Bari Lotsawa: Difference between revisions

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'''Bari Lotsawa''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ba ri lo tsA'') aka '''Rinchen Drak''' (''rin chen grags'') (1040-1111) — the second throne holder of [[Sakya]] school (Tib. ''[[Throneholders of the Sakya school|Sakya Trizin]]''). At the age of 63, he retained the seat of Sakya for a period of eight years (1102-1110). He is one of the main lineage figures in the transmission and translation of the [[White Tara]] practice and [[tantra]]s that originate from the Indian master [[Vagishvarakirti]].
'''Bari Lotsawa''' (བ་རི་ལོ་ཙཱ་, [[Wyl.]] ''ba ri lo tsA'') aka '''Rinchen Drak''' (''rin chen grags'') (1040-1111) — the second throne holder of [[Sakya]] school (Tib. ''[[Throneholders of the Sakya school|Sakya Trizin]]''). At the age of 63, he retained the seat of Sakya for a period of eight years (1102-1110). He is one of the main lineage figures in the transmission and translation of the [[White Tara]] practice and [[tantra]]s that originate from the Indian master [[Vagishvarakirti]].


==Further Reading==
==Further Reading==
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*[http://www.barimonastery.org Bari Monastery]
*[http://www.barimonastery.org Bari Monastery]
*[http://www.dechen.org/resources/html/bari.html An Indestructible Legacy: The Life of Bari Lotsawa]
*[http://www.dechen.org/resources/html/bari.html An Indestructible Legacy: The Life of Bari Lotsawa]
*[http://www.tbrc-dlms.org/link?RID=P3731 TBRC profile]
*{{TBRC|P3731|TBRC profile}}


[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category: Sakya Masters]]
[[Category: Sakya Masters]]
[[Category: Lotsawas]]
[[Category: Lotsawas]]

Revision as of 14:00, 3 February 2012

Bari Lotsawa (བ་རི་ལོ་ཙཱ་, Wyl. ba ri lo tsA) aka Rinchen Drak (rin chen grags) (1040-1111) — the second throne holder of Sakya school (Tib. Sakya Trizin). At the age of 63, he retained the seat of Sakya for a period of eight years (1102-1110). He is one of the main lineage figures in the transmission and translation of the White Tara practice and tantras that originate from the Indian master Vagishvarakirti.

Further Reading

  • The Blue Annals (Trad. Roerich, G.N.), Delhi: Motilal Barnasidass, 1996, p.1021-1024.

Internal Links

External Links