Mindroling Monastery: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Treasury of Lives link and addition of Lochen Dharmaśrī being a co-founder)
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
'''Orgyen Mindroling Monastery''' (Tib. ཨོ་རྒྱན་སྨིན་གྲོལ་གླིང་, [[Wyl.]] ''o rgyan smin grol gling'') — one of the [[Six "Mother" Nyingma Monasteries]]. It was founded in 1676 by [[Minling Terchen Gyurme Dorje]], aka Rigdzin Terdak Lingpa with his brother [[Lochen Dharmashri]]. The monastery enjoyed a close association with the [[Fifth Dalai Lama]], but was destroyed during the Dzungar war of 1717-8, during which Terdak Lingpa's younger brother, the great scholar Lochen Dharmashri was killed. Terdak Lingpa's daughter, [[Jetsün Mingyur Paldrön]], fled to Sikkim and then returned to Mindroling, and together with her brother [[Gyalsé Rinchen Namgyal|Drinchen Rinchen Namgyal]], rebuilt the monastery, with the support of Polha Taiji.
'''Orgyen Mindroling Monastery''' (Tib. ཨོ་རྒྱན་སྨིན་གྲོལ་གླིང་, [[Wyl.]] ''o rgyan smin grol gling'') — one of the [[Six "Mother" Nyingma Monasteries]]. It was founded in 1676 by [[Minling Terchen Gyurme Dorje]], aka Rigdzin Terdak Lingpa with his brother [[Lochen Dharmashri]]. The monastery enjoyed a close association with the [[Fifth Dalai Lama]], but was destroyed during the Dzungar war of 1717-8, during which Terdak Lingpa's younger brother, the great scholar Lochen Dharmashri was killed. Terdak Lingpa's daughter, [[Jetsün Mingyur Paldrön]], fled to Sikkim and then returned to Mindroling, and together with her brother [[Gyalsé Rinchen Namgyal|Drinchen Rinchen Namgyal]], rebuilt the monastery, with the support of Polha Taiji.


The heads of Mindroling are the hereditary successors of Minling Terchen. The last head, [[Minling Trichen Rinpoche]], was the eleventh throneholder.
The heads of Mindroling are the hereditary successors of Minling Terchen. [[Minling Trichen Rinpoche]], was the eleventh throneholder, and after his passing, his son Dungsay Dalha Gyaltsen (b. 1959) from Tibet, became the twelfth and current throneholder.<ref>Source: [https://www.khenchenrinpoche.org/history Minling Khenchen Rinpoche's website]</ref>


==Mindrolling Monastery in India==
==Mindrolling Monastery in India==
[[Image:Mindoling_India.jpg|thumb|Mindrolling Monastery in India]]
[[Image:Mindoling_India.jpg|thumb|Mindrolling Monastery in India]]
Re-established near Dehra Dhun in India, Mindrolling Monastery is one of the largest active Buddhist centres today.
Re-established near Dehra Dhun in India, Mindrolling Monastery is one of the largest active Buddhist centres today.
==Notes==
<small><references/></small>


==Internal Links==
==Internal Links==

Revision as of 12:36, 30 September 2019

Mindroling Monastery in Tibet

Orgyen Mindroling Monastery (Tib. ཨོ་རྒྱན་སྨིན་གྲོལ་གླིང་, Wyl. o rgyan smin grol gling) — one of the Six "Mother" Nyingma Monasteries. It was founded in 1676 by Minling Terchen Gyurme Dorje, aka Rigdzin Terdak Lingpa with his brother Lochen Dharmashri. The monastery enjoyed a close association with the Fifth Dalai Lama, but was destroyed during the Dzungar war of 1717-8, during which Terdak Lingpa's younger brother, the great scholar Lochen Dharmashri was killed. Terdak Lingpa's daughter, Jetsün Mingyur Paldrön, fled to Sikkim and then returned to Mindroling, and together with her brother Drinchen Rinchen Namgyal, rebuilt the monastery, with the support of Polha Taiji.

The heads of Mindroling are the hereditary successors of Minling Terchen. Minling Trichen Rinpoche, was the eleventh throneholder, and after his passing, his son Dungsay Dalha Gyaltsen (b. 1959) from Tibet, became the twelfth and current throneholder.[1]

Mindrolling Monastery in India

Mindrolling Monastery in India

Re-established near Dehra Dhun in India, Mindrolling Monastery is one of the largest active Buddhist centres today.

Notes

Internal Links

External Links