Śākyaprabha: Difference between revisions

From Tsadra Commons
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 7: Line 7:
|HasBnwPage=Yes
|HasBnwPage=Yes
|MainNamePhon=Śākyaprabha
|MainNamePhon=Śākyaprabha
|MainNameTib=ཤཱཀྱ་འོད
|MainNameTib=ཤཱཀྱ་འོད་
|MainNameWylie=Shākya 'Od
|MainNameWylie=shAkya 'Od
|TitleTibetan=སློབ་དཔོན་ཤཱཀྱ་འོད
|TitleTibetan=སློབ་དཔོན་ཤཱཀྱ་འོད
|TitleWylie=slob dpon shAkya 'od
|TitleWylie=slob dpon shAkya 'od
|YearBirth=circa 8th cent.
|YearBirth=ca. 8th century
|BornIn=Kashmir
|BornIn=Kashmir
|StudentOf=Ku ma ra kla shu
|StudentOf=Ku ma ra kla shu

Latest revision as of 11:17, 21 November 2019

Śākyaprabha Himalayan Art Resources
PersonType Category:Classical Indian Authors
MainNamePhon Śākyaprabha
MainNameTib ཤཱཀྱ་འོད་
MainNameWylie shAkya 'Od
YearBirth ca. 8th century
BornIn Kashmir
StudentOf Ku ma ra kla shu
TeacherOf Seng+ge'i gdong can
BDRC https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P4CZ16819
IsInGyatsa No
BnwShortPersonBio Medeival Indian master of the Vinaya, renowned in Tibet, together with Guṇaprabha, as one of the "two supreme ones" (mchog gnyis). Apparently from Kashmir, he was an expert in the Mūlasarvāstivāda vinaya. He is best known for his work Śrāmaṇeratriśatakakārikā ("Three Hundred Verses on the Novice"), to which he wrote an autocommentary entitled Prabhāvatī. (Source: "Śākyaprabha." In The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, 742. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.)
Other wikis