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Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen

Trülku Drakpa Gyeltsen (1619–1656) was an important Gelugpa lama and a contemporary of the 5th Dalai Lama (1617–1682). His Seat was the upper residence (Wylie: gzims khang gong ma) of Drepung Monastery, a famous Gelug gompa located near Lhasa. [1][2]

Trülku Drakpa Gyeltsen
སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན།
Personal
Died
Lhasa
ReligionTibetan Buddhism
SchoolGelug
Other namesDrakpa Gyeltsen (གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན།), Zimkhang Gongma Drakpa Gyeltsen (གཟིམས་ཁང་གོང་མ་༤་གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན), Trülku Drakpa Gyeltsen (སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན།), Kyorlung Ngari Trülku 06 (སྐྱོར་ལུང་མངའ་རིས་སྤྲུལ་སྐུ་༦).
Organization
TempleDrepung Monastery
Senior posting
Period in office17th century
ReincarnationNgakwang Sönam Gélek Pelzang

Incarnation lineage edit

Tibetan Buddhists consider Trülku Drakpa Gyeltsen to be the 6th Kyorlung Ngari Tulku, a line of incarnate lamas which began with Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen (1374-1434), an important disciple of Je Tsongkhapa, the founder of the Gelug school.

Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen is also called the 4th Drepung Zimkhang Gongma or rebirth of Panchen Sonam Dragpa, the 3rd Kyorlung Ngari Tulku, who held the posts of the 15th Ganden Tripa and abbot of Drepung.[3] Before his death in 1554, he had established his own monastic estate, known as the Upper Chamber (Zimkhang Gongma), named for its location at the top of Drepung Monastery just below the Ngakpa debating courtyard.[4] This grew to be a rival centre of power in Drepung to the estate of the Dalai Lamas, called Ganden Phodrang, or so-called lower chamber (Zimkhang 'Ogma) which had been constructed in 1518 by the 2nd Dalai Lama.[5][failed verification]

According to Lindsay G. McCune, the "Gelukpa authorities" agreed that Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen was the immediate rebirth of Sönam Gelek Pelzang (1594–1615), and the fourth incarnation, or tulku, in the Drepung Zimkhang Gongma line.[6]

Prior births edit

His prior "incarnation lineage"[7] includes:[8]

  • Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen (དུལ་འཛིན་གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན)[1374-1434] [9]
  • Charchen Chödrak (ཆར་ཆེན་ཆོས་གྲགས་)[10]
  • Panchen Sönam Drakpa (པཎ་ཆེན་བསོད་ནམས་གྲགས་པ་) [1478—1554] (first Drepung Zimkhang Gongma)[11][12]
  • Sönam Yéshé Wangpo (བསོད་ནམས་ཡེ་ཤེས་དབང་པོ་)- seat: Drepung monastery[13]
  • Ngakwang Sönam Gélek Pelzang (ངག་དབང་བསོད་ནམས་དགེ་ལེགས་དཔལ་བཟང་)- seat: Drepung monastery[14]

Some Tibetan Buddhists believe that, prior to his birth as Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen, he was also Buton Rinchen Drub (1291–1364) of Shalu Monastery[15]

Subsequent rebirths edit

Tibetan historian Samten Karmay writes that after the death of Dragpa Gyaltsen the search for his reincarnation was banned. Thus the Drepung Zimkhang Gongma line ended and the estate founded by Panchen Sönam Dragpa in 1554 at the Upper Chamber of Drepung ceased to exist in 1656.[16]

Some believe that Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen then appeared as the wrathful deity Dorje Shugden.[16] However at that time Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen's own students and supporters disagreed with this account, stating that this spirit was not that of Drakpa Gyeltsen but rather that of the Fifth Dalai Lama's minister Desi Sönam Chöpel (sde srid bsod nams chos ’phel; 1595-1658), who was an enemy of Drakpa Gyeltsen and who had also died around the same time.[17][18] Georges Dreyfus also notes that "there are other stories that seem to hint that the evil spirit connected with Drak-ba Gyel-tsen was already active prior to the latter's demise, even as early 1636. If Shuk-den was already active prior to Trul-ku Drak-ba Gyel-tsen's tragic demise, how can he be the latter's wrathful manifestation?"[17]

The Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center database lists a continuing line of Kyorlung Ngari tulkus subsequent to Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen:

  • Ngakwang Jinpa Jamyang Tenpé Gyeltsen (ངག་དབང་སྦྱིན་པ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་བསྟན་པའི་རྒྱལ་མཚན་)[19]
  • Lozang Tashi (བློ་བཟང་བཀྲ་ཤིས་)[20]
  • Lozang Gélek Drakpa (བློ་བཟང་དགེ་ལེགས་གྲགས་པ་)[21]
  • Lozang Jikmé Tenpé Gyeltsen (བློ་བཟང་འཇིགས་མེད་བསྟན་པའི་རྒྱལ་མཚན་)[22]
  • Ngakwang Tsültrim Tenpé Gyeltsen (ངག་དབང་ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས་བསྟན་པའི་རྒྱལ་མཚན་)[23]
  • Khédrup Tendzin Chökyi Nyima (མཁས་གྲུབ་བསྟན་འཛིན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་ཉི་མ་)[24]
  • Ngakwang Lozang Khédrup Tendzin Gyatso (ངག་དབང་བློ་བཟང་མཁས་གྲུབ་བསྟན་འཛིན་རྒྱ་མཚོ་)[25]
  • Tendzin Chögyel (བསྟན་འཛིན་ཆོས་རྒྱལ་) [b.1946][26]

Rivalry, murder and reincarnation edit

Tibetan historian Samten Karmay writes "It should be recalled that he had been one of the candidates for the reincarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama. As a result, he was always seen as a rival of the Fifth Dalai Lama though he invariably proclaimed himself a disciple of the latter. He came to be despised by a number of officials and especially the sDe-srid."[27]

Samten Karmay further writes "The circumstances of his death, whether natural or not, were contested and part of the dGe-lugs-pa school believed that the official Norbu, acting under the sDe-srid's orders had assassinated him. Whatever the truth, the search for his reincarnation was banned, which suggests that the affair must have been quite serious indeed. In 1658, the actual building of the 'Upper Chamber' was destroyed and the stupa containing the remains of the Lama was supposedly thrown into the sKyid-chu river. It was then believed that the spirit of Grags-pa rgyal-mtshan had returned as a sort of 'protector of the Buddhist religion'."[27]

Selected information from different sources edit

Lobsang Tamdin's be bum extracted the biographies (rnam thar) of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen and his reincarnation lineage into a work called sprul sku grags pa rgyal mtshan gyi sngon byung ‘khrungs rabs dang bcas pa'i rnam thar (dza ya pandi ta blo bzang 'phrin las kyi gsan yig nas zur du bkod pa bzhugs so). The originals can also be found directly in the catalog of received teachings (thob yig) of Jaya Pandita published by Lokesh Chandra, International Academy of Indian Culture (1981, vol. 4, folios 43-60). This contains the list of the long "incarnation lineage" of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen, with brief biographies. The biography of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen contains a year by year account of his life.[original research?]

Further reading edit

  • The Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences

Literature edit

  • Autobiography of Lobsang Chökyi Gyaltsen, 4th Panchen Lama (1567–1622, Wylie: chos smra ba'i dge slong blo bzang chos kyi rgyal mtshan gyi sphyod tshul gsal bar ston pa nor bu'i phreng ba zhes bya ba zhugs so)
  • The Vaidurya Serpo (Wylie: dga' ldan chos byung vai durya ser po), Desi Sangye Gyatso's (1653–1705) history of the Gandenpa tradition
  • Dungkar's Encyclopedia (Wylie: dung dkar tshig mdzod chen mo) by Dungkar Lozang Trinle (1927–1997)
  • Treasury of Names (Wylie: ming dzod) by Koshül Drakpa Chungne (born 20th century) and Gyelwa Lozang Khedrup (born 20th century)
  • Ngawang Lozang Gyamtso's Autobiography of the 5th Dalai Lama (Wylie: za hor gyi ban de ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho'i 'di snang 'khrul ba'i rol rtsed rtogs brjod kyi tshul du bkod pa du lu la' gos bzang)
  • The 5th Dalai Lama's Spontaneous Achievement of the Four Enlightened Activities: [Rites of] realization, offerings, expiation, praises, feasts, and so forth for the ocean of loyal dharma protectors who possess unhindered strength and power (Wylie: thogs med drag rtsal nus stobs ldan pa'i dam can chos srung rgya mtsho'i mngon rtogs mchod 'bul bskyang bshags bstod tsogs sogs 'phrin las rnam zhi lhun drub ces bya ba bzhugs so)
  • Excellent Wish-Granting Tree (Wylie: dpag bsam ljon bzang) by Sumpa Khenpo Yeshe Peljor (Wylie: sum pa ye shes dpal 'byor, 1704–1788)

