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Buddhist tantric literature

Buddhist tantric literature refers to the vast and varied literature of the Vajrayāna (or Mantrayāna) Buddhist traditions. The earliest of these works are a genre of Indian Buddhist tantric scriptures, variously named Tantras, Sūtras and Kalpas, which were composed from the 7th century CE onwards.[1] They are followed by later tantric commentaries (called pañjikās and ṭīkās), original compositions by Vajrayana authors (called prakaraṇas and upadeśas), sādhanas (practice texts), ritual manuals (kalpas or vidhis), collections of tantric songs (dohās) odes (stotra), or hymns, and other related works. Tantric Buddhist literature survives in various languages, including Sanskrit, Tibetan, and Chinese. Most Indian sources were composed in Sanskrit, but numerous tantric works were also composed in other languages like Tibetan and Chinese.

A manuscript of the Vajravali, a tantric commentary by Abhayakaragupta (manuscript c. 11th or 12th century CE, Sanskrit in Nepalaksara script).

Overview edit

History edit

Buddhist Tantric texts may have begun appearing during the Gupta Period (320–550 CE).[2][3] However, the earliest known datable Buddhist Tantra is the Awakening of Mahāvairocana Tantra, which was mentioned and collected by the Chinese pilgrim Wu-xing (無行) c. 680 CE.[4][5]

Wu-xing also reports that at the time he visited India (7th century), the Mantrayana (“teaching about mantra”, Chinese: zhenyan jiaofa, 真言教法‎) was already very popular.[4] Amoghavajra (704–774), a scholar translator who traveled to China, reports a canon of eighteen tantras during the 8th century.[5]

Over time the number of texts increased with numerous Tantric scholars writing commentaries and practice manuals. Buddhist Tantric traditions draw on the Mahayana sutras, and older Buddhist esoteric practices like dhāraṇī recitation texts.[6][1] Furthermore, earlier Buddhist traditions had maintained a collection of scriptures focused on magical practices, called the Vidyādhara Piṭaka (Wizardry Collection) which included various types of rituals and spells (vidyā).[7] In the account of a Buddhist spell master by Yijing, he even mentions erotic practices associated with this collection.[7]

Buddhist tantras were also influenced by non-buddhist traditions, including Śaiva and Śakta sources, the cults of local deities, and rites related to yakshas and nāgas.[6][8][1] The Buddhist Yogini tantras contain the most extensive borrowing from Śaiva and Śakta sources. In some cases, whole passages have been copied. This process has been studied by Alexis Sanderson.[9] Scholars like Phyllis Granoff have termed this extensive borrowing of non-buddhist forms "ritual eclecticism".[10] Buddhist Tantric works continued to be produced in India until the 1500s.[11]

Many early Buddhist Tantric texts, later termed “action Tantras” (kriyā tantra), are mostly collections of magical mantras or phrases for mostly worldly ends called mantrakalpas (mantra manuals) and they do not call themselves Tantras.[12] Later Tantric texts from the eighth century onward (termed variously Yogatantra, Mahayoga, and Yoginī Tantras) advocated union with a deity (deity yoga), sacred sounds (mantras), techniques for manipulation of the subtle body and other secret methods with which to achieve swift Buddhahood.[13] Some Tantras contain antinomian and transgressive practices such as ingesting alcohol and other forbidden substances as well as sexual rituals.[3] Some of these later Buddhist Tantras (especially the Yoginītantras) are clearly influenced by Śaiva Vidyāpīṭha scriptures.[1]

Buddhist Tantra quickly spread out of India into nearby countries like Tibet and Nepal in the eighth century, as well as to Southeast Asia and East Asia through overland and maritime trade routes.[1] Buddhist Tantra arrived in China during the Tang Dynasty (where it was known as Tangmi) and was brought to Japan by Kukai (774–835), where it is known as Shingon.[8] Tantric texts were brought to Tibet in two historical periods, the eighth century and the 11th century (which are called the "early translations" and "second dissemination" texts).[8] Buddhist tantra remains the main Buddhist tradition in Nepal, Mongolia and Tibet where it is known as Vajrayana.

Origin myths edit

Buddhist sources told various myths about the origin of the tantras. One origin myth states that the tantras were initially taught by the Buddha but were hidden away. Then they were rediscovered by Nāgārjuna in an iron stupa in south India.[14] Other origin myths focus around a mythic king of Oḍiyāna named Indrabhūti, who received the tantras with the aid of Vajrapani.[15]

Furthermore, as Gray writes, "there is another major genre of tantric Buddhist origin myths, which we might term “conversion myths” since they feature the founding figure, an awakened buddha, converting Śaiva Hindu deities to Buddhism".[16] These myths were useful in explaining the many Hindu elements which were found in some Buddhist tantric texts.[16] In one such myth told by Śubhakarasiṃha (善无畏, 637–735) and Yixing (一行, 683– 727), Vairocana Buddha turns himself into Mahākāla in order to swallow and subdue Shiva and the ḍākinīs who were killing and eating humans in order to obtain the essence in their hearts. After being subdued, these figures were said to have become Buddhist.[17]

Texts edit

 
Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra manuscript (c. 14th century, Newari) with a miniature illustration of Avalokiteśvara

Classes of tantric texts edit

There are various ways to categorize and schematize the various tantric primary sources. The earliest Indian classification scheme is found in the work of the commentator Buddhaguhya (c. 700).[18] He outlined just two types of tantras: outward oriented Kriya tantras (which contain much ritual directed as external objects like a Buddha statue) and the Yoga tantras which focus on inward contemplative practices in which the yogi visualizes themselves as the deity.[18] The commentator Vilāsavajra meanwhile, sometimes added a third category: Carya, which was intermediate between Kriya and Yoga. In another text meanwhile, Vilāsavajra discusses a different third category: Upaya, which referred to more transgressive tantras that made use of sexual yoga.[18]

The Classification of Tantras in Tibetan Buddhism differs by tradition. All traditions agree on three types: Kriyayoga, Caryayoga, and Yogatantra. In the "Ancient" (Nyingma) school, these three "outer tantras" are followed three further "inner tantras": Mahayoga, Anuyoga, and Atiyoga. In the "New Translation" (Sarma) schools, the "higher" classes are called "supreme yoga tantras" (anuttarayogatantra).[19] The Sarma classification systems was constructed by Indo-Tibetan scholastics and date to the mid-12th century based on Indian works.[18]

A fourfold schema can be found in the work of the Indian scholar Śraddhākaravarman, who writes of "four doors" to the Vajratana: Kriyatantra, Caryatantra, Yoga- tantra, and Mahayogatantra.[18] He also mentions a further sub-class of Mahayoga, Niruttarayoga, which refers to Mahayoga tantras with mandalas populated by female deities, i.e., the Yogini tantras. Ratnākaraśānti's (11th century) schema contains the same four latter classes, but adds Niruttarayoga as its own fifth category.[18] Kanha's Yogaratnamala meanwhile, also has four: Kriya, Carya, Yoga, Niruttarayoga. Thus, the Tibetan schema is based on these later Indic classifications schemes.[18]

In Tibetan traditions, the most important tantras are those of the "highest yoga tantra", "Mahayoga" or Atiyoga" classification. There are also various other classes of tantric works, such as hagiographies of great masters (namtars), tantric verse works, songs, meditation manuals, and instructional texts (upadesha). The Nyingma school also has a special category of scripture which were discovered or revealed in Tibet, known as Terma. Some of these are classified as "tantras" but were composed in Tibetan by Tibetans.

Meanwhile, in Shingon Buddhism and Chinese Esoteric Buddhism, these classifications are not used. These traditions mainly rely on the Mahāvairocana Sūtra (大日経, Dainichi-kyō), the Vajraśekhara Sūtra (金剛頂経, Kongōchō-kyō), and the Susiddhikara Sūtra (蘇悉地経, Soshitsuji-kyō).[20]

While traditional schemas classify tantric texts based on whether it is focused on "kriya" (ritual action) or "yoga" (contemplative practice), this does not mean that ritual topics are absent in the yoga tantras, which themselves contain extensive sections on ritual. Likewise, texts labeled "kriya tantra" also contain teachings on yoga.[21]

Many tantric Buddhist texts have titles other than "Tantra", including sutra, kalpa, rajñi, stotra, and doha. The Major Buddhist Tantras also accumulated secondary literature, such as 'Explanatory Tantras' (vyākhyātantra), commentaries (pañjikās, ṭīkās etc.) and sadhana literature which outline specific tantric ritual practices and meditations.[22]

Dhāraṇīs are an earlier class of Buddhist texts which are not specifically "tantric" or "Vajrayanist" in nature. They may be found in classic Mahayana sutras like the Lotus Sutra, and thus pre-date the development of Buddhist tantra.[23] Dhāraṇī practices and texts were part of mainstream Mahayana Buddhism well before the rise of Vajrayana, and as such, are not "tantric" works nor specifically connected to esoteric or mantrayana Buddhism.[24] However, some tantras and tantric works do make use of dhāraṇīs in a broader tantric context and later canonical collections included numerous dhāraṇīs into the tantra classification. Indeed, some scholars like Koichi Shinohara argue that the Buddhist tantric literature grew out of the earlier Mahayana dhāraṇī texts through a process of gradual expansion and the incorporation of new ritual elements (such as mandalas and visualization practices).[5]

There are between 1500 and 2000 surviving Indian Buddhist Tantric texts in Sanskrit, and over 2000 more Tantras solely survive in translation (mostly Tibetan or Chinese).[25] In the Tibetan canons, there are 450 Tantras in the Kanjur collection and 2400 in the Tengyur.[3]

Indian tantras edit

 
Chinese translation of the Vairocanābhisaṃbodhi (Awakening of Vairocana)
 
The Garbhadhātu maṇḍala, derived from the teachings of the Mahāvairocana Tantra. Buddha Vairocana is located in the center.

