Balaha: Difference between revisions
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'''Balaha''' (Tib. བ་ལ་ཧ་, [[Wyl.]] ''ba la ha'') or '''Balahaka''' is the king of horses, who bears a wish-fulfilling jewel on his back. | '''Balaha''' (Tib. བ་ལ་ཧ་, [[Wyl.]] ''ba la ha'') or '''Balahaka''' or '''Valaha''' is the king of horses, who bears a wish-fulfilling jewel on his back. | ||
the fabulous, talking and flying white king of horses, who is an emanation [[Avalokiteshvara]]. He is also one of the past incarnations of Buddha [[Shakyamuni]]. His story is told in the Valahassa Jataka. It bears a wish-fulfilling jewel on its back, and is drawn at the centre of windhorse flags. | |||
==Sources== | ==Sources== |
Revision as of 14:04, 5 April 2022
Balaha (Tib. བ་ལ་ཧ་, Wyl. ba la ha) or Balahaka or Valaha is the king of horses, who bears a wish-fulfilling jewel on his back. the fabulous, talking and flying white king of horses, who is an emanation Avalokiteshvara. He is also one of the past incarnations of Buddha Shakyamuni. His story is told in the Valahassa Jataka. It bears a wish-fulfilling jewel on its back, and is drawn at the centre of windhorse flags.
Sources
- Reference to Balaha is made in Chandrakirti's commentary to Aryadeva's Four Hundred Verses
- The story of Avalokiteshvara's manifestation as Balaha is also told in chapter six of The Clear Mirror: A Royal Geneaology by Sakyapa Sönam Gyaltsen.