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'''Shavaripa''' (Skt. ''Śāvaripa'' ; [[Wyl.]] ''sha ba ri pa'' or ''ri khrod dbang phyug''), the 'Hunter' — one of the [[eighty-four mahasiddhas]] of India. Shavaripa was a hunter who turned to the Buddhist path and renounced his livelihood after an encounter with the [[bodhisattva]] [[Avalokiteshvara]]. He later became a disciple of [[Nagarjuna]] and a teacher of [[Maitripa]]. Shavaripa is a key figure in the transmission of the early [[Mahamudra]] lineage of teachings in India, and counted among the 'Indian Patriarchs' of the [[Kagyü]] lineage. | '''Shavaripa''' (Skt. ''Śāvaripa''; Tib. ཤ་བ་རི་པ་ or རི་ཁྲོད་དབང་ཕྱུག, [[Wyl.]] ''sha ba ri pa'' or ''ri khrod dbang phyug''), the 'Hunter' — one of the [[eighty-four mahasiddhas]] of India. Shavaripa was a hunter who turned to the Buddhist path and renounced his livelihood after an encounter with the [[bodhisattva]] [[Avalokiteshvara]]. He later became a disciple of [[Nagarjuna]] and a teacher of [[Maitripa]]. Shavaripa is a key figure in the transmission of the early [[Mahamudra]] lineage of teachings in India, and counted among the 'Indian Patriarchs' of the [[Kagyü]] lineage. | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== |
Latest revision as of 01:11, 14 March 2018
Shavaripa (Skt. Śāvaripa; Tib. ཤ་བ་རི་པ་ or རི་ཁྲོད་དབང་ཕྱུག, Wyl. sha ba ri pa or ri khrod dbang phyug), the 'Hunter' — one of the eighty-four mahasiddhas of India. Shavaripa was a hunter who turned to the Buddhist path and renounced his livelihood after an encounter with the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara. He later became a disciple of Nagarjuna and a teacher of Maitripa. Shavaripa is a key figure in the transmission of the early Mahamudra lineage of teachings in India, and counted among the 'Indian Patriarchs' of the Kagyü lineage.
Further Reading
- Keith Dowman
- Masters of Mahāmudrā: Songs and Histories of the Eighty-four Buddhist Siddhas (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1986), Chapter 5, 'The Mahāsiddha Śavaripa, The Hunter'.
- Buddhist Masters of Enchantment: The Lives and Legends of the Mahasiddhas (Rochester: Inner Traditions, 1998), 'Savaripa, The Hunter'.