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[[File:Nyangral.png|frame|Nyang Ral Nyima Özer]]
[[File:Nyangral.png|frame|Nyang Ral Nyima Özer]]
'''Nyang Ral Nyima Özer''' (Tib. ཉང་རལ་ཉི་མ་འོད་ཟེར་, [[Wyl.]] ''nyang ral nyi ma 'od zer'') (1136-1204)<ref>These dates appear on TBRC. Leonard van der Kuijp gives the dates as 1124-1192.</ref>was a mind emanation of [[King Trisong Detsen]] and the first of the [[Five Sovereign Tertöns]]. His [[terma]]s contain cycles associated with the [[guru]], [[yidam]] and [[dakini]], but mostly the latter two, especially the cycle of the [[Kagyé Deshek Düpa]] and the dakini cycle of Tröma Nakmo (Wyl. ''khros ma nag mo''). The guru cycle is called Lama Yongdzok (Tib. བླ་མ་ཡོངས་རྫོགས་, Wyl. ''bla ma yongs rdzogs'').
'''Nyang Ral Nyima Özer''' (Tib. ཉང་རལ་ཉི་མ་འོད་ཟེར་, [[Wyl.]] ''nyang ral nyi ma 'od zer'') (1124-1192) was a mind emanation of [[King Trisong Detsen]] and the first of the [[Five Sovereign Tertöns]]. His [[terma]]s contain cycles associated with the [[guru]], [[yidam]] and [[dakini]], but mostly the latter two, especially the cycle of the [[Kagyé Deshek Düpa]] and the dakini cycle of Tröma Nakmo (Wyl. ''khros ma nag mo''). The guru cycle is called Lama Yongdzok (Tib. བླ་མ་ཡོངས་རྫོགས་, Wyl. ''bla ma yongs rdzogs'').


==His Writings==
==His Writings==

Revision as of 12:33, 1 January 2015

Nyang Ral Nyima Özer

Nyang Ral Nyima Özer (Tib. ཉང་རལ་ཉི་མ་འོད་ཟེར་, Wyl. nyang ral nyi ma 'od zer) (1124-1192) was a mind emanation of King Trisong Detsen and the first of the Five Sovereign Tertöns. His termas contain cycles associated with the guru, yidam and dakini, but mostly the latter two, especially the cycle of the Kagyé Deshek Düpa and the dakini cycle of Tröma Nakmo (Wyl. khros ma nag mo). The guru cycle is called Lama Yongdzok (Tib. བླ་མ་ཡོངས་རྫོགས་, Wyl. bla ma yongs rdzogs).

His Writings

  • ཆོས་འབྱུང་མེ་ཏོག་སྙིང་པོ་སྦྲང་རྩིའི་བཅུད་, chos 'byung me tog snying po sbrang rtsi'i bcud
ཆོས་འབྱུང་མེ་ཏོག་སྙིང་པོ་སྦྲང་རྩིའི་བཅུད།
བཀའ་ཐང་ཟངས་གླིང་མ།

Notes

Further Reading

  • Dudjom Rinpoche, The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, Its Fundamentals and History, trans. and ed. Gyurme Dorje (Boston: Wisdom, 1991), page 755-759.

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