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Robert W. Clark is the Coordinator of the Stanford Tibetan Language Program. He teaches Tibetan language and literature at Stanford University, and serves as a curator and consultant for Asian Art collections in the US and India. He is the program director of Tardo Ling, in San Francisco, a center for translation of Tibetan literature. Dr. Clark worked as a translator in the Private Office of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and has served as interpreter for Tibetan lamas and educators for over 25 years. He is an author of numerous books and articles on Tibetan, Nepalese, and Indian Buddhist art, history and culture including ''Treasures of the Nying T’ik''; ''The Universal Vehicle Discourse Literature (Mahayanasutralamkara)''; ''Tibet: Treasures from the Roof of the World''; ''The Art of Gandhara and Tibet''; ''The Tethong Portraits of the Eighty Four Mahasiddhas''; ''The Treasures of Buddhist Tibet''; ''Art of the Qianlong Emperor''; and ''The Practice of Mahamudra''. He has translated over 70 Tibetan texts, and over 1000 Tibetan official and commercial documents from the Nepalese Government archive. Dr. Clark was a curator and catalogue author for exhibitions of Tibetan and Buddhist art at the Tibetan Museum (Dharamsala), Asian Art Museum (San Francisco), Dallas Art Museum, and Bowers Museum of Culture. He is currently working on a biographical account concerning Buddhist culture in Tibet and India in the 20th century. ([https://dlcl.stanford.edu/people/robert-w-clark Source Accessed April 30, 2020]) +
Roberto Vitali is an independent researcher, author of books and articles, editor of volumes and journals, convener of seminars. His field of studies concerns the history of Tibet and the Himalayan lands from the earliest time to the 15th century and the Tibetan language literature in general. (Source: [https://vitali-tibet.com/ Vitali Personal Website Accessed August 14, 2024])
'''Recent books available online:'''
1) 2024: https://vitali-tibet.com/books/Roberto-Vitali-Early-bKa-brgyud-pa-masters-on-the-Upper-side-1191-1344.pdf
2) 2024: https://vitali-tibet.com/books/Roberto-Vitali-Essays-on-the-history-of-Tibet.pdf +
Rod Bucknell is Associate Professor at the University of Queensland, Australia. +
Roderick Whitfield is professor of Chinese and East Asian art and head of the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art at the University of London. +
Roger Espel Llima nació en Barcelona, y estudió matemáticas y lingüística en París y Clermont-Ferrand en Francia. Se formó en idioma tibetano y filosofía budista en el Rigpa Shedra East en Pharping, Nepal desde el año 2007. Ha traducido unos cuantos libros de budismo al español, y también tradujo el Libro tibetano de la vida y de la muerte al catalán. ([https://www.lotsawahouse.org/es/translators/roger-espel-llima/ Source Accessed Feb 9, 2023]) +
Roger Jackson is John W. Nason Professor of Asian Studies and Religion, Emeritus, at Carleton College. He also has taught at the University of Michigan, Fairfield University, McGill University, and Maitripa College. He has a BA from Wesleyan University and an MA and PhD from the University of Wisconsin, where he studied under Geshe Lhundub Sopa. His books include ''Is Enlightenment Possible?'' (1993), ''Tibetan Literature'' (with José Cabezón, 1996), ''Buddhist Theology'' (with John Makransky, 1999), ''Tantric Treasures'' (2004), ''The Crystal Mirror of Philosophical Systems'' (with Geshe Sopa et al., 2009), and ''Mahāmudrā and the Bka’ brgyud Tradition'' (with Matthew Kapstein, 2011). He is a past editor of the ''Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies'', and currently co-edits the ''Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies''. He recently completed a major study and anthology centered on Mahāmudrā theory and practice in the Geluk tradition: [https://wisdomexperience.org/product/mind-seeing-mind/ ''Mind Seeing Mind'']. ([http://conference-wp.tsadra.org/past-event/the-2017-tt-conference/ Source Accessed Dec 6, 2019])
Roger Jackson's [https://apps.carleton.edu/profiles/assets/rjackson_cv.pdf CV]
Roger Jackson, John W. Nason Professor of Asian Studies and Religion, Emeritus, recently published an article-length memoir of his career as a scholar of Buddhism, “[https://networks.h-net.org/node/6060/pages/6031574/jackson-roger-r Playing Both Ends Against the Middle: Buddhadharma, Buddhist Studies, and Me],” on the Buddhist studies website H-Buddhism. +
Roland Barraux, born on August 12, 1928 in Menotey (Jura), is a French diplomat and writer.
