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'''Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo''' ([[Wyl.]] ''phag mo gru pa rdo rje rgyal po'') (1110-1170) — one the three foremost disciples of [[Gampopa]], and an historical master of the [[Kagyü]] tradition. Before meeting with Gampopa, he also studied with [[Sachen Kunga Nyingpo]]—with whom he stayed with for twelve years, receiving the [[Lamdré]] teachings, [[Padampa Sangye]] and [[Chapa Chökyi Sengé]]. After Gampopa's death, Phagmodrupa left Central Tibet and settled in Phagmo Dru, Kham, and founded the [[Pagdru Kagyü]] school which later splintered into eight sub-schools, each one respectively being founded by one of his eight main students (see [[Kagyü]]). He was also the elder brother of [[Katok Dampa Deshek]], the founder of [[Kathok Monastery]]. | [[File:Phagmodrupa.jpg|thumb|Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo]] | ||
'''Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo''' (Tib. ཕག་མོ་གྲུ་པ་རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་, [[Wyl.]] ''phag mo gru pa rdo rje rgyal po'') (1110-1170) — one the three foremost disciples of [[Gampopa]], and an historical master of the [[Kagyü]] tradition. Before meeting with Gampopa, he also studied with [[Sachen Kunga Nyingpo]]—with whom he stayed with for twelve years, receiving the [[Lamdré]] teachings, [[Padampa Sangye]] and [[Chapa Chökyi Sengé]]. After Gampopa's death, Phagmodrupa left Central Tibet and settled in Phagmo Dru, Kham, and founded the [[Pagdru Kagyü]] school which later splintered into eight sub-schools, each one respectively being founded by one of his eight main students (see [[Kagyü]]). He was also the elder brother of [[Katok Dampa Deshek]], the founder of [[Kathok Monastery]]. | |||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
*Phagmodrupa: ''Engaging by Stages in the Teachings of the Buddha'' (ⓒ Tara Foundation, distributed by Otter Verlag), which contains a traditional biography of Phagmodrupa: | *Phagmodrupa: ''Engaging by Stages in the Teachings of the Buddha'' (ⓒ Tara Foundation, distributed by Otter Verlag), which contains a traditional biography of Phagmodrupa: | ||
*''The Life and Liberation of Phagmodrupa, The Protector of Migrating Beings'' by Takpo Chenga Rinpoche and translated by Terence Barrett (itself excerpted from Takpo Chenga Rinpoche's larger ''History of Drikung'' (Wyl. '' 'bri gung chos 'byung'') which was published under his ordination name, Drikung Konchog Gyatso, in 2004, by Nationalities Publications | *''The Life and Liberation of Phagmodrupa, The Protector of Migrating Beings'' by Takpo Chenga Rinpoche and translated by Terence Barrett (itself excerpted from Takpo Chenga Rinpoche's larger ''History of Drikung'' (Wyl. '' 'bri gung chos 'byung'') which was published under his ordination name, Drikung Konchog Gyatso, in 2004, by [[Mirik Petrün Khang|Nationalities Publications]], Beijing). [http://www.drikungtmc.org/resources.htm Available here] | ||
==Internal Links== | |||
*[[Three Men from Kham]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
*[http:// | *{{TBRC|P127|TBRC Profile}} | ||
*[http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Pakmodrupa-Dorje-Gyelpo/2539 Biography at Treasury of Lives] | |||
[[Category: Historical Masters]] | [[Category: Historical Masters]] | ||
[[Category: Kagyü Masters]] | [[Category: Kagyü Masters]] |
Latest revision as of 07:26, 13 February 2019
Phagmodrupa Dorje Gyalpo (Tib. ཕག་མོ་གྲུ་པ་རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱལ་པོ་, Wyl. phag mo gru pa rdo rje rgyal po) (1110-1170) — one the three foremost disciples of Gampopa, and an historical master of the Kagyü tradition. Before meeting with Gampopa, he also studied with Sachen Kunga Nyingpo—with whom he stayed with for twelve years, receiving the Lamdré teachings, Padampa Sangye and Chapa Chökyi Sengé. After Gampopa's death, Phagmodrupa left Central Tibet and settled in Phagmo Dru, Kham, and founded the Pagdru Kagyü school which later splintered into eight sub-schools, each one respectively being founded by one of his eight main students (see Kagyü). He was also the elder brother of Katok Dampa Deshek, the founder of Kathok Monastery.
Further Reading
- Phagmodrupa: Engaging by Stages in the Teachings of the Buddha (ⓒ Tara Foundation, distributed by Otter Verlag), which contains a traditional biography of Phagmodrupa:
- The Life and Liberation of Phagmodrupa, The Protector of Migrating Beings by Takpo Chenga Rinpoche and translated by Terence Barrett (itself excerpted from Takpo Chenga Rinpoche's larger History of Drikung (Wyl. 'bri gung chos 'byung) which was published under his ordination name, Drikung Konchog Gyatso, in 2004, by Nationalities Publications, Beijing). Available here