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  • ...ib. རིག་འཛིན་བརྒྱད་, ''rigdzin gyé''; [[Wyl.]] ''rig 'dzin brgyad'') '''of India''' — eight Indian masters who were the first recipients of the [[Kagyé]] *[[A Constant Stream of Blessings|Prayer to the Eight Supreme Vidyadharas of India: “A Constant Stream of Blessings”]] ...
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  • '''History of Buddhism in India''' (Tib. རྒྱ་གར་ཆོས་བྱུང་, ''gyagar chöju *Taranatha, ''History of Buddhism in India'', Transl. Lama Chimpa and Alaka Chattopadhyaya, Motilal Barnasidass, Delhi ...
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  • Glorious [[Candrakīrti]] in India,<br/> ...
    733 bytes (55 words) - 08:43, 27 December 2015

Page text matches

  • ...C Indian emperor who largely contributed to the propagation of Buddhism in India and Asia. ...n to India and the World'' in ''Down the Ages: Contribution of Buddhism to India and the World'', forthcoming publication ...
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  • ...sident scholar at the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives in Dharamsala, India, where he taught Buddhist philosophy and practice. ...
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  • ....]] ''rgyal po'i khab'') was the capital of the Maghada kingdom in central India; the [[Buddha]] resided there temporarily. [[Vulture's Peak]] Mountain is i [[Category:India]] ...
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  • [[Image:Screen-CoolGrove wide.jpg|thumb|300px|Cool Grove charnel ground in India]] [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...two reincarnations of the eighth Choegon Rinpoche; both currently live in India (the other Choegon Rinpoche is named Drukpa [[Choegon Rinpoche Chökyi Wang ...s also established a monastery, Dechen Chokhor, in Dehradun (Uttarakhand), India. ...
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  • ...ally excavated at village Antichak in the Bhagalpur district, Bihar state, India, and the process is still underway. *Sukumar Dutt, ''Buddhist Monks And Monasteries Of India: Their History And Contribution To Indian Culture.'' George Allen and Unwin ...
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  • ...At the time of the Buddha, it was part of the Malla confederacy. In modern India, it is close to the village of Kasia, which is to the east of Gorapur. [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...e from [[Penor Rinpoche]]'s [[Namdroling Monastery|monastery]] in southern India [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...po'i ri'') — a hill peak near [[Rajagriha]] in the state of Bihar, central India, where the [[Buddha]] taught the [[Prajnaparamita]] [[sutra]]s. [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...ndia. The Institute steadily progressed with optimal success. The Govt. of India declared the Institute to be a "Deemed to be a University" on 5th April, 19 [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...d+ha'') was the largest of the sixteen states that flourished in northern India between the sixth and third centuries BCE. Its capital was [[Rajagriha]] an [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...it is the town of Basarh, Muzaffarpur district, in Tirhut, Bihar state of India. [[category: India]] ...
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  • ...Dhok-Palri-Phodang-Durpin.jpg|thumb|350px|Zandok Palri Phodang, Kalimpong, India]] ...]] monastery established by [[Dudjom Rinpoche]] in Kalimpong, West Bengal, India, as early as 1946<Ref>Zangdok Palri association.</Ref>. ...
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  • ...Rinpoche''', Dongyu Nyima, who founded Khampagar Monastery in Tashi Jong, India]] ...]. He rebuilt [[Khampagar Monastery]] in [[Tashi Jong]], Himachal Pradesh, India, in the late 1960s and played a leading role in reviving the Drukpa Kagyü ...
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  • ==Mindrolling Monastery in India== [[Image:Mindoling_India.jpg|thumb|Mindrolling Monastery in India]] ...
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  • ...is also the founder and head of the Nyingma Institute in Gangtok, Sikkim, India and the Nyingma Retreat Center in Martam, Sikkim. ...as ordained monk and studied at the Higher Buddhist Institute in Varanasi, India. He graduated with the degree of [[acharya]]. ...
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  • ...s rigs'') — 'classifications of reasons' from the [[pramana]] tradition of India. ...
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  • ...d towards the [[Ganges]], passing near [[Bodhgaya]] in the state of Bihar, India. After leaving the royal palace, [[Shakyamuni]] practised austerities for s [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...འི་ཀླུང་; [[Wyl.]] ''gang gA’i klung'') is the major river in the north of India and, according to Buddhist cosmology, one of the four sacred rivers that fl [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...n foothills of the Himalayas near what is now the border between Nepal and India. This tribe produced the historical [[Shakyamuni Buddha|Buddha]], called ei [[Category: India]] ...
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  • '''History of Buddhism in India''' (Tib. རྒྱ་གར་ཆོས་བྱུང་, ''gyagar chöju *Taranatha, ''History of Buddhism in India'', Transl. Lama Chimpa and Alaka Chattopadhyaya, Motilal Barnasidass, Delhi ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...Tib. ཆུ་བོ་ཆེན་པོ་ལྔ་པོ།, [[Wyl.]] ''chu bo chen po lnga po'') of ancient India are: [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...པོ་, [[Wyl.]] '' 'od kyi glang po'') — one of the [[eight vidyadharas]] of India; he received and practised the [[Vajrakilaya]] tantra from the [[Kagyé]] c ...
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  • ...ent of [[Dudjom Rinpoche]] who oversees [[Duddul Raptenling]] monastery in India. In 1947, he went to India and Nepal for pilgrimage. In the northern part of India, in a place called Garshak, he studied with Lama Kunga Rinpoche, a direct s ...
