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'''Five classes of great [[dharani]]s''' ([[Wyl.]] ''gzungs chen sde lnga'').
'''Five classes of great [[dharani]]s''' ([[Wyl.]] ''gzungs chen sde lnga'').
Tibetan scholars group together five classes of dharanis, which are inserted in a Stupa as Dharmakāya relics (Tib. ''chos kyi sku’i ring bsrel''). Jamgön Kongtrul explains that these five dharanis must be inserted in every Stupa together with the Kriyayogatantra ''Spotless Rays of Light'' (Skt. ''Raśmivimalā'';  [[Wyl.]] ''’od zer dri med''). <ref>Kunsang Namgyal Lama, "Tsha Tsha Inscriptions: A Preliminary Survey," in ''Tibetan Inscriptions: Proceedings of a Panel held at the Twelfth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vancouver 2010,'' (Leiden: Brill, 2013): 25 - 26.</ref>
Tibetan scholars group together five classes of dharanis, which are inserted in a [[Stupa]] as [[Dharmakaya]] relics (Tib. ''chos kyi sku’i ring bsrel''). [[Jamgön Kongtrul]] explains that, whether elaborate or short, one kind of each of these five dharanis must be inserted in every Stupa together with the Kriyayogatantra ''Spotless Rays of Light'' (Skt. ''Raśmivimalā'';  [[Wyl.]] ''’od zer dri med''). <ref>Kunsang Namgyal Lama, "Tsha Tsha Inscriptions: A Preliminary Survey," in ''Tibetan Inscriptions: Proceedings of a Panel held at the Twelfth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vancouver 2010,'' (Leiden: Brill, 2013): 25 - 26.</ref>


# [[Ushnishavijaya]] (Skt. ''Uṣṇīṣavijayā''; Tib. གཙུག་ཏོར་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་མ་, ''Tsuktor Namgyalma''; [[Wyl.]] ''gtsug tor rnam rgyal ma'')
# [[Ushnishavijaya]] (Skt. ''Uṣṇīṣavijayā''; Tib. གཙུག་ཏོར་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་མ་, ''Tsuktor Namgyalma''; [[Wyl.]] ''gtsug tor rnam rgyal ma'')

Revision as of 08:11, 7 August 2016

Five classes of great dharanis (Wyl. gzungs chen sde lnga). Tibetan scholars group together five classes of dharanis, which are inserted in a Stupa as Dharmakaya relics (Tib. chos kyi sku’i ring bsrel). Jamgön Kongtrul explains that, whether elaborate or short, one kind of each of these five dharanis must be inserted in every Stupa together with the Kriyayogatantra Spotless Rays of Light (Skt. Raśmivimalā; Wyl. ’od zer dri med). [1]

  1. Ushnishavijaya (Skt. Uṣṇīṣavijayā; Tib. གཙུག་ཏོར་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་མ་, Tsuktor Namgyalma; Wyl. gtsug tor rnam rgyal ma)
  2. Vimaloshnisha (Skt. Vimaloṣṇīṣa; Tib. གཙུག་ཏོར་དྲི་མེད་, Tsuktor Drimed; Wyl. gtsug tor dri med)
  3. Guhyadhatu (Skt. Guhyadhātu; Wyl. gsang ba ring bsrel)
  4. Bodhigarbhalamkaralaksha (Skt. Bodhigarbhālaṃkāralakṣa; Wyl. byang chub rgyan 'bum)
  5. Essence of Dependent Origination dharani (Skt. Pratītyasamutpādahṛdaya; Wyl. rten 'brel snying po)

References

  • See Kunsang Namgyal Lama. "Tsha Tsha Inscriptions: A Preliminary Survey." In Tibetan Inscriptions: Proceedings of a Panel held at the Twelfth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vancouver 2010. Edited by Kurt Tropper, Cristina Scherrer-Schaub. Leiden: Brill, 2013: 1 - 42.
  • Bentor, Y. On the Indian Origins of the Tibetan Practice of Depositing Relics and Dhāraṇī in Stūpas and Images. JAOS, 115 (2), 1995: 248 - 261.
  • Bentor, Y. The Content of Stūpas and Images and the Indo-Tibetan Concept of Relics. The Tibet Journal 28 (1-2), 2003: 21 - 48.

Notes

  1. Kunsang Namgyal Lama, "Tsha Tsha Inscriptions: A Preliminary Survey," in Tibetan Inscriptions: Proceedings of a Panel held at the Twelfth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Vancouver 2010, (Leiden: Brill, 2013): 25 - 26.