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{{Person
{{Person
|classification=People
|HasDrlPage=Yes
|HasLibPage=Yes
|HasRtzPage=No
|HasDnzPage=Yes
|HasBnwPage=Yes
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors
|BiographicalInfo=In the city of Kayuri (ka yo ri) of Ngari, the home of the Tibetan paṇḍita, the Omniscient Dharma Lord Dolpapo Sherab Gyaltsen (1292–1361) was born to Yeshe Wangchok (his father) and Lamo Tsultrim Gyan (lha mo tshul khrims rgyan), his mother) in the year of Water Male Dragon. He took the novice vow, received the name as Sherab Gyaltsen, and studied authoritative commentaries on the scripture Karika (ka ri kA) under Khenpo Tsultrim Nyingpo (tshul khrims snying po). He also received empowerments and instructions on The Three Luminous Circles of Garlands, The Three Manifest Beneficial Cognitions, The Bodhicaryāvatāra, The Five Treatises of Maitreya, along with limitless greater and lesser traditions of sutra and mantra from over thirty lamas including Kyitun Jamyang Chakpa Gyantsen (skyid ston 'jam dbyangs grags pa rgyan mtshan).  
|images=File:Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen.jpg
File:Dolpopa.jpg{{!}}[https://www.himalayanart.org/items/55692 Himalayan Art Resources]
|MainNamePhon=Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen
|MainNameTib=དོལ་པོ་པ་ཤེས་རབ་རྒྱལ་མཚན་
|MainNameWylie=dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan
|AltNamesWylie=shes rab rgyal mtshan; shes rab mgon; rton pa bzhi ldan;
|AltNamesTib=ཤེས་རབ་རྒྱལ་མཚན་; ཤེས་རབ་མགོན་; རྟོན་པ་བཞི་ལྡན་;
|YearBirth=1292
|YearDeath=1361
|BornIn=gtsang stod mnga' ris dol po gru gsum spu mdo
|TibDateGender=Male
|TibDateElement=Water
|TibDateAnimal=Dragon
|TibDateRabjung=5
|ReligiousAffiliation=Jonang
|StudentOf=tshul khrims snying po; skyi ston 'jam dbyangs; skyi ston grags pa rgyal mtshan; sa skya slob dpon shes rab bzang po; gzhon nu bzang po; blo gros bstan pa; jo gdan mkhan po bsod nams grags pa; nag 'bum; jo nang chos rje yon gtan rgya mtsho;
|TeacherOf=jo nang lo tsA ba blo gros dpal; g.yag sde paN chen; bsod nams rgyal mtshan; phyogs las rnam rgyal; sa bzang ma ti paN chen blo gros rgyal mtshan; 'bri gung lo tsA ba ma Ni ka shrI; nya dbon kun dga' dpal; kun spangs chos grags dpal bzang
|BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P139
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Dolpopa-Sherab-Gyeltsen/2670
|tolExcerpt=Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen was one of the most influential Buddhist masters in Tibetan history. He first became an important scholar of the Sakya tradition, but then moved to Jonang Monastery. There he became the fourth holder of the monastic seat and constructed a monumental stupa. Dölpopa’s ideas, specifically his famous formulation of the zhentong view and his interpretations of Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna doctrine, have elicited controversy for nearly seven hundred years.
|HarLink=https://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=1595
|BnwShortPersonBio=Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen was one of the most influential Buddhist masters in Tibetan history. He first became an important scholar of the Sakya tradition, but then moved to Jonang Monastery. There he became the fourth holder of the monastic seat and constructed a monumental stupa. Dölpopa’s ideas, specifically his famous formulation of the zhentong view and his interpretations of Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna doctrine, have elicited controversy for nearly seven hundred years.
|PosBuNayDefProv=Definitive
|PosBuNayDefProvNotes="For Dölpopa, the teaching on buddha nature is of definitive meaning and serves as one of the cornerstones of his Shentong view. He typically describes both buddha nature and the dharmakāya as being ultimately really established, everlasting, eternal, permanent, immutable (ther zug), and being beyond dependent origination." [[Brunnhölzl, K.]], ''[[When the Clouds Part]]'', p. 68.
|PosAllBuddha=Yes
|PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes="The crucial stanza [RGV] I.27, in which the three reasons for the presence of a buddha nature in sentient beings are presented, is thus explained in the following way:
Since the dharmakāya of the perfect buddha embraces and pervades all phenomena, since there is no differentiation [to be made] within the dharmatā concerning all samsāra and nirvāna, and since the potential of the tathāgata exists in all sentient beings as the natural purity of the dharmadhātu, which can be purified of hindrances, truly every being possesses, always, continuously, and throughout beginningless time, the ultimate essence of the Buddha." [[Mathes, K.]], ''[[A Direct Path to the Buddha Within]]'', p. 82.
|PosWheelTurn=Third Turning
|PosYogaMadhyaNotes=Dolpopa has a unique view on this issue as Wangchuk points out:
*"Dölpopa argues the following: (1) Cittamātra is categorized into Conventional Cittamātra (''kun rdzob pa'i sems tsam'') and Ultimate Cittamātra (''don dam pa'i sems tsam''); (2) Cittamātra must not be conflated with Vijnānavāda; (3) Madhyamaka is grouped into Madyamaka without Appearance (''snang med dbu ma'') and Madhyamaka with Appearance (''snang bcas dbu ma''). His Mahäyäna doxography differs significantly from that of other fourteenth-century Tibetan scholars." [[Wangchuk, Tsering]], ''[[The Uttaratantra in the Land of Snows]]'', p. 47.


