-
Drukpa Pema
Karpo who
promoted the
recognition of a
rival candidate—Gyalwang
Pagsam Wangpo, an
illegitimate son of the
Chongje king (Chongje Depa), Ngawang...
-
Pagsam Wangpo (dpag bsam
dbang po) (1593-1653 CE), a key
figure in the
history of the
Drukpa Lineage of
Tibetan Buddhism, was born at
Chonggye ('phyong...
- in 1592,
there were two
rival candidates for his reincarnation.
Gyalwang Pagsam Wangpo, one of the candidates, was
favored by the King of
Tsang and prevailed...
-
Kunkhyen Pema Karpo,
there were two reincarnations, as he prophesied. One,
Pagsam Wangpo,
remained in
Central Tibet with the
patronage of the King of Tsang...
- or
Drukchen incarnations who, at the time of the
fifth Gyalwang Drukpa Pagsam Wangpo (1593—1653),
became established as the
reincarnate leaders of the...
- 1641–1717) was
considered to be the
immediate re-incarnation of
Gyalwang Pagsam Wangpo and the
sixth Gyalwang Drukchen hierarch of the
Northern branch of...
-
supposed reincarnation Pagsam Wangpo (1593–1653) who
visited Lhunpotse and
provided public teachings. The
prince became a
devotee of
Pagsam Wangpo and ****isted...
- the
recognition of a
rival candidate as the
right incarnation. This was
Pagsam Wangpo who was an
illegitimate son of the
Chongje Depa,
Ngawang Sonam Drakpa...
- the
rightful 18th
abbot of
Ralung Monastery:
Ngawang Namgyal and
Gyalwang Pagsam Wangpo. Both were
backed by
different groups within the
Drukpa sect, but...
- 1949, Vol. II, p. 697.
According to the
biography of the
Drukpa hierarch Pagsam Wangpo,
Karma Tseten's
grandson Karma Phuntsok Namgyal was a "nephew" of...