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[[Image:Kamalashila.JPG|frame|Kamalashila]]
[[Image:Kamalashila.JPG|frame|Kamalashila]]
'''Kamalashila''' (Skt. ''Kamalaśīla''; Tib. ''Pemé Ngang Tsul''; [[Wyl.]] ''padma'i ngang tshul'') (c. 740-795) - This master was the main disciple of the great abbot [[Shantarakshita]]. He famously defeated a Chinese master of the [[Hashang]] school (whose personal name is sometimes given as Mahayana Hashang) in the [[Samyé Debate|great debate]] at [[Samyé]], which took place around 792 AD, thereby ensuring that the Tibetans followed the Indian tradition of [[Madhyamika]] which had flourished at the great [[Nalanda]] Monastery. He died in Tibet in around 795.<ref>Seyfort Ruegg, ''Literature'', p. 94</ref>
'''Kamalashila''' (Skt. ''Kamalaśīla''; Tib. [[པདྨའི་ངང་ཚུལ་]], ''Pemé Ngang Tsul''; [[Wyl.]] ''pad+ma'i ngang tshul') (c. 740-795) - This master was the main disciple of the great abbot [[Shantarakshita]]. He famously defeated a Chinese master of the [[Hashang]] school (whose personal name is sometimes given as Mahayana Hashang) in the [[Samyé Debate|great debate]] at [[Samyé]], which took place around 792 AD, thereby ensuring that the Tibetans followed the Indian tradition of [[Madhyamika]] which had flourished at the great [[Nalanda]] Monastery. He died in Tibet in around 795.<ref>Seyfort Ruegg, ''Literature'', p. 94</ref>


==Principal Writings==
==Principal Writings==
His most famous compositions are the three texts entitled ''[[Stages of Meditation]]'' (Skt. ''Bhāvanākrama''), on which H.H. the [[Dalai Lama]] has taught several times. His other works include:
His most famous compositions are the three texts entitled ''[[Stages of Meditation]]'' (Skt. ''Bhāvanākrama''), on which H.H. the [[Dalai Lama]] has taught several times. His other works include:
*Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Compendium of Reality (''Tattvasaṃgraha-pañjikā'')
*Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Compendium of Reality (''Tattvasaṃgraha-pañjikā'')
*Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Ornament of the Middle Way (Skt. ''Madhyamakālaṅkārapañjikā''; Wyl. ''dbu ma'i rgyan gyi dka' 'grel'')
*Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Ornament of the Middle Way (Skt. ''Madhyamakālaṅkārapañjikā''; Tib. དབུ་མའི་རྒྱན་གྱི་དཀའ་འགྲེལ་, Wyl. ''dbu ma'i rgyan gyi dka' 'grel'')
*Light of the Middle Way (Skt. ''Madhyamakāloka''; Wyl. ''dbu ma snang ba'')
*Light of the Middle Way (Skt. ''Madhyamakāloka''; Tib. དབུ་མ་གསང་བ་, Wyl. ''dbu ma snang ba'')


==notes==
==notes==

Revision as of 14:51, 1 February 2011

Kamalashila

Kamalashila (Skt. Kamalaśīla; Tib. པདྨའི་ངང་ཚུལ་, Pemé Ngang Tsul; Wyl. pad+ma'i ngang tshul') (c. 740-795) - This master was the main disciple of the great abbot Shantarakshita. He famously defeated a Chinese master of the Hashang school (whose personal name is sometimes given as Mahayana Hashang) in the great debate at Samyé, which took place around 792 AD, thereby ensuring that the Tibetans followed the Indian tradition of Madhyamika which had flourished at the great Nalanda Monastery. He died in Tibet in around 795.[1]

Principal Writings

His most famous compositions are the three texts entitled Stages of Meditation (Skt. Bhāvanākrama), on which H.H. the Dalai Lama has taught several times. His other works include:

  • Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Compendium of Reality (Tattvasaṃgraha-pañjikā)
  • Commentary on the Difficult Points of the Ornament of the Middle Way (Skt. Madhyamakālaṅkārapañjikā; Tib. དབུ་མའི་རྒྱན་གྱི་དཀའ་འགྲེལ་, Wyl. dbu ma'i rgyan gyi dka' 'grel)
  • Light of the Middle Way (Skt. Madhyamakāloka; Tib. དབུ་མ་གསང་བ་, Wyl. dbu ma snang ba)

notes

  1. Seyfort Ruegg, Literature, p. 94

Further Reading

  • Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche, Essential Practice, translated by Jules B. Levinson, Snow Lion
  • David Seyfort Ruegg, The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 93-99