https://commons.tsadra.org/index.php?feed=atom&hideredirs=1&limit=50&namespace=0&offset=&size-mode=max&size=0&tagfilter=&title=Special:NewPages&username=Tsadra Commons - New pages [en]2024-03-28T19:12:33ZFrom Tsadra CommonsMediaWiki 1.35.6https://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Isler,_H.Isler, H.2024-03-19T18:14:42Z<p>AlexC: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Henry W. Isler<br />
|SortName=Isler, Henry<br />
|namefirst=Henry<br />
|namelast=Isler<br />
|PersonType=Editors<br />
|images=File:Isler Henry Linkedin.jpg<br />
|associatedwebsite=[https://www.linkedin.com/in/isler-henry-w-55555447/?originalSubdomain=ch Linkedin]<br />
|pagename=Isler, H.<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Bock,_E.Bock, E.2024-03-19T16:51:11Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Bock, E. |MainNamePhon=Etienne Bock |SortName=Bock, Etienne |namefirst=Etienne |namelast=Bock |PersonType=Authors of English Works; Editors |bio=Etienne Boc..."</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Bock, E.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Etienne Bock<br />
|SortName=Bock, Etienne<br />
|namefirst=Etienne<br />
|namelast=Bock<br />
|PersonType=Authors of English Works; Editors<br />
|bio=Etienne Bock is a specialist in Tibetan literature and Himalayan arts.<br />
|images=File:Bock Etienne Linkedin.jpg<br />
|associatedwebsite=[https://www.linkedin.com/in/etienne-bock/?originalSubdomain=fr Linkedin]<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Blancke,_K.Blancke, K.2024-03-19T16:42:03Z<p>AlexC: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Kristin Blancke<br />
|SortName=Blancke, Kristin<br />
|namefirst=Kristin<br />
|namelast=Blancke<br />
|PersonType=Authors of English Works; Editors<br />
|bio=Kristin Blancke is an independent researcher in Tibetan Buddhism, working many years on the Italian translation of the ''Hundred Thousand Songs of Milarepa'' by Tsang Nyon Heruka. In her research she evaluates earlier texts about the life and teachings of Milarepa, so as to be able to get a more 'realistic' picture of this great teacher. ([https://independent.academia.edu/kristinblancke Adapted from Source March 19, 2024])<br />
|images=File:Blancke Kristin Academia.jpg<br />
|associatedwebsite=[https://independent.academia.edu/kristinblancke Academia.org]<br />
|pagename=Blancke, K.<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Dpal_khang_lo_tsA_ba_ngag_dbang_chos_kyi_rgya_mtshoDpal khang lo tsA ba ngag dbang chos kyi rgya mtsho2024-03-12T20:42:24Z<p>Mort: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Palkhang Lotsāwa Ngawang Chökyi Gyamtso<br />
|MainNameTib=དཔལ་ཁང་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་ངག་དབང་ཆོས་ཀྱི་རྒྱ་མཚོ་<br />
|MainNameWylie=dpal khang lo tsA ba ngag dbang chos kyi rgya mtsho<br />
|OtherNames=karma 'phrin las gnyis pa<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|images=File:Karma Tinley II-Palkhang Lotsawa.jpg<br />
|yearbirth=16th century<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1457<br />
|EmanationOf=Karma phrin las pa<br />
|pagename=dpal khang lo tsA ba ngag dbang chos kyi rgya mtsho<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Owens,_RodOwens, Rod2024-03-11T20:02:29Z<p>Marcus: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Lama Rod Owens<br />
|SortName=Owens, Rod<br />
|namefirst=Rod<br />
|namelast=Owens<br />
|PersonType=Western Buddhist Teachers<br />
|bio=https://www.lamarod.com/about<br />
<br />
Author of The New Saints: From Broken Hearts to Spiritual Warriors and Love and Rage: The Path of Liberation through Anger and co-author of Radical Dharma: Talking Race, Love and Liberation.<br />
|images=File:Owens-Rod-Lama-Amazon.jpg<br />
|associatedwebsite=https://www.lamarod.com/<br />
|pagename=Owens, Rod<br />
}}</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Dpal_sprul_nam_mkha%27_%27jigs_medDpal sprul nam mkha' 'jigs med2024-03-08T22:28:33Z<p>Marcus: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Patrul Namkha Jikmé<br />
|SortName=Patrul Namkha Jikmé<br />
|MainNameTib=དཔལ་སྤྲུལ་ནམ་མཁའ་འཇིགས་མེད་<br />
|MainNameWylie=dpal sprul nam mkha' 'jigs med<br />
