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{{Person | {{Person | ||
|MainNamePhon=Chim Namkha Drakpa | |||
|SortName=mchims nam mkha' grags pa | |||
|MainNameTib=མཆིམས་ནམ་མཁའ་གྲགས་པ་ | |||
|MainNameWylie=mchims nam mkha' grags pa | |||
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors | |||
|bio=Chim Namkha Drak (mchims nam mkha' grags) was born in Mondoi Kau (smon 'gro'i kha'u) in Upper Nyang (myang stod), in U, in 1210, the iron-horse year of the fourteenth sexagenary cycle. He was of the Chim (mchims) clan. His parents were named Dargon (dar mgon) and Lhemen (lhas sman); his father's family claimed descent from Chim Dorje Drelching (mchims rdor rje sprel chung), a minister to the Tibetan king, Tri Songdeutsen (khri srong lde'u btsan, 742-797). | |||
He took novice vows and later full monastic ordinations by a lama named Pelden Dromoche (dpal ldan gro mo che), who was possibly the same person as the fourth abbot of Nartang Monastery (snar thang dgon), Droton Dutsi Drakpa (gro ston bdud rtsi grags pa, 1153-1232), one of his main teachers. | |||
He studied the texts of the Kadam tradition with several masters, including the fifth abbot of Nartang, Zhangton Chokyi Lama (zhang ston chos kyi bla ma, 1184-1241); the sixth abbot of Nartang, Sanggye Gompa Sengge Kyab (sangs rgyas sgom pa seng ge skyabs, 1179-1250); Chim Loten Nyamme (mchims blo brtan mnyam med, d.u.); Geshe Tashi Gangpa (dge bshes bkra shis sgang pa, d.u.); Drubtob Maṇi Hūṃbar (grub thob ma Ni hUM 'bar, d.u.). Tashi Gangpa transmitted the Avalokiteśvara teachings passed from Jangsem Dawa Gyeltsen (byang sems zla ba rgyal mtshan, d.u). (Source: [https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Chim-Namkha-Drak/2181 Treasury of Lives]) | |||
|yearbirth=1210 | |||
|yeardeath=1267/1285 | |||
|bornin=kha'u | |||
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1060 | |||
|BdrcPnum=1060 | |||
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Chim-Namkha-Drak/2181 | |||
|tolExcerpt=Chim Namkha Drak (mchims nam mkha' grags) was born in Mondoi Kau (smon 'gro'i kha'u) in Upper Nyang (myang stod), in U, in 1210, the iron-horse year of the fourteenth sexagenary cycle. He was of the Chim (mchims) clan. His parents were named Dargon (dar mgon) and Lhemen (lhas sman); his father's family claimed descent from Chim Dorje Drelching (mchims rdor rje sprel chung), a minister to the Tibetan king, Tri Songdeutsen (khri srong lde'u btsan, 742-797). | |||
He took novice vows and later full monastic ordinations by a lama named Pelden Dromoche (dpal ldan gro mo che), who was possibly the same person as the fourth abbot of Nartang Monastery (snar thang dgon), Droton Dutsi Drakpa (gro ston bdud rtsi grags pa, 1153-1232), one of his main teachers. | |||
He studied the texts of the Kadam tradition with several masters, including the fifth abbot of Nartang, Zhangton Chokyi Lama (zhang ston chos kyi bla ma, 1184-1241); the sixth abbot of Nartang, Sanggye Gompa Sengge Kyab (sangs rgyas sgom pa seng ge skyabs, 1179-1250); Chim Loten Nyamme (mchims blo brtan mnyam med, d.u.); Geshe Tashi Gangpa (dge bshes bkra shis sgang pa, d.u.); Drubtob Maṇi Hūṃbar (grub thob ma Ni hUM 'bar, d.u.). Tashi Gangpa transmitted the Avalokiteśvara teachings passed from Jangsem Dawa Gyeltsen (byang sems zla ba rgyal mtshan, d.u). | |||
|affiliation=Narthang Monastery (snar thang dgon) | |||
|religiousaffiliation=Kadam | |||
|classification=Person | |classification=Person | ||
}} | }} | ||
== Names == | == Names == |
Latest revision as of 15:12, 23 May 2024
Mchims nam mkha' grags pa on the DRL
Wylie | mchims nam mkha' grags pa |
---|---|
English Phonetics | Chim Namkha Drakpa |
Sort Name | mchims nam mkha' grags pa |
Birth: | 1210 |
---|---|
Death: | 1267/1285 |
Place of birth: | kha'u |
Tibetan calendar dates
- Primary Affiliation (Workplace)
- Narthang Monastery (snar thang dgon)
- Religious Affiliation
- Kadam
Biographical Information
Chim Namkha Drak (mchims nam mkha' grags) was born in Mondoi Kau (smon 'gro'i kha'u) in Upper Nyang (myang stod), in U, in 1210, the iron-horse year of the fourteenth sexagenary cycle. He was of the Chim (mchims) clan. His parents were named Dargon (dar mgon) and Lhemen (lhas sman); his father's family claimed descent from Chim Dorje Drelching (mchims rdor rje sprel chung), a minister to the Tibetan king, Tri Songdeutsen (khri srong lde'u btsan, 742-797).
He took novice vows and later full monastic ordinations by a lama named Pelden Dromoche (dpal ldan gro mo che), who was possibly the same person as the fourth abbot of Nartang Monastery (snar thang dgon), Droton Dutsi Drakpa (gro ston bdud rtsi grags pa, 1153-1232), one of his main teachers.
He studied the texts of the Kadam tradition with several masters, including the fifth abbot of Nartang, Zhangton Chokyi Lama (zhang ston chos kyi bla ma, 1184-1241); the sixth abbot of Nartang, Sanggye Gompa Sengge Kyab (sangs rgyas sgom pa seng ge skyabs, 1179-1250); Chim Loten Nyamme (mchims blo brtan mnyam med, d.u.); Geshe Tashi Gangpa (dge bshes bkra shis sgang pa, d.u.); Drubtob Maṇi Hūṃbar (grub thob ma Ni hUM 'bar, d.u.). Tashi Gangpa transmitted the Avalokiteśvara teachings passed from Jangsem Dawa Gyeltsen (byang sems zla ba rgyal mtshan, d.u). (Source: Treasury of Lives)
- BDRC Link (P1060)
- http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1060
- Treasury of Lives Link
- https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Chim-Namkha-Drak/2181
- Wiki Pages
Names
Tibetan: མཆིམས་ནམ་མཁའ་གྲགས་པ་
Wylie:
- mchims nam mkha' grags pa
- nam mkha' grags pa
- snar thang mkhan chen 07 nam mkha' grags pa
Other Transliterations in use:
Dates
Born: 1210
Died: 1267/1285