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ "grags pa rgyal mtshan". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  2. ^ "'bras spungs dgon". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  3. ^ Brief History of Ganden Monastery
  4. ^ Drepung: An Introduction by Georges Dreyfus (April 10, 2006)
  5. ^ [1] August 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Tales of Intrigue from Tibet's Holy City: The Historical Underpinnings of a Modern Buddhist Crisis / Thesis by Lindsay G. McCune, Introduction, p.2 2012-02-14 at the Wayback Machine The Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences
  7. ^
  8. ^ E. Gene Smith ; edited by Kurtis R. Schaeffer, "Among Tibetan Texts: history and literature of the Himalayan Plateau", page 129 Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2001
  9. ^ "grags pa rgyal mtshan". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  10. ^ "char chen chos grags". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  11. ^ "bsod nams grags pa". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help) http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P101
  12. ^ :"Panchen Sonam Dakpa (1478–1554) became one of the main disciples of the Second Dalai Lama Gedun Gyatso (1476–1542). As directed by the Second Dalai Lama, Panchen Sonam Dakpa became the Loseling abbot and taught there for about six years. He took a great responsibility for its academic activities and administrations. For the benefit of all beings, he bestowed upasaka vows to the Third Dalai Lama and named him Sonam Gyatso Pel Sangpo. Panchen Sonam Dakpa wrote fourteen volumes of treatises on the five major Buddhist texts for the benefit and promotion of the teachings of the Buddha in general and the Yellow Hat tradition in particular. Even today these commentaries are being used as the main textbooks in the Loseling College, the Shartse College of the Gaden Monastic University, in many monasteries of Kham and Amdo provinces of Tibet as well as in some monasteries in Mongolia."
  13. ^ "bsod nams ye shes dbang po". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  14. ^ "bsod nams dge legs dpal bzang". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  15. ^ bu ston rin chen grub TBRC P155
  16. ^ a b Karmay, Samten G. (1997). The Arrow and the Spindle, Volume 1, p. 514
  17. ^ a b Dreyfus, Georges. . dalailama.com. Archived from the original on 2010-01-02. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
  18. ^ Bell, Christopher Paul (2009). Dorjé Shukden: The Conflicting Narratives and Constructed Histories of a Tibetan Protector Deity. American Academy of Religion.
  19. ^ "ngag dbang sbyin pa 'jam dbyangs bstan pa'i rgyal mtshan". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  20. ^ "blo bzang bkra shis". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  21. ^ "blo bzang dge legs grags pa". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  22. ^ "blo bzang 'jigs med bstan pa'i rgyal mtshan". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  23. ^ "ngag dbang tshul khrims bstan pa'i rgyal mtshan". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  24. ^ "mkhas grub bstan 'dzin chos kyi nyi ma". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  25. ^ "ngag dbang blo bzang mkhas grub bstan 'dzin rgya mtsho". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  26. ^ "bstan 'dzin chos rgyal". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. TBRC. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
  27. ^ a b Karmay, Samten G. "The arrow and the spindle : studies in history, myths, rituals and beliefs in Tibet.", page 514, Kathmandu: Mandala Book Point, 1998. Vol 1, Part IV, "The Fifth Dalai Lama And His Reunification Of Tibet"