<h2>Biography</h2>
He served in the Comoros Islands twice from 1954 to 1959 and then from 1967 to 1972 1 . He was French Ambassador to Africa , then to Afghanistan between 1981 and 1985 and finally to Nepal 2 between 1985 and 1990 . A writer, he is notably the author of Histoire des Dalaï-Lamas , a book translated into several languages.
<h2>Publications</h2>
''From Coral to Volcano: The Story of the Comoros Islands'', 2009<br>
''History of Nepal: the kingdom of the mountain with three names'', 2007, Éditions L'Harmattan, 2007, (ISBN 2296034918 and 9782296034914)<br>
With Andriamampionona Razafindramboa, ''Jean Laborde, a Gascon in Madagascar'', 1805-1878, Komedit, 2004.<br>
With Zalmaï Haquani, Sébastien Brabant, Marc Hecker, Paul Presset, Denis Rolland, ''Une vie d'Afghanistan'', L'Harmattan, 2006.<br>
''The Knight of the Bastille: Joseph Arney'', 1762-1802, 2002.<br>
''If I forget you Bamiyan: memories of my mission in Afghanistan 1981-1985'', Bamiyan Editions, 2002.<br>
''History of the Dalai Lamas - Fourteen Reflections on the Lake of Visions'', preface by Dagpo Rinpoche, Albin Michel, 1993; republished in 2002, Albin Michel (ISBN 2226133178) ([https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Barraux Source Accessed Feb 22, 2023]) +
Rolf Alfred Stein (13 June 1911 – 9 October 1999) was a German-born French Sinologist and Tibetologist. He contributed in particular to the study of the ''Epic of King Gesar'', on which he wrote two books, and the use of Chinese sources in Tibetan history. He was the first scholar to correctly identify the ''Minyag'' of Tibetan sources with the Xixia of Chinese sources.
Stein was born in Schwetz (now Świecie, Poland) to a family of Jewish origin in 1911. As a young man, Stein became interested in the occult, and it was from there that his interest in Tibet began.
He received his first degree in Chinese from the ''Seminar für Orientalische Sprachen'' at the University of Berlin in 1933. He fled to France the same year. He obtained degrees from l'École nationale des langues orientales vivantes in Chinese (1934) and Japanese (1936). In Paris he studied Tibetan with Jacques Bacot and Marcelle Lalou. He became a French citizen on 30 August 1939. Stein spent the Second World War in French Indo-China, working as a translator and where he was taken prisoner by the Japanese. He completed his ''doctorat d'État'' in 1960 on the Gesar epic.
Stein was a professor at the École pratique des hautes études, Ve section (''Religions de la Chine et de la Haute Asie'') from 1951 until 1975. He was a professor at the prestigious Collège de France from 1966 until 1982. He died in 1999. He was married to a Vietnamese lady from the highlands and adopted a daughter of Vietnamese-French descent.
Among Stein's most notable students were Anne-Marie Blondeau, Ariane Macdonald-Spanien, Samten Karmay, Yamaguchi Zuiho, and Yoshiro Imaeda. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolf_Stein Source Accessed Jan 20, 2020]) +
Carola Roloff (born 1959 in Holzminden, West Germany) is a German Buddhist nun. Her monastic name is Bhiksuni Jampa Tsedroen. An active teacher, translator, author, and speaker, she is instrumental in campaigning for equal rights for Buddhist nuns. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carola_Roloff Source Accessed July 23, 2018]).
Dr. Roloff is Visiting Professor for Buddhism (endowed docentship until 31.03.2025) in the Academy of World Religions of the University of Hamburg. From 1981-1996 she studied Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and practice with Geshe Thubten Ngawang in the Tibetan Centre e.V. and then Tibetology and Classical Indology with a focus on Buddhist Studies in the Asia-Africa-Institute of the University of Hamburg (M.A. 2003, PhD in 2009). Her current focus in research and teaching is "Buddhism and Dialogue in Modern Societies". Other research topics include: Interreligious dialogue, Buddhism between tradition and modernity, Mindfulness and other meditative techniques, Socially engaged Buddhism, and Gender-religion interactions in Buddhism and their significance in social dialogue processes (including in relation to their countries of origin).
