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Difference between revisions of "Langri Tangpa"

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'''[[Geshe]] [[Langri Tangpa]]''' ({{BigTibetan|[[གླང་རི་ཐང་པ།]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[glang ri thang pa]]) (1054–1123) is an important figure in the [[lineage]] of the [[Kadampa]] and [[Gelug]] schools of [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. He was born in {{Wiki|Central Tibet}}, as [[Dorje Senge]] ({{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་ སེང་གེ]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[rdo rje seng ge]]). His [[name]] derives from ''{{Wiki|Langtang}}'', the area in which he is said to have lived. He was a [[Kadampa]] [[master]], and [[disciple]] of [[Potowa]].<ref>[http://www.thdl.org/tibetan/servlet/org.thdl.tib.scanner.OnLineScannerFilter?thdlBanner=on Tibetan Himalayan Digital Library Online Dictionary], {{Nolinking|search "glang ri thang pa"}}</ref>
 
'''[[Geshe]] [[Langri Tangpa]]''' ({{BigTibetan|[[གླང་རི་ཐང་པ།]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[glang ri thang pa]]) (1054–1123) is an important figure in the [[lineage]] of the [[Kadampa]] and [[Gelug]] schools of [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. He was born in {{Wiki|Central Tibet}}, as [[Dorje Senge]] ({{BigTibetan|[[རྡོ་རྗེ་ སེང་གེ]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[rdo rje seng ge]]). His [[name]] derives from ''{{Wiki|Langtang}}'', the area in which he is said to have lived. He was a [[Kadampa]] [[master]], and [[disciple]] of [[Potowa]].<ref>[http://www.thdl.org/tibetan/servlet/org.thdl.tib.scanner.OnLineScannerFilter?thdlBanner=on Tibetan Himalayan Digital Library Online Dictionary], {{Nolinking|search "glang ri thang pa"}}</ref>
  
In the [[2nd water bird]] year he founded [[Langtang]] [[Monastery]] ({{BigTibetan|གླང་ཐང་}}  ; [[wylie]]: glang thang), as a [[Kadampa]] [[monastery]]. It later became a [[Sakya]] [[monastery]].<ref>[http://www.thdl.org/tibetan/servlet/org.thdl.tib.scanner.OnLineScannerFilter?thdlBanner=on Tibetan Himalayan Digital Library Online Dictionary], {{Nolinking|search "glang thang"}}</ref>
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In the [[2nd water bird]] year he founded [[Langtang Monastery]] ({{BigTibetan|[[གླང་ཐང་]]}}  ; [[wylie]]: [[glang thang]]), as a [[Kadampa]] [[monastery]]. It later became a [[Sakya]] [[monastery]].<ref>[http://www.thdl.org/tibetan/servlet/org.thdl.tib.scanner.OnLineScannerFilter?thdlBanner=on Tibetan Himalayan Digital Library Online Dictionary], {{Nolinking|search "glang thang"}}</ref>
  
 
He was the author of ''[[Eight Verses of Training the Mind]]'' ( {{BigTibetan|[[བློ་སྦྱོང་ཚིགས་བརྒྱད་མ།]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[blo sbyong tshigs brgyad ma]]), considered a succinct summary of the [[Lojong]] ({{BigTibetan|[[བློ་སྦྱོང་]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[blo sbyong]]) teachings of [[Mahayana Buddhism]]. He is said to be an [[emanation]] of [[Buddha Amitābha]].   
 
He was the author of ''[[Eight Verses of Training the Mind]]'' ( {{BigTibetan|[[བློ་སྦྱོང་ཚིགས་བརྒྱད་མ།]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[blo sbyong tshigs brgyad ma]]), considered a succinct summary of the [[Lojong]] ({{BigTibetan|[[བློ་སྦྱོང་]]}} ; [[wylie]]: [[blo sbyong]]) teachings of [[Mahayana Buddhism]]. He is said to be an [[emanation]] of [[Buddha Amitābha]].   

Revision as of 11:22, 16 April 2014

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Geshe Langri Tangpa (གླང་རི་ཐང་པ། ; wylie: glang ri thang pa) (1054–1123) is an important figure in the lineage of the Kadampa and Gelug schools of Tibetan Buddhism. He was born in Central Tibet, as Dorje Senge (རྡོ་རྗེ་ སེང་གེ ; wylie: rdo rje seng ge). His name derives from Langtang, the area in which he is said to have lived. He was a Kadampa master, and disciple of Potowa.[1]

In the 2nd water bird year he founded Langtang Monastery (གླང་ཐང་ ; wylie: glang thang), as a Kadampa monastery. It later became a Sakya monastery.[2]

He was the author of Eight Verses of Training the Mind ( བློ་སྦྱོང་ཚིགས་བརྒྱད་མ། ; wylie: blo sbyong tshigs brgyad ma), considered a succinct summary of the Lojong (བློ་སྦྱོང་ ; wylie: blo sbyong) teachings of Mahayana Buddhism. He is said to be an emanation of Buddha Amitābha.

Footnotes

See also

  • Geshe Chekhawa, author of Training the Mind in Seven Points, an explanation of Lojong
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Transforming the Mind: Eight Verses on Generating Compassion and Transforming your Life, Thorsons (2000) ISBN 0-7225-3865-0 PB
  • Lojong (Mind training)

Sources

Source

Wikipedia:Langri Tangpa