|bio=Patrul Rinpoche's reincarnation, Patrul Namkha Jigme (dpal sprul nam mkha' 'jigs med, 1888–1960), who was the seventh son of the renowned treasure revealer Dudjom Lingpa (bdud 'joms gling pa, 1835–1904), was Kunzang Wangmo's father. He was also know as Padma Khalong Yangpa Tsal and Tulku Namkha Jikmé. (Source: [https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Kunzang-Wangmo/13819 Treasury of Lives]). Patrul Namkha Jikmé’s two main teachers were his father Dudjom Lingpa, and Khenpo Kunpal. He revealed nine volumes of terma, and constructed a shedra at Dza Pukhung Gön and a Zabchö Shitro Gongpa Rangdrol drupdra at Dzagyal Monastery. His main dharma heir was his own daughter, Khandroma Kunzang Wangmo, a great-daughter of Dudjom Lingpa. (Source: [https://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Patrul_Namkha_Jikm%C3%A9 Rigpa Wiki])<br />
|yearbirth=1888<br />
|yeardeath=1960<br />
|associatedwebsite=[https://library.bdrc.io/show/bdr:P3JM136 BDRC Person Page]<br />
[https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Patrul-Namkha-Jigme/TBRC_P3JM136 Treasury of Lives]<br />
|pagename=dpal sprul nam mkha' 'jigs med<br />
}}</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Shan%2Bti_pa_blo_gros_rgyal_mtshanShan+ti pa blo gros rgyal mtshan2024-02-28T16:31:54Z<p>Mort: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Shan+ti pa blo gros rgyal mtshan |MainNamePhon=Shantipa Lodrö Gyaltsen |MainNameTib=ཤནྟི་པ་བློ་གྲོས་རྒྱལ་མཚ..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Shan+ti pa blo gros rgyal mtshan<br />
|MainNamePhon=Shantipa Lodrö Gyaltsen<br />
|MainNameTib=ཤནྟི་པ་བློ་གྲོས་རྒྱལ་མཚན་<br />
|MainNameWylie=shan+ti pa blo gros rgyal mtshan<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|yearbirth=1487<br />
|yeardeath=1567<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P507<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/PaN_chen_blo_gros_legs_bzangPaN chen blo gros legs bzang2024-02-28T16:22:13Z<p>Mort: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=PaN chen blo gros legs bzang |MainNamePhon=Paṇchen Lodrö Lekzang |MainNameTib=པཎ་ཆེན་བློ་གྲོས་ལེགས་བཟང་..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=PaN chen blo gros legs bzang<br />
|MainNamePhon=Paṇchen Lodrö Lekzang<br />
|MainNameTib=པཎ་ཆེན་བློ་གྲོས་ལེགས་བཟང་<br />
|MainNameWylie=paN chen blo gros legs bzang<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|yearbirth=16th century<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P2917<br />
|BdrcPnum=2917<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Shangs_ston_kun_mkhyen_legs_pa_don_grubShangs ston kun mkhyen legs pa don grub2024-02-28T16:01:10Z<p>Mort: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Shangs ston kun mkhyen legs pa don grub |MainNamePhon=Shangtön Kunkhyen Lekpa Döndrup |MainNameTib=ཤངས་སྟོན་ཀུན་མཁྱེན..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Shangs ston kun mkhyen legs pa don grub<br />
|MainNamePhon=Shangtön Kunkhyen Lekpa Döndrup<br />
|MainNameTib=ཤངས་སྟོན་ཀུན་མཁྱེན་ལེགས་པ་དོན་གྲུབ་<br />
|MainNameWylie=shangs ston kun mkhyen legs pa don grub<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|yearbirth=1479<br />
|yeardeath=1555<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1778<br />
|BdrcPnum=1778<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Lo_ras_paLo ras pa2024-02-26T20:51:19Z<p>Mort: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Lorepa<br />
|MainNameTib=ལོ་རས་པ་<br />
|MainNameWylie=lo ras pa<br />
|OtherNames=lo ras dbang phyug brtson 'grus; dbang phyug brtson 'grus; dbu ri pa; rgyal ba lo ras pa; chos rje lo ras pa; grags pa dbang phyug<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|images=File:Lorepa.jpg<br />
|yearbirth=1187<br />
|yeardeath=1250<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P4252<br />
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Lorepa-Wangchuk-Tsondru/6671<br />
|tolExcerpt=Lorepa is considered the founder of a branch of the Drukpa Kagyu called the Me Druk, or "Lower Druk." A very important teacher during his times, he exemplifies the life of solitary meditation under often difficult circumstances. He founded Tharpaling in Bhutan.<br />
|pagename=Lo ras pa<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Bla_ma_bsod_nams_bzang_poBla ma bsod nams bzang po2024-02-26T18:09:03Z<p>Mort: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Lama Sönam Zangpo<br />
|MainNameTib=བླ་མ་བསོད་ནམས་བཟང་པོ་<br />
|MainNameWylie=bla ma bsod nams bzang po<br />
|OtherNames=me me bla ma bsod nams bzang po; rtogs ldan bsod nams bzang po<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors; Tibetan Buddhist Teachers<br />
|images=File:Drubwang sonam zangpo.jpg<br />
File:Sonam zangpo.jpg<br />
|yearbirth=1892<br />
|yeardeath=1983<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P622<br />
