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Difference between revisions of "Kurukulla"

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[[File:Kurukullā0032.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Kurukullā0032.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
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{{Seealso|Red Tara}}
 
{{Seealso|Red Tara}}
'''[[Kurukulla]]''' (Skt. ''[[kurukullā]]''; Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རིག་བྱེད་མ་]]}}, ''[[rikjéma]]''; [[Wyl.]] ''[[rig byed ma]]'') — a {{Wiki|female}} [[deity]] of the [[Lotus family]], associated with the [[activity]] of magnetizing. She is usually depicted as red in {{Wiki|colour}}, in [[dancing]] [[posture]] and holding a flowery [[bow]] and arrow. She is also one of the [[Twenty-One Taras]] mentioned in the {{Wiki|ancient}} [[Tara]] [[tantra]]s.
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'''[[Kurukulla]]''' (Skt. ''[[kurukullā]]''; Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རིག་བྱེད་མ་]]}}, ''[[rikjéma]]''; [[Wyl.]] ''[[rig byed ma]]'') — a {{Wiki|female}} [[deity]] of the [[Lotus family]], associated with the [[activity]] of magnetizing.  
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She is usually depicted as [[red]] in {{Wiki|colour}}, in [[dancing]] [[posture]] and holding a flowery [[bow]] and arrow. She is also one of the [[Twenty-One Taras]] mentioned in the {{Wiki|ancient}} [[Tara]] [[tantra]]s.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
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*[http://www.himalayanart.org/pages/kurukulla/index.html Outline page on Himalayan Art]
 
*[http://www.himalayanart.org/pages/kurukulla/index.html Outline page on Himalayan Art]
 
*{{84000|http://read.84000.co/browser/released/UT22084/081/UT22084-081-006.pdf|The Practice Manual of Noble Tārā Kurukullā}}
 
*{{84000|http://read.84000.co/browser/released/UT22084/081/UT22084-081-006.pdf|The Practice Manual of Noble Tārā Kurukullā}}
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'''[[Kurukullā]]''' ([[Tibetan]]: ''[[rig che ma]]'', English: The [[One of the Action Family]]), [[Goddess of Power]].
 
'''[[Kurukullā]]''' ([[Tibetan]]: ''[[rig che ma]]'', English: The [[One of the Action Family]]), [[Goddess of Power]].
  
Powerful, red in {{Wiki|colour}} with one face, [[hair]] flowing upward, three [[eyes]] and four hands, slightly fierce in expression, she holds a [[bow]] and arrow in the first pair of hands and a hook and lasso in the lower pair. All the hand [[objects]] are [[constructed]] of red [[utpala]] [[flowers]] and used as implements for the subjugation of others. Adorned with [[jewel]] ornaments, a [[tiara]], earrings, necklaces, bracelets and {{Wiki|silk}} scarves, she wears a lower skirt of [[tiger]] {{Wiki|skin}}. [[Standing]] atop a corpse, {{Wiki|sun}} disc and [[lotus]] blossom she dances amidst the circular flames of the [[fire]] of [[pristine awareness]].
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Powerful, [[red]] in {{Wiki|colour}} with one face, [[hair]] flowing upward, three [[eyes]] and four hands, slightly fierce in expression, she holds a [[bow]] and arrow in the first pair of hands and a hook and lasso in the lower pair.  
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All the hand [[objects]] are [[constructed]] of [[red]] [[utpala]] [[flowers]] and used as implements for the subjugation of others.  
 +
 
 +
Adorned with [[jewel]] ornaments, a [[tiara]], earrings, necklaces, bracelets and {{Wiki|silk}} scarves, she wears a lower skirt of [[tiger]] {{Wiki|skin}}. [[Standing]] atop a corpse, {{Wiki|sun}} disc and [[lotus]] blossom she dances amidst the circular flames of the [[fire]] of [[pristine awareness]].
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The [[goddess]] of power, [[Kurukulle]], is one of the twenty-one [[forms]] of the [[goddess]] [[Tara]]. She ensures that one gains power over any [[activity]] [[desired]] and dispels {{Wiki|obstacles}}.  
  
