Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:DalaiLamaV.JPG|frame|'''Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso, the Fifth Dalai Lama''']] | |||
'''Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso''' (''ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho'') - The fifth Dalai Lama. | '''Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso''' (''ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho'') - The fifth Dalai Lama. | ||
Revision as of 11:33, 19 August 2007
Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso (ngag dbang blo bzang rgya mtsho) - The fifth Dalai Lama.
Biography
The fifth Dalai Lama was prophesied in certain termas as an emanation of the enlightened activity of King Trisong Detsen. He was born in 1617 to descendants of the royal house of Zahor. Out of the chaos of seventeenth century Central Asia, he emerged in 1642 with the whole land of Tibet from Ladakh to Tachienlu under his rule. Ten years later he was invited to Beijing by the emperor Shun-chih, where he was treated as an equal and offered an imperial proclamation inscribed in gold, calling him ‘Dalai Lama, Vajra Holder and Master of the Teaching’.
He constructed the Potala Palace, pioneered the dual system of spiritual and temporal governance of Tibet, and is credited with establishing a national health system and educational programme. He was a prolific writer, his historical and autobiographical writings supplying a crucial source for historians of the period.
He felt a deep connection with the Nyingma tradition of Guru Padmasambhava, and had a number of important Nyingma teachers, such as Zurchen Chöying Rangdrol, Khöntön Paljor Lhundrup, and Terdak Lingpa, Minling Terchen Gyurmé Dorje. He was particularly close to the masters of the Northern Treasures lineage of Rigdzin Gödem, who appear frequently in his visions. In his autobiography he also speaks of Pema Rigdzin, the first Dzogchen Rinpoche, whom he urged to found the Dzogchen monastery in Kham; he calls him “the great Dzogchenpa who has totally understood the Nyingtik”.
He was a tertön and is especially renowned for his cycle of pure vision teachings known as Sangwa Gyachen, 'Bearing the Seal of Secrecy.'
He passed away in his sixty-sixth year in 1682 in the Potala Palace, while absorbed in meditation on Kurukulla, a deity associated with power and magnetizing.