|BdrcPnum=622<br />
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/bsod-nams-bzang-po/P622<br />
|religiousaffiliation=Drukpa Kagyu<br />
|StudentOf=ShAkya shrI<br />
|TeacherOf=Khyentse, Dzongsar; 'phags mchog rdo rje<br />
|PersonalAffiliation=grandfather of Dzongsar Khyentse and Garab Rinpoche<br />
|pagename=bla ma bsod nams bzang po<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/LakshmikaraLakshmikara2024-02-02T21:22:52Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Lakshmikara |MainNamePhon=Lakshmikara |SortName=Lakshmikara |namefirst=Lakshmikara |PersonType=Translators |bio=Scholar who assisted in producing the first..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Lakshmikara<br />
|MainNamePhon=Lakshmikara<br />
|SortName=Lakshmikara<br />
|namefirst=Lakshmikara<br />
|PersonType=Translators<br />
|bio=Scholar who assisted in producing the first complete translation of the ''Mirror'' in about 1270, collaborating with Shong ston rdo rje rgyal mtshan. ([https://academic.oup.com/book/45656/chapter/398026442 Source Accessed Feb 2, 2024])<br />
|DatesNotes=13th century<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Rau,_W.Rau, W.2024-01-31T22:40:36Z<p>AlexC: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Wilhelm Rau<br />
|SortName=Rau, Wilhelm<br />
|namefirst=Wilhelm<br />
|namelast=Rau<br />
|PersonType=Authors of German Works; Professors<br />
|bio=Adolf Wilhelm Ludwig Rau (Gera 15.2.1922 – Gera 29.12.1999) was a German Indologist and professor in Marburg. He was that son of Rudolf Rau, a schoolteacher, and Johanna Seifarth. He began studying Sanskrit already when 15. From 1940, he began studies at Leipzig under Friedrich Weller, but was soon interrupted by service as an interpreter for the Indian Legion (which gave him practical knowledge of Hindūstānī and contacts with other Indologists). After a brief time as an American war prisoner, he came to the West and continued his studies at Marburg from 1946 (but also kept in contact with Weller until Weller’s death). He earned his Ph.D. in 1949 from Marburg under Nobel. PD 1952 Marburg, then two years in India studying vyākaraṇa under Shantibhikshu Shastri at Santiniketan. From 1955 he was Professor of IE Linguistics at Frankfurt. In 1957 he succeeded Nobel as Professor of Sanskrit Philology at Marburg. He retired in 1988.<br />
<br />
Rau is best known for his studies on the material culture of the Vedic period, masterfully combining archaeological evidence to a full discussion of texts, especially the Brāhmaṇas. His other interests include the text tradition of the Vākyapadīya of Bhartṛhari and the history of Indology. Among his students, for example, H. Brückner, G. Ehlers, Sh. Einoo, A. Frenz, D. George, K. Klaus, M. Kraatz, M. Mittwede, R. S. Sarma, D. Schrapel, P. S. Sharma and Ry. Tsuchida completed their Ph.D. under him. His papers are kept in Halle. ([https://whowaswho-indology.info/5138/rau-wilhelm/ Adapted from Source Jan 31, 2014])<br />
|yearbirth=1922<br />
|yeardeath=1999<br />
|bornin=Gera, Germany<br />
|pagename=Rau, W.<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Schlingloff,_D.Schlingloff, D.2024-01-30T19:47:45Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Schlingloff, D. |MainNamePhon=Dieter Schlingloff |SortName=Schlingloff, Dieter |namefirst=Dieter |namelast=Schlingloff |PersonType=Authors of German Works;..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Schlingloff, D.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Dieter Schlingloff<br />
|SortName=Schlingloff, Dieter<br />
|namefirst=Dieter<br />
|namelast=Schlingloff<br />
|PersonType=Authors of German Works; Professors<br />
|bio=Dieter Schlingloff (born April 24, 1928 in Kassel ) is a German Indologist. After graduating from high school in Eschwege in 1944/1946, he studied in Göttingen from 1947 to 1952. From 1953 to 1961 he was a research assistant at the Institute for Oriental Research at the German Academy of Sciences in Berlin. From 1962 to 1968 he was a private lecturer in Göttingen. From 1968 to 1971 he was a full professor in Kiel. From 1972 to 1996 he was a university professor in Munich. He has been an honorary professor in Leipzig since 2005.<br />
<br />
His areas of expertise are Buddhist Sanskrit literature, ancient Indian art and cultural history. He is researching mural paintings in Ajanta. ([https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieter_Schlingloff Source Accessed Jan 30, 2024])<br />