The most important texts of the Vajrayana Buddhist traditions are the "tantras". The term tantra has many meanings, but one of the most common meaning is simply a specific type of divinely revealed text or scripture. In the Buddhist context, tantras were considered to be the words of a Buddha or bodhisattva (buddhavacana).[26]

Unlike Mahayana sutras, tantras are quite technical, outlining the details of rituals, such as how to construct a mandala.[26] They also contain unique tantric terminology and "coded language" (sandhyā-bhāṣa), which is metaphorical and secretive. They often omit important details and misdirect the reader, thus maintaining secrecy and requiring further commentary to be properly understood.[27] Their original language was Sanskrit, but not classical Sanskrit (Pāṇinean) per se, since tantras often include different word forms or grammar associated with regional Middle-Indic languages, like Apabraṃśa.[28] Apabraṃśa is also often used for tantric songs and poems.[28]

Tantric scriptures were also considered to be secret by tantric Buddhist communities, and would only be revealed to disciples which had gone through the necessary initiations.[29] Buddhist tantras promise both the ability to attain worldly magical powers (laukikasiddhi) and the surepeme achievement (lokottarasiddhi) of Buddhahood in one lifetime.[5]

Some of the unique themes and ideas found in the Buddhist Tantras is the revaluation of the body and its use in attaining great bliss (mahasukha), a revaluation of the role of women, yoginīs (female yogis), and female deities.[30][3] The tantras also contain a revaluation of supposedly negative mental states (like desire and anger) and antinominan behavior (like drinking alcohol, eating meat, living in charnel grounds etc.), which can be used in the service of liberation. This is manifested in the promotion of tantric fierce deities. As the Hevajra Tantra says "the world is bound by passion, also by passion it is released".[3] Some tantras, especially those of the Yoginītantra genre, have many erotic and sexual elements. The Guhyasamāja tantra, Hevajra, Caṇḍamahāroṣaṇa, Saṃvarodaya, and Sampuṭikātantrarāja, all open as follows: “Thus I have heard: at one time the Bhagavān resided in the vulvas of the women who are the vajras of the body, speech and mind of all the Tathāgatas” (evaṃ mayā śrutam ekasmin samaye bhagavān sarvva-tathāgata-kāya-vāk-citta-vajra-yonī-bhāgeṣu vijahāra).[31]

Regarding their philosophical view, the Buddhist tantras generally follow the view of the Mahāyāna sutras, especially the theories of emptiness, buddha-nature, and luminosity.[32][33] According to the tantras, to reach Buddhahood, one needs to recognize the true nature of one's mind, the buddha-nature, which is a non-dual empty luminosity (prabhāsvara) which is pure, blissful, and free of all concepts.[34] The true nature is the same in Buddhas and sentient beings, and is thus the ultimate "continuum" (tantra). The Guhyasamāja Tantra describes the ultimate nature of mind thus: "Devoid of all existents, free of the aggregates, the sense objects and media, and subject and object, one’s mind, being identical to the selflessness of dharmas, is originally unarisen and has emptiness as its nature."[32] This ultimate nature can be accessed through skillful means, especially the contemplative tantric techniques taught in the tantras.[35]

When it comes to practical content, tantras contain numerous explanations of yogic practice and ritual actions. Common topics related to spiritual practice include: how to make mandalas, how to perform ritual initiations (abhisheka), explanation of mantras, fire ritual (homa), special observances (carya), descriptions of tantric feasts (ganacakra), descriptions of tantric deities, deity yoga, subtle body based practices (of the perfection stage) and teachings on the yoginis.[21]

List of Indian Buddhist tantras edit

The following is a list of some major Buddhist Tantras from the classic period of Indian Buddhist tantrism as well as other tantric scriptures like sutras and dharanis. The list is organized according to the traditional classification used in the Tibetan canon.

Action tantra (Kriyātantra) edit

The scriptures in this category are considered to emphasize ritual action (kriyā), preparation of ritual spaces, textual recitation / chanting (of mantras, dhāraṇīs, vidyās, and other texts), and the external worship of deities.[36] Key Action tantras include:[37][31]

  • The Heart Sutra
  • The Dhāraṇī of Vaiḍūryaprabha
  • Mañjuśrī­mūlakalpa (Root Manual of the Rites of Mañjuśrī), an early mantra-kalpa (compendium of mantras, compiled in stages beginning in the seventh century)[38]
  • Suvarṇaprabhāsottamasūtra (Golden Light Sutra)
  • Mahā­māyūrī­-vidyārājñī (The Queen of Incantations: The Great Peahen), one of the five texts in the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection
  • The Supreme Accomplishment of Invincible Averting, Sitātapatrā Born from the Uṣṇīṣa of the Tathāgata, which contains a protective spell (vidyā)
  • Mañjuśrīnāmāṣṭaśatakam (The Hundred and Eight Names of Mañjuśrī)
  • The Bhūta­ḍāmara Tantra (c. 7th century), an esoteric manual on magic and exorcism focused on Vajrapāṇi as Bhūtaḍāmara (“Tamer of Spirits”)[38]
  • The Aparimitāyurjñāna Sūtra
  • Amoghapāśa-kalparāja-sūtra (The Noble Sovereign Ritual of Amoghapāśa), the source of the mantra of light
  • The Dhāraṇī of the Eleven Faced Avalokiteśvara (Avalokiteśvaraikādaśamukhadhāraṇī)
  • Nīlakaṇṭhadhāraṇī
  • Tārā Tantra, or Sarvatathāgatamātṛtārāviśvakarmabhavanāmatantra (Tantra Which is the Source for All the Functions of Tārā, Mother of All the Tathagatas) [39]
  • Tārā­devī­nāmāṣṭaśataka (The Hundred and Eight Names of Tārā)
  • Subāhuparipṛcchā­tantra (The Tantra of Subāhu’s Questions) (mid-sixth to mid-seventh centuries) [38]
Conduct tantras (Caryātantra) edit

Scriptures in this category are seen as containing equal ritual and meditation elements. They mostly focus on Vairocana, Vajrapāṇi and Acala. Some key scriptures:[40][31]

  • Vairocanābhisaṃbodhi Tantra (Awakening of Great Vairocana, terminus ante quem c. 7th century)[38]
  • Acalamahākrodharājasya sarvatathāgatasya balāparimitavīravinayasvākhyāto nāma kalpaḥ (The Practice Described as the Taming of the Great Wrathful King Acala)
  • Vajrapāṇyabhiṣeka-mahātantra (Vajrapāṇi Empowerment Tantra, c. early 7th century)[38]
  • Bhagavannīlāmbaradharavajrapāṇi Tantra (The Tantra of the Blue-Clad Blessed Vajrapāṇi)
Yoga tantras edit

These tantras focus on meditation, i.e. yoga. However, unlike the Anuttara- or Mahāyoga tantras, these scriptures do not contain much wrathful, antinomian or sexual elements, and instead focus on themes of ritual purity, mandalic buddhafields, and "peaceful" deities and Buddhas like Vairocana Buddha and Vajrasattva. Mantras, mandalas and mudras are key elements of the practices taught in these tantras.[41][42] Some key Yoga tantras are:[43][31]

  • Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha sutra (Compendium of the Reality of All Tathāgatas, c. 7th century)[38]
  • Vajraśekhara Sūtra (Adamantine Peak, 8th century), a collection of tantric texts.[38]
  • Susiddhikāra-sūtra (mid-sixth to mid-seventh centuries)[38]
  • Sarvarahasya-nāma-tantrarāja (Universal Secret Sovereign Tantra, c. 8th century)[38]
  • Sarvadurgatipariśodhanatejorāja (The Tantra Purifying Evil Destinies, terminus ante quem c. 8th century)[38]
  • Prajñāpāramitānayaśatapañcaśatikā (The Principles of the Perfection of Wisdom in 150 Lines, c. 7-8th century)[38]
Anuttarayoga, Mahāyoga or Yoginī Tantras edit
 
Statue of Saṃvara in union with his consort Vajravarahi (c. 12th century, Bengal). The theme of fierce deities in sexual union is commonly found in the anuttarayoga tantras.

The fourth category of tantric scriptures is considered to be the highest and most powerful class of tantra in Tibetan Buddhism.[18] This view is not shared by other Buddhist Mantrayana traditions like Shingon. This class of texts is called by different names, including Anuttarayogatantra, Mahāyoga, Niruttarayoga, and Yoginī Tantras.[18] They are also often further divided into different sub-categories, like "father", "mother" and "non-dual" tantras.[31] Japanese scholars like Tsukamoto further classify these into different families, like Akṣobhya-kula, Vairocana-kula, Heruka-kula, Vajra-sūrya-kula, Padmanarteśvara-kula, Paramāśva-kula, and Vajradhara-kula.[31]

These tantras tend to contain more transgressive elements, including sexual themes, sexual yoga (karmamudrā), wrathful deities, charnel ground imagery, the ingestion of taboo substances (blood, meat, alcohol, sexual fluids), tantric feasts, as well as numerous Shaiva and Shakta influences.[18][38] The deities in these scriptures often (but not always) appear as fierce herukas and erotic dakinis. Some key tantras in this category include:[44]

  • Sarvabuddhasamāyoga-dākinījālasaṃvara Tantra (Ḍākinīs’ Network That Unites All Buddhas, early 8th century), one of the first Yoginī Tantras, introduces the practice of gaṇacakra.[38] It has been seen by modern scholars as a "transitional scripture" and a “proto-yoginītantra”.[42]
  • Mañjuśrī-nāmasamgīti (Chanting the names of Mañjuśrī, c. 8th century)[38]
  • Guhyasamāja Tantra (The Esoteric Community Tantra, c. 8th century)[38]
  • Advayasamatāvijaya (Victory of Nondual Equality, c. 8th century), part of the Guhyasamāja tradition.[38]
  • The six explanatory tantras (vyākhyātantra) of the Guhyasamāja tradition: The Sandhyāvyākaraṇa (Explanation of the Intention); the Caturdevīparipṛcchā (The Four Goddessesʼ Inquiry); the Vajramālā (Vajra Rosary); the Jñānavajrasamuccaya (Gnosis Vajra Compendium) and its longer version; and the Vajrahṛdayālaṃkāra (Vajra Heart Adornment).[38]
  • Catuṣpīṭha (Four Chapters, c. 9th century), the first tantra to teach utkrāntiyoga, or yogic suicide.[38]
  • Māyājāla Tantra (The Net of Magical Illusion)
  • Guhyagarbha Tantra (The Secret Womb Tantra), the key Mahayoga tantra in the Nyingma tradition
  • Cakrasaṃvara Tantra (Supreme Bliss of the Wheels Tantra, c. 8th to 9th century), also called Herukābhidhāna (Discourse of Heruka) or Laghusaṃvara (Small Saṃvara). This tantra has been shown to contain much content borrowed from Śaiva Vidyāpīṭha tantras.[45]
  • Other tantras in the Cakrasaṃvara cycle: Herukābhyudaya (Realization of Heruka); Abhidhānottara (The Continuation of the Abhidhāna or Discourse); Caturyoginīsampuṭa (The Union of the Four Yoginīs); Yoginīsaṃcāra (Yoginīsʼ Rotation); Vajraḍāka (Vajraḍāka); and Vārāhyabhyudaya (Realization of Vārāhī).[38]
  • Tantras of the last historical phase of the Cakrasaṃvara cycle: The Saṃvarodaya (Emergence of the Supreme Bliss); the Ḍākārṇava (Ocean of Ḍākas); the Vārāhīkalpa (Ritual Practice of Vārāhī); and the Yoginījāla (Net of Yoginīs).[38]
  • Mahā­māyā­ Tantra
  • Hevajra Tantra (c. 9th century), an influential tantra which introduced key tantric teachings like the innate (sahaja), the fourfold joy (caturānanda), the subtle body system with four cakras and the three channels (avadhūtī, lalanā, and rasanā), and the inner fire (Caṇḍālī).[38]
  • Ḍākinīvajrapañjara (Ḍākinī Vajra Cage), an important tantra in the Hevajra cycle of scriptures.[38]
  • Sampuṭodbhava (Emergence from the Union) and the Sampuṭatilaka (Ornament of the Emergence from the Union), part of the Hevajra cycle.[38]
  • Other texts of the Hevajra cycle: The Mahāmudrātilaka (Great Seal Ornament); the Jñānagarbha (Womb of Gnosis); the Jñānatilaka (Ornament of Gnosis); and the Tattvapradīpa (Light of Truth).[38]
  • Buddhakapāla (Skull of Buddha, c. 9-10th century).[38]
  • Namastāraikaviṃśatistotra (Praise to Tārā with Twenty-One Verses of Homage)
  • Vajramrta Tantra (Adamantine Nectar, c. 9th century).[38]
  • Jñānatilakayoginī Tantra (The Tilaka of Gnosis, a Yoginī Tantra)
  • Vajrapãṇyabhiṣeka Tantra
  • Kālacakra Tantra (Wheel of Time, c. 11th century).[38]
  • Caṇḍamahā­roṣaṇa Tantra (Fiery Great Wrathful One, c. 10-11th century Nepal).[38]
  • Sampuṭa Tantra (Kiss Tantra)
  • Śrīsaṃvarakhasama Tantra (Glorious Sky-like Great Bliss Tantra)
  • Vajraḍāka Tantra
  • Vārāhyabhibodhana Tantra (Awakening of Varahi)
  • Vajrabhairavavidāraṇa Tantra (The Tantra of Vajrabhairava's Destruction)
  • Āryatārā­kurukullā­kalpa (The Practice Manual of Noble Tārā Kurukullā)
  • Mahākāla Tantra
  • Tārāyogini Tantra
  • Kṛṣnayamāri Tantra
  • Raktayamāri Tantra
  • Great Vajrabhairava Tantra
  • Ekajaṭa Tantra
  • Vajrayogini Tantra

