Eight wrathful females: Difference between revisions

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#Chauri (Skt. Caurī; Wyl. ''tso'u ri''), the female thief (''chom rkun ma'')
#Chauri (Skt. Caurī; Wyl. ''tso'u ri''), the female thief (''chom rkun ma'')
#Ghasmari (Skt. Ghasmarī; Wyl. ''kas ma ri''), (''sme sha can'')  
#Ghasmari (Skt. Ghasmarī; Wyl. ''kas ma ri''), (''sme sha can'')  
#Pramoha (Skt. *Pramohā; Wyl. ''pra mo''), the utterly bewildered female (''rab tu rmongs ma'')
#Pramoha (Skt. Pramohā; Wyl. ''pra mo''), the utterly bewildered female (''rab tu rmongs ma'')
#Chandali (Skt. Caṇḍālī; Wyl. ''tsan dha li''), the fierce woman (''gtum mo'')
#Chandali (Skt. Caṇḍālī; Wyl. ''tsan dha li''), the fierce woman (''gtum mo'')
#Vetali (Skt. Vetālī; Wyl. ''be'e ta li''), the zombie (''ro langs ma'')  
#Vetali (Skt. Vetālī; Wyl. ''be'e ta li''), the zombie (''ro langs ma'')  
#Shmashani (Skt. *Śmaśānī; Wyl. ''sme sha ni''), female dweller of charnel grounds (''dur khrod ma'')
#Shmashani (Skt. Śmaśānī; Wyl. ''sme sha ni''), female dweller of charnel grounds (''dur khrod ma'')


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 09:55, 7 October 2022

The eight wrathful females or eight gaurima (Skt. gaurī; Tib. གཽ་རི་མ་བརྒྱད་, gaurima gyé; Wyl. gau ri ma brgyad) are counted among the mandala of the fifty-eight wrathful deities. They are:

  1. Gauri (Skt. Gaurī;[1] Wyl. ko'u ri), the white female (dkar mo)[2]
  2. Pukkasi (Skt. Pukkasī; Wyl. pus ka si), (sbos mo)
  3. Chauri (Skt. Caurī; Wyl. tso'u ri), the female thief (chom rkun ma)
  4. Ghasmari (Skt. Ghasmarī; Wyl. kas ma ri), (sme sha can)
  5. Pramoha (Skt. Pramohā; Wyl. pra mo), the utterly bewildered female (rab tu rmongs ma)
  6. Chandali (Skt. Caṇḍālī; Wyl. tsan dha li), the fierce woman (gtum mo)
  7. Vetali (Skt. Vetālī; Wyl. be'e ta li), the zombie (ro langs ma)
  8. Shmashani (Skt. Śmaśānī; Wyl. sme sha ni), female dweller of charnel grounds (dur khrod ma)

Notes

  1. Unless marked with an asterisk, the Sanskrit has been attested in various tantras translated for 84.000 or other sources.
  2. The translations into Tibetan are taken from Longchenpa's Dispelling Darkness in the Ten Directions