He attended most every dharma teaching that occurred around Ü and Tsang in his young age. Everyone praised him as an intrinsically omniscient one because of his insightful capacity, his impressive manifestation of awareness, and his extensive and unobstructed knowledge of Prajñāpāramitā. Therefore, he was renowned as “the Omniscient Dharma Lord”. He requested full ordination and studied the root texts of the Vinaya Sutras and their commentaries from Kenchen Sonam Chakpa (mkhyen chen bsod nams grags pa).
*It seems that the simple answer is that Dolpopa espoused Great Madhyamaka (''dbu ma chen mo'') or Madhyamaka with Appearance (''snang bcas dbu ma''), which is equivalent to Ultimate Cittamātra (''don dam pa'i sems tsam''). See [[Wangchuk, Tsering]], ''[[The Uttaratantra in the Land of Snows]]'', pp. 49-50.
 
|PosZhenRang=Zhentong
In 1322, at the age of thirty one, he arrived at Jonang. Khentsun Yönten Gyatso (mkhan btsun yon tan rgya mtsho) bestowed upon him the Kalachakra empowerment, and gave him the instructions on the Six Unions and many other teachings. In 1326, at the command of Khentsun, he was enthroned as regent. During the next two years, Khentsun continually gave him all the empowerments, transmissions, and instructions, and taught him all the doctrines he knew.  
|PosZhenRangNotes=He was not the first to use the term, but he was the one to define and make it a central feature of his innovative philosophical position:
 
