Eight great pillars of the practice lineage: Difference between revisions

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'''Eight great pillars of the practice lineage''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ka ba chen po brgyad'')
'''Eight great pillars of the practice lineage''' (Tib. ཀ་བ་ཆེན་པོ་བརྒྱད་, [[Wyl.]] ''ka ba chen po brgyad'') — important figures from the [[eight practice lineages]]. See also the [[Ten great pillars of the study lineage]].


#Pagor [[Vairotsana]]
#Pagor [[Vairotsana]]
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#[[Padampa Sangye]]
#[[Padampa Sangye]]
#[[Kyijo Lotsawa]]
#[[Kyijo Lotsawa]]
#[[Orgyenpa]]
#[[Orgyenpa Rinchen Pal|Orgyenpa]]


These eight masters were first mentioned in this list by the 16th century master [[Tertön Sherab Özer]].
These eight masters were first mentioned in this list by the 16th century master [[Tertön Sherab Özer]].
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[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Historical Masters]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:08-Eight]]

Latest revision as of 23:58, 15 June 2018

Eight great pillars of the practice lineage (Tib. ཀ་བ་ཆེན་པོ་བརྒྱད་, Wyl. ka ba chen po brgyad) — important figures from the eight practice lineages. See also the Ten great pillars of the study lineage.

  1. Pagor Vairotsana
  2. Dromtönpa
  3. Khyungpo Naljor
  4. Drokmi Lotsawa
  5. Marpa Lotsawa
  6. Padampa Sangye
  7. Kyijo Lotsawa
  8. Orgyenpa

These eight masters were first mentioned in this list by the 16th century master Tertön Sherab Özer.