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  • ...Duddul Raptenling 02.png|thumb|350px|Duddul Rabten Ling Monastery, Orissa, India]] ...ng''' is a [[Nyingma]] monastery founded by [[Dudjom Rinpoche]] in Orissa, India. ...
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  • ...ure in the transmission of the early [[Mahamudra]] lineage of teachings in India, and counted among the 'Indian Patriarchs' of the [[Kagyü]] lineage. ...
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  • ...abodhi''' (Skt. ''Nāgabodhi'') — one of the [[eighty-four mahasiddhas]] of India who is said to have attained supreme accomplishment by snatching up and eat ...
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  • ...gdzin gyé''; [[Wyl.]] ''rig 'dzin brgyad'') are the [[eight vidyadharas of India]]. It can also refer to the [[eight vidyadharas of Tibet]]. ...
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  • ...dawa'', [[Wyl.]] ''lha'i zla ba '') — one of the [[eight vidyadharas]] of India; he received and practised the [[Jikten Chötö]] tantra from the [[Kagyé] ...
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  • ...rigs'') — 'classifications of [[mind]]' from the [[pramana]] tradition of India. ...
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  • ...borders of China. After Sudarshana's passing, as the Dharma spread across India and Asia, the [[Sangha]] was led by various convocations of [[arhat]]s and ...
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  • ...a in 1959 at the age of four and completed his elementary studies in South India. He then studied at the [[Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies]] in ...
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  • ...'', [[Wyl.]] ''nor gyi legs sbyar'') — one of the [[eight vidyadharas]] of India; he received and practised the [[Mamo Bötong]] tantra from the [[Kagyé]] ...
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  • ...ack magic of ritual daggers''' (Tib. བྱད་ཕུར་, [[Wyl.]] ''byad phur'')— in India and Tibet, [[phurba|ritual daggers]] where often used in rites of black mag ...
    251 bytes (36 words) - 08:15, 9 November 2018
  • ...to the Buddhist temples which house members of the monastic [[sangha]] in India and Nepal, where they are also called [[baha]] or biha. ...
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  • ...aria in central Asia. Preaching to kings and commoners all across northern India, he turned the populace away from nature worship, black magic, and animal s ...
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  • ...father is Sei Kushog, the brother of the senior abbot of Ngor Monastery in India. ...e abbot of the Ngor Monastery and was sent to Ngor monastery in Manduwala, India to undergo the rigorous training that is a prerequisite for lineage holders ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...India and later joined the Shartse College of [[Ganden Monastery]], South India, where he received the [[Geshe Lharampa]] degree. He taught at Ganden for f ...
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  • ...s linking Emory University with Tibetan institutions of higher learning in India. He is also engaged in collaborative research at Emory on meditation and it ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • Glorious [[Candrakīrti]] in India,<br/> ...
    733 bytes (55 words) - 08:43, 27 December 2015
  • ...he''' (b. 1985) — an important [[lama]] of the [[Gelugpa]] school, born in India and recognized at an early age by His Holiness the [[Dalai Lama]] as the re ...gree in November 2016 and enrolled at Gyuto Tantric College in Dharamsala, India in April 2017 for a year of tantric studies that traditionally follows the ...
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  • The [[Sakya Institute]] in Puruwala, India, was established in 1980 with the intention of imparting further education ...
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  • ...n California where he gave teachings and led retreats, before returning to India, where he passed away. ...ing [[H.H. the Dalai Lama]]'s [[Kalachakra]] [[empowerment]] in Amaravati, India. ...
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  • ...yü Nyima, rebuilt Khampagar Monastery in [[Tashi Jong]], Himachal Pradesh, India, in the late 1960s. ...ima]] (b.1982) who currently resides at Khampagar Monastery in Tashi Jong, India, and ...
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  • ...eaches students from many different countries including Tibet. When not in India, Chamtrul Rinpoche travels around the world to teach his students in the US ...
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  • ==Dzogchen Monastery in India== [[Image:Dzogchen Monastery India.jpg|thumb|left|Dzogchen Monastery in India]] ...
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  • ...ifth Dalai Lama]]. He wrote his most famous work, ''History of Buddhism in India'', in 1608. *''History of Buddhism in India'' ...
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  • ...e Nyingma lineage, founded by [[Khetsun Sangpo Rinpoche]] in 1974 first in India, and later relocated to Nepal at the initiative of [[Dudjom Rinpoche]]. It ...ce was created by Khetsun Sangpo Rinpoche, in Dalhousie, Himachel Pradesh, India, near Dharamsala, the seat of the [[Dalai Lama]]. ...
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  • ...th day of the first Tibetan month of the year of the Wood Snake in Orissa, India. ...ar, poetry, calligraphy and Sanskrit at the Tibetan Institute of Varanasi, India, where he received a BA in Tibetan philosophy. He completed one year of MA ...
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  • ...o gu'', [[Wyl.]] ''rig 'dzin chen po dgu'') are the [[eight vidyadharas of India]] who were the first recipients of one of the [[Kagyé]] teachings, plus [[ ...
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  • ...al record spanning four thousand years, and is the most important place in India for followers of Hinduism. The heart of the city, Kashi (Skt. ''Kāśi''), [[category: India]] ...
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  • [[Category:India]] ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...[[Jikten Chötö]]. He was also part of the 108 translators who were sent to India and [[Oddiyana]]. ...
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  • ...l yogis and ngakpas were having trouble with their dreadlocks adjusting to India’s humidity and sanitation (epidemics of head lice were rampant), Dudjom R In 1963, he came to Orissa (India) where Dudjom Rinpoche was building a Nyingma monastery called [[Duddul Rap ...
