Kanha: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Sanskrit fixes)
No edit summary
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Kanha''' or '''Kanhapa''' (Skt. ''Kāṇha''; Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་ [[Wyl.]] ''nag po pa'') was one of the two main students of the [[mahasiddha]] [[Virupa]] from whom he received the [[Lamdre]] teachings.
'''Kanha''' or '''Kanhapa''' (Skt. ''Kāṇha''; Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་, ''nakpopa'', [[Wyl.]] ''nag po pa'') was one of the two main students of the [[mahasiddha]] [[Virupa]] from whom he received the [[Lamdre]] teachings.


Virūpa's disciple was also called Kāṇha of Deliberate Behaviour (Tib. བརྟུལ་ཞུགས་ནག་པོ་པ་, ''trulshyug nagpopa''), he was also known as the Eastern Kāṇha, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་ཤར་ཕྱོགས་པ་, ''nagpopa sharchokpa'').  
Virūpa's disciple was also called Kāṇha of Deliberate Behaviour (Tib. བརྟུལ་ཞུགས་ནག་པོ་པ་, ''trulshyug nagpopa''), he was also known as the Eastern Kāṇha, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་ཤར་ཕྱོགས་པ་, ''nagpopa sharchokpa'').  


There is a second Nagpopa, Kṛṣṇasamayavajra, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་དམ་ཚིག་རྡོ་རྗེ་, ''nagpopa damtsik dorje''), whose real name is Śribhadra, and who is the source of one of the four Hevajra transmissions of the Sakya tradition.<ref>'''Cyrus Stearns:''' ''Taking the result as the path: core teachings of the Sakya lamdré tradition'', p.640 n.135</ref>
There is a second Nagpopa, Kṛṣṇasamayavajra, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་དམ་ཚིག་རྡོ་རྗེ་, ''nagpopa damtsik dorje''), whose real name is Śribhadra, and who is the source of one of the four [[Hevajra]] transmissions of the [[Sakya]] tradition.<ref>'''Cyrus Stearns:''' ''Taking the result as the path: core teachings of the Sakya lamdré tradition'', p.640 n.135</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:15, 29 March 2018

Kanha or Kanhapa (Skt. Kāṇha; Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་, nakpopa, Wyl. nag po pa) was one of the two main students of the mahasiddha Virupa from whom he received the Lamdre teachings.

Virūpa's disciple was also called Kāṇha of Deliberate Behaviour (Tib. བརྟུལ་ཞུགས་ནག་པོ་པ་, trulshyug nagpopa), he was also known as the Eastern Kāṇha, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་ཤར་ཕྱོགས་པ་, nagpopa sharchokpa).

There is a second Nagpopa, Kṛṣṇasamayavajra, (Tib. ནག་པོ་པ་དམ་ཚིག་རྡོ་རྗེ་, nagpopa damtsik dorje), whose real name is Śribhadra, and who is the source of one of the four Hevajra transmissions of the Sakya tradition.[1]

References

  1. Cyrus Stearns: Taking the result as the path: core teachings of the Sakya lamdré tradition, p.640 n.135

External Links