Dwags po sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Person |pagename=dwags po sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa |MainNamePhon=Dagpo Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa |MainNameTib=དྭགས་པོ་སྒོམ་ཆེན་ངག་དབང་གྲགས་པ |MainNameWylie=dwags po sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa |OtherNames=Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa; sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa; grags pa'i blo gros; dwags po sgom chen |PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors |bio=Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo (15th century) Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo,...") |
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|MainNamePhon=Dagpo Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa | |MainNamePhon=Dagpo Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa | ||
|MainNameTib=དྭགས་པོ་སྒོམ་ཆེན་ངག་དབང་གྲགས་པ | |MainNameTib=དྭགས་པོ་སྒོམ་ཆེན་ངག་དབང་གྲགས་པ | ||
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Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo, also known as Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa, was born in the Tsang region of Tibet in the 15th century. He became a great scholar and tantric adept having studied the great texts under the preeminent Gelugpa masters of the day, including Gyaltsab Je, Khedrub Je, and Choeje Lodro Tenpa. | Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo, also known as Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa, was born in the Tsang region of Tibet in the 15th century. He became a great scholar and tantric adept having studied the great texts under the preeminent Gelugpa masters of the day, including Gyaltsab Je, Khedrub Je, and Choeje Lodro Tenpa. | ||
A wandering monastic community called Dagpo Dratsang had formed under his teacher, Je Lodro Tenpa, with the monks travelling from monastery to monastery debating as they went. Je Lodron Tenpa entrusted this community to Ngawang Drakpa and under his abbotship they finally settled at Gyatsa in Dagpo under the name of Thösamling. This was the first monastic university for advanced studies in Buddhist philosophy in Dagpo, and it later became known as Dagpo Shedrub Ling. Ngawang Drakpa’s collected works comprise 19 volumes. ([https://archive.jangchuplamrim.org/jangchup-lamrim/lamrim-authors-biographies/ Source Accessed Sep 24, 2025]) | A wandering monastic community called Dagpo Dratsang had formed under his teacher, Je Lodro Tenpa, with the monks travelling from monastery to monastery debating as they went. Je Lodron Tenpa entrusted this community to Ngawang Drakpa and under his abbotship they finally settled at Gyatsa in Dagpo under the name of Thösamling. This was the first monastic university for advanced studies in Buddhist philosophy in Dagpo, and it later became known as Dagpo Shedrub Ling. Ngawang Drakpa’s collected works comprise 19 volumes. | ||
He wrote a commentary on the ''Bodhicittavivaraṇa'' titled ''Rnam shes nor bu phreng ba'' (རྣམ་ཤེས་ནོར་བུ་ཕྲེང་བ་). ([https://archive.jangchuplamrim.org/jangchup-lamrim/lamrim-authors-biographies/ Source Accessed Sep 24, 2025]) | |||
|images=File:Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo.jpg | |images=File:Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo.jpg | ||
|DatesNotes=15th century | |DatesNotes=15th century | ||
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1846 | |BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1846 | ||
|pagename=dwags po sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa | |||
}} | }} | ||
Latest revision as of 18:39, 24 September 2025
| PersonType | Category:Classical Tibetan Authors |
|---|---|
| MainNamePhon | Dagpo Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa |
| MainNameTib | དྭགས་པོ་སྒོམ་ཆེན་ངག་དབང་གྲགས་པ |
| MainNameWylie | dwags po sgom chen ngag dbang grags pa |
| bio | Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo (15th century)
Ngawang Drakpa of Dagpo, also known as Gomchen Ngawang Drakpa, was born in the Tsang region of Tibet in the 15th century. He became a great scholar and tantric adept having studied the great texts under the preeminent Gelugpa masters of the day, including Gyaltsab Je, Khedrub Je, and Choeje Lodro Tenpa. A wandering monastic community called Dagpo Dratsang had formed under his teacher, Je Lodro Tenpa, with the monks travelling from monastery to monastery debating as they went. Je Lodron Tenpa entrusted this community to Ngawang Drakpa and under his abbotship they finally settled at Gyatsa in Dagpo under the name of Thösamling. This was the first monastic university for advanced studies in Buddhist philosophy in Dagpo, and it later became known as Dagpo Shedrub Ling. Ngawang Drakpa’s collected works comprise 19 volumes. He wrote a commentary on the Bodhicittavivaraṇa titled Rnam shes nor bu phreng ba (རྣམ་ཤེས་ནོར་བུ་ཕྲེང་བ་). (Source Accessed Sep 24, 2025) |
| DatesNotes | 15th century |
| BDRC | http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1846 |
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