Kawa Paltsek: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Kawa Paltsek.jpg|frame|Kawa Paltsek]] | [[Image:Kawa Paltsek.jpg|frame|Kawa Paltsek]] | ||
'''Kawa Paltsek''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ska ba dpal brtsegs'') — one of the [[twenty-five disciples of Guru Rinpoche]]. He was born in Kawa in Phenpo Valley. He was ordained by the great abbot [[Shantarakshita]] and became one of the greatest Tibetan translators. With [[pandita]]s such as Jñanagarbha and Vidyakarasimha, he translated the [[prajnaparamita]] and other [[mahayana]] [[sutra]]s and [[Haribhadra]]’s major commentary on the ''[[Abhisamayalankara]]'' known as ''[[Sphutartha]]''. He collaborated with Vidyakaraprabha in translating treatises on [[Madhyamika]] and [[logic]]; and with [[Jinamitra]], he translated [[Vasubandhu]]’s ''[[Abhidharmakosha]]'' and commentary. Together with Sarvajñadeva, he was the first to translate the ''[[Bodhicharyavatara]]'' into Tibetan. He also translated many [[tantra]]s later collected in the [[Nyingma Gyübum]]. | '''Kawa Paltsek''' (Tib. [[སྐ་བ་དཔལ་བརྩེགས་]], [[Wyl.]] ''ska ba dpal brtsegs'') — one of the [[twenty-five disciples of Guru Rinpoche]]. He was born in Kawa in Phenpo Valley. He was ordained by the great abbot [[Shantarakshita]] and became one of the greatest Tibetan translators. With [[pandita]]s such as Jñanagarbha and Vidyakarasimha, he translated the [[prajnaparamita]] and other [[mahayana]] [[sutra]]s and [[Haribhadra]]’s major commentary on the ''[[Abhisamayalankara]]'' known as ''[[Sphutartha]]''. He collaborated with Vidyakaraprabha in translating treatises on [[Madhyamika]] and [[logic]]; and with [[Jinamitra]], he translated [[Vasubandhu]]’s ''[[Abhidharmakosha]]'' and commentary. Together with Sarvajñadeva, he was the first to translate the ''[[Bodhicharyavatara]]'' into Tibetan. He also translated many [[tantra]]s later collected in the [[Nyingma Gyübum]]. | ||
Along with [[Chokro Lüi Gyaltsen]], he was sent to India by king [[Trisong Detsen]] to invite [[Vimalamitra]] to Tibet. He later received the [[Vima Nyingtik]] teachings from Vimalamitra in [[Samyé]]. | Along with [[Chokro Lüi Gyaltsen]], he was sent to India by king [[Trisong Detsen]] to invite [[Vimalamitra]] to Tibet. He later received the [[Vima Nyingtik]] teachings from Vimalamitra in [[Samyé]]. | ||
==Writings== | ==Writings== | ||
*Exposition of the Stages of the View (''lta ba'i rim pa bshad pa'') | *Exposition of the Stages of the View (ལྟ་བའི་རིམ་པ་བཤད་པ་, ''lta ba'i rim pa bshad pa'') | ||
:{{TBRCW|O1GS6011|O1GS60111GS36617$W23703|ལྟ་བའི་རིམ་པ་བཤད་པ་, ''lta ba'i rim pa bshad pa''}} | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Revision as of 14:36, 29 March 2011
Kawa Paltsek (Tib. སྐ་བ་དཔལ་བརྩེགས་, Wyl. ska ba dpal brtsegs) — one of the twenty-five disciples of Guru Rinpoche. He was born in Kawa in Phenpo Valley. He was ordained by the great abbot Shantarakshita and became one of the greatest Tibetan translators. With panditas such as Jñanagarbha and Vidyakarasimha, he translated the prajnaparamita and other mahayana sutras and Haribhadra’s major commentary on the Abhisamayalankara known as Sphutartha. He collaborated with Vidyakaraprabha in translating treatises on Madhyamika and logic; and with Jinamitra, he translated Vasubandhu’s Abhidharmakosha and commentary. Together with Sarvajñadeva, he was the first to translate the Bodhicharyavatara into Tibetan. He also translated many tantras later collected in the Nyingma Gyübum.
Along with Chokro Lüi Gyaltsen, he was sent to India by king Trisong Detsen to invite Vimalamitra to Tibet. He later received the Vima Nyingtik teachings from Vimalamitra in Samyé.
Writings
- Exposition of the Stages of the View (ལྟ་བའི་རིམ་པ་བཤད་པ་, lta ba'i rim pa bshad pa)