Search by property

Jump to navigation Jump to search

This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.

Search by property

A list of all pages that have property "BiographicalInfo" with value "15th/16th cent.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 34 results starting with #1.

View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)


    

List of results

    • Tai Situpa, 8th  + (1717 - Founds dpal spungs chos 'khor gling monastery)
    • Sera Khandro  + (1892–1940)
    • Wa-gindra  + (18th cent.)
    • Tseten Zhabdrung, 6th  + (1978-1980s - Professor at Northwest Minorities University in Lanzhou, Gansu Province.)
    • O rgyan bsam gtan gling pa  + (19th century)
    • Gangs ri ba chos dbyings rdo rje  + (20th cent.)
    • Pad+ma mthar phyin  + (20th cent.)
    • Pad+ma rnam rgyal  + (20th century)
    • Thon mi sam bho Ta  + (7th century. See [http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Tonmi-Sambhata/8342 Treasury of Lives] for bio.)
    • Sarvajñamitra  + (8th century)
    • Ngag dbang chos 'byor rgya mtsho  + (According to Filippo Brambilla, Ngawang ChAccording to Filippo Brambilla, Ngawang Chöjor Gyatso (Ngag dbang chos 'byor rgya mtsho) "was the fourth vajrācārya of gTsang ba [monastery], who had been one of ’Ba’ mda’ dge legs’ closest disciples." (Filippo Brambilla, "A Late Proponent of the Jo nang gZhan stong Doctrine: Ngag dbang tshogs gnyis rgya mtsho (1880–1940)" [''Revue d’Etudes Tibétaines'' 45 (2018)], 5–50).</br></br>Furthermore, Brambilla writes, Ngawang Chöjor Gyatso, along with several of the vajra masters of gTsang ba monastery (such as Ngag dbang chos ’phel rgya mtsho, Ngag dbang chos kyi ’phags pa, Kun dga’ mkhas grub dbang phyug, and ’Ba’ mda’ dGe legs himself, had a relationship with leading figures of the nonsectarian movement</br>like Jamgön Kongtrul (1813-1899) and Patrul Rinpoche (1808-1887), most of these Jonang scholars studying with them at dPal spung and rDzogs chen monasteries (Ibid., 11–12).nd rDzogs chen monasteries (Ibid., 11–12).)
    • Rgyal tshab rje dar ma rin chen  + (Alternative birth date 1362. *one of the tAlternative birth date 1362.</br>*one of the two chief disciples of tsong kha pa and his first successor on the seat of dga' ldan, 1419-1431.</br>:dga' ldan dgon pa dang brag yer pa'i lo rgyus (p. 58) </br></br>* birth 1364 at ri nang (nyang stod) </br>* Assumes Office 1419 Dga' ldan khri at dga' ldan dgon (stag rtse rdzong)</br>* Leaves Office 1431 Dga' ldan khri at dga' ldan dgon (stag rtse rdzong)</br>* death 1432</br></br>*Took the degree of dka' bcu pa at sa skya, gsang phu, and rtsed thang.</br>:debated against rong ston and against g.yag phrug pa.</br>:1419: came to the throne of dga' ldan and served ll years.</br>:gsung 'bum in 8 volumes.served ll years. :gsung 'bum in 8 volumes.)
    • Sa chen kun dga' snying po  + (Assumes office in 1111)