*"According to traditional Tibetan accounts, the revolutionary theory that the ultimate is not "empty of an own-being” (''rang stong'') but “empty of other” (''gzhan stong'') arose in Dölpopas mind during a Kālacakra retreat at Jonang. Lhai Gyaltsen informs us that Dölpopas realization was connected with the ''Kālacakratantra'' and the construction of the great ''stūpa'' in Jonang, which was consecrated in 1333. One of the first works in which Dölpopa expressed his new zhentong understanding of the Buddhist doctrine was his famous ''Ri chos nges don rgya mtsho''. His last major work was the ''Bka bsdu bzhi pa'' (''Bka' bsdu bzhi pa'i don bstan rtsis chen po'', ''The Great Reckoning of the Doctrine That Has the Significance of a Fourth Council''), which can be seen as a final summary of Dölpopas views." [[Mathes, K.]], ''[[A Direct Path to the Buddha Within]]'', p. 75.
The main accomplishments of Dolpapa Sherab Gyaltsen were: 1) he built the great Jonang stupa of liberation; 2) he wrote an extensive instruction on The Ocean of Precious Ultimate Truth in his own way; 3) he gave permission to his two main students to re-translate the Kalachakra, and he composed a great tantric commentary, precise meaning, and annotation to it; 4) he wrote The Fundamental Treatise, The Four Significant Doctrines, and treatises and instructions on emptiness-of-other. During his lifetime, he dedicated his work to the buddha dharma and benefit of all sentient beings, and established many disciples on the path of maturation and libration. He passed into Nirvana in 1361, the year of Iron Female Ox. His outstanding students included Lotsā Namnyi ()
|PosEmptyLumin=Tathāgatagarbha as the Emptiness That is an Implicative Negation (with enlightened qualities)
|PosEmptyLuminNotes="He typically describes both buddha nature and the dharmakāya as being ultimately really established, everlasting, eternal, permanent, immutable (''ther zug''), and being beyond dependent origination. He also equates the tathāgata heart with “ālaya-wisdom” as opposed to the ālaya-consciousness." [[Brunnhölzl, K.]], ''[[When the Clouds Part]]'', p. 68.
|IsInGyatsa=No
|PosDefProv=Definitive
}}
}}
== Names ==
Tibetan: <big>དོལ་པོ་པ་ཤེས་རབ་རྒྱལ་མཚན།</big><br>
Wylie: <br>
*dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan<br>
*shes rab rgyal mtshan<br>
*shes rab mgon<br>
*rton pa bzhi ldan<br>
Other Transliterations in use:<br>
Dolpopa<br>
Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen<br>
Dolbopa<br>
Dolboba<br>
== Dates ==
birth 1292 at gtsang stod mnga' ris dol po gru gsum spu mdo<br>
death 1361<br>
== Affiliation ==
[[Jo nang pa]]
== Other Biographical Information ==
[http://tbrc.org/link?RID=P139 TBRC Person RID: P139]
major figure in the 'bro transmission of the kalacakra precepts<br>
"jo nang kun mkkhyen dol po shes rab rgyal mtshan dpal bzang po"<br>
thob yig gang+gA'i chu rgyun (v. 2, p. 7)<br>
1304. Fled to skyi-stengs dgon for ordination.<br>
Teacher (not recorded): bla-ma 'jam-pa'i-dbyangs taught dol-po-pa the byams chos sde lnga, dbu ma rigs, bstod tshogs, gtam tshogs, dbang lung rjes gnang for about four years before 1314.<br>
1322. Goes to jo-nang where he meets his principal master, chos-rje yon-tan-rgya-mtsho.<br>
1327-1331. Builds the great mchod-rten of jo-nang in memory of yon-tan-rgya-mtsho.<br>
1336. Travels to sa-skya, chu-bzang, lha-rtse rdzong, shangs, snar-thang, etc. to meditate and erect various images and retreats.<br>
1348. Invited to rta-nag by the ri-khud-pa and taught for a year there.<br>
Travelled to dbus where he taught extensively.<br>
Writings comprise 174 treatises:<br>
grub mtha' skor: 16<br>
phar phyin skor: 7<br>
gsol 'debs skor: 25<br>
Rdo rje 'phreng ba'i skor: 3<br>
Spring yig skor: 8<br>
Gdams ngag dang dris lan skor: 12<br>
Rnam thar sogs kyi skor: 16<br>
Smon lam skor: 3<br>
Bkra shis skor: 4<br>
== Main Students ==
blo gros rgyal mtshan
phyogs las rnam rgyal
blo gros dpal bzang
rin chen bzang po
dkon mchog rgyal mtshan
kun dga' dpal
chos grags dpal
ma Ni ka shrI
bsod nams grags pa
kun dga' 'bum
blo gros rgyal mtshan
rin chen tshul khrims
blo gros dpal
phun tshogs dpal
lha'i rgyal mtshan
bsod nams bzang po
blo gros grags pa
g.yag sde paN chen
chos grags bzang po
== Main Teachers ==
tshul khrims snying po
skyi ston 'jam dbyangs
byang chub seng+ge
tshul khrims bzang po
grags pa rgyal mtshan
shes rab bzang po
gzhon nu bzang po
blo gros bstan pa
bsod nams grags pa
nag 'bum
yon tan rgya mtsho
yon tan rgya mtsho
== Quotes ==
== Writings About {{PAGENAME}} ==
== Writings ==
{{Footer}}

