- Dromtön, Drom
Tonpa or Dromtönpa Gyelwé
Jungné (Tibetan: འབྲོམ་སྟོན་པ་རྒྱལ་བའི་འབྱུང་གནས་, 1004 or 1005–1064) was the
chief disciple of the
Buddhist master...
-
Drakpa Jungne (Tibetan: གྲགས་པ་འབྱུང་གནས, Wylie:
Grags pa
byung gnas, 1414–1445) was a king of
central Tibet who
ruled in 1432–1445. He
belonged to the...
- Dorje, ever
predicted the
place where Chokyi Jungne was born. The
eighth Kenting Tai Situpa,
Chokyi Jungne (1700–1774), was born in the
province of A-Lo...
-
flaming vajra in the
right hand, left hand in a
subjugation mudra. Guru Pema
Jungne (Wylie: pad ma 'byung-gnas, Skt: Guru Padmakara),
meaning "Born from a Lotus"...
-
Kunga Lekpa Jungne Gyaltsen (Wylie: Kun dga legs pa'i 'byung gnas
rgyal mts'an, Chinese: 公哥列思八沖納思監藏班藏卜; 1308–1330) was a
Tibetan Imperial Preceptor (Dishi)...
- Dipamkara". The
Treasury of Lives.
Retrieved 11
December 2018. "Dromton
Gyelwa Jungne". The
Treasury of Lives.
Retrieved 11
December 2018.
Tulku & Helm 2006,...
- Ming
court in 1440. At his
demise he was
succeeded by his
nephew Drakpa Jungne,
whose mother belonged to the
powerful feudatory family Rinpungpa in Tsang...
-
forty years. The
Gongchig was
written out by his
heart disciple Won
Sherab Jungne (1187–1241). It is a late
summary of the Buddha's teachings, in
which Jigten...
- 1385–1432 (cousin)
Drakpa Jungne 1432–1445 (nephew)
Kunga Lekpa 1448–1481 (brother)
Ngagi Wangpo 1481–1491 (son of
Drakpa Jungne)
Tsokye Dorje 1491–1499...
-
Zhabdrung incarnations. Ever
since Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal appointed Pekar Jungne as the 1st Je Khenpo, the
spiritual head of all
monasteries in Bhutan, successive...