([https://www.buddhismuskunde.uni-hamburg.de/personen/roloff.html Source Accessed July 23, 2018]) +
Dr. Ronald Davidson has taught at Fairfield University since 1990, after having
previously taught at Santa Clara University and at the Institute of Buddhist Studies
(Graduate Theological Union) in California. He has twice been Director of Asian Studies. He was trained in Sanskrit and Chinese Buddhist studies at the University of California Berkeley under Drs. Padmanabh Jaini, Lewis Lancaster, and Michel Strickmann, but also studied and lived with Tibetans for 18 years before and during his graduate career, working for 11 years with Ngor Thartse Khenpo (Hiroshi Sonami). ([http://works.bepress.com/ronald_davidson/ Source]) +
EMMERICK, RONALD ERIC, (b. Sydney, 9 March 1937; d. Hamburg, 31 August 2001), distinguished Australian scholar of the ancient civilizations and languages of Iran, India, and Tibet. He was the only son of Eric Steward Emmerick (1905-67) and Myrtle Caroline Emmerick, née Smith (1908-72). Prompted by his keen interest in languages and their history, he studied Latin, Greek, French, and German at Sydney University (1955-58), where he also attended an unofficial Sanskrit course offered by the classicist and linguist Athanasius Pryor Treweek. He took his B.A. degree with First Class Honors and received the University Medal for Classics with a thesis on “Mycenaean Morphology.” Subsequently he was appointed as a teaching fellow in the Latin department in 1959. His choice to write his thesis on Mycenaean Greek, whose script, Linear B, had only been deciphered in 1953, attests to his intellectual curiosity and shows how he was attracted by little explored subjects whose study could open up new vistas and deepen our knowledge of history in general. His chosen field of research, however, to which he devoted most of his life, was to be the Khotanese language and texts. He first heard of this language when, in Sydney, at the age of twenty-two, he read Harold Walter Bailey’s 1938 inaugural lecture, “The Content of Indian and Iranian Studies.” He was so impressed by this lecture that he decided to study Khotanese with Bailey at Cambridge University. There, he first completed his studies in Classics and was instructed in Iranian and Indian studies by Bailey, receiving the Brotherton Sanskrit Prize, the Bhaonagar Medal for Sanskrit and the Rapson Scholarship. Then, in the years 1963-65, he wrote his doctoral dissertation entitled "Indo-Iranian Studies: Saka Grammar" and took his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in 1965. In the meantime, he had been elected research fellow at St. John’s College, Cambridge (1964-67) and lecturer in Iranian Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies of the University of London (1964-71). In addition, he taught Sanskrit at Cambridge while Bailey was on a sabbatical leave (1965-66). He subsequently revised and enlarged his dissertation and published it under the title Saka Grammatical Studies (1968f), which became an indispensable reference work for both ancient and modern Iranian studies.
(Read more [https://iranicaonline.org/articles/emmerick-ronald-eric-scholar here])
Dr. Ron Burr has been a philosophy and religious studies professor for over two decades with the University of Southern Mississippi [www.usm.edu]. Ron has more than 20 years of leadership training experience in companies and non-profits. He has worked with the Fulbright Commission [www.fulbright.co.uk] where he helped institute business ethics programs in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines, and with the Center for Creative Leadership [www.ccl.org/leadership/index.aspx] where he conducted numerous training events for Fortune 500 companies.
Ron was instrumental in creating Religious Youth Service's experience-based, service learning model. He has served as a RYS project and educational leader in Spain, Italy, Poland, Czech Republic, Turkey, Dominican Republic, Taiwan, Mongolia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, the Philippines, Trinidad, Guatemala, The U.K., Jamaica and Estonia.
