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Difference between revisions of "Vimalamitra"

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Vimalamitra (in [[Sanskrit]]) (Chinese: 無垢友 (pinyin: Wúgòuyǒu); Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་ (Drime Shenyen, Wylie: Dri-med Bshes-gnyen)), an 8th century Indian [[Dzogchen]] adept. According to tradition, he was born in Western [[India]]. Vimalamitra received the transmission of [[Dzogchen]] from [[Shri Singha]] and [[Jnanasutra]]. He was also a student of Buddhaguhya. He was invited to Tibet by emissaries of King [[Trisong Detsen]] where he established himself as a teacher and translator of [[Dzogchen]] texts. Vimalamitra eliminated all [[Delusion]], thereby gaining complete realization ([[Rainbow body]])
 
Vimalamitra (in [[Sanskrit]]) (Chinese: 無垢友 (pinyin: Wúgòuyǒu); Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་ (Drime Shenyen, Wylie: Dri-med Bshes-gnyen)), an 8th century Indian [[Dzogchen]] adept. According to tradition, he was born in Western [[India]]. Vimalamitra received the transmission of [[Dzogchen]] from [[Shri Singha]] and [[Jnanasutra]]. He was also a student of Buddhaguhya. He was invited to Tibet by emissaries of King [[Trisong Detsen]] where he established himself as a teacher and translator of [[Dzogchen]] texts. Vimalamitra eliminated all [[Delusion]], thereby gaining complete realization ([[Rainbow body]])
  
==Nomenclature, orthography and etymology==
+
Nomenclature, orthography and etymology
  
 
"Drime Shenyen" (Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་, Wylie: dri med bshes gnyen) and in devotion by the contracted "Vima" (Tibetan: བི་མ, Wylie: bi ma). Orthographic renderings of the [[Sanskrit]] differ e.g. Vimilamitra and Vimalamitra.
 
"Drime Shenyen" (Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་, Wylie: dri med bshes gnyen) and in devotion by the contracted "Vima" (Tibetan: བི་མ, Wylie: bi ma). Orthographic renderings of the [[Sanskrit]] differ e.g. Vimilamitra and Vimalamitra.
  
==Detail==
+
[[Seventeen Tantras]] and assorted Nyingtig
===[[Seventeen Tantras]] and assorted Nyingtig===
 
  
 
Gyatso (1998: pp. 153–154) relates how the [[Seventeen Tantras]], though not considered [[Terma]], were revealed in a [[Terma]]-like manner:
 
Gyatso (1998: pp. 153–154) relates how the [[Seventeen Tantras]], though not considered [[Terma]], were revealed in a [[Terma]]-like manner:
  
:    By the eleventh century, both Bonpos and Buddhists were presenting texts they claimed to have unearthed from the place where those texts had been hidden in the past. Among the earliest Buddhist materials so characterized were the esoteric Nyingtig, or "[[Heart]] Sphere", teachings, including the seventeen [[Atiyoga]] [[Tantras]], which were associated with Vimalamitra, an Indian Great Perfection master invited to Tibet, according to some accounts, by [[Trisong Detsen]] in the eighth century. Vimalamitra's Tibetan student, Nyangban Tingzin Zangpo, was said to have concealed these teachings after the master went to China. The discoverer was Neten Dangma Lhungyal (eleventh century), who proceeded to transmit these teachings to Chetsun Senge Wangchuk, one of the first accomplished [[Tibetan Buddhist]] yogins, and to others. The Nyingtig materials were at the [[Heart]] of the Great Perfection [[Buddhism]] and had considerable influence upon [[Jigme Lingpa]], who labelled his own Treasure with the same term.
+
    By the eleventh century, both Bonpos and Buddhists were presenting texts they claimed to have unearthed from the place where those texts had been hidden in the past. Among the earliest Buddhist materials so characterized were the esoteric Nyingtig, or "[[Heart]] Sphere", teachings, including the seventeen [[Atiyoga]] [[Tantras]], which were associated with Vimalamitra, an Indian Great Perfection master invited to Tibet, according to some accounts, by [[Trisong Detsen]] in the eighth century. Vimalamitra's Tibetan student, Nyangban Tingzin Zangpo, was said to have concealed these teachings after the master went to China. The discoverer was Neten Dangma Lhungyal (eleventh century), who proceeded to transmit these teachings to Chetsun Senge Wangchuk, one of the first accomplished [[Tibetan Buddhist]] yogins, and to others. The Nyingtig materials were at the [[Heart]] of the Great Perfection [[Buddhism]] and had considerable influence upon [[Jigme Lingpa]], who labelled his own Treasure with the same term.
  
