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'''Sarvastivadin''' (Skt. ''Sarvāstivādin''; Tib. [[ཐམས་ཅད་ཡོད་པར་སྨྲ་བ་]], ''tamché yöpar mawa'', [[Wyl.]] ''thams cad yod par smra ba'') — one of the four major early Buddhist schools established in India, the others being Pudgalavadin, Vibhajyavadin and Mahasanghika. Sarvastivada was a widespread group, and there were different sub-schools or sects throughout its history, the most influential ones being the [[Vaibhashika]] school based in Kashmir and the [[Sautrantika]] school.
'''Sarvastivada''' (Skt. ''Sarvāstivāda''; Tib. [[ཐམས་ཅད་ཡོད་པར་སྨྲ་བ་]], ''tamché yöpar mawa'', [[Wyl.]] ''thams cad yod par smra ba'') — one of the four major early Buddhist schools established in India, the others being Pudgalavada, Vibhajyavada and Mahasanghika. Sarvastivada was a widespread group, and there were different sub-schools or sects throughout its history, the most influential ones being the [[Vaibhashika]] school based in Kashmir and the [[Sautrantika]] school.


The lineage of monastic ordination and [[vinaya]] that was transmitted in Tibet with [[Shantarakshita]] comes from one of its branches, the Mulasarvastivadin (Skt. ''Mūlasarvāstivādin'') or "root"-Sarvastivadin.
The lineage of monastic ordination and [[vinaya]] that was transmitted in Tibet with [[Shantarakshita]] comes from one of its branches, the [[Mulasarvastivada]] (Skt. ''Mūlasarvāstivāda'') or "root"-Sarvastivada.


[[Category:Schools and Lineages]]
[[Category:Schools and Lineages]]
[[Category:Hinayana Schools]]
[[Category:Hinayana Schools]]

Latest revision as of 22:00, 7 November 2024

Sarvastivada (Skt. Sarvāstivāda; Tib. ཐམས་ཅད་ཡོད་པར་སྨྲ་བ་, tamché yöpar mawa, Wyl. thams cad yod par smra ba) — one of the four major early Buddhist schools established in India, the others being Pudgalavada, Vibhajyavada and Mahasanghika. Sarvastivada was a widespread group, and there were different sub-schools or sects throughout its history, the most influential ones being the Vaibhashika school based in Kashmir and the Sautrantika school.

The lineage of monastic ordination and vinaya that was transmitted in Tibet with Shantarakshita comes from one of its branches, the Mulasarvastivada (Skt. Mūlasarvāstivāda) or "root"-Sarvastivada.