Other Indian tantric texts edit

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

There various other types of tantric Buddhist texts composed in India. One class of tantric text that are not always considered tantras but have tantric elements in them are several late Prajñāpāramitā sutras which have numerous tantric or mantrayana elements. These include: the Adhyardhaśatikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra (150 lines), the Heart Sutra (Prajñāpāramitāhṛdaya), the Ekaślokikā prajñāpāramitā, Svalpākṣarā Prajñāpāramitā, Kauśikā Prajñāpāramitā, Saptaślokikā Prajñāpāramitā, the *Prajñāpāramitānāmāṣṭaśataka and the Candragarbha Prajñāpāramitā.[46]

Other "tantric" sutras include the Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra, the source of the famous Mani mantra, and the Śūraṅgama Sūtra, which is included in the Chinese Tripitaka's Esoteric Sutra category.[47] The Śūraṅgama text contains indic materials, but may have been compiled or heavily edited in China.

Another class of tantric texts are verses, songs and other original compositions by tantric sages known as mahasiddhas ("greatly accomplished ones"). Their tantric songs, variously called dohā (rhyming couplets), caryāgīti (songs of realization), and vajragīti, were often grouped together into collections, like the proto-Bengali Caryapāda and Saraha's Dohakośa.[48] There are various works on these tantric sages. Sāṅkrtyāyana lists the following important siddhas: Saraha, (Nāgārjuna), (Sabarapa), Luīpa, Dārikāpa, (Vajra-ghaṇṭāpa), Kūrmapā, Jālandharapā, (Kaṃha(pā) Caryapā), Guhyapā (Vijayapa), Tilopa, Naropa.[31] There are longer lists which contain eighty four mahasiddhas in works such as Abhayadatta Śrī's History of the Eighty-four Mahasiddhas (Caturasitisiddha pravrtti).[31]

Another class of verse tantric works are hymns (stotras) to specific deities.[49]

Yet another class of texts are ritual manuals and collections of rites or sādhanas (practices).[49] One example of these kinds of collections is the Sādhanamālā (Garland of Sādhanas) which contains numerous sādhanas composed by various Indian tantric masters. Another example is Abhayakaragupta's Niṣpannayogāvalī, which contains details on 26 different mandalas.[50]

Indian Tantric authors edit

 
A Tibetan illustration of Ratnākaraśānti (c. 11th century), an influential Buddhist philosopher and tantric scholar practitioner who studied at Vikramashila, a major center of tantric studies.

As Buddhist Tantra became more widely practiced in the middle of the seventh century, pandits (scholars) at mainstream Buddhist institutions like Nālandā, Vikramaśilā and Somapura began to write treatises, commentaries and other works on Vajrayana Buddhism. Other tantric works were written by lay yogis, yoginis, and mahasiddhas which were outside of the traditional monastic institutions. Another important site for the development of Buddhist tantric literature was Kashmir, a major center for tantric practice (both Buddhist and non-buddhist, such as Trika Saiva Tantra).

Benoytosh Bhattacharyya notes that there are two main chronological lists of prominent Indian Tantric authors, the first from Tāranātha's works (c. 1575–1634) and the second from Kazi Dawasamdup's introduction to the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra.[51]

Tāranātha's list:[51]

  1. Padmavajra (c.693), author of the Guhyasiddhi
  2. Anangavajra (c.705), author of the Prajñopāyaviniścayasiddhi
  3. Indrabhūti (c.717), author of the Jñānasiddhi
  4. Bhagavatī Lakṣmī (c.729) or Lakṣmīṃkarā, female author of the Advayasiddhi and the *Sahaja-siddhipaddhati
  5. Lilavajra (c.741)
  6. Darikapa (c.753)
  7. Sahajayoginī (c.765)
  8. Ḍombi Heruka or Ḍombipa (c.777)

Kazi Dawasamdup's list:[51]

  1. Saraha, also known as Rāhula (c. 633), a famous author of esoteric dohas
  2. Ārya Nāgārjuna, a tantric commentator to the Guhyasamāja who authored the Pañcakrama.[52] Not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name.
  3. Śabaripa (c.657)
  4. Luipa (c.669)
  5. Vajraghaṇṭā (c.681)
  6. Kācchapa (c.693)
  7. Jalandharipa (c.705), wrote a commentary to the Hevajra tantra
  8. Kr̥ṣṇācārya (c.717)
  9. Guhya (c.729)
  10. Vijayapa (c.741)
  11. Tilopa
  12. Nāropā

Other important Indian tantric authors include:

  • Buddhaguhya, wrote a commentary on the Mahavairocana Tantra
  • Mañjuśrīmitra (8th century), an important author on non-conceptual meditation which is a precursor to later Tibetan Dzogchen texts. He wrote The Transcendent State of Bodhicitta (Tibetan: Byang chub sems bsgom pa), considered a key work of early Dzogchen Semde literature.
  • Vimalamitra (8th century), wrote commentaries on the Guhyagarbha tantra and is also associated with translations of Dzogchen Semde texts
  • Padmasambhava (8th century), wrote a commentary on the 13th chapter of the Guhyagarbha tantra, a work on Mahayoga, and Garland of Views, a doxographic work.[53]
  • Śāntarakṣita (725–788), whose authorship of the Tantric work Tattvasiddhi is attributed by various authors, but this is debated by scholars such as Ernst Steinkellner.[54]
  • Vilāsavajra, 8-9th century author of the Namamantrarthavalokini, a commentary on the Mañjuśrīnāmasamgīti.[55]
  • Jñānapāda, also known as Buddhajñāna, Buddhaśrījñāna, *Buddhajñānapāda, *Śrījñānapāda (fl. c. 770–820 CE). He was a very influential tantric author and a commentator to the Guhyasamājatantra. A key work of his is the Mukhāgama, a collection of his teachings and the Ātmasādhanāvatāra, a major tantric treatise.[56]
  • Virūpa, a famed yogin and author. He is likely the author of the Amṛtasiddhi, the source of the earliest system of Hatha yoga
  • Āryadeva, author of the Lamp that Integrates the Practices (Caryāmelāpakapradīpa), a commentary on the Guhyasamāja Tantra.[57] Not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name.
  • Candrakīrti, 9th century author of the Pradīpodyotananāmaṭīkā, an extensive Guhyasamāja commentary.[58] He is not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name.
  • Sakyamitra, commentator on the Guhyasamāja Tantra
  • Nagabodhi, commentator on the Guhyasamāja Tantra
  • Ānandagarbha, author of the Vajrajvālodayā, a sādhanā manual
  • Bhavyakīrti, 10th century author of a commentary on the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra, the Śrīcakrasamvarapañjikā-śūramanojñā-nāma.[54]
  • Sraddhakaravarman, commentator on the Guhyasamāja
  • Devapāla, a 9th emperor of the Palas, and author of Śrīcakrasaṃvara-sādhana-sarva-śula-nāma-ṭīkā, a large Cakrasamvāratantra commentary.[59]
  • Bhavabhaṭṭa, 10th century author of the Śrīcakrasaṁvarapañjikā, a Cakrasamvāratantra commentary
  • Jayabhadra, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Durjayacandra, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Vajrapani, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Tathagataraksita, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Bhavabadra, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Viravajra, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Manibhadra, Cakrasamvāratantra commentator
  • Śraddhākaravarman, a Guhyasamāja commentator and author of Yogānattaratantrārthāvatārasaṃgraha [60]
  • Prasantajnana, Guhyasamāja commentator
  • Vimalagupta, Guhyasamāja commentator
  • Cilupa, Guhyasamāja commentator
  • Vajrahasa, Guhyasamāja commentator
  • Kāṇha, author of the Yogaratnamālā on the Hevajra Tantra.[61]
  • Bhadrapāda, author of the Śrīhevajravyākhyākhyāvivaraṇa, on the Hevajra Tantra
  • Vajragarbha, author of the Ṣaṭsāhasrikā-Hevajra-ṭīkā
  • Ratnakīrti, 11th century
  • Ratnākaraśānti (i.e. Santipa), wrote the Muktāvalī, a commentary on the Hevajra and the Hevajrasādhanopāyikā
  • Vāgīśvarakīrti, a well known tantric author who was colleague of Ratnākaraśānti at Vikramaśīla[62]
  • Maitrīpāda (c.  1007–1085), a.k.a. Advayavajra, author of several influential works on meditation
  • Pundarika (11th-century), a commentator on the Kalachakra who wrote the Vimalaprabhā (Stainless Light)
  • Sucandra, wrote a Kalachakra commentary in sixty thousand stanzas
  • Hevajratantra-Yogaratnamālā, a Hevajra commentary by Kr̥ṣṇavajrapāda (11th century)
  • Abhayākaragupta, 11th-early 12th century CE, wrote numerous tantric texts like Vajrāvali and Kālacakrāvatāra.
  • Dīpaṅkaraśrījñāna, also known as Atīśa (c. 982–1054), who was influential in the transmission of Buddhism to Tibet. He most famous for his Bodhipathapradīpa.

East Asian tantric literature edit

Tantric Buddhism arrived in China during the Tang dynasty, when numerous esoteric works were translated into Chinese.[63] During this era, three great tantric masters (vajracharyas) came from India to China: Śubhakarasiṃha (637–735), Vajrabodhi (671–741) and Amoghavajra (705–774). They worked on translations of classic tantras like the Vairocanābhisaṃbodhi Sūtra and the Vajrasekhara Sutra, and also composed practice manuals and commentaries in Chinese.[64] They are considered to be the founding patriarchs of Chinese Esoteric Buddhism and their writings are central to the East Asian Mantrayana traditions.