|yearbirth=1928<br />
|bornin=Kassel<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Waldschmidt,_R.Waldschmidt, R.2024-01-30T19:40:13Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Waldschmidt, R. |MainNamePhon=Rose Leonore Marie Waldschmidt |SortName=Waldschmidt, Rose Leonore Marie |namefirst=Rose Leonore Marie |namelast=Waldschmidt |..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Waldschmidt, R.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Rose Leonore Marie Waldschmidt<br />
|SortName=Waldschmidt, Rose Leonore Marie<br />
|namefirst=Rose Leonore Marie<br />
|namelast=Waldschmidt<br />
|PersonType=Authors of German Works<br />
|bio=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])<br />
|yearbirth=1895<br />
|yeardeath=1988<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Brag_dkar_ba_chos_kyi_dbang_phyugBrag dkar ba chos kyi dbang phyug2024-01-29T16:28:42Z<p>Mort: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Brag dkar ba chos kyi dbang phyug |MainNamePhon=Drakarwa Chökyi Wangchuk |MainNameTib=བྲག་དཀར་བ་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་ཕ..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Brag dkar ba chos kyi dbang phyug<br />
|MainNamePhon=Drakarwa Chökyi Wangchuk<br />
|MainNameTib=བྲག་དཀར་བ་ཆོས་ཀྱི་དབང་ཕྱུག་<br />
|MainNameWylie=brag dkar ba chos kyi dbang phyug<br />
|OtherNames=brag dkar rta so sprul sku chos kyi dbang phyug; mi pham chos kyi dbang phyug; mi pham 'chi med med grub pa chos kyi rgyal mtshan<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|yearbirth=1775<br />
|yeardeath=1837<br />
|bornin=brag dkar rta so<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P5630<br />
|BdrcPnum=5630<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Kambalap%C4%81daKambalapāda2024-01-27T01:21:29Z<p>AlexC: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Kambalapāda<br />
|SortName=Kambalapāda<br />
|MainNameTib=कम्बलपाद<br />
|OtherNames=Lva ba pa; Bla ma Dge slong; Lwa ba pa; Lavāpa<br />
|PersonType=Authors of Sanskrit Works<br />
|bio=Lva ba pa, or bLa ma dGe slong, Skt. Kambalapāda, was a tenth-century master who, with others, discovered the yoginī tantras in the country of Oḍḍīyāna (BA, 753), and was important in the lineage of Guhyasamāja. He was known as the Sleeping Bhikṣu (monk) because he is said to have slept for three years at the gate of king Indrabhūti's palace (BA, 362). A bhasuku or bhusuku is similar to a mendicant (sprang bu), that is, free of purposeful action (bya bral pa) (KTGR 2005). Sleeping for three years would probably qualify! (Harding, ''Esoteric Instructions'', 192n172)<br />
|DatesNotes=10th century<br />
|pagename=Kambalapāda<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Jit%C4%81riJitāri2024-01-27T01:14:41Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Jitāri |MainNamePhon=Jitāri |SortName=Jitāri |namefirst=Jitāri |MainNameTib=དགྲ་ལས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ |MainNameWylie=Dgra las rnam r..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Jitāri<br />
|MainNamePhon=Jitāri<br />
|SortName=Jitāri<br />
|namefirst=Jitāri<br />
|MainNameTib=དགྲ་ལས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ<br />
|MainNameWylie=Dgra las rnam rgyal<br />
|OtherNames=Jetāri<br />
|PersonType=Authors of Sanskrit Works<br />
|bio=Jitāri. [alt. Jetāri] (T. Dgra las rnam rgyal) (fl. c. 940-980). Sanskrit proper name of the author of the ''Hetutattopadeśa'' and a number of short works on pramāṇa in the tradition that follows Dharmakīrti; later Tibetan doxographers (see siddhānta) characterize him as interpreting Dharmakīrti's works from a<br />
Madhyamaka perspective, leading them to include him in a Yogācāra - Svātantrika - Madhyamaka school following the false aspect (alīkākara) position. A Jitāri also appears in the list of the eighty-four mahāsiddhas as a tantric adept; he is also listed as a teacher of Atiśa Dīpamkaraśrījñāna. (Source: "Jitāri." In ''The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism'', 393. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.)<br />
|DatesNotes=(fl. c. 940–980)<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Vidy%C4%81kara%C5%9B%C4%81ntiVidyākaraśānti2024-01-25T23:12:32Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Vidyākaraśānti |MainNamePhon=Vidyākaraśānti |SortName=Vidyākaraśānti |namefirst=Vidyākaraśānti |MainNameTib=विद्याकरशान्..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Vidyākaraśānti<br />
|MainNamePhon=Vidyākaraśānti<br />
