwa Choyang The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Gyelwai Lodro The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Garry Ron August 2007 Nyak Jnanakumara The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Kawa Peltsek The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Langdro Konchok Jungne The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Sokpo Pelgyi Yeshe The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 10 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Lhalung Pelgyi Dorje The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Lang Pelgyi Sengge The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Kharchen Pelgyi Wangchuk The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Odren Pelgyi Wangchuk The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Ma Rinchen Chok The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur December 2009 Nubchen Sanggye Yeshe The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Mandelbaum Arthur August 2007 Yeshe Yang The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Leschly Jakob August 2007 Nyang Tingdzin Zangpo The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 19 August 2013 Works cited Edit Arunima 13 December 2022 Thirumalai Nitya ed Border Clash India s Tourism Push Near Yangtze Holy Site for Arunachal and Tibet Riled Up the Chinese News18 com New Delhi India CNN News18 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Baker Ian A 4 January 2001 The Lukhang A hidden temple in Tibet Asianart com Retrieved 26 December 2022 Boord Martin 1993 Cult of the Deity Vajrakila Institute of Buddhist Studies ISBN 0 9515424 3 5 Buffetrille Katia 2012 Low Tricks and High Stakes Surrounding a Holy Place in Eastern Nepal The Halesi Maratika Caves In Buffetrille Katia ed Revisiting Rituals in a Changing Tibetan World Brill s Tibetan Studies Library Vol 31 Leiden Boston Brill pp 163 208 ISBN 978 9004232174 ISSN 1568 6183 via Academia edu Buswell Robert E Lopez Donald S Jr eds 2013 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 4805 8 Cantwell Cathy Mayer Rob 2013 Representations of Padmasambhava in early post Imperial Tibet In Cuppers Christoph Mayer Robert Walter Michael eds Tibet after Empire Culture Society and Religion between 850 1000 LIRI Seminar Proceedings Series pp 19 50 ISBN 978 9937 553 05 6 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Changchub Gyalwa Nyingpo Namkhai 2002 Lady of the Lotus born The Life and Enlightenment of Yeshe Tsogyal Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group Boston amp London Shambhala Publications ISBN 1 57062 544 1 Dalton Jacob October December 2004 The Early Development of the Padmasambhava Legend in Tibet A Study of IOL Tib J 644 and Pelliot tibetain 307 Journal of the American Oriental Society 124 4 759 772 doi 10 2307 4132116 JSTOR 4132116 Davidson Ronald M 2005 Tibetan Renaissance Columbia University Press Dobson Elaine 2004 Dancing on the demon s back the dramnyen dance and song of Bhutan UNESCO Regional Expert Symposium on Arts Education in Asia Hong Kong Retrieved 26 December 2022 Doney Lewis 2014 The Zangs gling ma The First Padmasambhava Biography Two Exemplars of the Earliest Attested Recension Andiast International Institute for Tibetan and Buddhist Studies ISBN 978 3 03809 118 9 Retrieved 22 December 2022 via Academia edu Doney Lewis 2015 Padmasambhava in Tibetan Buddhism In Silk Jonathan A et al eds Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism Leiden Boston Brill pp 1197 1212 ISBN 978 9004299375 Dowman Keith 1984 Sky Dancer The Secret Life and Songs of the Lady Yeshe Tsogyal Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0710095763 Dudjom Rinpoche 2002 The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism Its Fundamentals and History Translated by Gyurme Dorje and Matthew Kapstein Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 199 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gyatso Janet August 2006 A Partial Genealogy of the Lifestory of Ye shes mtsho rgyal The Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies 2 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Fremantle Francesca 2001 Luminous Emptiness Understanding the Tibetan Book of the Dead Boston Shambhala Publications Inc ISBN 1 57062 450 X Germano David 2005 The Funerary Transformation of the Great Perfection Rdzogs chen Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies 1 1 54 Harvey Peter 1995 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices Cambridge University Press Harvey Peter 2008 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 67674 8 Heine Steven 2002 Opening a Mountain Koans of the Zen Masters Oxford Oxford University Press Hirschberg Daniel April 2013 Nyangrel Nyima Ozer The Treasury of Lives ISSN 2332 077X Retrieved 18 July 2017 Huntington John Bangdel Dina 2004 The Circle of Bliss Buddhist Meditational Art Chicago Serindia Publications ISBN 978 1932476019 Kazi Jigme N 2020 Sons of Sikkim The Rise and Fall of the Namgyal Dynasty of Sikkim Notion Press ISBN 978 1 64805 981 0 Kvaerne Per 2013 Tuttle Gray Schaeffer Kurtis R