Deer Park: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Deer Park''' is the place where the [[Buddha]] gave his first teaching, the "First Turning of the Wheel of the [[Dharma]]" (see [[Three Turnings]]), at [[Sarnath]] near Varnasi. Today pilgrims can visit the place where relics of the Buddha are kept. The [[Jataka]] mentions that the Buddha in one of his previous lives was born there as a golden deer who saved the life of a pregnant deer and the name "Deer Park" derives from this occasion when [[Shakyamuni]] was a bodhisattva leading a herd of deer.
[[Image:Dhamekha Stupa.jpg|thumb|240px|The [[Dhamekha Stupa]] which marks the place where the Buddha gave his first teaching]]
'''Deer Park''' (Skt. ''ṛṣipatana'') is the place where the [[Buddha]] gave his first teaching, the 'First Turning of the Wheel of the [[Dharma]]' (see [[Three Turnings]]), at [[Sarnath]] near [[Varanasi]]. Today [[pilgrimage|pilgrims]] can visit the place where relics of the Buddha are kept. The [[Jataka]] mentions that the Buddha in one of his previous lives was born there as a golden deer who saved the life of a pregnant deer and the name 'Deer Park' derives from this occasion when [[Shakyamuni]] was a [[bodhisattva]] leading a herd of deer.
 
==Internal Links==
*[[Eight holy places]]


[[Category: Places]]
[[Category: Places]]
[[Category:Pilgrimage]]
[[category:India]]

Latest revision as of 07:53, 21 August 2017

The Dhamekha Stupa which marks the place where the Buddha gave his first teaching

Deer Park (Skt. ṛṣipatana) is the place where the Buddha gave his first teaching, the 'First Turning of the Wheel of the Dharma' (see Three Turnings), at Sarnath near Varanasi. Today pilgrims can visit the place where relics of the Buddha are kept. The Jataka mentions that the Buddha in one of his previous lives was born there as a golden deer who saved the life of a pregnant deer and the name 'Deer Park' derives from this occasion when Shakyamuni was a bodhisattva leading a herd of deer.

Internal Links