|SortName=Vidyākaraśānti<br />
|namefirst=Vidyākaraśānti<br />
|MainNameTib=विद्याकरशान्ति<br />
|MainNameWylie=Vidyākaraśānti<br />
|PersonType=Authors of Sanskrit Works<br />
|bio=Vidyākaraśānti (1100–1200), author of the ''Tarkasopāna''.<br />
|DatesNotes=(1100–1200)<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Am%E1%B9%9Bt%C4%81karaAmṛtākara2024-01-25T22:44:21Z<p>AlexC: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Amṛtākara<br />
|SortName=Amṛtākara<br />
|namefirst=Amṛtākara<br />
|PersonType=Authors of Sanskrit Works<br />
|bio=Said to be a teacher from Kashmir, Amṛtākara wrote the ''Catuḥstavasamāsārtha'', a commentary on the ''Catuḥstava'' (Four Hymns) of Nāgārjuna.<br />
|pagename=Amṛtākara<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Bh%C4%81mahaBhāmaha2024-01-25T02:13:10Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Bhāmaha |MainNamePhon=Bhāmaha |SortName=Bhāmaha |namefirst=Bhāmaha |MainNameTib=भामह |PersonType=Classical Indian Authors |bio=Bhamaha (Sanskrit..."</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
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|MainNamePhon=Bhāmaha<br />
|SortName=Bhāmaha<br />
|namefirst=Bhāmaha<br />
|MainNameTib=भामह<br />
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors<br />
|bio=Bhamaha (Sanskrit: भामह, Bhāmaha) (c. 7th century) was a Sanskrit poetician believed to be contemporaneous with Daṇḍin. He is noted for writing a work called the ''Kāvyālaṃkāra'' (Sanskrit: काव्यालङ्कार, Kāvyālaṃkāra) ("The ornaments of poetry"). For centuries, he was known only by reputation, until manuscripts of the ''Kāvyālaṃkāra came to the attention of scholars in the early 1900s. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhamaha Source Accessed Jan 24, 2024])<br />
|yearbirth=7th century<br />
|associatedwebsite=https://gretil.sub.uni-goettingen.de/gretil/1_sanskr/5_poetry/1_alam/bhakavpu.htm<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Mkhan_chen_zla_zerMkhan chen zla zer2024-01-24T17:11:54Z<p>Marcus: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|religiousaffiliation=Nyingma<br />
|TeacherOf=Pema Rigtsal<br />
|pagename=mkhan chen zla zer<br />
|MainNamePhon=Khenchen Dazer<br />
|SortName=Dazer, Khenchen<br />
|MainNameTib=མཁན་ཆེན་ཟླ་ཟེར།<br />
|MainNameWylie=mkhan chen zla zer<br />
|OtherNames=Khenpo Dawé Özer; mkhan po zla ba'i 'od zer<br />
|PersonType=Tibetan Buddhist Teachers<br />
|bio=he was from Rahor, a branch of Dzogchen monastery founded by the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche in Gyalrong near Dergé. He was a student of Pöpa Tulku. He escaped from Tibet together with his former classmate Rahor Khenpo Tupten and went together with him to Sikkim via Bhutan.<br />
<br />
He taught at Namdroling in South India, where he also compiled a collection of prayers and liturgies used in Nyingma rituals, and eventually returned to Tibet, where he taught at the Shri Singha Shedra at Dzogchen Monastery. ([https://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Khenpo_Daw%C3%A9_%C3%96zer Source Accessed on January 24, 2024])<br />
<br />
'''Read more: '''<br />
:Marilyn Silverstone, 'Five Nyingmapa Lamas in Sikkim', Kailash: A Journal of Himalayan Studies, 1973, vol. 1.1<br />
:Nyoshul Khenpo, A Marvelous Garland of Rare Gems, Padma Publishing, 2005, p. 480<br />
<br />
'''Writings:'''<br />
*དོན་རྣམ་འགྲེལ་པ་ལུང་རིགས་དོ་ཤལ་, don rnam 'grel pa lung rigs do shal (Necklace of Scripture and Reasoning: A Commentary on Mipham Rinpoche's Sword of Wisdom for Thoroughly Ascertaining Reality, ཤེས་རབ་རལ་གྲི་དོན་རྣམ་ངེས) (composed in 1982): https://library.bdrc.io/show/bdr:MW1KG4451<br />
*ཆོས་སྤྱོད་བསྡུས་པ་ཕན་བདེའི་དགའ་སྟོན་, chos spyod bsdus pa phan bde'i dga' ston (editor)<br />
|yearbirth=1922<br />
|yeardeath=1990<br />
|bornin=Tsangtang (gtsang thang), in Dranggo (brag mgo), Kham<br />
|associatedwebsite=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Khenchen-Dazer/11741<br />
|BdrcLink=https://library.bdrc.io/show/bdr:P8977<br />
|BdrcPnum=P8977<br />
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Khenchen-Dazer/11741<br />
}}</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Pema_RigtsalPema Rigtsal2024-01-23T23:50:19Z<p>Marcus: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|affiliation=Namkha Khyung Dzong Monastery<br />
|affiliationsecondary=Upper Dudjom Lineage<br />
|religiousaffiliation=Nyingma<br />
|StudentOf=mkhan chen zla zer<br />
|MainNamePhon=HE Tulku Pema Rigtsal<br />
