Yaksha: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:CM Capture 8.png|frame| | [[Image:CM Capture 8.png|frame|A yaksha depiction from a thangka found at Himalayan Art Resources]] | ||
'''Yaksha''' (Skt. ''yakṣa''; Tib. [[གནོད་སྤྱིན་]], ''nöjin'', Wyl. ''gnod sbyin'') — one of the [[eight classes of gods and demons]]. Yakshas are powerful beings, some times beneficent and sometimes malignant, who live on earth, in the air, and in the lower heavens.<ref>John Powers, ''Wisdom of Buddha'' (Dharma Publishing, 1995), page 314.</ref> | '''Yaksha''' (Skt. ''yakṣa''; Tib. [[གནོད་སྤྱིན་]], ''nöjin'', [[Wyl.]] ''gnod sbyin'') — one of the [[eight classes of gods and demons]]. Yakshas are powerful beings, some times beneficent and sometimes malignant, who live on earth, in the air, and in the [[Six heavens of the desire realm|lower heavens]].<ref>John Powers, ''Wisdom of Buddha'' (Dharma Publishing, 1995), page 314.</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 22:18, 7 November 2020
Yaksha (Skt. yakṣa; Tib. གནོད་སྤྱིན་, nöjin, Wyl. gnod sbyin) — one of the eight classes of gods and demons. Yakshas are powerful beings, some times beneficent and sometimes malignant, who live on earth, in the air, and in the lower heavens.[1]
References
- ↑ John Powers, Wisdom of Buddha (Dharma Publishing, 1995), page 314.