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  • ...rs and attendants. He preached in six of the great communities of northern India, where he was well known among the common people for his ability to offer p ...trine to Upagupta, Shanavasika passed into [[nirvana]] at Campa in eastern India.<ref>''Ways of Enlightenment'', Dharma Publishing, page 39.</ref> ...
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  • ...lete. In the Ngagyur Nyingma Insitute of [[Namdroling Monastery]] in South India, for example, the full programme lasts for nine years, with the first six y ...
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  • ...inpoche]]. He practised [[Chö]] in 108 [[charnel ground]]s all over Tibet, India and the Himalayan countries, and was also regularly performed healing Chö ===Moving to India and in Sikkhim and Nepal=== ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...ng his lifetime to the one hundred and eight famous [[charnel ground]]s of India, Nepal and Tibet. ...c School at Tso Pema for two years. Later this school moved to Dehra Dhun, India, and is now called [[Mindroling Monastery]]. ...
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  • ...mitage, and in particular from his main teacher, Pöpa Tulku. He arrived in India in 1959, and in 1964 he took up residence in Manali, in Himachal Pradesh, i ...
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  • ...(b. 1982) who currently resides at Khampagar Monastery in [[Tashi Jong]], India, and ...
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  • ...'', [[Wyl.]] ''zhi ba'i snying po'') — one of the [[eight vidyadharas]] of India. He performed the [[consecration]] ceremony for the [[Samyé]] temple. He r ...
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  • ...karakuta]] (Tib. ''Deché Tsekpa'') in the Cool Grove [[charnel ground]] in India. In turn she entrusted these teachings to the [[eight vidyadharas]]. ...
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  • ...yed the city, as they did with most of the holy Buddhist sites of Northern India, but many of the remains were excavated by British archaeologists during th [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...he visited all the Buddhist pilgrimage sites in Tibet, Sikkim, Bhutan and India as monk and wandering [[ngakpa]]. ...tan studies at the Visvabharati University at Santiniketan in West Bengal, India. In the late 50's he was invited by Professor Tucci to teach in Rome. Durin ...
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  • [[category: India]] ...
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  • ...ontinued his studies at the monastic university of Sera Jé in the south of India. In 1982 he obtained the highest degree in Buddhist studies—[[Geshe Lhara ...and, at regular intervals, he teaches to his disciples scattered in Tibet, India, United States, Canada, Japan and in major European countries. Currently he ...
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  • ...d the Padmasambhava Buddhist Centres, which now have branches in the U.S., India, and Russia. ...
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  • [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...lied to a kind of cloth | N. of a Buddhist school | of a people in central India {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatti]]}} {{Context|[[:Category ...
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  • ..., a sacred site of [[Guru Rinpoche]] in the northern state of Rewalsar, in India. [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...scholar. One of the greatest translators in world history, he travelled to India, where he lived for many years, studying Sanskrit and all the sciences of t ...
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  • ...a Gyurme]] was responsible for establishing the refugee settlement in Bir, India, and established the [[Pema Ewam Chögar Gyurme Ling Monastery|new Chokling ...
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  • *Shaw, Miranda. ''Buddhist Goddesses of India'', Reprint edition (Princeton University Press, 2015), pp. 247-264. ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...of the great master [[Hungkara]], one of the eight [[Eight vidyadharas of India]]. ...ors of the monastery of '''Orgyen Kunzang Chökhor Ling''' at Darjeeling in India. ...
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  • ..., [[Wyl.]] ''gnas ’jog'') is the name of one of the great sages of ancient India; one of the composers of the Vedic hymns. In Pali sources, a figure named V ...
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  • ...''Tathāgatarakṣita'') is said to have been a native of Orissa, in Eastern India. Born into the warrior caste and a physician by profession, he went to stud ...
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  • ...inferior quality (said to be brought from Virāṭa-deśa in the north-west of India) | a royal fillet or tiara {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatt ...
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  • ...olor|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} a jacket, bodice | N. of a people in southern India on the Coromandel | = | coast | the ancestor of the Colas | a prince of th ...
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  • ...trine. Because of this, despite his tremendous importance and influence in India and Tibet, he has been vilified by sectarian Tibetan [[Madhyamika|Madhyamik ...t at the time, knew that and was grief stricken, saying that now no one in India was able to distinguish anymore between the Buddhist and the non-Buddhist. ...
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  • ...as stayed in close retreat for decades in different caves in [[Tso Pema]], India. ...
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  • ...of the world (the country of the northern Kurus, situated in the north of India, and described as the country of eternal beatitude). {{Context|[[:Category: ...
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  • *Ngor Monastery was re-established 1978 in Manduwala, Uttarakhandt, Northern India. *[https://www.ludingfoundation.org/ngor-monastery/ Ngor Monastery, India] ...
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  • #Jikmé Kunzang Pema Wangchen (b.1975), who currently lives in India ...
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  • ..., garden, royal garden | purpose, motive | N. of a country in the north of India. {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatti]]}} {{Context|[[:Categor ...
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  • ...zang Longrol]].<Ref>Upper Pemakö is now part of Arunachal Pradesh state of India.</Ref> It follows the [[Dudjom Tersar]] lineage and is a main retreat place ...rom [[Yang Gon Cho Khor Ling]] in Upper Pemakö to Lower Pemakö in northern India, he was accompanied by many of his disciples from [[Powo]], Tibet. ...
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  • [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...n a century before Christ—ruled over a region encompassing parts of modern India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. King Milinda is credited as a philosopher as wel ...
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  • ...sort of grain, commonly called Rāggy, and much cultivated in the south of India) | N. of the second daughter of Añgiras {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatt ...