|SortName=Pema Rigtsal<br />
|MainNameTib=པདྨ་རིག་རྩལ་<br />
|MainNameWylie=pad+ma rig rtsal<br />
|OtherNames=Pema Riktsal<br />
|PersonType=Authors of English Works; Authors of Tibetan Works; Tibetan Buddhist Teachers; Tulkus<br />
|bio=Tulku Pema Rigtsal Rinpoche is the Supreme Head of Namkha Khyung Dzong Monastery in Humla, Nepal ("upper Dudjom lineage" known as Namkha Khyung Dzong, formerly based at Mount Kailash in Tibet). At the age of three he was recognized by Dudjom Rinpoche as the reincarnation of “Chimed Rinpoche,” who is the emanation of the Great Indian Siddha “Dampa Sangye” and spiritual head of the renowned Shedphel Ling Monastery in Ngari, Tibet. In 1985 he reconstructed the Namkha Khyung Dzong Monastery in Humla, Nepal, and has taught the 13 major philosophical texts (Shungchen Chusum) for 24 years. His religious guidance has inspired hundreds of ascetics and other practitioners in Tibet.<br />
<br />
Rinpoche has studied the Vajrayana tradition of the Nyingma lineage from renowned spiritual masters: Dudjom Rinpoche, Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Dodrupchen Rinpoche, Penor Rinpoche, Thinley Norbu Rinpoche, Trulshik Rinpoche, and Domang Yangthang Rinpoche. ([https://rubinmuseum.org/events/event/mindfulness-meditation-with-tulku-pema-rigtsal-rinpoche-02-22-24/ Source Accessed January 23, 2024])<br />
<br />
According to Rigpa Wiki: Tulku Pema Rigtsal gives teachings on the Dudjom Tersar Ngöndro, the ''The Words of My Perfect Teacher'', ''Bodhicharyavatara'', and the Richö, Nang Jang, Neluk Rangjung, and other Dudjom Tersar teachings, to the people of Humla and those from the Ngari part of Tibet.<br />
<br />
Tulku Pema Rigtsal also holds Summer and Winter Dharma Teaching sessions every year for more than five hundred practitioners including monks, ngakpas (yogis) and nuns residing in Humla and Ngari, Tibet. Hundreds of hermits are practising in caves and solitary locations in Humla, Nepal and Ngari, Tibet under his instruction and guidance.<br />
<br />
Among his writings, there are:<br />
:a commentary on the Calling The Lama From Afar of Dudjom Rinpoche<br />
:a biography of the Degyal Rinpoche (the first).<br />
:his first book in Tibetan, entitled “Semkyi Sangwa Ngontu Phyungwa” (translated and published in English as [[The Great Secret of Mind]]).<br />
|images=File:Tulku Pema Rigtsal-2024.jpeg<br />
|yearbirth=1963<br />
|associatedwebsite=https://www.namkhyung.org/<br />
|BdrcLink=https://library.bdrc.io/show/bdr:P3JM117<br />
|BdrcPnum=P3JM117<br />
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/pad+ma-rig-rtsal/12921<br />
|pagename=Pema Rigtsal<br />
}}</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Gupta,_H.Gupta, H.2024-01-23T17:41:54Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Gupta, H. |MainNamePhon=Harish C. Gupta |SortName=Gupta, Harish |namefirst=Harish |namelast=Gupta |PersonType=Translators }}"</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Gupta, H.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Harish C. Gupta<br />
|SortName=Gupta, Harish<br />
|namefirst=Harish<br />
|namelast=Gupta<br />
|PersonType=Translators<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/V%C4%81caspatimi%C5%9BraVācaspatimiśra2024-01-23T15:50:46Z<p>AlexC: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Vācaspatimiśra<br />
|SortName=Vācaspatimiśra<br />
|namefirst=Vācaspatimiśra<br />
|OtherNames=Vācaspati Miśra<br />
|bio=Vācaspati Miśra was an extremely versatile and influential Indian philosopher in the tenth century CE . As a follower of Advaita Vedānta, he wrote commentaries on the fundamental works of the two great masters of this tradition, Śaṅkarā and Maṇḍana Miśra. He also contributed to most of the orthodox (or Brahmanical) philosophical schools of Hinduism: he wrote on Mīmāṃsā and grammatical theory (in particular, on the holistic ''sphoṭa'' theory of meaning), and his commentaries on Nyāya, Sāṃkhya, and Yoga are all considered authoritative in these traditions. One of the two subschools of Śaṅkara's Advaita tradition follows and is named after Vācaspati's ''Bhāmatī'' ("Bright"), itself a commentary on Śaṅkara's ''Brahmasūtrabhāṣya'' ("Commentary on the aphorisms on ''brahman''"). ([https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119009924.eopr0400 Source Accessed Jan 22, 2024])<br />
|yearbirth=10th century<br />
