Chöjé Marpa Sherab Yeshé: Difference between revisions

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'''Marpa Drubthob Sherab Sengé''' (Tib. སྨར་པ་སྒྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཤེས་རབ་སེང་གེ་, [[Wyl.]] ''smar pa sgrub thob shes rab seng ge'')<ref>Source: Richard Baron & Dan Martin.</ref> (1135-1203)<ref>Source: Dan Martin. Martsan Kagyu website gives (1134-1203).</ref> — the founder of the [[Martsang Kagyü]] lineage. He founded Sho Monastery (Wyl. ''sho dgon'') in 1167, in Markham. This date can be considered as the founding date of the Martsang Kagyü lineage.<ref>Source: Samdhong Rinpoche.</ref>
'''Marpa Drubthob Sherab Sengé''' (Tib. སྨར་པ་སྒྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཤེས་རབ་སེང་གེ་, [[Wyl.]] ''smar pa sgrub thob shes rab seng ge'')<ref>Source: Richard Baron & Dan Martin.</ref> (1135-1203)<ref>Source: Dan Martin. Martsan Kagyu website gives (1134-1203).</ref> — one of [[Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo]]'s main disciples, and founder of the [[Martsang Kagyü]] lineage. He founded Sho Monastery (Wyl. ''sho dgon'') in 1167, in Markham. This date can be considered as the founding date of the Martsang Kagyü lineage.<ref>Source: Samdhong Rinpoche.</ref>


==Name Variants==
==Name Variants==

Revision as of 13:52, 16 May 2011

Marpa Drubthob Sherab Sengé (Tib. སྨར་པ་སྒྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཤེས་རབ་སེང་གེ་, Wyl. smar pa sgrub thob shes rab seng ge)[1] (1135-1203)[2] — one of Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo's main disciples, and founder of the Martsang Kagyü lineage. He founded Sho Monastery (Wyl. sho dgon) in 1167, in Markham. This date can be considered as the founding date of the Martsang Kagyü lineage.[3]

Name Variants

  • Chöjé Marpa (chos rje smar pa)(source: Dan Martin & Philippe Cornu)
  • Chöjé Marpa Sherab Yeshe (source: Martsan Kagyu website)
  • Kunga Pal (kun dga' dpal) (source: Dan Martin)
  • Marpa Sherab Yeshe (source: Dan Martin)
  • Marpa Drubtob Sherab Yeshe (source: TBRC & Dan Martin)
  • Martsang Sherab Senge (source: Kagyü Office)
  • Rinchen Lodrö (source: Philippe Cornu)
  • Sherab Yeshe (source: TBRC & Dan Martin)

Notes & References

  1. Source: Richard Baron & Dan Martin.
  2. Source: Dan Martin. Martsan Kagyu website gives (1134-1203).
  3. Source: Samdhong Rinpoche.

External Links