The [[goddess]] of power, [[Kurukulle]], is one of the twenty-one [[forms]] of the [[goddess]] [[Tara]]. She ensures that one gains power over any [[activity]] [[desired]] and dispels {{Wiki|obstacles}}. [[Tibetan Buddhism]] holds if those who engage in business or who seek an attractive partner rely on and {{Wiki|worship}} her, she can surely grant the [[accomplishment]] of whatever one wishes-for example, conferring without hardship her hook and lasso that can draw in what is [[desired]].
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[[Tibetan Buddhism]] holds if those who engage in business or who seek an attractive partner rely on and {{Wiki|worship}} her, she can surely grant the [[accomplishment]] of whatever one wishes-for example, conferring without hardship her hook and lasso that can draw in what is [[desired]].
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}
 
[http://www.thangkar.com/art/show/p005-en.htm www.thangkar.com]
 
[http://www.thangkar.com/art/show/p005-en.htm www.thangkar.com]
 
{{NewSourceBreak}}
 
{{NewSourceBreak}}
[[Kurukullā]]. (T. [[Dbang gi lha mo]]). [[Sanskrit]] proper [[name]] of a [[form]] of [[Tārā]]; [[Kurukullā]] appears in both [[peaceful]] and [[wrathful]] [[manner]], generally red in {{Wiki|color}}. [[Wrathful]], she stands in [[Ardhaparyaṅka Āsana]], one face with three [[eyes]], wearing a {{Wiki|crown}} of skulls and holding in her four hands a [[bow]] and arrow and snare ([[pāśa]]) and displaying the [[Abhayamudrā]]. When [[peaceful]], she is portrayed in seated [[posture]] and has eight arms. [[Kurukullā]] is propitiated in a [[rite]] of [[Vaśīkaraṇa]], by which men are bewitched. She is therefore considered the [[Tārā]] of [[love]], propitiated by women seeking [[success]] in romance. Her [[mantra]] is [[oṃ kurukulle hrī svāhā]].
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[[Kurukullā]]. (T. [[Dbang gi lha mo]]). [[Sanskrit]] proper [[name]] of a [[form]] of [[Tārā]]; [[Kurukullā]] appears in both [[peaceful]] and [[wrathful]] [[manner]], generally [[red]] in {{Wiki|color}}. [[Wrathful]], she stands in [[Ardhaparyaṅka Āsana]], one face with three [[eyes]], wearing a {{Wiki|crown}} of skulls and holding in her four hands a [[bow]] and arrow and snare ([[pāśa]]) and displaying the [[Abhayamudrā]]. When [[peaceful]], she is portrayed in seated [[posture]] and has eight arms. [[Kurukullā]] is propitiated in a [[rite]] of [[Vaśīkaraṇa]], by which men are bewitched. She is therefore considered the [[Tārā]] of [[love]], propitiated by women seeking [[success]] in romance. Her [[mantra]] is [[oṃ kurukulle hrī svāhā]].
 
{{PrincetonDict}}
 
{{PrincetonDict}}
  
  
 
[[Category:Kurukullā]]
 
[[Category:Kurukullā]]

Revision as of 17:41, 3 January 2016

Kurukullā0032.jpg



See also  :


Kurukulla (Skt. kurukullā; Tib. རིག་བྱེད་མ་, rikjéma; Wyl. rig byed ma) — a female deity of the Lotus family, associated with the activity of magnetizing.

She is usually depicted as red in colour, in dancing posture and holding a flowery bow and arrow. She is also one of the Twenty-One Taras mentioned in the ancient Tara tantras.

External Links

Source

RigpaWiki:Kurukulla







Kurukullā (Tibetan: rig che ma, English: The One of the Action Family), Goddess of Power.

Powerful, red in colour with one face, hair flowing upward, three eyes and four hands, slightly fierce in expression, she holds a bow and arrow in the first pair of hands and a hook and lasso in the lower pair.

All the hand objects are constructed of red utpala flowers and used as implements for the subjugation of others.

Adorned with jewel ornaments, a tiara, earrings, necklaces, bracelets and silk scarves, she wears a lower skirt of tiger skin. Standing atop a corpse, sun disc and lotus blossom she dances amidst the circular flames of the fire of pristine awareness.

The goddess of power, Kurukulle, is one of the twenty-one forms of the goddess Tara. She ensures that one gains power over any activity desired and dispels obstacles.

Tibetan Buddhism holds if those who engage in business or who seek an attractive partner rely on and worship her, she can surely grant the accomplishment of whatever one wishes-for example, conferring without hardship her hook and lasso that can draw in what is desired.

Source

www.thangkar.com





Kurukullā. (T. Dbang gi lha mo). Sanskrit proper name of a form of Tārā; Kurukullā appears in both peaceful and wrathful manner, generally red in color. Wrathful, she stands in Ardhaparyaṅka Āsana, one face with three eyes, wearing a crown of skulls and holding in her four hands a bow and arrow and snare (pāśa) and displaying the Abhayamudrā. When peaceful, she is portrayed in seated posture and has eight arms. Kurukullā is propitiated in a rite of Vaśīkaraṇa, by which men are bewitched. She is therefore considered the Tārā of love, propitiated by women seeking success in romance. Her mantra is oṃ kurukulle hrī svāhā.

Source

The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism by Robert E. Buswell Jr. and Donald S. Lopez Jr.