External links edit

  • P1729 grags pa rgyal mtshan (1619–1656) - at TBRC
  • Townsend, Dominique. "Drakpa Gyeltsen". The Treasury of Lives: Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters. Retrieved 2013-08-11.

tulku, dragpa, gyaltsen, trülku, drakpa, gyeltsen, 1619, 1656, important, gelugpa, lama, contemporary, dalai, lama, 1617, 1682, seat, upper, residence, wylie, gzims, khang, gong, drepung, monastery, famous, gelug, gompa, located, near, lhasa, trülku, drakpa, g. Trulku Drakpa Gyeltsen 1619 1656 was an important Gelugpa lama and a contemporary of the 5th Dalai Lama 1617 1682 His Seat was the upper residence Wylie gzims khang gong ma of Drepung Monastery a famous Gelug gompa located near Lhasa 1 2 Trulku Drakpa Gyeltsenས ལ ས ག གས པ ར ལ མཚན PersonalDiedLhasaReligionTibetan BuddhismSchoolGelugOther namesDrakpa Gyeltsen ག གས པ ར ལ མཚན Zimkhang Gongma Drakpa Gyeltsen གཟ མས ཁང ག ང མ ༤ ག གས པ ར ལ མཚན Trulku Drakpa Gyeltsen ས ལ ས ག གས པ ར ལ མཚན Kyorlung Ngari Trulku 06 ས ར ལ ང མངའ ར ས ས ལ ས ༦ OrganizationTempleDrepung MonasterySenior postingPeriod in office17th centuryReincarnationNgakwang Sonam Gelek Pelzang Contents 1 Incarnation lineage 1 1 Prior births 1 2 Subsequent rebirths 2 Rivalry murder and reincarnation 3 Selected information from different sources 4 Further reading 5 Literature 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksIncarnation lineage editTibetan Buddhists consider Trulku Drakpa Gyeltsen to be the 6th Kyorlung Ngari Tulku a line of incarnate lamas which began with Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen 1374 1434 an important disciple of Je Tsongkhapa the founder of the Gelug school Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen is also called the 4th Drepung Zimkhang Gongma or rebirth of Panchen Sonam Dragpa the 3rd Kyorlung Ngari Tulku who held the posts of the 15th Ganden Tripa and abbot of Drepung 3 Before his death in 1554 he had established his own monastic estate known as the Upper Chamber Zimkhang Gongma named for its location at the top of Drepung Monastery just below the Ngakpa debating courtyard 4 This grew to be a rival centre of power in Drepung to the estate of the Dalai Lamas called Ganden Phodrang or so called lower chamber Zimkhang Ogma which had been constructed in 1518 by the 2nd Dalai Lama 5 failed verification According to Lindsay G McCune the Gelukpa authorities agreed that Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen was the immediate rebirth of Sonam Gelek Pelzang 1594 1615 and the fourth incarnation or tulku in the Drepung Zimkhang Gongma line 6 Prior births edit His prior incarnation lineage 7 includes 8 Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen ད ལ འཛ ན ག གས པ ར ལ མཚན 1374 1434 9 Charchen Chodrak ཆར ཆ ན ཆ ས ག གས 10 Panchen Sonam Drakpa པཎ ཆ ན བས ད ནམས ག གས པ 1478 1554 first Drepung Zimkhang Gongma 11 12 Sonam Yeshe Wangpo བས ད ནམས ཡ ཤ ས དབང པ seat Drepung monastery 13 Ngakwang Sonam Gelek Pelzang ངག དབང བས ད ནམས དག ལ གས དཔལ བཟང seat Drepung monastery 14 Some Tibetan Buddhists believe that prior to his birth as Duldzin Dragpa Gyaltsen he was also Buton Rinchen Drub 1291 1364 of Shalu Monastery 15 Subsequent rebirths edit Tibetan historian Samten Karmay writes that after the death of Dragpa Gyaltsen the search for his reincarnation was banned Thus the Drepung Zimkhang Gongma line ended and the estate founded by Panchen Sonam Dragpa in 1554 at the Upper Chamber of Drepung ceased to exist in 1656 16 Some believe that Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen then appeared as the wrathful deity Dorje Shugden 16 However at that time Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen s own students and supporters disagreed with this account stating that this spirit was not that of Drakpa Gyeltsen but rather that of the Fifth Dalai Lama s minister Desi Sonam Chopel sde srid bsod nams chos phel 1595 1658 who was an enemy of Drakpa Gyeltsen and who had also died around the same time 17 18 Georges Dreyfus also notes that there are other stories that seem to hint that the evil spirit connected with Drak ba Gyel tsen was already