The tradition was passed on from later figures like Huiguo to various Japanese Budhist disciples who founded mantrayana lineages in Japan. One important figure is Kūkai (774–835), the founder of the Shingon school. Kūkai's numerous works and commentaries on tantric practice are foundational texts for the Shingon tradition. One of the most important works of Kūkai is his magnum opus, the Jūjū shinron (Treatise on Ten Levels of Mind), along with its summary, the Hizō hōyaku (Precious Key to the Secret Treasury).[65]

The Tendai school meanwhile also maintains its own collection of Mantrayana texts, commentaries and practice manuals, composed by traditional figures like Saicho, Ennin and Annen. The original works of Annen (841–889?) are particularly important for Tendai esotericism, especially his Shingonshū kyōjigi (On the Meaning of Teachings and Times in Esoteric Buddhism) and the Taizōkongō bodaishingi ryaku mondōshō (Abbreviated Discussion on the Meaning of Bodhicitta according to the Garbha and Vajra realms) [66]

Tibetan tantric literature edit

As Vajrayana Buddhism developed in Tibet (beginning in the 8th century CE), Tibetan Buddhists also began to compose Vajrayana scriptures, commentaries and other works. Eventually, a vast literature of original Tibetan Vajrayana compositions developed. There are many types of indigenous Tibetan tantric literature. Each school of Tibetan Buddhism maintains their own collections of texts composed by the lineage masters of their tradition and considered to be canonical by their sect. These include commentarial works, original treatises, meditation manuals, sadhanas, ritual texts, poems and hymns, as well as new revelations (such as treasure texts and "pure vision" texts).

 
Part of the early Dzogchen 'Semde' text called The Cuckoo of Rigpa, found at Dunhuang.

The Nyingma school for example, maintains a large collection of texts which are part of their "Dzogchen" (Great Perfection) tradition. This class of tantric Buddhist texts is divided into three divisions: the "Mind Series" (Semde, the earliest Dzogchen texts, c. 9th century), which includes tantras like the Kulayarāja Tantra (All Creating King), the "Space Series" (Longde, c. 11th–14th centuries), and the "Esoteric Instructions" series (Menngagde, c. 11th–14th centuries), which include the Seventeen Tantras and the Vima Nyingthig.[67] The Nyingma school also maintains other collections of texts called "Terma" (Treasure Texts). These texts were revealed by "treasure revealers" (tertons) at different times in Tibetan history. Examples include the Bardo Thödol (the "Tibetan Book of the Dead"), the Longchen Nyingthig, Dudjom Tersar and the Yuthok Nyingthig.

The Kagyu school on the other hand maintains several collections of tantric texts which are unique to their school. These include the Collected works of Milarepa (Mila Gnubum, which includes his many songs), the Collected works of Gampopa (Dagpo Kabum, including Jewel Ornament of Liberation), and, for the Karma Kagyu school, the works of lineage masters like the Karmapas. The Kagyu tradition emphasizes the esoteric practice of Mahamudra, and as such, they also maintain many collections of texts that focus on this method. The seventh Karmapa Chödrak Gyatso (1454- 1506) collected many Indian Mahamudra sources into the three volume collection called The Indian Mahāmudrā Treatises (Tib. Phyag rgya chen po 'i rgya gzhung).[68]

In the Gelug school, the tantric works of the founder Tsongkhapa and his direct disciples are generally seen as foundational texts. The Sakya school and the Jonang school likewise maintain collections of the tantric works of their founding figures, such as Sakya Pandita and Dolpopa respectively.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Gray, D.  (2016, April 05). Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion. Retrieved 19 Mar. 2024, from https://oxfordre.com/religion/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.001.0001/acrefore-9780199340378-e-59.
  2. ^ Wayman 2008, p. 23.
  3. ^ a b c d e Williams, Tribe and Wynne; Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, chapter 7
  4. ^ a b Hodge 2003, pp. 14–15.
  5. ^ a b c d Gray 2023, p. 13.
  6. ^ a b Orzech, Sørensen & Payne 2011, p. 20.
  7. ^ a b Gray 2023, pp. 21–24.
  8. ^ a b c Gray, David B.; Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism
  9. ^ Sanderson, Alexis. "The Śaiva Age — The Rise and Dominance of Śaivism during the Early Medieval Period." In:Genesis and Development of Tantrism, edited by Shingo Einoo, Tokyo: University of Tokyo, Institute of Oriental Culture, March 2009, pp. 41–349.
  10. ^ Gray 2023, p. 15.
  11. ^ Gray 2023, p. 14.
  12. ^ Wallis, Christopher; THE TANTRIC AGE: A Comparison Of Shaiva And Buddhist Tantra, February, 2016
  13. ^ “A Crisis of Doxography: How Tibetans Organized Tantra During the 8th-12th Centuries,” Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 28.1 (2005): 115–181.
  14. ^ Gray 2023, pp. 25, 28–30.
  15. ^ Gray 2023, p. 30.
  16. ^ a b Gray 2023, p. 35.
  17. ^ Gray 2023, p. 37.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Dalton, Jacob. A Crisis of Doxography: How Tibetans Organized Tantra during the 8th–12th Centuries. Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, Volume 28 • Number 1 • 2005.
  19. ^ Tsong-kha-pa, The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra, Part One in Tsong-kha-pa et al. (2016), pp. 63 - 155.
  20. ^ Yamasaki, Taiko (1988). Shingon: Japanese Esoteric Buddhism, p. 35, Boston/London: Shambala Publications.
  21. ^ a b "Tantric Literature: Overview South Asia" Silk (ed.) et al. Brill's Encyclopedia of Buddhism, BRILL, 2015.
  22. ^ Wayman 2008, p. 14.
  23. ^ Richard McBride (2004). Robert Buswell (ed.). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Macmillan Reference. pp. 21, 180, 217–218, 253. ISBN 978-0-02-865718-9.
  24. ^ Richard K. Payne (2006). Tantric Buddhism in East Asia. Simon and Schuster. pp. 14–17. ISBN 978-0-86171-487-2.
  25. ^ Isaacson 1998, p. 3.
  26. ^ a b Gray 2023, p. 7.
  27. ^ Gray 2023, pp. 26–27, 51.
  28. ^ a b Gray 2023, pp. 64–68.
  29. ^ Gray 2023, p. 8.
  30. ^ Gray 2023, pp. 69–70.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h Hartzell, James. (2012). The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras: "The Samādhi of the Plowed Row". Pacific World Journal. Third Series. 63-178.
  32. ^ a b Gray 2023, p. 74.
  33. ^ Wayman 2008, p. 3.
  34. ^ Gray 2023, pp. 74–77.
  35. ^ Gray 2023, p. 77.
  36. ^ Dharmachakra Translation Committee. "The Root Manual of the Rites of Mañjuśrī - Introduction / 84000 Reading Room". 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda. Retrieved 2024-03-22.
  37. ^ "Action tantras | 84000 Reading Room". 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda. Retrieved 2024-03-20.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Tsunehiko Sugiki, "On the Chronology of the Buddhist Tantras" in Payne, Richard K., and Glen A. Hayes (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Tantric Studies (online edn, Oxford Academic, 18 Aug. 2022), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549889.001.0001, accessed 20 Mar. 2024.
  39. ^ James B. Apple, “Atiśa’s System of Twenty-One Tārās”, Revue d’Etudes Tibétaines, no. 66, Avril 2023, pp. 424-463.
  40. ^ "Conduct tantras | 84000 Reading Room". 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda. Retrieved 2024-03-21.
  41. ^ Yamasaki, Taiko (1988). Shingon: Japanese Esoteric Buddhism, p. 72. Boston/London: Shambala Publications.
  42. ^ a b Szántó & Griffiths (2015), Sarvabuddhasamāyogaḍākinījālaśaṁvara, in Brill's Encyclopaedia of Buddhism, vol. I.
  43. ^ "Yoga tantras | 84000 Reading Room". 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda. Retrieved 2024-03-21.
  44. ^ "Unexcelled Yoga tantras | 84000 Reading Room". 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda. Retrieved 2024-03-20.
  45. ^ Gray 2023, p. 33.
  46. ^ Bianchini, Francesco (2020). Tradition and Innovation in late South Asian Buddhism: The Impact of Spell Practices on the Recasting of Prajnaparamita Scriptures, pp. 65-75. St John’s College, The University of Oxford.
  47. ^ Taisho 945 is found in Volume 19 of the Taisho Tripitaka."Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō" 大正新脩大藏經 [Taishō Shinshū Tripitaka]. CBETA 漢文大藏經 (in Chinese). This is an index to the Taisho Tripitaka - nb Volume 19 is listed as 密教部 or Esoteric Sutra Section is where Taisho 945 (Surangama Sutra) is located.
  48. ^ Lara Braitstein. The Adamantine Songs: Vajragiti by Saraha. American Institute of Buddhist Studies. 2014
  49. ^ a b Isaacson 1998.
  50. ^ Tadeusz Skorupski. Jyotirmañjari of Abhayåkaragupta. The Buddhist Forum , Volume VI,The Institute of Buddhist StudiesTring, UK, 2001, 183-221
  51. ^ a b c Bhattacharyya, Benoytosh. An Introduction to Buddhist Esoterism, Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1980, India, pp. 62-63.
  52. ^ Yün-hua, Jan. “Nāgārjuna, One or More? A New Interpretation of Buddhist Hagiography.” History of Religions, vol. 10, no. 2, 1970, pp. 139–55. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1061906. Accessed 25 Mar. 2024.
  53. ^ 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.
  54. ^ a b Gray, David B; Compassionate Violence?: On the Ethical Implications of Tantric Buddhist Ritual; Journal of Buddhist Ethics, ISSN 1076-9005, Volume 14, 2007
  55. ^ Tribe, Anthony; Tantric Buddhist Practice in India: Vilāsavajra’s commentary on the Mañjuśrīnāmasamgīti
  56. ^ Dalton, Catherine and Szántó, Péter-Dániel, “Jñānapāda”, in: Brill's Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online, Editor-in-Chief: Volume Editors: Jonathan A. Silk, Richard Bowring, Vincent Eltschinger, Oskar von Hinüber. Consulted online on 26 March 2024 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2467-9666_enbo_COM_2037> First print edition: 20190619
  57. ^ "Aryadeva's Lamp that Integrates the Practices (Caryamelapakapradipa): The Gradual Path of Vajrayana Buddhism according to the Esoteric Community Noble Tradition". Tibet House US | NYC - Official Website. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
  58. ^ "Pradīpoddyotana-nāma-ṭīkā - Buddha-Nature". buddhanature.tsadra.org. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
  59. ^ Hartzell, James. (2012). The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras: "The Samādhi of the Plowed Row". Pacific World Journal. Third Series. p. 87.
  60. ^ "Śraddhākaravarman - Buddha-Nature". buddhanature.tsadra.org. Retrieved 2024-03-21.
  61. ^ Hartzell, James. (2012). The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras: "The Samādhi of the Plowed Row". Pacific World Journal. Third Series. p.93.
  62. ^ Schneider, Johannes, "Vāgīśvarakīrti", Brill's Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online, Brill, retrieved 2024-03-25
  63. ^ Orzech, Sørensen & Payne 2011, p. 4.
  64. ^ Orzech, Sørensen & Payne 2011, p. 274.
  65. ^ Yamasaki, Taiko (1988). Shingon: Japanese Esoteric Buddhism, p. 32. Boston/London: Shambala Publications.
  66. ^ Dolce, Lucia; Mano, Shinya (2011). "Godai'in Annen", in Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia, 2011, Leiden: Brill NV. p. 770.
  67. ^ Dudjom Rinpoche (1991), The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, Vol. 1, pp. 493–498. Wisdom Publications, ISBN 978-0-86171-087-4
  68. ^ Mathes, Klaus-Dieter (2015). A Fine Blend of Mahāmudrā and Madhyamaka: Maitrīpa's Collection of Texts on Non-conceptual Realization (Amanasikāra), p. 2. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. ISBN 978-3700177869.

