Eight vidyadharas: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Reverted edits by Sébastien (talk) to last revision by Gyurme)
(30 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Eight vidyadharas''' (Tib. ''rig 'dzin brgyad'') - Eight Indian masters of awareness who were entrusted with the [[Kagyé]] teachings: [[Vimalamitra]], [[Humkara]], [[Mañjushrimitra]], [[Nagarjuna]], [[Prabahasti]], [[Dhanasamskrita]], [[Rambuguhya-Devachandra]] and [[Shantigarbha]]. Sometimes [[Padmasambhava]] is added as a ninth.
'''Eight vidyadharas''' (Tib. རིག་འཛིན་བརྒྱད་, ''rigdzin gyé''; [[Wyl.]] ''rig 'dzin brgyad'') are the [[eight vidyadharas of India]]. It can also refer to the [[eight vidyadharas of Tibet]]
 
==The Eight Vidyadharas and the Kagyé==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left" border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0"
|+According to [[Dudjom Rinpoche]]:
|-
! Master!! Deity!! Casket
|-
| Vimalamitra
| Chemchok || gold
|-
| Humkara
| Yangdak || silver
|-
| Mañjushrimitra
| Yamantaka || iron
|-
| Nagarjuna
| Hayagriva || copper
|-
| Padmasambhava
| Vajrakilaya || turquoise
|-
| Dhanasamskrita
| Mamo Bötong || rhinoceros horn
|-
| Rambuguhya
| Jikten Chötö || agate
|-
| Shantigarbha
| Möpa Drakngak || Zi stone
|}
 
==In the mandala of Rigdzin Düpa==
 
The eight vidyadharas appear as follows in the mandala of [[Rigdzin Düpa]] (together with the associated deities of Kagyé):
 
* East - Humkara - Yangdak Heruka
* South - Manjushrimitra - Yamantaka
* West - Nagarjuna - Hayagriva
* North - Prabhahasti - Vajrakilaya
* South-east - Dhanasamskrita - Mamo Bötong
* South-west - Vimalamitra - Düdtsi Yönten
* North-west- Rombhuguhya - Jikten Chötö
* North-east - Shantigarbha - Möpa Drakngak




[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Eight Vidyadharas]]
[[Category:Kagyé]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:08-Eight]]

Revision as of 12:18, 22 March 2016

Eight vidyadharas (Tib. རིག་འཛིན་བརྒྱད་, rigdzin gyé; Wyl. rig 'dzin brgyad) are the eight vidyadharas of India. It can also refer to the eight vidyadharas of Tibet.