==Translations==
+
Translations
  
 
Vimalamitra also translated, together with [[Ma Rinchen Chok]], important [[Nyingmapa]] texts such as the [[Guhyasamaja Tantra]] and the Guhyagarbha [[Tantra]] (Tib., gSang-ba snying-po, "The Secret [[Heart]]", or "Essence of Secrets").
 
Vimalamitra also translated, together with [[Ma Rinchen Chok]], important [[Nyingmapa]] texts such as the [[Guhyasamaja Tantra]] and the Guhyagarbha [[Tantra]] (Tib., gSang-ba snying-po, "The Secret [[Heart]]", or "Essence of Secrets").
Line 28: Line 27:
 
     Later, Vimalamitra was invited to Tibet by the translators [[Kawa Peltsek]] and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen, emissaries of King [[Trisong Detsen]], and he was welcomed in Central Tibet as a great master. The Eastern Tibetan [[Yudra Nyingpo]] became his collaborator in translation and teaching. They translated a variety of [[Dzogchen]] texts, notably thirteen [[Mind]] Series texts, the Mayajala-[[Tantra]] and Secret Precept Series texts. He initiated the King, Mune Tsenpo, Nyak Tingnedzin Zangpo, [[Kawa Peltsek]] and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen. He hid the translated texts at Gegung in Chimphu. He stayed thirteen years in Tibet and then left for Riwo Tsenga (Wutaishan) where he vanished.
 
     Later, Vimalamitra was invited to Tibet by the translators [[Kawa Peltsek]] and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen, emissaries of King [[Trisong Detsen]], and he was welcomed in Central Tibet as a great master. The Eastern Tibetan [[Yudra Nyingpo]] became his collaborator in translation and teaching. They translated a variety of [[Dzogchen]] texts, notably thirteen [[Mind]] Series texts, the Mayajala-[[Tantra]] and Secret Precept Series texts. He initiated the King, Mune Tsenpo, Nyak Tingnedzin Zangpo, [[Kawa Peltsek]] and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen. He hid the translated texts at Gegung in Chimphu. He stayed thirteen years in Tibet and then left for Riwo Tsenga (Wutaishan) where he vanished.
  
==Vimalamitra lineage==
+
Vimalamitra lineage
  
 
One tradition of [[Dzogchen]] was directly transmitted from [[Vajrasattva]], a Sambhogakaya, to [[Garab Dorje]] (b. 55 CE), the Nirmanakaya. [[Garab Dorje]] transcribed this teaching which he transmitted to his [[Disciple]] [[Manjushrimitra]]. Mañjushrīmītra classified the teaching into three cycles:
 
One tradition of [[Dzogchen]] was directly transmitted from [[Vajrasattva]], a Sambhogakaya, to [[Garab Dorje]] (b. 55 CE), the Nirmanakaya. [[Garab Dorje]] transcribed this teaching which he transmitted to his [[Disciple]] [[Manjushrimitra]]. Mañjushrīmītra classified the teaching into three cycles:
Line 38: Line 37:
 
and this classification determined the exposition of the [[Dzogchen]] teachings in the following centuries. Mañjushrīmītra’s student [[Shri Singha]] re-edited the oral instruction class/cycle, and in this [[Form]] the teaching was transmitted to Jñānasūtra and Vimalamitra (sometimes Vimilamitra). Vimalamitra took the Menngagde disciplic teaching to Tibet in the 8th Century.
 
and this classification determined the exposition of the [[Dzogchen]] teachings in the following centuries. Mañjushrīmītra’s student [[Shri Singha]] re-edited the oral instruction class/cycle, and in this [[Form]] the teaching was transmitted to Jñānasūtra and Vimalamitra (sometimes Vimilamitra). Vimalamitra took the Menngagde disciplic teaching to Tibet in the 8th Century.
  
