Vaidurya: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Vaidurya_2x_from_Mirror_of_Stainless_Crystal.jpg|200px|thumb|Two images of vaidurya from the Mirror of Stainless Crystal]]
[[Image:Vaidurya_2x_from_Mirror_of_Stainless_Crystal.jpg|200px|thumb|Two images of vaidurya from the Mirror of Stainless Crystal]]


'''Vaidurya''' (Skt. vaiḍūrya, Tib. [[བཻ་ཌཱུ་རྱ་]] ''baiD'ur+ya'' or ''bai DU r+ya'')— a substance which can ordinarily be identified with beryl, cat's eye, lapis lazuli, chrysoberyl and aquamarine, yet it also refers to something very special. For example, in the White Lotus Sutra it is said that vaidurya is found among the relics of the buddhas. In most cases though, it is probably best identified with beryl. It can have several colours, but when it refers to the [[Buddha of Medicine]], as in the [[Buddha of Medicine mantra and dharani|Buddha of Medicine dharani]], it is definitively blue or aquamarine.   
'''Vaidurya''' (Skt. vaiḍūrya, Tib. [[བཻ་ཌཱུ་རྱ་]] ''baiD'ur+ya'' or ''bai DU r+ya'')— a substance which can ordinarily be identified with beryl, cat's eye, lapis lazuli, chrysoberyl and aquamarine, yet it also refers to something very special. For example, in the White Lotus Sutra it is said that vaidurya is one of the relics of the buddhas. In most cases though, it is probably best identified with beryl. It can have several colours, but when it refers to the [[Buddha of Medicine]], as in the [[Buddha of Medicine mantra and dharani|Buddha of Medicine dharani]], it is definitively blue or aquamarine.   


The terms beryl and vaidurya are also likely to be linguistically connected, through Greek and Prakrit. In contemporary Indian usage, it refers mainly to cat's eye aka chrysoberyl, and in ayurveda it can also be synonymous with blue sapphire. Sometimes it is also thought to be lapis lazuli, yet since that stone is opaque and vaidurya is often said to be sparkling or to have a radiant quality, as in the case of ''vaidurya prabha'', that is not often the case. But in Tibetan and Chinese context, the interpretation of being lapis lazuli might hold up since in those cultures lapis lazuli was held in high esteem.  
The terms beryl and vaidurya are also likely to be linguistically connected, through Greek and Prakrit. In contemporary Indian usage, it refers mainly to cat's eye aka chrysoberyl, and in ayurveda it can also be synonymous with blue sapphire. Sometimes it is also thought to be lapis lazuli, yet since that stone is opaque and vaidurya is often said to be sparkling or to have a radiant quality, as in the case of ''vaidurya prabha'', that is not often the case. But in Tibetan and Chinese context, the interpretation of being lapis lazuli might hold up since in those cultures lapis lazuli was held in high esteem.  

Revision as of 12:29, 30 March 2017

Two images of vaidurya from the Mirror of Stainless Crystal

Vaidurya (Skt. vaiḍūrya, Tib. བཻ་ཌཱུ་རྱ་ baiD'ur+ya or bai DU r+ya)— a substance which can ordinarily be identified with beryl, cat's eye, lapis lazuli, chrysoberyl and aquamarine, yet it also refers to something very special. For example, in the White Lotus Sutra it is said that vaidurya is one of the relics of the buddhas. In most cases though, it is probably best identified with beryl. It can have several colours, but when it refers to the Buddha of Medicine, as in the Buddha of Medicine dharani, it is definitively blue or aquamarine.

The terms beryl and vaidurya are also likely to be linguistically connected, through Greek and Prakrit. In contemporary Indian usage, it refers mainly to cat's eye aka chrysoberyl, and in ayurveda it can also be synonymous with blue sapphire. Sometimes it is also thought to be lapis lazuli, yet since that stone is opaque and vaidurya is often said to be sparkling or to have a radiant quality, as in the case of vaidurya prabha, that is not often the case. But in Tibetan and Chinese context, the interpretation of being lapis lazuli might hold up since in those cultures lapis lazuli was held in high esteem.

Further reading

Mirror of Stainless Crystal, pg 27-19. Marianne Winder, Vaidurya