Works cited edit

  • Gray, David B. (2023). The Buddhist Tantras: A Guide. New York: Oxford Academic. ISBN 978-0-19-762383-1.
  • Hodge, Stephen (2003). The Mahā-Vairocana-Abhisaṃbodhi Tantra with Buddhaguhya's Commentary. London: RoutledgeCurzon.[ISBN missing]
  • Isaacson, Harunaga (1998). "Tantric Buddhism in India (from c. 800 to c. 1200)" (PDF). Buddhismus in Geschichte und Gegenwart. II. University of Hamburg: 23–49.
  • Orzech, Charles D.; Sørensen, Henrik H.; Payne, Richard K., eds. (2011). Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill.[ISBN missing]
  • Wayman, Alex (2008) [1973]. The Buddhist Tantras: Light on Indo-Tibetan Esotericism. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-46163-4.

Further reading edit

  • Davidson, Ronald M. (2002). Indian Esoteric Buddhism: A Social History of the Tantric Movement. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Davidson, Ronald M. (2005). Tibetan Renaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Gray, David (2007). The Cakrasamvara Tantra: A Study and Annotated Translation. New York: American Institute of Buddhist Studies.
  • Shinohara, Koichi (2014). Spells, Images, and Maṇḍalas: Tracing the Evolution of Esoteric Buddhist Rituals. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Snellgrove, David L. (1987). Indo-Tibetan Buddhism: Indian Buddhists and Their Tibetan Successors. London: Serindia.
  • Wedemeyer, Christian K. (2013). Making Sense of Tantric Buddhism: History, Semiology, & Transgression in the Indian Traditions. New York: Columbia University Press.

External links edit

  • 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
  • Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon

buddhist, tantric, literature, hinduism, tantric, texts, tantras, hinduism, practice, tantra, tantra, refers, vast, varied, literature, vajrayāna, mantrayāna, buddhist, traditions, earliest, these, works, genre, indian, buddhist, tantric, scriptures, variously. For Hinduism Tantric texts see Tantras Hinduism For the practice of Tantra see Tantra Buddhist tantric literature refers to the vast and varied literature of the Vajrayana or Mantrayana Buddhist traditions The earliest of these works are a genre of Indian Buddhist tantric scriptures variously named Tantras Sutras and Kalpas which were composed from the 7th century CE onwards 1 They are followed by later tantric commentaries called panjikas and ṭikas original compositions by Vajrayana authors called prakaraṇas and upadesas sadhanas practice texts ritual manuals kalpas or vidhis collections of tantric songs dohas odes stotra or hymns and other related works Tantric Buddhist literature survives in various languages including Sanskrit Tibetan and Chinese Most Indian sources were composed in Sanskrit but numerous tantric works were also composed in other languages like Tibetan and Chinese A manuscript of theVajravali a tantric commentary by Abhayakaragupta manuscript c 11th or 12th century CE Sanskrit in Nepalaksara script Contents 1 Overview 1 1 History 1 2 Origin myths 2 Texts 2 1 Classes of tantric texts 2 2 Indian tantras 2 2 1 List of Indian Buddhist tantras 2 2 1 1 Action tantra Kriyatantra 2 2 1 2 Conduct tantras Caryatantra 2 2 1 3 Yoga tantras 2 2 1 4 Anuttarayoga Mahayoga or Yogini Tantras 2 3 Other Indian tantric texts 2 4 Indian Tantric authors 2 5 East Asian tantric literature 2 6 Tibetan tantric literature 3 See also 4 Footnotes 4 1 Works cited 5 Further reading 6 External linksOverview editHistory edit Buddhist Tantric texts may have begun appearing during the Gupta Period 320 550 CE 2 3 However the earliest known datable Buddhist Tantra is the Awakening of Mahavairocana Tantra which was mentioned and collected by the Chinese pilgrim Wu xing 無行 c 680 CE 4 5 Wu xing also reports that at the time he visited India 7th century the Mantrayana teaching about mantra Chinese zhenyan jiaofa 真言教法 was already very popular 4 Amoghavajra 704 774 a scholar translator who traveled to China reports a canon of eighteen tantras during the 8th century 5 Over time the number of texts increased with numerous Tantric scholars writing commentaries and practice manuals Buddhist Tantric traditions draw on the Mahayana sutras and older Buddhist esoteric practices like dharaṇi recitation texts 6 1 Furthermore earlier Buddhist traditions had maintained a collection of scriptures focused on magical practices called the Vidyadhara Piṭaka Wizardry Collection which included various types of rituals and spells vidya 7 In the account of a Buddhist spell master by Yijing he even mentions erotic practices associated with this collection 7 Buddhist tantras were also influenced by non buddhist traditions including Saiva and Sakta sources the cults of local deities and rites related to yakshas and nagas 6 8 1 The Buddhist Yogini tantras contain the most extensive borrowing from Saiva and Sakta sources In some cases whole passages have been copied This process has been studied by Alexis Sanderson 9 Scholars like Phyllis Granoff have termed this extensive borrowing of non buddhist forms ritual eclecticism 10 Buddhist Tantric works continued to be produced in India until the 1500s 11 Many early Buddhist Tantric texts later termed action Tantras kriya tantra are mostly collections of magical mantras or phrases for mostly worldly ends called mantrakalpas mantra manuals and they do not call themselves Tantras 12 Later Tantric texts from the eighth century onward termed variously Yogatantra Mahayoga and Yogini Tantras advocated union with a deity deity yoga sacred sounds mantras techniques for manipulation of the subtle body and other secret methods with which to achieve swift Buddhahood 13 Some Tantras contain antinomian and transgressive practices such as ingesting alcohol and other forbidden substances as well as sexual rituals 3 Some of these later Buddhist Tantras especially the Yoginitantras are clearly influenced by Saiva Vidyapiṭha scriptures 1 Buddhist Tantra quickly spread out of India into nearby countries like Tibet and Nepal in the eighth century as well as to Southeast Asia and East Asia through overland and maritime trade routes 1 Buddhist Tantra arrived in China during the Tang Dynasty where it was known as Tangmi and was brought to Japan by Kukai 774 835 where it is known as Shingon 8 Tantric texts were brought to Tibet in two historical periods the eighth century and the 11th century which are called the early translations and second dissemination texts 8 Buddhist tantra remains the main Buddhist tradition in Nepal Mongolia and Tibet where it is known as Vajrayana Origin myths edit Buddhist sources told various myths about the origin of the tantras One origin myth states that the tantras were initially taught by the Buddha but were hidden away Then they were rediscovered by Nagarjuna in an iron stupa in south India 14 Other origin myths focus around a mythic king of Oḍiyana named Indrabhuti who received the tantras with the aid of Vajrapani 15 Furthermore as Gray writes there is another major genre of tantric Buddhist origin myths which we might term conversion myths since they feature the founding figure an awakened buddha converting Saiva Hindu deities to Buddhism 16 These myths were useful in explaining the many Hindu elements which were found in some Buddhist tantric texts 16 In one such myth told by Subhakarasiṃha 善无畏 637 735 and Yixing 一行 683 727 Vairocana Buddha turns himself into Mahakala in order to swallow and subdue Shiva and the ḍakinis who were killing and eating humans in order to obtain the essence in their hearts After being subdued these figures were said to have become Buddhist 17 Texts edit nbsp Karaṇḍavyuha Sutra manuscript c 14th century Newari with a miniature illustration of AvalokitesvaraClasses of tantric texts edit There are various ways to categorize and schematize the various tantric primary sources The earliest Indian classification scheme is found in the work of the commentator Buddhaguhya c 700 18 He outlined just two types of tantras outward oriented Kriya tantras which contain much ritual directed as external objects like a Buddha statue and the Yoga tantras which focus on inward contemplative practices in which the yogi visualizes themselves as the deity 18 The commentator Vilasavajra meanwhile sometimes added a third category Carya which was intermediate between Kriya and Yoga In another text meanwhile Vilasavajra discusses a different third category Upaya which referred to more transgressive tantras that made use of sexual yoga 18 The Classification of Tantras in Tibetan Buddhism differs by tradition All traditions agree on three types Kriyayoga Caryayoga and Yogatantra In the Ancient Nyingma school these three outer tantras are followed three further inner tantras Mahayoga Anuyoga and Atiyoga In the New Translation Sarma schools the higher classes are called supreme yoga tantras anuttarayogatantra 19 The Sarma classification systems was constructed by Indo Tibetan scholastics and date to the mid 12th century based on Indian works 18 A fourfold schema can be found in the work of the Indian scholar Sraddhakaravarman who writes of four doors to the Vajratana Kriyatantra Caryatantra Yoga tantra and Mahayogatantra 18 He also mentions a further sub class of Mahayoga Niruttarayoga which refers to Mahayoga tantras with mandalas populated by female deities i e the Yogini tantras Ratnakarasanti s 11th century schema contains the same four latter classes but adds Niruttarayoga as its own fifth category 18 Kanha s Yogaratnamala meanwhile also has four Kriya Carya Yoga Niruttarayoga Thus the Tibetan schema is based on these later Indic classifications schemes 18 In Tibetan traditions the most important tantras are those of the highest yoga tantra Mahayoga or Atiyoga classification There are also various other classes of tantric works such as hagiographies of great masters namtars tantric verse works songs meditation manuals and instructional texts upadesha The Nyingma school also has a special category of scripture which were discovered or revealed in Tibet known as Terma Some of these are classified as tantras but were composed in Tibetan by Tibetans Meanwhile in Shingon Buddhism and Chinese Esoteric Buddhism these classifications are not used These traditions mainly rely on the Mahavairocana Sutra 大日経 Dainichi kyō the Vajrasekhara Sutra 金剛頂経 Kongōchō kyō and the Susiddhikara Sutra 蘇悉地経 Soshitsuji kyō 20 While traditional schemas classify tantric texts based on whether it is focused on kriya ritual action or yoga contemplative practice this does not mean that ritual topics are absent in the yoga tantras which themselves contain extensive sections on ritual Likewise texts labeled kriya tantra also contain teachings on yoga 21 Many tantric Buddhist texts have titles other than Tantra including sutra kalpa rajni stotra and doha The Major Buddhist Tantras also accumulated secondary literature such as Explanatory Tantras vyakhyatantra commentaries panjikas ṭikas etc and sadhana literature which outline specific tantric ritual practices and meditations 22 Dharaṇis are an earlier class of Buddhist texts which are not specifically tantric or Vajrayanist in nature They may be found in classic Mahayana sutras like the Lotus Sutra and thus pre date the development of Buddhist tantra 23 Dharaṇi practices and texts were part of mainstream Mahayana Buddhism well before the rise of Vajrayana and as such are not tantric works nor specifically connected to esoteric or mantrayana Buddhism 24 However some tantras and tantric works do make use of dharaṇis in a broader tantric context and later canonical collections included numerous dharaṇis into the tantra classification Indeed some scholars like Koichi Shinohara argue that the Buddhist tantric literature grew out of the earlier Mahayana dharaṇi texts through a process of gradual expansion and the incorporation of new ritual elements such as mandalas and visualization practices 5 There are between 1500 and 2000 surviving Indian Buddhist Tantric texts in Sanskrit and over 2000 more Tantras solely survive in translation mostly Tibetan or Chinese 25 In the Tibetan canons there are 450 Tantras in the Kanjur collection and 2400 in the Tengyur 3 Indian tantras edit nbsp Chinese translation of the Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Awakening of Vairocana nbsp The Garbhadhatu maṇḍala derived from the teachings of the Mahavairocana Tantra Buddha Vairocana is located in the center The most important texts of the Vajrayana Buddhist traditions are the tantras The term tantra has many meanings but one of the most common meaning is simply a specific type of divinely revealed text or scripture In the Buddhist context tantras were considered to be the words of a Buddha or bodhisattva buddhavacana 26 Unlike Mahayana sutras tantras are quite technical outlining the details of rituals such as how to construct a mandala 26 They also contain unique tantric terminology and coded language sandhya bhaṣa which is metaphorical and secretive They often omit important details and misdirect the reader thus maintaining secrecy and requiring further commentary to be properly understood 27 Their original language was Sanskrit but not classical Sanskrit Paṇinean per se since tantras often include different word forms or grammar associated with regional Middle Indic languages like Apabraṃsa 28 Apabraṃsa is also often used for tantric songs and poems 28 Tantric scriptures were also considered to be secret by tantric Buddhist communities and would only be revealed to disciples which had gone through the necessary initiations 29 Buddhist tantras promise both the ability to attain worldly magical powers laukikasiddhi and the surepeme achievement lokottarasiddhi of Buddhahood in one lifetime 5 Some of the unique themes and ideas found in the Buddhist Tantras is the revaluation of the body and its use in attaining great bliss mahasukha a revaluation of the role of women yoginis female yogis and female deities 30 3 The tantras also contain a revaluation of supposedly negative mental states like desire and anger and antinominan behavior like drinking alcohol eating meat living in charnel grounds etc which can be used in the service of liberation This is manifested in the promotion of tantric fierce deities As the Hevajra Tantra says the world is bound by passion also by passion it is released 3 Some tantras especially those of the Yoginitantra genre have many erotic and sexual elements The Guhyasamaja tantra Hevajra Caṇḍamaharoṣaṇa Saṃvarodaya and Sampuṭikatantraraja all open as follows Thus I have heard at one time the Bhagavan resided in the vulvas of the women who are the vajras of the body speech and mind of all the Tathagatas evaṃ maya srutam ekasmin samaye bhagavan sarvva tathagata kaya vak citta vajra yoni bhageṣu vijahara 31 Regarding their philosophical view the Buddhist tantras generally follow the view of the Mahayana sutras especially the theories of emptiness buddha nature and luminosity 32 33 According to the tantras to reach Buddhahood one needs to recognize the true nature of one s mind the buddha nature which is a non dual empty luminosity prabhasvara which is pure blissful and free of all concepts 34 The true nature is the same in Buddhas and sentient beings and is thus the ultimate continuum tantra The Guhyasamaja Tantra describes the ultimate nature of mind thus Devoid of all existents free of the aggregates the sense objects and media and subject and object one s mind being identical to the selflessness of dharmas is originally unarisen and has emptiness as its nature 32 This ultimate nature can be accessed through skillful means especially the contemplative tantric techniques taught in the tantras 35 When it comes to practical content tantras contain numerous explanations of yogic practice and ritual actions Common topics related to spiritual practice include how to make mandalas how to perform ritual initiations abhisheka explanation of mantras fire ritual homa special observances carya descriptions of tantric feasts ganacakra descriptions of tantric deities deity yoga subtle body based practices of the perfection stage