==Attributed Works==
+
Attributed Works
 
The Vima Nyingthig or "Secret [[Heart]] Essence of Vimalamitra" is actually mostly the [[Terma]] of Chetsun Senge Wangchug. This cycle of texts belongs to the Secret Instruction or Menngagde division of [[Dzogchen|Atiyoga]].
 
The Vima Nyingthig or "Secret [[Heart]] Essence of Vimalamitra" is actually mostly the [[Terma]] of Chetsun Senge Wangchug. This cycle of texts belongs to the Secret Instruction or Menngagde division of [[Dzogchen|Atiyoga]].
  
==Contribution to pharmacology==
+
Contribution to pharmacology
 
Vimalamitra created a special formulation currently called in his name Vimala or Bimala for treating disorders of the rLung element (wind element: nervousness etc.).
 
Vimalamitra created a special formulation currently called in his name Vimala or Bimala for treating disorders of the rLung element (wind element: nervousness etc.).
 
</poem>
 
</poem>

Revision as of 04:55, 11 April 2013

Vimalamitra

Vimalamitra (in Sanskrit) (Chinese: 無垢友 (pinyin: Wúgòuyǒu); Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་ (Drime Shenyen, Wylie: Dri-med Bshes-gnyen)), an 8th century Indian Dzogchen adept. According to tradition, he was born in Western India. Vimalamitra received the transmission of Dzogchen from Shri Singha and Jnanasutra. He was also a student of Buddhaguhya. He was invited to Tibet by emissaries of King Trisong Detsen where he established himself as a teacher and translator of Dzogchen texts. Vimalamitra eliminated all Delusion, thereby gaining complete realization (Rainbow body)

Nomenclature, orthography and etymology

"Drime Shenyen" (Tibetan: དྲི་མེད་བཤེས་གཉེན་, Wylie: dri med bshes gnyen) and in devotion by the contracted "Vima" (Tibetan: བི་མ, Wylie: bi ma). Orthographic renderings of the Sanskrit differ e.g. Vimilamitra and Vimalamitra.

Seventeen Tantras and assorted Nyingtig

Gyatso (1998: pp. 153–154) relates how the Seventeen Tantras, though not considered Terma, were revealed in a Terma-like manner:

    By the eleventh century, both Bonpos and Buddhists were presenting texts they claimed to have unearthed from the place where those texts had been hidden in the past. Among the earliest Buddhist materials so characterized were the esoteric Nyingtig, or "Heart Sphere", teachings, including the seventeen Atiyoga Tantras, which were associated with Vimalamitra, an Indian Great Perfection master invited to Tibet, according to some accounts, by Trisong Detsen in the eighth century. Vimalamitra's Tibetan student, Nyangban Tingzin Zangpo, was said to have concealed these teachings after the master went to China. The discoverer was Neten Dangma Lhungyal (eleventh century), who proceeded to transmit these teachings to Chetsun Senge Wangchuk, one of the first accomplished Tibetan Buddhist yogins, and to others. The Nyingtig materials were at the Heart of the Great Perfection Buddhism and had considerable influence upon Jigme Lingpa, who labelled his own Treasure with the same term.

Translations

Vimalamitra also translated, together with Ma Rinchen Chok, important Nyingmapa texts such as the Guhyasamaja Tantra and the Guhyagarbha Tantra (Tib., gSang-ba snying-po, "The Secret Heart", or "Essence of Secrets").

Vimalamitra, according to The Nyingma Tradition, was a pupil of Buddhaguhya and Lilavajra, as was Vairotsana who received the Mahayoga (Māyā-jāla Cycle) transmission from Buddhaguhya.