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  • *Bu sTon, ''History of Buddhism in India and Tibet'', translated by E. Obermiller, Sri Satguru, 1932 *Buton Rinchen Drup , ''Buton's History of Buddhism in India and Its Spread to Tibet: A Treasury of Priceless Scripture'', translated by ...
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  • ...ib. རིག་འཛིན་བརྒྱད་, ''rigdzin gyé''; [[Wyl.]] ''rig 'dzin brgyad'') '''of India''' — eight Indian masters who were the first recipients of the [[Kagyé]] *[[A Constant Stream of Blessings|Prayer to the Eight Supreme Vidyadharas of India: “A Constant Stream of Blessings”]] ...
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  • ...Chöling''' is a [[nyingma]] monastery located in the Spiti Region of North India, upholding both the [[Pema Lingpa]] and the [[Dudjom Tersar]] lineage. All [[Category:India]] ...
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  • ...Tsurpu Monastery]] in 1189; since then, and up until their recent exile to India, the [[Karmapa Incarnation Line|successive incarnations of the Karmapa]] ha ...
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  • ...r smra ba'') — one of the four major early Buddhist schools established in India, the others being Pudgalavada, Vibhajyavada and Mahasanghika. Sarvastivada ...
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  • ...ema''' (Tib. མཚོ་པདྨ་,[[Wyl.]] ''mtsho pad+ma'') 'Lotus Lake' in Rewalsar, India, where [[Guru Rinpoche]] performed the miracle of transforming the funeral [[Category:India]] ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • *John Makransky, ''Buddhahood embodied: sources of controversy in India and Tibet'', New York: SUNY, 1997 ...
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  • ...is father was forced by the invading Chinese to flee over the Himalayas to India with his wife, Kilo. Kyechok Lingpa then had a monastery in Patanam, a few ===Tibet and India=== ...
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  • [[Image:Tashi Jong.JPG|thumb|300px|Tashi Jong, in India, courtesy of Angus Moore]] ...hi Jong''' — the reestablished seat of [[Khampagar Monastery]] in northern India. ...
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  • ...yl.]] ''mai tri pa'') (1007-1078?) was one of the great [[mahasiddha]]s of India, and a disciple of [[Naropa]] and [[Saraha]]. He found ''[[Distinguishing D ...
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  • .... From {{Color|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} N. of a celebrated king of Northern India (whose reign began in the first century of our era and who, next to Aśoka, ...
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  • Along with [[Kawa Paltsek]], he was sent to India by king [[Trisong Detsen]] to invite [[Vimalamitra]] to Tibet. He later rec ...
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  • ===Studying in Mindroling Nyingma College in India=== Later, Lama Rangrig studied at the [[Mindroling Monastery]] college in India for 7 years, pursuing higher [[Nyingma]] education and Buddhist studies. Th ...
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  • ...r]], and the treatises composed by the learned and accomplished masters of India, which are contained in the Tengyur. ...lumes, and the Tengyur, the translation of the commentaries that come from India, is 228 volumes. The commentaries written later on by Tibetans and others c ...
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  • ...n Western Tibet in 1945, Lama Tsering Gyaltsen Rinpoche went into exile to India with his family at the age of 16, where they lived in a settlement for refu ...
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  • .... After, Lama Pema Longdrol and his wife came to Kalimpong in West Bengal, India. ...974), who heads the oldest Buthanese monastery, Jangsa Gompa in Kalimpong, India. ...
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  • ...in Kalimpong. Lama Rinchen graduated from Sanskrit University in Varanasi India where he completed advanced studies in [[Sutrayana]] Buddhist philosophy an For many years, Lama Rinchen was in charge of [[Zangdokpalri Monastery]] in India and also Urgyen Dongag, Choling Monastery in Kathmandu, Nepal. In 1980, [[D ...
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  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'' (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981). pp. 113-114 ...
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  • ...ersar]] lineage holder based in [[Zangdok Palri Monastery]], in Kalimpong, India. ...
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  • ...ionment with cyclic existence occurs.<ref>Butön’s ''History of Buddhism in India & Its Spread to Tibet''.</ref> *Butön, ''History of Buddhism in India & Its Spread to Tibet'' translated by Lisa Stein & Ngawang Zangpo, Tsadra F ...
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  • ...[[ཀུ་ཤ་]], [[Wyl.]] ''ku sha'') — a variety of grass considered sacred in India. The [[Buddha]] used this grass to make the meditation seat on which he att ...
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  • ...trul Rinpoche]] was born as the son of Neten Chokling Rinpoche in Northern India, in 1964, shortly before the Tibetan community settlement at Bir was establ ...
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  • ...awiki.org/index.php?title=Dzongsar_shedra#In_Exile Dzongsar Institute], in India from 1992 to 1998, where he received the shastra and [[acharya]] titles. Kh ...ching and the ''[[Compendium of Sadhanas]]'', he joined Dzongsar Shedra in India in 1992 where he completed the study of the ''Eighteen Renowned Scriptures' ...
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  • ...new Dzongsar shedra, Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö Institute, in Chauntra, India]] The shedra was soon moved to Bir, which is in Himachal Pradesh in India, 70km east of Dharamsala. Through the extraordinary efforts of Khen Rinpoch ...
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  • ==India== ...
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  • ...in Tibet since many of the Kagyü lineage teachers were living in exile in India. ===In India=== ...