and teachings on the yoginis 21 List of Indian Buddhist tantras edit The following is a list of some major Buddhist Tantras from the classic period of Indian Buddhist tantrism as well as other tantric scriptures like sutras and dharanis The list is organized according to the traditional classification used in the Tibetan canon Action tantra Kriyatantra edit The scriptures in this category are considered to emphasize ritual action kriya preparation of ritual spaces textual recitation chanting of mantras dharaṇis vidyas and other texts and the external worship of deities 36 Key Action tantras include 37 31 The Heart Sutra The Dharaṇi of Vaiḍuryaprabha Manjusri mulakalpa Root Manual of the Rites of Manjusri an early mantra kalpa compendium of mantras compiled in stages beginning in the seventh century 38 Suvarṇaprabhasottamasutra Golden Light Sutra Maha mayuri vidyarajni The Queen of Incantations The Great Peahen one of the five texts in the Pancarakṣa scriptural collection The Supreme Accomplishment of Invincible Averting Sitatapatra Born from the Uṣṇiṣa of the Tathagata which contains a protective spell vidya Manjusrinamaṣṭasatakam The Hundred and Eight Names of Manjusri The Bhuta ḍamara Tantra c 7th century an esoteric manual on magic and exorcism focused on Vajrapaṇi as Bhutaḍamara Tamer of Spirits 38 The Aparimitayurjnana Sutra Amoghapasa kalparaja sutra The Noble Sovereign Ritual of Amoghapasa the source of the mantra of light The Dharaṇi of the Eleven Faced Avalokitesvara Avalokitesvaraikadasamukhadharaṇi Nilakaṇṭhadharaṇi Tara Tantra or Sarvatathagatamatṛtaravisvakarmabhavanamatantra Tantra Which is the Source for All the Functions of Tara Mother of All the Tathagatas 39 Tara devi namaṣṭasataka The Hundred and Eight Names of Tara Subahuparipṛccha tantra The Tantra of Subahu s Questions mid sixth to mid seventh centuries 38 Conduct tantras Caryatantra edit Scriptures in this category are seen as containing equal ritual and meditation elements They mostly focus on Vairocana Vajrapaṇi and Acala Some key scriptures 40 31 Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Tantra Awakening of Great Vairocana terminus ante quem c 7th century 38 Acalamahakrodharajasya sarvatathagatasya balaparimitaviravinayasvakhyato nama kalpaḥ The Practice Described as the Taming of the Great Wrathful King Acala Vajrapaṇyabhiṣeka mahatantra Vajrapaṇi Empowerment Tantra c early 7th century 38 Bhagavannilambaradharavajrapaṇi Tantra The Tantra of the Blue Clad Blessed Vajrapaṇi Yoga tantras edit These tantras focus on meditation i e yoga However unlike the Anuttara or Mahayoga tantras these scriptures do not contain much wrathful antinomian or sexual elements and instead focus on themes of ritual purity mandalic buddhafields and peaceful deities and Buddhas like Vairocana Buddha and Vajrasattva Mantras mandalas and mudras are key elements of the practices taught in these tantras 41 42 Some key Yoga tantras are 43 31 Sarvatathagatatattvasaṃgraha sutra Compendium of the Reality of All Tathagatas c 7th century 38 Vajrasekhara Sutra Adamantine Peak 8th century a collection of tantric texts 38 Susiddhikara sutra mid sixth to mid seventh centuries 38 Sarvarahasya nama tantraraja Universal Secret Sovereign Tantra c 8th century 38 Sarvadurgatiparisodhanatejoraja The Tantra Purifying Evil Destinies terminus ante quem c 8th century 38 Prajnaparamitanayasatapancasatika The Principles of the Perfection of Wisdom in 150 Lines c 7 8th century 38 Anuttarayoga Mahayoga or Yogini Tantras edit nbsp Statue of Saṃvara in union with his consort Vajravarahi c 12th century Bengal The theme of fierce deities in sexual union is commonly found in the anuttarayoga tantras The fourth category of tantric scriptures is considered to be the highest and most powerful class of tantra in Tibetan Buddhism 18 This view is not shared by other Buddhist Mantrayana traditions like Shingon This class of texts is called by different names including Anuttarayogatantra Mahayoga Niruttarayoga and Yogini Tantras 18 They are also often further divided into different sub categories like father mother and non dual tantras 31 Japanese scholars like Tsukamoto further classify these into different families like Akṣobhya kula Vairocana kula Heruka kula Vajra surya kula Padmanartesvara kula Paramasva kula and Vajradhara kula 31 These tantras tend to contain more transgressive elements including sexual themes sexual yoga karmamudra wrathful deities charnel ground imagery the ingestion of taboo substances blood meat alcohol sexual fluids tantric feasts as well as numerous Shaiva and Shakta influences 18 38 The deities in these scriptures often but not always appear as fierce herukas and erotic dakinis Some key tantras in this category include 44 Sarvabuddhasamayoga dakinijalasaṃvara Tantra Ḍakinis Network That Unites All Buddhas early 8th century one of the first Yogini Tantras introduces the practice of gaṇacakra 38 It has been seen by modern scholars as a transitional scripture and a proto yoginitantra 42 Manjusri namasamgiti Chanting the names of Manjusri c 8th century 38 Guhyasamaja Tantra The Esoteric Community Tantra c 8th century 38 Advayasamatavijaya Victory of Nondual Equality c 8th century part of the Guhyasamaja tradition 38 The six explanatory tantras vyakhyatantra of the Guhyasamaja tradition The Sandhyavyakaraṇa Explanation of the Intention the Caturdeviparipṛccha The Four Goddessesʼ Inquiry the Vajramala Vajra Rosary the Jnanavajrasamuccaya Gnosis Vajra Compendium and its longer version and the Vajrahṛdayalaṃkara Vajra Heart Adornment 38 Catuṣpiṭha Four Chapters c 9th century the first tantra to teach utkrantiyoga or yogic suicide 38 Mayajala Tantra The Net of Magical Illusion Guhyagarbha Tantra The Secret Womb Tantra the key Mahayoga tantra in the Nyingma tradition Cakrasaṃvara Tantra Supreme Bliss of the Wheels Tantra c 8th to 9th century also called Herukabhidhana Discourse of Heruka or Laghusaṃvara Small Saṃvara This tantra has been shown to contain much content borrowed from Saiva Vidyapiṭha tantras 45 Other tantras in the Cakrasaṃvara cycle Herukabhyudaya Realization of Heruka Abhidhanottara The Continuation of the Abhidhana or Discourse Caturyoginisampuṭa The Union of the Four Yoginis Yoginisaṃcara Yoginisʼ Rotation Vajraḍaka Vajraḍaka and Varahyabhyudaya Realization of Varahi 38 Tantras of the last historical phase of the Cakrasaṃvara cycle The Saṃvarodaya Emergence of the Supreme Bliss the Ḍakarṇava Ocean of Ḍakas the Varahikalpa Ritual Practice of Varahi and the Yoginijala Net of Yoginis 38 Maha maya Tantra Hevajra Tantra c 9th century an influential tantra which introduced key tantric teachings like the innate sahaja the fourfold joy caturananda the subtle body system with four cakras and the three channels avadhuti lalana and rasana and the inner fire Caṇḍali 38 Ḍakinivajrapanjara Ḍakini Vajra Cage an important tantra in the Hevajra cycle of scriptures 38 Sampuṭodbhava Emergence from the Union and the Sampuṭatilaka Ornament of the Emergence from the Union part of the Hevajra cycle 38 Other texts of the Hevajra cycle The Mahamudratilaka Great Seal Ornament the Jnanagarbha Womb of Gnosis the Jnanatilaka Ornament of Gnosis and the Tattvapradipa Light of Truth 38 Buddhakapala Skull of Buddha c 9 10th century 38 Namastaraikaviṃsatistotra Praise to Tara with Twenty One Verses of Homage Vajramrta Tantra Adamantine Nectar c 9th century 38 Jnanatilakayogini Tantra The Tilaka of Gnosis a Yogini Tantra Vajrapaṇyabhiṣeka Tantra Kalacakra Tantra Wheel of Time c 11th century 38 Caṇḍamaha roṣaṇa Tantra Fiery Great Wrathful One c 10 11th century Nepal 38 Sampuṭa Tantra Kiss Tantra Srisaṃvarakhasama Tantra Glorious Sky like Great Bliss Tantra Vajraḍaka Tantra Varahyabhibodhana Tantra Awakening of Varahi Vajrabhairavavidaraṇa Tantra The Tantra of Vajrabhairava s Destruction Aryatara kurukulla kalpa The Practice Manual of Noble Tara Kurukulla Mahakala Tantra Tarayogini Tantra Kṛṣnayamari Tantra Raktayamari Tantra Great Vajrabhairava Tantra Ekajaṭa Tantra Vajrayogini TantraOther Indian tantric texts edit nbsp Caryapada manuscript preserved in the library of Rajshahi College nbsp Eight Mahasiddhas with the bodhisattva Samantabhadra top 1st row l gt r Darikapa Putalipa Upanaha 2nd row Kokilipa and Anangapa 3rd row Lakshmikara Samudra Vyalipa There various other types of tantric Buddhist texts composed in India One class of tantric text that are not always considered tantras but have tantric elements in them are several late Prajnaparamita sutras which have numerous tantric or mantrayana elements These include the Adhyardhasatika Prajnaparamita Sutra 150 lines the Heart Sutra Prajnaparamitahṛdaya the Ekaslokika prajnaparamita Svalpakṣara Prajnaparamita Kausika Prajnaparamita Saptaslokika Prajnaparamita the Prajnaparamitanamaṣṭasataka and the Candragarbha Prajnaparamita 46 Other tantric sutras include the Karaṇḍavyuha Sutra the source of the famous Mani mantra and the Suraṅgama Sutra which is included in the Chinese Tripitaka s Esoteric Sutra category 47 The Suraṅgama text contains indic materials but may have been compiled or heavily edited in China Another class of tantric texts are verses songs and other original compositions by tantric sages known as mahasiddhas greatly accomplished ones Their tantric songs variously called doha rhyming couplets caryagiti songs of realization and vajragiti were often grouped together into collections like the proto Bengali Caryapada and Saraha s Dohakosa 48 There are various works on these tantric sages Saṅkrtyayana lists the following important siddhas Saraha Nagarjuna Sabarapa Luipa Darikapa Vajra ghaṇṭapa Kurmapa Jalandharapa Kaṃha pa Caryapa Guhyapa Vijayapa Tilopa Naropa 31 There are longer lists which contain eighty four mahasiddhas in works such as Abhayadatta Sri s History of the Eighty four Mahasiddhas Caturasitisiddha pravrtti 31 Another class of verse tantric works are hymns stotras to specific deities 49 Yet another class of texts are ritual manuals and collections of rites or sadhanas practices 49 One example of these kinds of collections is the Sadhanamala Garland of Sadhanas which contains numerous sadhanas composed by various Indian tantric masters Another example is Abhayakaragupta s Niṣpannayogavali which contains details on 26 different mandalas 50 Indian Tantric authors edit nbsp A Tibetan illustration of Ratnakarasanti c 11th century an influential Buddhist philosopher and tantric scholar practitioner who studied at Vikramashila a major center of tantric studies As Buddhist Tantra became more widely practiced in the middle of the seventh century pandits scholars at mainstream Buddhist institutions like Nalanda Vikramasila and Somapura began to write treatises commentaries and other works on Vajrayana Buddhism Other tantric works were written by lay yogis yoginis and mahasiddhas which were outside of the traditional monastic institutions Another important site for the development of Buddhist tantric literature was Kashmir a major center for tantric practice both Buddhist and non buddhist such as Trika Saiva Tantra Benoytosh Bhattacharyya notes that there are two main chronological lists of prominent Indian Tantric authors the first from Taranatha s works c 1575 1634 and the second from Kazi Dawasamdup s introduction to the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra 51 Taranatha s list 51 Padmavajra c 693 author of the Guhyasiddhi Anangavajra c 705 author of the Prajnopayaviniscayasiddhi Indrabhuti c 717 author of the Jnanasiddhi Bhagavati Lakṣmi c 729 or Lakṣmiṃkara female author of the Advayasiddhi and the Sahaja siddhipaddhati Lilavajra c 741 Darikapa c 753 Sahajayogini c 765 Ḍombi Heruka or Ḍombipa c 777 Kazi Dawasamdup s list 51 Saraha also known as Rahula c 633 a famous author of esoteric dohas Arya Nagarjuna a tantric commentator to the Guhyasamaja who authored the Pancakrama 52 Not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name Sabaripa c 657 Luipa c 669 Vajraghaṇṭa c 681 Kacchapa c 693 Jalandharipa c 705 wrote a commentary to the Hevajra tantra Kr ṣṇacarya c 717 Guhya c 729 Vijayapa c 741 Tilopa NaropaOther important Indian tantric authors include Buddhaguhya wrote a commentary on the Mahavairocana Tantra Manjusrimitra 8th century an important author on non conceptual meditation which is a precursor to later Tibetan Dzogchen texts He wrote The Transcendent State of Bodhicitta Tibetan Byang chub sems bsgom pa considered a key work of early Dzogchen Semde literature Vimalamitra 8th century wrote commentaries on the Guhyagarbha tantra and is also associated with translations of Dzogchen Semde texts Padmasambhava 8th century wrote a commentary on the 13th chapter of the Guhyagarbha tantra a work on Mahayoga and Garland of Views a doxographic work 53 Santarakṣita 725 788 whose authorship of the Tantric work Tattvasiddhi is attributed by various authors but this is debated by scholars such as Ernst Steinkellner 54 Vilasavajra 8 9th century author of the Namamantrarthavalokini a commentary on the Manjusrinamasamgiti 55 Jnanapada also known as Buddhajnana Buddhasrijnana Buddhajnanapada Srijnanapada fl c 770 820 CE He was a very influential tantric author and a commentator to the Guhyasamajatantra A key work of his is the Mukhagama a collection of his teachings and the Atmasadhanavatara a major tantric treatise 56 Virupa a famed yogin and author He is likely the author of the Amṛtasiddhi the source of the earliest system of Hatha yoga Aryadeva author of the Lamp that Integrates the Practices Caryamelapakapradipa a commentary on the Guhyasamaja Tantra 57 Not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name Candrakirti 9th century author of the Pradipodyotananamaṭika an extensive Guhyasamaja commentary 58 He is not to be confused with the Madhyamaka philosopher of the same name Sakyamitra commentator on the Guhyasamaja Tantra Nagabodhi commentator on the Guhyasamaja Tantra Anandagarbha author of the Vajrajvalodaya a sadhana manual Bhavyakirti 10th century author of a commentary on the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra the Sricakrasamvarapanjika suramanojna nama 54 Sraddhakaravarman commentator on the Guhyasamaja Devapala a 9th emperor of the Palas and author of Sricakrasaṃvara sadhana sarva sula nama ṭika a large Cakrasamvaratantra commentary 59 Bhavabhaṭṭa 10th century author of the Sricakrasaṁvarapanjika a Cakrasamvaratantra commentary