active prior to the latter s demise even as early 1636 If Shuk den was already active prior to Trul ku Drak ba Gyel tsen s tragic demise how can he be the latter s wrathful manifestation 17 The Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center database lists a continuing line of Kyorlung Ngari tulkus subsequent to Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen Ngakwang Jinpa Jamyang Tenpe Gyeltsen ངག དབང ས ན པ འཇམ དབ ངས བས ན པའ ར ལ མཚན 19 Lozang Tashi བ བཟང བཀ ཤ ས 20 Lozang Gelek Drakpa བ བཟང དག ལ གས ག གས པ 21 Lozang Jikme Tenpe Gyeltsen བ བཟང འཇ གས མ ད བས ན པའ ར ལ མཚན 22 Ngakwang Tsultrim Tenpe Gyeltsen ངག དབང ཚ ལ ཁ མས བས ན པའ ར ལ མཚན 23 Khedrup Tendzin Chokyi Nyima མཁས ག བ བས ན འཛ ན ཆ ས ཀ ཉ མ 24 Ngakwang Lozang Khedrup Tendzin Gyatso ངག དབང བ བཟང མཁས ག བ བས ན འཛ ན ར མཚ 25 Tendzin Chogyel བས ན འཛ ན ཆ ས ར ལ b 1946 26 Rivalry murder and reincarnation editTibetan historian Samten Karmay writes It should be recalled that he had been one of the candidates for the reincarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama As a result he was always seen as a rival of the Fifth Dalai Lama though he invariably proclaimed himself a disciple of the latter He came to be despised by a number of officials and especially the sDe srid 27 Samten Karmay further writes The circumstances of his death whether natural or not were contested and part of the dGe lugs pa school believed that the official Norbu acting under the sDe srid s orders had assassinated him Whatever the truth the search for his reincarnation was banned which suggests that the affair must have been quite serious indeed In 1658 the actual building of the Upper Chamber was destroyed and the stupa containing the remains of the Lama was supposedly thrown into the sKyid chu river It was then believed that the spirit of Grags pa rgyal mtshan had returned as a sort of protector of the Buddhist religion 27 Selected information from different sources editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed November 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Lobsang Tamdin s be bum extracted the biographies rnam thar of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen and his reincarnation lineage into a work called sprul sku grags pa rgyal mtshan gyi sngon byung khrungs rabs dang bcas pa i rnam thar dza ya pandi ta blo bzang phrin las kyi gsan yig nas zur du bkod pa bzhugs so The originals can also be found directly in the catalog of received teachings thob yig of Jaya Pandita published by Lokesh Chandra International Academy of Indian Culture 1981 vol 4 folios 43 60 This contains the list of the long incarnation lineage of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen with brief biographies The biography of Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen contains a year by year account of his life original research Further reading editTales of Intrigue from Tibet s Holy City The Historical Underpinnings of a Modern Buddhist Crisis Thesis by Lindsay G McCune The Florida State University College of Arts and SciencesLiterature editAutobiography of Lobsang Chokyi Gyaltsen 4th Panchen Lama 1567 1622 Wylie chos smra ba i dge slong blo bzang chos kyi rgyal mtshan gyi sphyod tshul gsal bar ston pa nor bu i phreng ba zhes bya ba zhugs so The Vaidurya Serpo Wylie dga ldan chos byung vai durya ser po Desi Sangye Gyatso s 1653 1705 history of the Gandenpa tradition Dungkar s Encyclopedia Wylie dung dkar tshig mdzod chen mo by Dungkar Lozang Trinle 1927 1997 Treasury of Names Wylie ming dzod by Koshul Drakpa Chungne born 20th century and Gyelwa Lozang Khedrup born 20th century Ngawang Lozang Gyamtso s Autobiography of the 5th Dalai Lama Wylie za hor gyi ban de ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho i di snang khrul ba i rol rtsed rtogs brjod kyi tshul du bkod pa du lu la gos bzang The 5th Dalai Lama s Spontaneous Achievement of the Four Enlightened Activities Rites of realization offerings expiation praises feasts and so forth for the ocean of loyal dharma protectors who possess unhindered strength and power Wylie thogs med drag rtsal