 Vimalamitra was born in Hastisthala in Western India. He was a scholar Monk versed in the three approaches to Buddhahood and a tantric master who attained mahamudra as a Disciple of Buddhaguhya. While he was living in Bodhgaya he met a Monk of similar Mind called Jnanasutra and there the Bodhisattva Vajrasattva himself appeared to them both and told them that through five hundred rebirths as scholars they had achieved nothing and if they aspired to ultimate realization they should go to China and at the Bodhi tree Temple they would find their master, Shri Singha, who would give them the instruction they required to attain Buddhahood in this lifetime. Leaving his friend behind, Vimalamitra, highly motivated, immediately set out for China and found Shri Singha as Vajrasattva had predicted and over twenty years he received instruction on the outer, inner and secret teaching of the Oral Lineage (Mangak nyingthik). Completely satisfied - although the master had not given him the texts - he returned to India. Meeting Jnanasutra, Vimalamitra related what he had received and accomplished and Jnanasutra immediately decided to go to meet Shri Singha.

    Years later, still intent on his meditations and doing tantric practice, Vimalamitra was visited by Dakinis who instructed him to go to the Bhasing Cremation ground if he wanted to receive the Dzogchen Heart Essence instructions. At Bhasing he met his old friend Jnanasutra from whom he begged for the instruction he had missed. From him he received the initiatory empowerments and meditational activities of the uttermost secret section of the Secret Teaching and after the fourth Empowerment he saw the naked nature of Mind. He also received the texts from him. Vimalamitra meditated on this for ten years before Jnanasutra achieved Rainbow body and left him with his final legacy, a tiny jeweline casket containing the verses called "Four Profound Methods" (Zhakthab Zhi) and through this he accomplished the Heart of the matter.

    Thereafter Vimalamitra wandered through northern India, staying at Kamarupa in Assam as King Haribadra's priest, to Bhirya further west where Dharmapala ruled and where he also became a royal priest, and to the Prabhaskara Cremation ground where he taught demonic beings through magical activity. He made three copies of the texts: one he hid in Uddiyana on the Golden Strand Island, one he concealed beneath a rock called Serling in Kashmir and one he gave to the Dakinis in the Cremation ground. He attained the Rainbow body of supreme transformation.

    Later, Vimalamitra was invited to Tibet by the translators Kawa Peltsek and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen, emissaries of King Trisong Detsen, and he was welcomed in Central Tibet as a great master. The Eastern Tibetan Yudra Nyingpo became his collaborator in translation and teaching. They translated a variety of Dzogchen texts, notably thirteen Mind Series texts, the Mayajala-Tantra and Secret Precept Series texts. He initiated the King, Mune Tsenpo, Nyak Tingnedzin Zangpo, Kawa Peltsek and Chokro Lui Gyeltsen. He hid the translated texts at Gegung in Chimphu. He stayed thirteen years in Tibet and then left for Riwo Tsenga (Wutaishan) where he vanished.

Vimalamitra lineage

One tradition of Dzogchen was directly transmitted from Vajrasattva, a Sambhogakaya, to Garab Dorje (b. 55 CE), the Nirmanakaya. Garab Dorje transcribed this teaching which he transmitted to his Disciple Manjushrimitra. Mañjushrīmītra classified the teaching into three cycles:

  • Semde (Mind class/cycle);
  • Longde (space class/cycle); and
  • Menngagde (oral instruction class/cycle),


and this classification determined the exposition of the Dzogchen teachings in the following centuries. Mañjushrīmītra’s student Shri Singha re-edited the oral instruction class/cycle, and in this Form the teaching was transmitted to Jñānasūtra and Vimalamitra (sometimes Vimilamitra). Vimalamitra took the Menngagde disciplic teaching to Tibet in the 8th Century.

Attributed Works
The Vima Nyingthig or "Secret Heart Essence of Vimalamitra" is actually mostly the Terma of Chetsun Senge Wangchug. This cycle of texts belongs to the Secret Instruction or Menngagde division of Atiyoga.

Contribution to pharmacology
Vimalamitra created a special formulation currently called in his name Vimala or Bimala for treating disorders of the rLung element (wind element: nervousness etc.).

Source

Wikipedia:Vimalamitra