    • Rgyal thang pa bde chen rdo rje  + (Author of the dkar brgyud gser 'phreng that includes biographies of many prominent early Kagyu masters.)
    • Brag g.yab blo gros rgyal mtshan  + (BDRC also has this person page [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P8763 P8763] connected to the printing of his work on the 9th chapter of the ''Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra'', which the publishers attribute to Blo gros rgya mtsho.)
    • Bsod nams rtse mo  + (Bio on [http://hhsakyatrizin.net/loppon-sonam-tsemo/ hhsakyatrizin.net])
    • Dorjee, Dudjom  + (Born to a nomadic family in eastern Tibet,Born to a nomadic family in eastern Tibet, Lama Dudjom Dorjee Rinpoche grew up in India and received a distinguished Acharya degree from Sanskrit University in Varanasi. In 1981, at the request of the Sixteenth Gyalwang Karmapa, he came to the United States as a representative of the Karma Kagyu lineage. He is presently Resident Lama of Karma Thegsum Choling in Dallas, Texas.of Karma Thegsum Choling in Dallas, Texas.)
    • Vimuktisena  + (Circa 5th Century/6th Century)
    • A tsa ra dmar po  + (Cyrus Stearns ([[Luminous Lives]], page 52) says that this is another name for someone named Gayadhara who is a tantric lay practitioner from "India".)
    • Gnas brtan 'jam dbyangs grags pa  + (Dge lugs pa master who served as the most Dge lugs pa master who served as the most important scribe to the 5th Dalai Lama.</br>He is listed under the name and title 'dul 'dzin 'jam dbyangs grags pa as one of the main tutors of the 6th Dalai Lama. ([https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P2277 Source Accessed Sept 8, 2020])#!rid=P2277 Source Accessed Sept 8, 2020]))
    • 'jam dpal tshul khrims  + (Editor of the collected works of [[Karmapa, 15th]].)
    • Chos dbyings bde chen mtsho mo  + (For more on this incarnation lineage see BDRC [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P10245 bsam sdings rdo rje phag mo sprul sku skye brgyud] and Treasury of Lives [https://treasuryoflives.org/incarnation/Dorje-Pakmo Dorje Pakmo])
    • Gter bdag gling pa 'gyur med rdo rje  + (Founded Mindroling Monastery ('og min o rgyan smin grol gling) in 1676.)
    • Rngog legs pa'i shes rab  + (Founded gsang phu ne'u thog in 1072.)
    • Phywa pa chos kyi seng+ge  + (From [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W00EGS101From [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W00EGS1016899 shAkya mchog ldan] a more detailed description of important students: </br>དཔེ་འགྲེམས་ཀྱི་གྲྭ་པ་ལྔ་སྟོང་ཙམ་བྱུང་བར་གྲགས། དེའི་ནང་ནས་མཆོག་ཏུ་གྱུར་པ། གྲུབ་ཐོབ་མི་གསུམ། ཇོ་སྲས་མི་བཞི། ཤེས་རབ་ཅན་མི་གསུམ། སེང་ཆེན་བརྒྱད ་རྣམས་སོ། །དང་པོ་ནི། རྗེ་དུས་གསུམ་མཁྱེན་པ། ཕག་མོ་གྲུབ་པ། གསལ་སྟོ་ཤོ་སྒོམ་རྣམས་སོ། །ལ་ལ་ཞང་འཚལ་པ་ཡིན་ཞེས་ཟེར། གཉིས་པ་ནི། ས་ཇོ་སྲས་བསོད་ནམས་རྩེ་མོ། མཉོས་ཇོ་སྲས་དཔལ་ལེ། ཁུ་ཇོ་སྲས་ནེ་ཙོ། རྔོག་ཇོ་སྲས་ར་མོ་རྣམས་སོ། །གསུམ་པ་ནི། རྐོང་པོ་འཇག་ཆུང༌། ལྷོ་པ་སྒོག་གཟན། པར་བུ་བ་བློ་གྲོས་སེང་གེ་རྣམས་སོ། །སྒོག་གཟན་ནི་ལྷོ་པ་ཐམས་ཅད་མཁྱེན་པར་གྲགས་པ་སྟེ། ལྷོ་པ་དྷར་སེང་ངོ༌། །བཞི་པ་ནི། ཕྱྭ་པའི་རྗེས་སུ་གདན་ས་ལོ་ལྔ་མཛད་པའི་བརྩེགས་དབང་ཕྱུག་སེང་གེ་གཙང་ནག་པ་བརྩོན་འགྲུས་སེང་གེ་ རྨ་བྱ་རྩོད་པའི་སེང་གེ་ བྲུ་ཤ་བསོད་ནམས་སེང་གེ་ མྱང་བྲན་པ་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སེང་གེ་ དན་འབག་པ་སྨྲ་བའི་སེང་གེ་ འདམ་པ་དཀོན་མཆོག་སེང་གེ་ རྐྱང་དུར་བ་གཞོན་ནུ་སེང་གེ་ ལ་ལ་དག་འུ་ཡུག་པ་བསོད་ནམས་སེང་གེ ཞེས་ཟེར་ཡང་དུས་མི་འགྲིག་</br></br>Another list of the seng chen rgyad can be found in the [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W7499 Chos 'byung mkhas pa'i dga' ston], p. 729:</br>སློབ་མ་ཐུགས་སྲས་སེང་ཆེན་བརྒྱད་ཅེས། གཙང་ནག་པ་བརྩོན་འགྲུས་སེང་གེ དན་འབག་སྨྲ་བའི་སེང་གེ བྲུ་ཤ་བསོད་ནམས་སེང་གེ རྨ་བྱ་རྩོད་པའི་སེང་གེ རྩགས་དབང་ཕྱུག་སེང་གེ ཉང་བྲན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སེང་གེ འདན་མ་དཀོན་མཆོག་སེང་གེ གཉལ་པ་ཡོན་ཏན་སེང་གེ ཁ་ཅིག་གཙང་པ་འཇམ་དཔལ་སེང་གེ་ཡང་འདྲེན།</br></br>And again in the [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W1KG2733 Chos rnam kun btus], p. 1853:</br></br>1. gtsang nag pa brtson 'grus seng ge</br></br>2. dan 'bag pa smra ba'i seng ge</br></br>3. bru sha bsod nams seng ge</br></br>4. rmya ba rtsod pa'i seng ge</br></br>5. rtsags dbang phyug seng ge</br></br>6. myang bran chos kyi seng ge</br></br>7. ldan ma dkon mchog seng ge</br></br>8. gnyal pa yon tan seng gemchog seng ge 8. gnyal pa yon tan seng ge)
    • Bsod nams lde'u btsan  + (He was recognized as the subsequent rebirth of terton [[bdud 'dul rdo rje]].)
    • Shamarpa, 2nd  + (He was recognized in 1355 as second zhwa dmar by mkhas grub dar ma rgyal mtshan)
    • Dwags po sprul sku  + (He was the chief editor of the Shechen Edition of the Rinchen Terdzö, which was completed in 2018.)
    • Byang bdag bkra shis stobs rgyal  + (He was the father of [[Ngag gi dbang po]], the founder of the important Nyingma monastery thub bstan rdo rje brag.)
    • Phag mo gru pa rdo rje rgyal po  + (He was the older brother or cousin of KaH thog dam pa bde gshegs.)
    • Pad+ma ye shes  + (He wrote an outer biography of Chogyur Lingpa, which he signs as Padma Jñāna and refers to himself as an old student of his.)
    • 'jam dbyangs nam mkha' rgyal mtshan  + (Held the position of Sakya Tridzin from 1421-1441.)
    • 'jam dbyangs mkhyen brtse chos kyi blo gros  + (His father was Rigdzin Gyurme Tsewang GyelHis father was Rigdzin Gyurme Tsewang Gyelpo (rig 'dzin 'gyur med tshe dbang rgyal po, d.u.) and his mother was Tsultrim Tso (tshul khrims 'tsho, d.u.). His clan was Chakgong (lcag gong). His paternal grandfather was Serpa Tengen (gser pa gter rgan, d.u.), a lineage holder of the treasures of Dudul Dorje (bdud 'dul rdo rje, 1615-1672). ([https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Jamyang-Khyentse-Chokyi-Lodro/9990 Source: Treasury of Lives])kyi-Lodro/9990 Source: Treasury of Lives]))