eds The Tibetan history reader New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14469 8 Laird Thomas 2006 The Story of Tibet Conversations with the Dalai Lama New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1827 1 Meulenbeld Ben 2001 Buddhist Symbolism in Tibetan Thangkas The Story of Siddhartha and Other Buddhas Interpreted in Modern Nepalese Painting Binkey Kok ISBN 978 90 74597 44 9 Morgan D 2010 Essential Buddhism A Comprehensive Guide to Belief and Practice Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 38452 3 Norbu Thubten Jigme Turnbull Colin 1987 Tibet Its History Religion and People Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 021382 1 Palden Sherab Rinpoche Khenchen May 1992 The Eight Manifestations of Guru Padmasambhava Translated by Khenpo Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche Padma Gochen Ling Turtle Hill Archived from the original on 4 December 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 Palden Sherab Rinpoche Khenchen Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche Khenpo 1998 Kaye Joan ed Lion s Gaze A Commentary on Tsig Sum Nedek Translated by Sarah Harding Sky Dancer Press ISBN 978 1880975053 Palden Sherab Rinpoche Khenchen Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche Khenpo 2008 Illuminating the Path Ngondro Instructions According to the Nyingma School of Vajrayana Buddhism Padmasambhava Buddhist Center ISBN 978 0965933940 Palden Sherab Rinpoche Khenchen Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche Khenpo 2013 The Beauty of Awakened Mind Dzogchen Lineage of the Great Master Shigpo Dudtsi Dharma Samudra ISBN 978 0983407416 Powers John 2007 Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism rev ed Ithaca New York Snow Lion Publications ISBN 978 1 55939 282 2 Samten Lingpa 1998 The Lives and Liberation of Princess Mandarava the Indian Consort of Padmasambhava Translated by Lama Chonam Sangye Khandro Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0861711444 Snelling John 1987 The Buddhist Handbook A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice London Century Paperbacks Sogyal Rinpoche 1992 The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying Rider ISBN 0 7126 5437 2 Tulku Thondup 1995 The Meaning Of The Vajra Seven Line Prayer To Guru Rinpoche Enlightened Journey Buddhist Practice as Daily Life Shambhala Publications Inc ISBN 978 1570626074 Archived from the original on 7 January 2008 Trungpa Chogyam 2001 Crazy Wisdom Boston Shambhala Publications ISBN 0 87773 910 2 van Schaik Sam 2011 Tibet A History Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 19410 4 van Schaik Sam Iwao Kazushi 2009 Fragments of the Testament of Ba from Dunhuang Journal of the American Oriental Society 128 3 477 487 ISSN 0003 0279 Watt James January 1999 Padmasambhava 8 Forms Dorje Drolo Himalayan Art Resources Retrieved 26 December 2022 Sadhanas and commentaries Edit Drakpa Chokyi 17 March 2022 A Torch for the Path to Omniscience A Word by Word Commentary on the Text of the Longchen Nyingtik Preliminary Practices Lotsawa House Retrieved 20 December 2022 Karma Lingpa 4 May 2022 The Benefits of the Vajra Guru Mantra and an Explanation of Its Syllables A Treasure Text Revealed by Tulku Karma Lingpa Lotsawa House Retrieved 26 December 2022 Mipham 2007 White Lotus An Explanation of the Seven line Prayer to Guru Padmasambhava Translated by Padmakara Translation Group Shambhala ISBN 978 1590305119 Patrul Rinpoche 28 June 2022 Brief Guide to the Stages of Visualization for the Ngondro Practice Lotsawa House Retrieved 20 December 2022 Wangpo Jamyang Khyentse 7 April 2022 Illuminating the Excellent Path to Omniscience Notes on the Longchen Nyingtik Ngondro Lotsawa House Retrieved 20 December 2022 Further reading EditBischoff F A 1978 Ligeti Louis ed Padmasambhava est il un personnage historique Is Padmasambhava a historical figure Csoma de Koros Memorial Symposium Budapest Akademiai Kiado 27 33 ISBN 963 05 1568 7 Guenther Herbert V 1996 The Teachings of Padmasambhava Leiden E J Brill ISBN 90 04 10542 5 Jackson D 1979 Review The Life and Liberation of Padmasambhava Padma bKai thang The Journal of Asian Studies 39 123 25 doi 10 2307 2053510 JSTOR 2053510 S2CID 161669619 Padmasambhava 1994 Schmidt Marcia Binder ed Advice from the Lotus Born A Collection of Padmasambhava s Advice to the Dakini Yeshe Tsogyal and Other Close Disciples Rangjung Yeshe Publications ISBN 978 9627341208 Thondup Tulku 1986 Hidden Teachings of Tibet An Explanation of the Terma Tradition of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism London Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0861710416 Wang S A 1975 Can Man Go Beyond Ethics The System of Padmasambhava The Journal of Religious Ethics 3 1 141 155 JSTOR 40017721 External links Edit nbsp Quotations related to Padmasambhava at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Padmasambhava category at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Padmasambhava amp oldid 1176762877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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