Surendrabodhi: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Surendrabodhi''' (Skt.; Tib. ལྷའི་དབང་པོ་བྱང་ཆུབ་, ''lhé wangpo changchub'', or སུ་རེན་དྲ་བོ་དྷི། [[Wyl.]] ''lha'i dbang po byang chub'' or ''su ren dra bo dhi'') — one of the great Indian [[pandita]]s who helped the Tibetan translators such as [[Shyang Yeshé Dé|Yeshé Dé]] translate Buddhist texts from Sanskrit.
'''Surendrabodhi''' (Skt.; Tib. ལྷའི་དབང་པོ་བྱང་ཆུབ་, ''lhé wangpo changchub'', or སུ་རེན་དྲ་བོ་དྷི། [[Wyl.]] ''lha'i dbang po byang chub'' or ''su ren dra bo dhi'') — one of the great Indian [[pandita]]s who helped the Tibetan translators such as [[Shyang Yeshé Dé|Yeshé Dé]] translate Buddhist texts from Sanskrit.


He came to Tibet during the reign of [[King Tri Ralpachen]] (r. 815–38 ᴄᴇ). He is listed as the translator of forty-three texts and was one of the small group of paṇḍitas responsible for the [[Mahavyutpatti|Mahāvyutpatti Sanskrit-Tibetan dictionary]].<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref>
He came to Tibet during the reign of [[King Tri Ralpachen]] (r. 815–38 ᴄᴇ). He is listed as the translator of forty-three texts and was one of the small group of paṇḍitas responsible for the [[Mahavyutpatti|Mahāvyutpatti Sanskrit-Tibetan dictionary]].<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha, Glossary of Terms.</ref>


==External Links==
==External Links==

Revision as of 12:24, 17 November 2022

Surendrabodhi (Skt.; Tib. ལྷའི་དབང་པོ་བྱང་ཆུབ་, lhé wangpo changchub, or སུ་རེན་དྲ་བོ་དྷི། Wyl. lha'i dbang po byang chub or su ren dra bo dhi) — one of the great Indian panditas who helped the Tibetan translators such as Yeshé Dé translate Buddhist texts from Sanskrit.

He came to Tibet during the reign of King Tri Ralpachen (r. 815–38 ᴄᴇ). He is listed as the translator of forty-three texts and was one of the small group of paṇḍitas responsible for the Mahāvyutpatti Sanskrit-Tibetan dictionary.[1]

External Links

References

  1. 84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha, Glossary of Terms.