Eight Great Naga Kings: Difference between revisions
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The '''Eight Great Nāga Kings''' (Skt. nāgarāja, Tib. [[ཀླུའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཆེན་པོ་བརྒྱད་]], [[Wyl.]] ''klu'i rgyal po chen po brgyad'') — a list of great [[naga| nāga]] kings, who where amongst the audience when [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] taught the dharma. They are frequently mentioned in [[Vajrayana]] practices. | The '''Eight Great Nāga Kings''' (Skt. nāgarāja, Tib. [[ཀླུའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཆེན་པོ་བརྒྱད་]], [[Wyl.]] ''klu'i rgyal po chen po brgyad'') — a list of great [[naga| nāga]] kings, who where amongst the audience when [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] taught the dharma. They are frequently mentioned in [[Vajrayana]] practices. | ||
The [[Great Tibetan Dictionary]] | The [[Great Tibetan Dictionary]] gives the following list, while admitting there are other lists as well: | ||
:1. Vāsuki (Tib. Norgyé, | :1. Vāsuki (Tib. ''Norgyé'', Wyl. ''nor rgyas'') | ||
:2. Padma (Tib. Pema, | :2. Padma (Tib. ''Pema'', Wyl. ''pad ma'') | ||
:3. Karkoṭaka (Tib. Tobgyu, | :3. Karkoṭaka (Tib. ''Tobgyu'', Wyl. ''stobs rgyu'') | ||
:4. Takṣaka (Tib. Jokpo, | :4. Takṣaka (Tib. ''Jokpo'', Wyl. '' 'jog po'') | ||
:5. Mahāpadma (Tib. Pema | :5. Mahāpadma (Tib. ''Pema Chenpo'', Wyl. ''pad ma chen po'') | ||
:6. Śaṅkhapāla (Tib. Dungkyong, | :6. Śaṅkhapāla (Tib. ''Dungkyong'', Wyl. ''dung skyong'') | ||
:7. Kulika (Tib. Rikden, | :7. Kulika (Tib. ''Rikden'', Wyl. ''rigs ldan'') | ||
:8. Śeṣa (Tib. Tayé, | :8. Śeṣa (Tib. ''Tayé'', Wyl. ''mtha' yas '') | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
*Beer, Robert. ''The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols.'' Chicago: Serindia, 2003: 72 - 74. | *Beer, Robert. ''The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols.'' Chicago: Serindia, 2003: 72 - 74. |
Revision as of 11:44, 3 August 2016
The Eight Great Nāga Kings (Skt. nāgarāja, Tib. ཀླུའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཆེན་པོ་བརྒྱད་, Wyl. klu'i rgyal po chen po brgyad) — a list of great nāga kings, who where amongst the audience when Buddha Shakyamuni taught the dharma. They are frequently mentioned in Vajrayana practices.
The Great Tibetan Dictionary gives the following list, while admitting there are other lists as well:
- 1. Vāsuki (Tib. Norgyé, Wyl. nor rgyas)
- 2. Padma (Tib. Pema, Wyl. pad ma)
- 3. Karkoṭaka (Tib. Tobgyu, Wyl. stobs rgyu)
- 4. Takṣaka (Tib. Jokpo, Wyl. 'jog po)
- 5. Mahāpadma (Tib. Pema Chenpo, Wyl. pad ma chen po)
- 6. Śaṅkhapāla (Tib. Dungkyong, Wyl. dung skyong)
- 7. Kulika (Tib. Rikden, Wyl. rigs ldan)
- 8. Śeṣa (Tib. Tayé, Wyl. mtha' yas )
Further Reading
- Beer, Robert. The Handbook of Tibetan Buddhist Symbols. Chicago: Serindia, 2003: 72 - 74.