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  • ...ng his lifetime to the one hundred and eight famous [[charnel ground]]s of India, Nepal and Tibet, practicing [[Chö]] from the [[Tröma Nakmo (Dudjom)]].<R In 1961, Lama Thekchok Dorje passed away in Kalimpong, India, in the [[Sleeping lion's posture]].<Ref>Private conversation with Lama Yes ...
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  • *Khandro Rinpoche, [[Bodhgaya]], India, 26 February 2019 *Khandro Rinpoche, Amsterdam, Holland India, 24 March 2019 ...
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  • ...t China, for example, the swastika was a Taoist symbol of eternity, and in India it is considered to be originally a solar symbol, derived from the motion o ...
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  • ...al leader of a Tibetan community residing in exile in the state of Orissa, India. His father, [[Namkha Drimé Rabjam Rinpoche]], is the supreme head and lin From his early childhood in India, Jigme Rinpoche displayed spiritual tendencies. Jigme Rinpoche was recogniz ...
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  • ...o teach for 10 years at the request of Kyabjé [[Dudjom Rinpoche]]. Back in India he became in charge of the [[Library of Tibetan Works and Archives]] in [[D ...
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  • ...ing with his meeting [[Manjushri]] when that [[bodhisattva]] came to South India. The previous chapters of the ''Avatamsaka'' have already presented the vie The ''Ganda­vyuha Sutra'' first existed in India as an independent sutra and still exists as an independent sutra in Sanskri ...
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  • ...]’s ministers. According to the ''[[Pema Kathang]]'', the king sent him to India together with [[Nyak Jñanakumara]] to invite Shantarakshita to Tibet. As t ...Namdrol who went to invite the great abbot Khenpo Jikmé Puntsok to come to India and the West, and attended him making his travel possible). ...
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  • ...and propagated the Buddhist teachings throughout Tibet, Nepal, Sikkim and India in both conventional and charismatic styles. Her father was also a student ...ructed numerous [[stupa]]s, prayer wheels, and other holy supports in both India and Nepal. ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...sandal-wood | a sectarial mark on the forehead (called so in the south of India) | p.66 | myrrh | Hyperanthera Moringa | the mere smell of anything, small ...
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  • ...[[Gyurme Tsewang Gyatso]]. In the latter part of his life he lived in Bir, India. The Gangna Labrang at [[Dzongsar]] belonged to the Ngor Khangsar Labrang. ...
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  • ...red. When they have all done so, he will once again go to [[Vajrasana]] in India, where he will manifest the state of complete and perfect enlightenment. ...en Rinpoche]], ''The Biography of the Mahāpaṇḍita Vimalamitra'' (Calcutta, India: Sarat Press, 1967) ...
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  • ...:''}} pl. | fr. | N. of a warrior-tribe and their country in the north of India | of a Vedic school | a man belonging to the tribe of the Pañcālas | a k ...
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  • ...rary [[Nyingma]] lama based in Spiti, a remote mountain region of northern India. ...ashmir. He also oversees [[Urgyen Sangnag Chöling]] in the Spiti region of India, a Monastery in Manali, Himachal Pradesh. In Pin Valley, Spiti Tulku he has ...
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  • ...da}}. From {{Color|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} N. of a wild non-Āryan tribe in India (described as hunters, fishermen, robbers) | 'the Bheels' | a man of any de ...
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  • ...na}}. From {{Color|#006060|''Sanskrit:''}} N. of a celebrated sovereign of India (said to be so called either from having ridden on a Yaksha called Śāli, ...
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  • Tulku Orgyen Phuntsok was born in Pemakö, in northeastern India, as the son of [[Lama Rigdzin Phuntsok]]. He was recognized at a young age ...rn India at [[Namdroling Monastery]], the largest [[Nyingma]] monastery in India, established by [[Penor Rinpoche]]. ...
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  • [[category:India]] ...
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  • ...nd Buddha-Gaya, Vol. 1: Early History of the Holy Land'' (1931). Varanasi, India: Bhartiya, 1975. *Barua, Dipak Kumar. ''Buddha Gaya Temple: Its History''. Buddha Gaya, India: Buddha Gaya Temple Management Committee,1975. Second revised edition, 1981 ...
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  • *''Tantric Buddhist Practice in India: Vilāsavajra’s commentary on the Mañjuśrī-nāmasaṃgīti'', translat ...
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  • ...f his life, acting on advice from [[Tara]], Nagarjuna returned to Southern India and dwelt at a place called Mount Splendour, where he gave extensive teachi ...
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  • ...Chattopadhyaya, Debiprasad, ed.,&nbsp;''Taranatha's History of Buddhism in India'', (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1990): 284 – 287.</ref> A short colophon ...eiden: Brill 2015): 368.</ref> Interestingly this sadhana was not found in India, but rather in [[Samye]] in Tibet. Most of Anandagarbha’s works were tran ...
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  • ...instructions.<ref>[[Butön Rinchen Drup| Butön's]] ''History of Buddhism in India and Its Spread to Tibet'', Snow Lion Publications 2013.</ref> ...
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  • The Drikung Kagyü school is present today in Tibet, India and Ladakh, and unites both the major Kagyü and Nyingma traditions. This s ...Drikung Kagyü Lineage, who has established his seat in exile in Dehra Dun, India). ...
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  • In the holy land of India, you were the [[mahasiddha]] [[Kukkuripa]],<br> ...
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  • ...g and later passed much of his time with Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche in India, Nepal and Bhutan, receiving many precious teachings. ...
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  • ...om Tenchok Gyurmé Ling<ref>i.e., Neten Monastery in Bir, Himachal Pradesh, India.</ref> requested me to offer a long life prayer using the name Rigdzin Gyur ...