nus stobs ldan pa i dam can chos srung rgya mtsho i mngon rtogs mchod bul bskyang bshags bstod tsogs sogs phrin las rnam zhi lhun drub ces bya ba bzhugs so Excellent Wish Granting Tree Wylie dpag bsam ljon bzang by Sumpa Khenpo Yeshe Peljor Wylie sum pa ye shes dpal byor 1704 1788 Notes editReferences edit grags pa rgyal mtshan Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 bras spungs dgon Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 Brief History of Ganden Monastery Drepung An Introduction by Georges Dreyfus April 10 2006 1 Archived August 19 2009 at the Wayback Machine Tales of Intrigue from Tibet s Holy City The Historical Underpinnings of a Modern Buddhist Crisis Thesis by Lindsay G McCune Introduction p 2 Archived 2012 02 14 at the Wayback Machine The Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences A small explanation for the Lineages E Gene Smith edited by Kurtis R Schaeffer Among Tibetan Texts history and literature of the Himalayan Plateau page 129 Boston Wisdom Publications 2001 grags pa rgyal mtshan Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 char chen chos grags Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 bsod nams grags pa Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help http www tbrc org rid P101 g A Brief History Drepung Loseling College Panchen Sonam Dakpa 1478 1554 became one of the main disciples of the Second Dalai Lama Gedun Gyatso 1476 1542 As directed by the Second Dalai Lama Panchen Sonam Dakpa became the Loseling abbot and taught there for about six years He took a great responsibility for its academic activities and administrations For the benefit of all beings he bestowed upasaka vows to the Third Dalai Lama and named him Sonam Gyatso Pel Sangpo Panchen Sonam Dakpa wrote fourteen volumes of treatises on the five major Buddhist texts for the benefit and promotion of the teachings of the Buddha in general and the Yellow Hat tradition in particular Even today these commentaries are being used as the main textbooks in the Loseling College the Shartse College of the Gaden Monastic University in many monasteries of Kham and Amdo provinces of Tibet as well as in some monasteries in Mongolia bsod nams ye shes dbang po Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 bsod nams dge legs dpal bzang Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 bu ston rin chen grub TBRC P155 a b Karmay Samten G 1997 The Arrow and the Spindle Volume 1 p 514 a b Dreyfus Georges The Shugden Affair Origins of a Controversy Part I dalailama com Archived from the original on 2010 01 02 Retrieved 2014 08 11 Bell Christopher Paul 2009 Dorje Shukden The Conflicting Narratives and Constructed Histories of a Tibetan Protector Deity American Academy of Religion ngag dbang sbyin pa jam dbyangs bstan pa i rgyal mtshan Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 blo bzang bkra shis Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 blo bzang dge legs grags pa Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 blo bzang jigs med bstan pa i rgyal mtshan Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 ngag dbang tshul khrims bstan pa i rgyal mtshan Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 mkhas grub bstan dzin chos kyi nyi ma Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 ngag dbang blo bzang mkhas grub bstan dzin rgya mtsho Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 bstan dzin chos rgyal Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center TBRC Retrieved 2014 08 10 a b Karmay Samten G The arrow and the spindle studies in history myths rituals and beliefs in Tibet page 514 Kathmandu Mandala Book Point 1998 Vol 1 Part IV The Fifth Dalai Lama And His Reunification Of Tibet External links editP1729 grags pa rgyal mtshan 1619 1656 at TBRC Townsend Dominique Drakpa Gyeltsen The Treasury of Lives Biographies of Himalayan Religious Masters Retrieved 2013 08 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tulku Dragpa Gyaltsen amp oldid 1094550369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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