Jayabhadra Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Durjayacandra Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Vajrapani Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Tathagataraksita Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Bhavabadra Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Viravajra Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Manibhadra Cakrasamvaratantra commentator Sraddhakaravarman a Guhyasamaja commentator and author of Yoganattaratantrarthavatarasaṃgraha 60 Prasantajnana Guhyasamaja commentator Vimalagupta Guhyasamaja commentator Cilupa Guhyasamaja commentator Vajrahasa Guhyasamaja commentator Kaṇha author of the Yogaratnamala on the Hevajra Tantra 61 Bhadrapada author of the Srihevajravyakhyakhyavivaraṇa on the Hevajra Tantra Vajragarbha author of the Ṣaṭsahasrika Hevajra ṭika Ratnakirti 11th century Ratnakarasanti i e Santipa wrote the Muktavali a commentary on the Hevajra and the Hevajrasadhanopayika Vagisvarakirti a well known tantric author who was colleague of Ratnakarasanti at Vikramasila 62 Maitripada c 1007 1085 a k a Advayavajra author of several influential works on meditation Pundarika 11th century a commentator on the Kalachakra who wrote the Vimalaprabha Stainless Light Sucandra wrote a Kalachakra commentary in sixty thousand stanzas Hevajratantra Yogaratnamala a Hevajra commentary by Kr ṣṇavajrapada 11th century Abhayakaragupta 11th early 12th century CE wrote numerous tantric texts like Vajravali and Kalacakravatara Dipaṅkarasrijnana also known as Atisa c 982 1054 who was influential in the transmission of Buddhism to Tibet He most famous for his Bodhipathapradipa East Asian tantric literature edit Tantric Buddhism arrived in China during the Tang dynasty when numerous esoteric works were translated into Chinese 63 During this era three great tantric masters vajracharyas came from India to China Subhakarasiṃha 637 735 Vajrabodhi 671 741 and Amoghavajra 705 774 They worked on translations of classic tantras like the Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Sutra and the Vajrasekhara Sutra and also composed practice manuals and commentaries in Chinese 64 They are considered to be the founding patriarchs of Chinese Esoteric Buddhism and their writings are central to the East Asian Mantrayana traditions The tradition was passed on from later figures like Huiguo to various Japanese Budhist disciples who founded mantrayana lineages in Japan One important figure is Kukai 774 835 the founder of the Shingon school Kukai s numerous works and commentaries on tantric practice are foundational texts for the Shingon tradition One of the most important works of Kukai is his magnum opus the Juju shinron Treatise on Ten Levels of Mind along with its summary the Hizō hōyaku Precious Key to the Secret Treasury 65 The Tendai school meanwhile also maintains its own collection of Mantrayana texts commentaries and practice manuals composed by traditional figures like Saicho Ennin and Annen The original works of Annen 841 889 are particularly important for Tendai esotericism especially his Shingonshu kyōjigi On the Meaning of Teachings and Times in Esoteric Buddhism and the Taizōkongō bodaishingi ryaku mondōshō Abbreviated Discussion on the Meaning of Bodhicitta according to the Garbha and Vajra realms 66 Tibetan tantric literature edit As Vajrayana Buddhism developed in Tibet beginning in the 8th century CE Tibetan Buddhists also began to compose Vajrayana scriptures commentaries and other works Eventually a vast literature of original Tibetan Vajrayana compositions developed There are many types of indigenous Tibetan tantric literature Each school of Tibetan Buddhism maintains their own collections of texts composed by the lineage masters of their tradition and considered to be canonical by their sect These include commentarial works original treatises meditation manuals sadhanas ritual texts poems and hymns as well as new revelations such as treasure texts and pure vision texts nbsp Part of the early Dzogchen Semde text called The Cuckoo of Rigpa found at Dunhuang The Nyingma school for example maintains a large collection of texts which are part of their Dzogchen Great Perfection tradition This class of tantric Buddhist texts is divided into three divisions the Mind Series Semde the earliest Dzogchen texts c 9th century which includes tantras like the Kulayaraja Tantra All Creating King the Space Series Longde c 11th 14th centuries and the Esoteric Instructions series Menngagde c 11th 14th centuries which include the Seventeen Tantras and the Vima Nyingthig 67 The Nyingma school also maintains other collections of texts called Terma Treasure Texts These texts were revealed by treasure revealers tertons at different times in Tibetan history Examples include the Bardo Thodol the Tibetan Book of the Dead the Longchen Nyingthig Dudjom Tersar and the Yuthok Nyingthig The Kagyu school on the other hand maintains several collections of tantric texts which are unique to their school These include the Collected works of Milarepa Mila Gnubum which includes his many songs the Collected works of Gampopa Dagpo Kabum including Jewel Ornament of Liberation and for the Karma Kagyu school the works of lineage masters like the Karmapas The Kagyu tradition emphasizes the esoteric practice of Mahamudra and as such they also maintain many collections of texts that focus on this method The seventh Karmapa Chodrak Gyatso 1454 1506 collected many Indian Mahamudra sources into the three volume collection called The Indian Mahamudra Treatises Tib Phyag rgya chen po i rgya gzhung 68 In the Gelug school the tantric works of the founder Tsongkhapa and his direct disciples are generally seen as foundational texts The Sakya school and the Jonang school likewise maintain collections of the tantric works of their founding figures such as Sakya Pandita and Dolpopa respectively See also editBuddhist texts Historic literature and religious texts of Buddhism Sanskrit Buddhist literature Sanskrit literatureFootnotes edit a b c d e Gray D 2016 April 05 Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Retrieved 19 Mar 2024 from https oxfordre com religion view 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 001 0001 acrefore 9780199340378 e 59 Wayman 2008 p 23 a b c d e Williams Tribe and Wynne Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition chapter 7 a b Hodge 2003 pp 14 15 a b c d Gray 2023 p 13 a b Orzech Sorensen amp Payne 2011 p 20 a b Gray 2023 pp 21 24 a b c Gray David B Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism Sanderson Alexis The Saiva Age The Rise and Dominance of Saivism during the Early Medieval Period In Genesis and Development of Tantrism edited by Shingo Einoo Tokyo University of Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture March 2009 pp 41 349 Gray 2023 p 15 Gray 2023 p 14 Wallis Christopher THE TANTRIC AGE A Comparison Of Shaiva And Buddhist Tantra February 2016 A Crisis of Doxography How Tibetans Organized Tantra During the 8th 12th Centuries Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 28 1 2005 115 181 Gray 2023 pp 25 28 30 Gray 2023 p 30 a b Gray 2023 p 35 Gray 2023 p 37 a b c d e f g h i j Dalton Jacob A Crisis of Doxography How Tibetans Organized Tantra during the 8th 12th Centuries Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Volume 28 Number 1 2005 Tsong kha pa The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra Part One in Tsong kha pa et al 2016 pp 63 155 Yamasaki Taiko 1988 Shingon Japanese Esoteric Buddhism p 35 Boston London Shambala Publications a b Tantric Literature Overview South Asia Silk ed et al Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism BRILL 2015 Wayman 2008 p 14 Richard McBride 2004 Robert Buswell ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism Macmillan Reference pp 21 180 217 218 253 ISBN 978 0 02 865718 9 Richard K Payne 2006 Tantric Buddhism in East Asia Simon and Schuster pp 14 17 ISBN 978 0 86171 487 2 Isaacson 1998 p 3 a b Gray 2023 p 7 Gray 2023 pp 26 27 51 a b Gray 2023 pp 64 68 Gray 2023 p 8 Gray 2023 pp 69 70 a b c d e f g h Hartzell James 2012 The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras The Samadhi of the Plowed Row Pacific World Journal Third Series 63 178 a b Gray 2023 p 74 Wayman 2008 p 3 Gray 2023 pp 74 77 Gray 2023 p 77 Dharmachakra Translation Committee The Root Manual of the Rites of Manjusri Introduction 84000 Reading Room 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda Retrieved 2024 03 22 Action tantras 84000 Reading Room 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda Retrieved 2024 03 20 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Tsunehiko Sugiki On the Chronology of the Buddhist Tantras in Payne Richard K and Glen A Hayes eds The Oxford Handbook of Tantric Studies online edn Oxford Academic 18 Aug 2022 https doi org 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780197549889 001 0001 accessed 20 Mar 2024 James B Apple Atisa s System of Twenty One Taras Revue d Etudes Tibetaines no 66 Avril 2023 pp 424 463 Conduct tantras 84000 Reading Room 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda Retrieved 2024 03 21 Yamasaki Taiko 1988 Shingon Japanese Esoteric Buddhism p 72 Boston London Shambala Publications a b Szanto amp Griffiths 2015 Sarvabuddhasamayogaḍakinijalasaṁvara in Brill s Encyclopaedia of Buddhism vol I Yoga tantras 84000 Reading Room 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda Retrieved 2024 03 21 Unexcelled Yoga tantras 84000 Reading Room 84000 Translating The Words of The Budda Retrieved 2024 03 20 Gray 2023 p 33 Bianchini Francesco 2020 Tradition and Innovation in late South Asian Buddhism The Impact of Spell Practices on the Recasting of Prajnaparamita Scriptures pp 65 75 St John s College The University of Oxford Taisho 945 is found in Volume 19 of the Taisho Tripitaka Taishō Shinshu Daizōkyō 大正新脩大藏經 Taishō Shinshu Tripitaka CBETA 漢文大藏經 in Chinese This is an index to the Taisho Tripitaka nb Volume 19 is listed as 密教部 or Esoteric Sutra Section is where Taisho 945 Surangama Sutra is located Lara Braitstein The Adamantine Songs Vajragiti by Saraha American Institute of Buddhist Studies 2014 a b Isaacson 1998 Tadeusz Skorupski Jyotirmanjari of Abhayakaragupta The Buddhist Forum Volume VI The Institute of Buddhist StudiesTring UK 2001 183 221 a b c Bhattacharyya Benoytosh An Introduction to Buddhist Esoterism Motilal Banarsidass Publ 1980 India pp 62 63 Yun hua Jan Nagarjuna One or More A New Interpretation of Buddhist Hagiography History of Religions vol 10 no 2 1970 pp 139 55 JSTOR http www jstor org stable 1061906 Accessed 25 Mar 2024 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 a b Gray David B Compassionate Violence On the Ethical Implications of Tantric Buddhist Ritual Journal of Buddhist Ethics ISSN 1076 9005 Volume 14 2007 Tribe Anthony Tantric Buddhist Practice in India Vilasavajra s commentary on the Manjusrinamasamgiti Dalton Catherine and Szanto Peter Daniel Jnanapada in Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online Editor in Chief Volume Editors Jonathan A Silk Richard Bowring Vincent Eltschinger Oskar von Hinuber Consulted online on 26 March 2024 lt http dx doi org 10 1163 2467 9666 enbo COM 2037 gt First print edition 20190619 Aryadeva s Lamp that Integrates the Practices Caryamelapakapradipa The Gradual Path of Vajrayana Buddhism according to the Esoteric Community Noble Tradition Tibet House US NYC Official Website Retrieved 2024 03 26 Pradipoddyotana nama ṭika Buddha Nature buddhanature tsadra org Retrieved 2024 03 26 Hartzell James 2012 The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras The Samadhi of the Plowed Row Pacific World Journal Third Series p 87 Sraddhakaravarman Buddha Nature buddhanature tsadra org Retrieved 2024 03 21 Hartzell James 2012 The Buddhist Sanskrit Tantras The Samadhi of the Plowed Row Pacific World Journal Third Series p 93 Schneider Johannes Vagisvarakirti Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism Online Brill retrieved 2024 03 25 Orzech Sorensen amp Payne 2011 p 4 Orzech Sorensen amp Payne 2011 p 274 Yamasaki Taiko 1988 Shingon Japanese Esoteric Buddhism p 32 Boston London Shambala Publications Dolce Lucia Mano Shinya 2011 Godai in Annen in Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia 2011 Leiden Brill NV p 770 Dudjom Rinpoche 1991 The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism Vol 1 pp 493 498 Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0 86171 087 4 Mathes Klaus Dieter 2015 A Fine Blend of Mahamudra and Madhyamaka Maitripa s Collection of Texts on Non conceptual Realization Amanasikara p 2 Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 978 3700177869 Works cited edit Gray David B 2023 The Buddhist Tantras A Guide New York Oxford Academic ISBN 978 0 19 762383 1 Hodge Stephen 2003 The Maha Vairocana Abhisaṃbodhi Tantra with Buddhaguhya s Commentary London RoutledgeCurzon ISBN missing Isaacson Harunaga 1998 Tantric Buddhism in India from c 800 to c 1200 PDF Buddhismus in Geschichte und Gegenwart II University of Hamburg 23 49 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik H Payne Richard K eds 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia Leiden Netherlands Brill ISBN missing Wayman Alex 2008 1973 The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan Esotericism New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 46163 4 Further reading editDavidson Ronald M 2002 Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement New York Columbia University Press Davidson Ronald M 2005 Tibetan Renaissance Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture New York Columbia University Press Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra A Study and Annotated Translation New York American Institute of Buddhist Studies Shinohara Koichi 2014 Spells Images and Maṇḍalas Tracing the Evolution of Esoteric Buddhist Rituals New York Columbia University Press Snellgrove David L 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and Their Tibetan Successors London Serindia Wedemeyer Christian K 2013 Making Sense of Tantric Buddhism History Semiology amp Transgression in the Indian Traditions New York Columbia University Press External links edit84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buddhist tantric literature amp oldid 1215732344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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