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  • ...ny original works, including a guidebook to the major pilgrimage places of India, a treatise on eroticism (''<nowiki>'</nowiki>dod pa'i bstan bcos''), a his *dge-'dun chos-'phel, ''Guide to Sacred Places in India'', translated by [[Dhongthog Rinpoche|T.G. Dhongthog Rinpoche]] and Kalzang ...
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  • ...e eighth incarnation of the Tenzin Tulkus. In 1959 after leaving Tibet for India, [[His Holiness the Dalai Lama]] placed him in charge of a monastery housin ...
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  • ...with Jainas he is one of the 12 Sārvabhaumas or Cakravartins [emperors of India] | the N. of Sanat-kumāra is sometimes given to any great saint who retain ...
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  • ...po]] degree after nine years of study at [[Namdroling Monastery]] in South India. In April 2006, Khenpo Gawang Rinpoche was formally enthroned as a khenpo b ...
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  • ...swelling, tumour, polypus | ten millions | N. of a mountain in the west of India (commonly called Abū, a place of pilgrimage of the Jainas, and celebrated ...
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  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 109-110 ...
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  • ...t [[Gyütö Monastery]], Dalhousie, India in 1970. In 1959, Rinpoche fled to India to escape the repressive Chinese government in Tibet. There, he was commiss ...
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  • ...'') (1921-2008) was the seniormost [[khenpo]] at the Dzongsar Institute in India. ...in Sikkim at the age of 62. Following an extensive pilgrimage in Nepal and India, he started the new Dzongsar Shedra in 1983 in West Sikkim, at the holy sit ...
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  • ...mountain or range of mountain (said to be one of the 7 principal chains in India, and sometimes identified with the northern parts of the Ghats) | of a Plac ...
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  • ...:''}} the central one of the 7 continents surrounding the mountain Meru (= India | named so either from the Jambu trees abounding in it, or from an enormous ...
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  • ...npoche]], and an accomplished [[Chö]] practitioner. In 1959, he arrived in India and settled in Darjeeling. Due to his expert Chö practice, he became one o ...
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  • ...rom [[Drokmi Lotsawa]], but was asked too much money. And so he set out to India, making several trips, where he received many teachings, in particular on t ...
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  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981 ...
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  • ...who played a key role in the transmission of the [[Mahayoga]] teachings in India and Tibet. He was a teacher of [[Vimalamitra]]. ...
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  • ==The Learned and Accomplished Masters of India, the Land of the Āryas== ...
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  • ...ndia to assume greater significance. Notably, along with sites in northern India listed in this chapter we also find sites located in China, Kashmir, Gandha ...
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  • ...bi ru pa'' or ''bir wa pa'') was one of the [[eighty-four mahasiddhas]] of India and an important source of the teachings set down in the [[Lamdré]] of the ...
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  • ...f higher rank than the present low and mixed castes so numerous throughout India | a pure Śūdra | a man of mixed origin | N. of a Brāhman | N. of a peopl ...
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  • ...ilitary array | to | on | an index, table of contents (in books printed in India | below | a triangle formed by the sides of a trapezium produced till they ...
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  • ...ed annually at the Ngagyur Nyingma Chenmo world peace prayers at Bodhgaya, India. ...
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  • *Ladrang Kalsang, ''The Guardian Deities of Tibet'' (India: Wisdom Books, 2007) ...
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  • ...yadeva]]<ref>This is according to [[Taranatha]]'s ''History of Buddhism in India''. According to other sources, he was defeated by Pārśva.</ref> at [[Nala ...ttopadhyaya and Debiprasad Chatterji, ''Taranatha's History of Buddhism in India'' (Delhi : Motilal Banarsidass, 1990), pages 124-126 & 131-136. ...
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  • ...' is a [[Nyingma]] temple in Lower [[Pemakö]], now in the northern part of India, founded by [[Togden Kunzang Longrol]] on the instructions of [[Dudjom Rinp ...dent in Terkong Nang, to relocate the center and its sacred objects to the India-controlled part of Pemakö, which became knows as the ‘Lower Pemakö’. ...
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  • ...this image when they stayed in Samyé for more than a month on their way to India. ...
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  • ...e Sanskrit titles of translated texts that have been brought to Tibet from India. It was also commonly used for writing Sanskrit [[mantra]]s as well as [[Se ...
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  • ...,400 arhats he dwells in the mountain cave of Saptaparni in [[Rajagriha]], India. He has the power to counteract the effect of actions opposed to the [[Thre ...
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  • ...scarded food and clothing. With 1,000 arhats he now lives in Tamradvipa in India. ...
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  • ...| opposed to | declined Gram. 238 | northern (because the northern part of India is high) | left (opposed to | or right, because in praying the face being t ...
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  • *Lodrö Chökyi Nyima, born in Tibet (b.1995) and now living in India, and ...
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  • ...he had incarnated in the village of Chemday, near Leh, Ladakh, in Northern India. ...hen, he has taught extensively throughout the United States, as well as in India, Nepal, Japan and in Greece. While he has been rigorously trained in the ce ...
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  • ...s in Leh, the capital of Ladakh. He also met a British officer of the East India Company named Moorcroft to whom he related the purpose of his journey, and ...During a Residence at Kanam in the Himalaya Mountains, on the Confines of India and Tibet'', 1827-30, Calcutta, 1834 ...
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  • ...s the reincarnation of his predecessor. In 1959, Rinpoche came to exile in India along with tens of thousand Tibetan refugees. In 1962 Rinpoche, at the age ...f Buddhism. In 2005, Rinpoche opened a second Chime Gatsa Ling in Sidhpur, India, for his growing community of monks. ...