Latest revision as of 16:25, 8 January 2021

Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen.jpg Himalayan Art Resources
PersonType Category:Classical Tibetan Authors
MainNamePhon Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen
MainNameTib དོལ་པོ་པ་ཤེས་རབ་རྒྱལ་མཚན་
MainNameWylie dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan
AltNamesTib ཤེས་རབ་རྒྱལ་མཚན་  ·  ཤེས་རབ་མགོན་  ·  རྟོན་པ་བཞི་ལྡན་
AltNamesWylie shes rab rgyal mtshan  ·  shes rab mgon  ·  rton pa bzhi ldan
YearBirth 1292
YearDeath 1361
BornIn gtsang stod mnga' ris dol po gru gsum spu mdo
TibDateGender Male
TibDateElement Water
TibDateAnimal Dragon
TibDateRabjung 5
ReligiousAffiliation Jonang
StudentOf tshul khrims snying po  ·  skyi ston 'jam dbyangs  ·  skyi ston grags pa rgyal mtshan  ·  sa skya slob dpon shes rab bzang po  ·  gzhon nu bzang po  ·  blo gros bstan pa  ·  jo gdan mkhan po bsod nams grags pa  ·  nag 'bum  ·  jo nang chos rje yon gtan rgya mtsho
TeacherOf jo nang lo tsA ba blo gros dpal  ·  g.yag sde paN chen  ·  bsod nams rgyal mtshan  ·  phyogs las rnam rgyal  ·  sa bzang ma ti paN chen blo gros rgyal mtshan  ·  Drikung Lotsāwa Maṇikaśrī  ·  nya dbon kun dga' dpal  ·  kun spangs chos grags dpal bzang
BDRC https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P139
Treasury of Lives https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Dolpopa-Sherab-Gyeltsen/2670
Himalayan Art Resources https://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=1595
IsInGyatsa No
BnwShortPersonBio Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen was one of the most influential Buddhist masters in Tibetan history. He first became an important scholar of the Sakya tradition, but then moved to Jonang Monastery. There he became the fourth holder of the monastic seat and constructed a monumental stupa. Dölpopa’s ideas, specifically his famous formulation of the zhentong view and his interpretations of Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna doctrine, have elicited controversy for nearly seven hundred years.
PosBuNayDefProv Definitive
PosBuNayDefProvNotes "For Dölpopa, the teaching on buddha nature is of definitive meaning and serves as one of the cornerstones of his Shentong view. He typically describes both buddha nature and the dharmakāya as being ultimately really established, everlasting, eternal, permanent, immutable (ther zug), and being beyond dependent origination." Karl Brunnhölzl, When the Clouds Part, p. 68.
PosAllBuddha Yes
PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes "The crucial stanza [RGV] I.27, in which the three reasons for the presence of a buddha nature in sentient beings are presented, is thus explained in the following way:

Since the dharmakāya of the perfect buddha embraces and pervades all phenomena, since there is no differentiation [to be made] within the dharmatā concerning all samsāra and nirvāna, and since the potential of the tathāgata exists in all sentient beings as the natural purity of the dharmadhātu, which can be purified of hindrances, truly every being possesses, always, continuously, and throughout beginningless time, the ultimate essence of the Buddha." Klaus-Dieter Mathes, A Direct Path to the Buddha Within, p. 82.

PosWheelTurn Third Turning
PosYogaMadhyaNotes Dolpopa has a unique view on this issue as Wangchuk points out:
  • "Dölpopa argues the following: (1) Cittamātra is categorized into Conventional Cittamātra (kun rdzob pa'i sems tsam) and Ultimate Cittamātra (don dam pa'i sems tsam); (2) Cittamātra must not be conflated with Vijnānavāda; (3) Madhyamaka is grouped into Madyamaka without Appearance (snang med dbu ma) and Madhyamaka with Appearance (snang bcas dbu ma). His Mahäyäna doxography differs significantly from that of other fourteenth-century Tibetan scholars." Wangchuk, Tsering, The Uttaratantra in the Land of Snows, p. 47.
  • It seems that the simple answer is that Dolpopa espoused Great Madhyamaka (dbu ma chen mo) or Madhyamaka with Appearance (snang bcas dbu ma), which is equivalent to Ultimate Cittamātra (don dam pa'i sems tsam). See Wangchuk, Tsering, The Uttaratantra in the Land of Snows, pp. 49-50.
PosZhenRang Zhentong
PosZhenRangNotes He was not the first to use the term, but he was the one to define and make it a central feature of his innovative philosophical position:
  • "According to traditional Tibetan accounts, the revolutionary theory that the ultimate is not "empty of an own-being” (rang stong) but “empty of other” (gzhan stong) arose in Dölpopas mind during a Kālacakra retreat at Jonang. Lhai Gyaltsen informs us that Dölpopas realization was connected with the Kālacakratantra and the construction of the great stūpa in Jonang, which was consecrated in 1333. One of the first works in which Dölpopa expressed his new zhentong understanding of the Buddhist doctrine was his famous Ri chos nges don rgya mtsho. His last major work was the Bka bsdu bzhi pa (Bka' bsdu bzhi pa'i don bstan rtsis chen po, The Great Reckoning of the Doctrine That Has the Significance of a Fourth Council), which can be seen as a final summary of Dölpopas views." Klaus-Dieter Mathes, A Direct Path to the Buddha Within, p. 75.
PosEmptyLumin Tathāgatagarbha as the Emptiness That is an Implicative Negation (with enlightened qualities)
PosEmptyLuminNotes "He typically describes both buddha nature and the dharmakāya as being ultimately really established, everlasting, eternal, permanent, immutable (ther zug), and being beyond dependent origination. He also equates the tathāgata heart with “ālaya-wisdom” as opposed to the ālaya-consciousness." Karl Brunnhölzl, When the Clouds Part, p. 68.
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