- experience.
Tibetan Buddhist malas or
rosaries (Tib. ཕྲེང་བ Wyl.
phreng ba, "
Trengwa" ) are
usually 108 beads;
sometimes 111
including the guru bead(s), reflecting...
- and its
spread in Tibet, as well as the
history of Tibet. Of
Tsuklak Trengwa's many students, his
chief disciples included the
Ninth Karmapa Wangchuk...
- made from
Elaeocarpus angustifolius Various types of
malas (Tibetan:
trengwa) are used in
Tibetan Buddhism,
including "Bodhi seed" (commonly made from...
- Mikyö Dorje, 8th
Karmapa Lama (1507–1554) and
Second Pawo
Rinpoche Tsugla Trengwa see the term "shentong madhyamaka" as a misnomer, for them the yogacara...
-
Tibetan commentaries on Śāntideva's Bodhicaryāvatāra, such as Pawo
Tsugla Trengwa Rinpoche's 16th
century commentary and
Kunzang Pelden's (1862–1943) commentary...
-
various sources from
other Tibetan Buddhist schools, like Pawo
Tsuklak Trengwa and Shākya Chokden, both
write about how
large numbers of
Tibetans flocked...
- Dorje, the 8th
Karmapa Lama (1507–1554) and
Second Pawo
Rinpoche Tsugla Trengwa, both of whom see "Shentong" as
another name for
Yogacara and as a separate...
-
commentary entitled ‘Feast for the Fortunate’. Pawo
Rinpoche Tsuglag Trengwa's ‘Exposition of The
Entrance to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life, the Essence...
- Lhündrup 1440–1503 ཆོས་དབང་ལྷུན་གྲུབ་ chos
dbang lhun grub 2.
Tsuklak Trengwa 1504–1566 གཙུག་ལག་ཕྲེང་བ་
gtsug lag
phreng ba 3.
Tsuklak Gyatso 1567–1633...
- were
incorporated into the
Karma Kamtsang Kagyu lineage by Pal
Tsuglak Trengwa and into the
Gelug lineage by the 1st
Dalai Lama. The
Kadam school was...