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  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 114-115 ...
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  • ...[[Bairo Rinpoche]]. He received many teachings from [[Dudjom Rinpoche]] in India. ...ndia with many other masters and his own subjects. Later on, in Kalimpong, India, Zhichen Ontrul Rinpoche received Dzogchen teachings from [[Dudjom Rinpoche ...
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  • ...full ordination with [[Geshe Langri Tangpa]] and travelled seven times to India from Tibet, bringing back many teachings from masters such as [[Niguma]], [ ...
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  • ...as not been the victim of systematic destruction from Muslim invaders like India was. Even though it is generally thought that Muslim invaders never reached ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ...who, of couse, went on to become one of the most famous scholars in all of India. ...
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  • ...mplete, uninterrupted transmission of authentic [[pith instructions]] from India and Tibet, with nothing left out, like one vase being filled from another. ...
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  • ...d particularly where I should be and so on. It's very lucky that I went to India, and was able to come out here. If I had been given to a monastery, I think ...ved his Bachelor degree in English from St. Josephs College in Darjeeling, India in 1971. He received the highest level Doctorate degree in Tibetan Philosop ...
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  • ...swelling, tumour, polypus | ten millions | N. of a mountain in the west of India (commonly called Abū, a place of pilgrimage of the Jainas, and celebrated ...
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  • ...Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Sikkim – in all places where the Mahasiddhas in India and Tibet lived of visited. I have practiced in the hidden lands blessed by ...
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  • *[[Khandro Rinpoche]], [[Bodhgaya]], India, 28 February 2019 ...
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  • ...a’s views. The [[Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones]] of the noble land of India asserted that there is no difference between Nagarjuna’s commentaries and ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 4-49 ...
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  • *[[History of Buddhism in India]] ...
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  • ...' is considered the most important Ayurvedic work in the region of Kerala, India. ...
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  • ...Nyima]], rebuilt Khampagar Monastery in [[Tashi Jong]], Himachal Pradesh, India, in the late 1960s. It is home to the famous [[tokden]]s, yogis who have ga ...
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  • ...[Ling Choktrul Rinpoche|Tenzin Lungtok Thinley Choephak]] was born in Bir, India in 1985. ...
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  • ...[[Shakya]] clan. He was born as the only son of a king in distant Eastern India, in Ujani (today's Ujjain). But the extraordinary stigma he was born with w ...
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  • ...his previous excellent aspirations and karma, was able to safely arrive in India as a refugee. He and I have connected as student and teacher". ...''Katok Ritrod''', Chagdud Gompa small retreat center in Pharping (Nepal), India, and Bhutan. ...
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  • ...wn from nature. The sutra also reflects common cultural beliefs of ancient India, such as spirit possession. In addition, it presents graphic and vividly co ...
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  • ...on, ''Tantric Treasures: Three Collections of Mystical Verse from Buddhist India'', Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0195166415 ...
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  • ...hen Monastery. Tulku Pegyal agreed and spent most of the next ten years in India, with a three year period in Sikkim. In 1995 he moved to Nepal and establis ...
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  • He dwells with 1,000 arhats on Mt. Gangs-can, near [[Shambhala]], north of India. Abhedya holds an [[enlightenment]] [[stupa]] given to him by the Buddha to ...
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  • ...Longrol]] in [[Deden Tashi Chöling]]. Garwang Sangye Dorje passed away in India, and his [[kudung]] is in Orissa. ...
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  • :In 1972, Tashilhunpo Monastery was re-established in Byalakuppe, South India by a few elderly monks who escaped from Tibet after the Tibetan National Up ...
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  • ...on retreats. He passed into [[parinirvana]] on 30th October 2023 in Delhi, India. ...he's main monastic seat is in the high border region of Ladakh in northern India, where he also established a nunnery called Tashi Chöling, in Hanley, Lada ...
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  • ...nd vivifying character | as denoted by the Liñga | are scattered all over India | the various sects of Śaivas are described in | a particular religious ri ...
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  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'', Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981, pp. 101-103 ...
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  • ...m by scholar-gatekeepers. It is located in what is now the state of Bihar, India. ...'') in many sources.<ref>Sukumar Dutt, ''Buddhist Monks And Monasteries Of India: Their History And Contribution To Indian Culture.'' George Allen and Unwin ...
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  • ...on, ''Tantric Treasures: Three Collections of Mystical Verse from Buddhist India'', Oxford University Press, 2004 ...
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  • ...odcast, 'Pagyu and Shezhin' episode, December 22, 2008 - Guna Shedra, Bir, India. ...
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  • In India, in the early 1960’s and later, she received also many teachings from [[D ...
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  • After having fled Tibet to India with his two sons, Lama Chime Namgyal followed them in he USA and help his ...
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  • ...sandal-wood | a sectarial mark on the forehead (called so in the south of India) | p.66 | myrrh | Hyperanthera Moringa | the mere smell of anything, small ...
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  • ...e, Korean, and Mongolian. This suggests that it enjoyed some popularity in India. ...
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  • ...he [[Geshe Lharampa]] degree from [[Sera Mé]] Monastic University in South India. Since 1994 Geshe Tashi has been based at Jamyang Buddhist Centre in London ...
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  • ...Hill attest to its wide influence in the Mahayana Buddhist communities of India, China, and Tibet.<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref> ...
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  • [[Category: India]] ...
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  • ==In India== ...
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  • ...gtrul Rinpoche, particularly in traditional Buddhist [[shedra]] studies in India and the US, Dungse-la now teaches widely as well as engages in an annual 10 ...