|pagename=Vācaspatimiśra<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Strauss,_O.Strauss, O.2024-01-20T19:50:09Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Strauss, O. |MainNamePhon=Otto Strauss |SortName=Strauss, Otto |namefirst=Otto |namelast=Strauss |PersonType=Authors of German Works; Professors; Translator..."</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Strauss, O.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Otto Strauss<br />
|SortName=Strauss, Otto<br />
|namefirst=Otto<br />
|namelast=Strauss<br />
|PersonType=Authors of German Works; Professors; Translators<br />
|bio=Otto Strauss (b. Berlin 18.10.1881 — d. Bloemendaal, Netherlands 20.10.1940) was a German Indologist and a Professor in Breslau. The son of a banker, he studied Indology, philosophy, and art history at Munich, Berlin and especially Kiel (Oldenberg, Deussen). From Deussen, he developed an interest in Indian philosophy. He received his Ph.D. in 1905 at Kiel (under Oldenberg). From 1913 he was Professor of Comparative Philology at University of Calcutta. In 1915-20, he interned in Ahmednagar (and studied Russian). In 1920 he resumed his docentship at Kiel . . . In 1928 he succeeded Liebich as ord. Professor at Breslau. As a Jew, he was forced to resign in 1935. He lived some time in Berlin, then at his friends in Bloemendaal, Netherlands, and died there of angina pectoris.<br />
<br />
Strauss was an important pioneer of Indian philosophy in Germany. While Deussen still had few texts and mixed Western ideas in his interpretation of them, Strauss applied strict philological methods to the sources. His greatest interest was in the Mīmāṁsā school. He also worked on Sanskrit grammar. Among his students were K. Marschner, E. Pax, and W. Liebenthal. ([https://whowaswho-indology.info/5929/strauss-otto/ Adapted from Source Jan 19, 2024])<br />
|yearbirth=1881<br />
|yeardeath=1940<br />
|bornin=Berlin<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/De_Manziarly,_I.De Manziarly, I.2024-01-20T19:07:45Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=de Manziarly, I. |MainNamePhon=I. de Manziarly |SortName=de Manziarly, I. |namefirst=I. |namelast=de Manziarly |PersonType=Translators }}"</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
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|namelast=de Manziarly<br />
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}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/A_mdo_dge_bshes_%27jam_dpal_rol_pa%27i_blo_grosA mdo dge bshes 'jam dpal rol pa'i blo gros2024-01-19T20:55:08Z<p>Mort: Mort moved page A mdo dge bshes 'jam dpal rol pa'i blo gros to A mdo dge bshes 'jam dpal rol ba'i blo gros</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Amdo Geshe Jampal Rolwai Lodrö<br />
|MainNameTib=ཨ་མདོ་དགེ་བཤེས་འཇམ་དཔལ་རོལ་བའི་བློ་གྲོས་<br />
|MainNameWylie=a mdo dge bshes 'jam dpal rol ba'i blo gros<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|images=File:Amdo Geshe.jpeg<br />
|yearbirth=1888<br />
|yeardeath=1936<br />
|bornin=Tsongkha, Amdo<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P3546<br />
|BdrcPnum=3546<br />
|TolLink=https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Amdo-Geshe-Jampel-Rolpai-Lodro/5897<br />
|tolExcerpt=Jampel Rolpai Lodro, better known as Amdo Geshe, studied at the monastery of Kumbum Jampa Ling with a number of prominent Geluk teachers, and later received Nyingma teachings from Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and the famous Chod master, Dharma Sengge. As a teacher of Jamyang Khyentse Chokyi Lodro, he played a pivotal role, together with the likes of Katok Situ and Loter Wangpo, in transmitting the nonsectarian ideals of his teachers into the Twentieth Century. He was a staunch defender of the writings of Tsongkhapa, yet his writings also include a number of works influenced by, or focusing upon, the Nyingma master, Longchen Rabjam. He founded the monastery of Nyenmo Monastery in Darlak in Golok in 1919.<br />
|pagename=A mdo dge bshes 'jam dpal rol pa'i blo gros<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/McClelland,_JosephMcClelland, Joseph2024-01-19T19:55:32Z<p>Marcus: Marcus moved page McClelland, Joseph to McClellan, Joseph</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Joseph Mark McClelland<br />
|SortName=McClelland, Joseph<br />
|namefirst=Joseph<br />
|namelast=McClelland<br />
|PersonType=Translators<br />