After earning his Ph.D. in comparative philosophy at the University of California [www.ucsb.edu], Santa Barbara, Ron studied Buddhism in Thailand, Taiwan, Sri Lanka and Japan. He also pursued post-doctoral studies with the best known comparative religionists of the twentieth century: Huston Smith [www.hustonsmith.net] and Ninian Smart [www.scottlondon.com/interviews/smart.html]. In addition to the Fulbright Ron has been the recipient of many private and national government grants. He edited a lengthy book on comparative philosophy and religion and has a long list of other publications in these fields. ([http://www.religiousyouthservice.org/about/leadership/burr.htm Source Accessed June 14, 2023]) +
Rongwo Lugyal (རོང་བོ་ཀླུ་རྒྱལ།) was born and raised in Rebgong. He is a writer, editor, and translator who translates from English to Tibetan and vice versa. Many of his works and translations are published in literary journals and on online platforms, including ''Journal of Tibetan Literature.'' +
*https://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Rongzom_Ch%C3%B6kyi_Zangpo
*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rongzom_Chokyi_Zangpo
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Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim is Reader in History at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. She is the co-editor of ''Rashid al-Din: Agent and Mediator of Cultural Exchanges in Ilkhanid Iran'' (2013), ''Islam and Tibet: Interactions along the Musk Routes'' (2010) and ''Astro-Medicine: Astrology and Medicine, East and West'' (2008). ([https://www.google.com/search?q=Ronit+Yoeli-Tlalim&oq=Ronit+Yoeli-Tlalim+&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOdIBCDU2NGowajE1qAIAsAIA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Source Accessed Dec 2, 2023]) +
Rose Leonore Marie Waldschmidt (née Ohrlich). Berlin 21.5.1895 — 1988. was a German Indologist. She was the daughter of Richard Ohrlich, auditor and tax consultant, and Katharina Herrmann. She was a textile designer and then specialized on the history of South Asian handicrafts. From 1927, she was the wife of Ernst Waldschmidt, whom she survived. In 1932-34 they were together in Sri Lanka and India. Their only son died in WW II. ([https://whowaswho-indology.info/23011/waldschmidt-rose-leonore/?print=print Adapted from Source Jan 30, 2024]) +
Rosemarie Fuchs (1950-2010) studied and practiced with eminent lamas of the Karma Kagyu tradition and spent much of her life translating Tibetan texts to German and interpreting for Tibetan Lamas in Germany. She is a member of the Marpa Translation Committee and has been a devoted student of the Venerable Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche since 1978. Fuchs translated the ''Mahayana Uttaratantra Shastra'' upon Khenpo Rinpoche’s advice. ([https://www.penguinrandomhouseretail.com/author/?authorid=167711 Adapted from Source Jul 22, 2020]) +
Rosemary Patton began studying Tibetan Buddhism and language in France with Dagpo Rinpoché in 1975 after earning a degree in English literature and drama at Queen’s University in Canada and a degree in anthropology at the Sorbonne. After attaining a further degree at the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (INaLCO) in Paris, she pursued her studies at Drepung Gomang in South India. She has been Dagpo Rinpoché’s English-language translator since the late 1980s. ([https://www.simonandschuster.com/authors/Rosemary-Patton/193102223 Source Accessed Mar 24, 2025]) +
Roy Andrew Miller (September 5, 1924 – August 22, 2014) was an American linguist notable for his advocacy of Korean and Japanese as members of the Altaic group of languages.
Miller was born in Winona, Minnesota, on September 5, 1924, to Andrew and Jessie (née Eickelberry) Miller. In 1953, he completed a Ph.D. in Chinese and Japanese at Columbia University in New York. Long a student of languages, his early work in the 1950s was largely with Chinese and Tibetan. For example, in 1969 he wrote the Encyclopædia Britannica entry on the Tibeto-Burman languages of South Asia.
He was Professor of Linguistics at the International Christian University in Tokyo from 1955 to 1963. Subsequently he taught at Yale University; between 1964 and 1970, he was chairman of the department of East and South Asian Languages and Literatures. From 1970 until 1989 he held a similar post at the University of Washington in Seattle. He then taught in Europe, mainly in Germany and Scandinavia.
He wrote extensively on the Japanese language, from ''A Japanese Reader'' (1963) and ''The Japanese Language'' (1967) to ''Japanese and the Other Altaic Languages'' (1971) and ''Nihongo: In Defense of Japanese'' (1986). He later broadened his scope by linking Korean both to Japanese and Altaic, most notably in ''Languages and History: Japanese, Korean, and Altaic'' (1996).
On the occasion of his 75th birthday, Professors Karl Menges and Nelly Naumann prepared a Festschrift highlighting his career and including articles on Altaic languages. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Andrew_Miller Source Accessed Sep 23, 2021]) +
Royce Wiles is a Lecturer (Applied Buddhist Studies) at Nan Tien Institute in the Greater Sydney Area. +