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  • ...npoche was born on September 22th, 1966 in a Tibetan settlement of Orissa, India. ...''Jigme Pema Lodrö Gyatso'''. This happy event was celebrated in Nepal and India. ...
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  • He lives in northern India in Priyangudvipa with 1,000 arhats. ...
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  • ...[five sciences]]. It is used especially for the master scholars of ancient India. An exceptionally great scholar is given the title of mahapandita. ...
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  • ...yl.]] ''dpyod pa ba'') — an [[Eternalism|eternalist]] tradition of ancient India. The Mimamsaka, or Analysts, are followers of Jaimini. Their school is base ...
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  • ...rung Rinpoche—was enthroned at Ngor Pal Ewam Choden Monastery, Manduwalla, India, as the 76th abbot of the line. ...
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  • ...''gcer bu pa'', Eng. 'the naked ones') — a non-Buddhist school of ancient India which developed before Buddhism, during the first millennia BCE. The twenty ...
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  • ...Sherab Ling Monastery, close to the Tibetan community of Bir, in Northern India. In 1980 he made his first tour to Europe, and has since traveled widely in *''Relative World, Ultimate Mind'', Penguin Books India, 1999. ...
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  • ...e of the '[[Six Ornaments]]', the greatest Buddhist authorities of Ancient India. ''Abhidharma-samuccaya'' is a complete and systematic account of the [[Abh ...
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  • ...mpanions and I stole away at night, leaving our homeland, until we reached India, making our way to Sikkim, where I stayed for two years. At [[Rumtek Monast Later I went to a new Tibetan refugee settlement in Simla, India, where in the years that followed I worked with the community, local and st ...
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  • *King Könchok Wang, in India ...
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  • ...-mālā, Bhadrāśva, Kiṃnara, and Bhārata | sometimes the number given is 7 | India | and | N. of a grammarian {{Context|[[:Category:Mahavyutpatti|Mahavyutpatt ...
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  • His writings, which were published in six volumes in Rewalsar, India, include a popular biography of the crazy yogi [[Drukpa Kunley]], compiled ...
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  • ...of Analytical Meditation]]''</ref> [[Gendün Chöpel]], on his pilgrimage to India, painted this tree and sent his painting back to Tibet, claiming he had fou ...
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  • ...4). Following the Chinese invasion, he fled with his parents into exile to India and later joined the [[Nechung Monastery]] as a [[novice monk]] in 1971. In ...
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  • ...nunneries in Eastern Tibet as well as its present seat in [[Tashi Jong]], India, where the tradition of [[tokden]]s, or realized [[yogi]]s, is continued to ...
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  • *Chimpa, Alaka Chattopadhyaya & Lama, ''Taranatha’s History of Buddhism in India'', Edited by Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2010), ...
    2 KB (204 words) - 20:49, 2 December 2018
  • ...light of a butter lamp or a stick of incense. After fleeing into exile in India, he became the teacher of H.H. [[Sakya Trizin]] and served as the main [[Sa ...
    1 KB (216 words) - 19:10, 27 January 2018
  • ...is also actively involved with the [[Mindroling Monastery]] in Dehra Dun, India. *[[Bodhgaya]], India, 27 & 28 February 2019, [[confession]] practice ...
    6 KB (820 words) - 17:53, 4 July 2023
  • Along with [[Chokro Lüi Gyaltsen]], he was sent to India by king [[Trisong Detsen]] to invite [[Vimalamitra]] to Tibet. He later rec ...
    2 KB (219 words) - 14:07, 7 July 2022
  • *''P’howa Commentary'', Pilgrims Publishing, India, 2004 *''Red Tara Commentary'', Pilgrims Publishing, India, 2004 ...
    3 KB (472 words) - 20:15, 3 April 2023
  • ...ok Lingpa was forced by the invading Chinese to flee over the Himalayas to India with his wife, Kilo. Kyechok Lingpa then had a monastery in Patanam, a few ...
    1 KB (193 words) - 16:09, 18 July 2014
  • ...ction=AU</ref> It is 'Brahmic behaviour', which means 'pure behaviour'. In India, in practice this often came down to celibacy. Because of this, in a Buddhi ...
    2 KB (267 words) - 09:18, 13 October 2015
  • ===Moving to India=== ...lku Rinpoche fled over the Himalaya to Bhutan with his tutor, and later to India, where he studied later at the school for young tulkus in Dalhousie. ...
    8 KB (1,267 words) - 23:34, 28 July 2022
  • ...Seyfort Ruegg, ''The Literature of the Madhyamaka School of Philosophy in India'' (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1981). ...
    2 KB (208 words) - 01:01, 9 June 2018
  • After the Chinese invasion he went to Sikkim, Northern India. He practised and meditated there until the [[Sixteenth Karmapa]] passed aw ...
    2 KB (227 words) - 11:52, 17 December 2018
  • ...t Thonmi Sambhota, a minister of [[Songtsen Gampo]] (569-649), was sent to India to study the art of writing, and upon his return introduced the '''uchen''' ...
    2 KB (243 words) - 13:41, 16 August 2009
  • ...vening seven years he spent time in the [[Dzogchen Monastery]] in southern India and in Kathmandu, Nepal, where he began the Kilung Foundation. In 1998 he f ...
    1 KB (230 words) - 06:25, 13 April 2021
  • ...ce Upon in Ratnaśikhin Buddha’s Lifetime: Legends of Ratnaśikhin Buddha in India and Beyond,'' in: P. Skilling & J. McDaniel, eds., Buddhist Narrative in As ...
    2 KB (249 words) - 09:08, 4 December 2023
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