|bio=Joe McClellan became a student of Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche in 1996. He earned a BA in History from the University of Washington, and then studied Tibetan language and philosophy in Nepal for two years. Joe then received MA, MPhil, and PhD degrees in Columbia University’s Department of Religion, where he focused on comparative philosophy. Subsequently, he taught Western and Asian philosophies and religions, as well as gender studies, at several colleges in the U.S. Since 2017, he has taught at colleges in Bangladesh, Myanmar, and most recently in Bhutan. He is a contributor to [https://treasuryoflives.org/bo/search/by_author/Joseph-McClellan Treasury of Lives], [https://www.lotsawahouse.org/translators/joseph-mcclellan/ Lotsawa House], and the Khyentse Vision Project. ([https://www.khyentsevision.org/team/joe-mcclellan/ Source Accessed January 19, 2024])<br />
|images=File:McClellan-Joe-KVP.jpg<br />
|associatedwebsite=https://www.khyentsevision.org/team/joe-mcclellan/<br />
|pagename=McClelland, Joseph<br />
}}</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Katok_Getse,_3rdKatok Getse, 3rd2024-01-19T16:00:13Z<p>Mort: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Third Katok Getse Gyurme Tenpa Namgyal<br />
|SortName=Katok Getse, 3rd<br />
|MainNameTib=འགྱུར་མེད་བསྟན་པ་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་<br />
|MainNameWylie='gyur med bstan pa rnam rgyal<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors; Tulkus<br />
|images=File:Getse Gyurme Tenpa Namgyal.jpg<br />
|yearbirth=1886<br />
|yeardeath=1952<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P4782<br />
|TitleEnglish=Katok Getse<br />
|TitleTibetan=ཀཿཐོག་དགེ་རྩེ་<br />
|TitleWylie=kaH thog dge rtse<br />
|Ordinal=3rd<br />
|pagename=Katok Getse, 3rd<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Drongur_Ch%C3%B6je,_16thDrongur Chöje, 16th2024-01-18T15:36:00Z<p>Mort: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Drongur Chöje, 16th |MainNamePhon=Sixteenth Drongur Chöje Ngedön Tenpai Gyaltsen |MainNameTib=འབྲོང་ངུར་ཆོས་རྗེ་་..."</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Drongur Chöje, 16th<br />
|MainNamePhon=Sixteenth Drongur Chöje Ngedön Tenpai Gyaltsen<br />
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|MainNameWylie='brong ngur chos rje nges don bstan pa'i rgyal mtshan<br />
|PersonType=Authors of Tibetan Works<br />
|yearbirth=1984<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P1KG20863<br />
}}</div>Morthttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Janert,_K.Janert, K.2024-01-15T16:36:22Z<p>AlexC: Created page with "{{Person |pagename=Janert, K. |MainNamePhon=Klaus Ludwig Janert |SortName=Janert, Klaus |namefirst=Klaus |namelast=Janert |PersonType=Authors of German Works; Editors |bio=Kla..."</p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|pagename=Janert, K.<br />
|MainNamePhon=Klaus Ludwig Janert<br />
|SortName=Janert, Klaus<br />
|namefirst=Klaus<br />
|namelast=Janert<br />
|PersonType=Authors of German Works; Editors<br />
|bio=Klaus Ludwig Janert (Wittenberg 9.3.1922 — 10.12.1994) was a German Indologist and Professor in Cologne. He studied Indology, Tamil, IE and Slavic linguistics at Halle (under Thieme) and Göttingen, where [he earned his] Ph.D. [in] 1954. He worked in Göttingen University Library. He retired in 1987. He was a demanding teacher and critic. Married twice, with Imogen Mutschmann and Ilse Pliester.<br />
<br />
The main field of Janert was clearly the study of manuscripts, while a further interest was the Aśoka inscriptions, also history of Indology, Tamil, and Nakhi. Among his students was U. Niklas. ([https://whowaswho-indology.info/2784/janert-klaus-ludwig/ Adapted from Source Jan 15, 2024])<br />
|yearbirth=1922<br />
|yeardeath=1994<br />
|bornin=Wittenberg<br />
}}</div>AlexChttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/SandboxSandbox2024-01-11T18:37:33Z<p>Marcus: Created page with "Hello"</p>
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<div>Hello</div>Marcushttps://commons.tsadra.org/index.php/Sbas_ston_blo_gros_dbang_phyugSbas ston blo gros dbang phyug2024-01-10T21:18:55Z<p>Mort: </p>
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<div>{{Person<br />
|MainNamePhon=Betön Lodrö Wangchuk<br />
|MainNameTib=སྦས་སྟོན་བློ་གྲོས་དབང་ཕྱུག་<br />
|MainNameWylie=sbas ston blo gros dbang phyug<br />
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors<br />
|images=File:8810 (BetonLodroWangchuk).jpg<br />
|yearbirth=8-9th century<br />
|BdrcLink=http://purl.bdrc.io/resource/P2JM145<br />
|StudentOf=Nyang ting nge 'dzin bzang po<br />
|pagename=sbas ston blo gros dbang phyug<br />
}}</div>Mort