User:Mort: Difference between revisions

From gDams Ngag mDzod
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[syntax]]


=== Mediawiki ===
[[citations]]
*[https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Contents Learning to use Media Wiki]
*[http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Reference_card Quick Reference Card]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Tables Tables]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Images Images]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Magic_words Magic words]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:FAQ Frequently Asked Questions]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Contents User Help]
*[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Contents Technical manual]


Issues


<big>'''RESEARCH'''</big>
Vol. 1
#Text 3.1.2 g.yung ston and rmog ston are not the same person.  rmog rton wrote this work based on the yig cha of g.yung ston [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P1454 BDRC P1454], so it should include him as the source author.
#Text 3.1.4 Shri Simha is included as a category in this text, though he's only quoted in the conclusion of the text.
#Text 3.1.6 You have the wrong [[Nam mkha' rdo rje]].  It should be this person [https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P7962 BDRC P7962].
#Text 3.1.7 In reference to the Note on this page- snyan brgyud rin po che is not a person it is the Precious Hearing Lineage (of Aro).
#Texts 3.1.4 through 3.1.7 None of the titles for the Semde guidance manuals are actually translated, only the subtitles.


RTZ - Rinchen Terdzö - Treasury of Precious Termas
[[Image file names]]


Very short descriptive summary found online:
[[work page]]
The Great Treasury of Precious Termas, a collection of the most important revealed termas of Padmasambhava, Vimalamitra, Vairotsana and their closest disciples, gathered by Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Thaye with the help of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo.
Peter Roberts Catalog- a translation of Tai Situ 12's thob yig gsal ba'i sgron me, an account of the RTZ empowerments, Aug 4 - Nov 16, 2006. For the Tibetan see http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W1KG854
 
Sarah Harding Catalog? - Marcus is checking with Sarah about this
 
Gene Smith's Catalog (DKR's 111 V. redaction based mostly on the Tsurpu edition- in wylie w/ colophons and notes) - http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W1KG9255
 
University of Virginia Catalog (extremely corrupted in terms of spelling mistakes in the wylie, but comprehensive-covering up to V. 108 of DKR's edition)- https://collab.itc.virginia.edu/wiki/tibetantexts/Rin%20Chen%20Gter%20Mdzod%20Cataloging.html
 
 
Recent RTZ Empowerments
 
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, gave the RTZ five times, including in Repkong in 1950 from which there is this famous photo. http://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=File:Dilgo_Khyentse_and_Lama_Gonpo_2.jpg
 
Dudjom Rinpoche, gave the RTZ for the first time when he was 14 years old and the tenth time was in 1967 at Tso Pema, Rewalsar, India, which took about 45 days.  It seems that he always personally gave both wangs and lungs during these events.
 
Kalu Rinpoche, Sonada, India 1983. (Elsewhere the author of the Sakyong Foundation accounts of the RTZ in Orissa mentions that Kalu Rinpoche gave the RTZ over the course of six months at Palpung Sherabling in India in 1984. I'm pretty sure that this must be a mistake as Tai Situ's bio states that he received the RTZ from Kalu Rinpoche in 1983, so it is doubtful if he would invite him to his own monastery the following year to give it again.)
 
Penor Rinpoche, was the first to give the RTZ in the west, which occurred in 1988 at Kunzang Palyul Choling in Poolsville Maryland.  The last time he gave it was March 12 - May 16 2001, Namdroling Monastery, Bylakuppee, Karnataka, India.  For the wang list see http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W00EGS1017219
 
Tai Situ XII, Aug 4 - Nov 16 2006, Palpung Sherabling Monastery, Himachal Pradesh, India.  For the wang list see http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W1KG854 as well as Peter Allen Robert's translation of the thob yig.
 
Taklung Tsetrul Rinpoche, Nov. 8th 2008- March 14th 2009, Mindroling Monastery, Dehradun, India. See Mindroling's Web-pages dedicated to the RTZ transmission http://mindrolling.org/rinchenterdzod/index.cfm
 
Namkha Drimed Rinpoche, Dec. 5 2008- March 6 2009, Rigon Thupten Mindroling Monastery, Orissa, India.  For the wang list see the following accounts from the Sakyong Foundation.
https://s3.amazonaws.com/sakyong-foundation/Rinchen-Terdzo-Empowerment-List.pdf
http://www.sakyongfoundation.org/chandragiri/the-great-river-of-blessings/
 
Yangthang Rinpoche Dec 1 2010- Feb 18, 2011, Orgyen Dorje Den Alameda, California. For the wang list and accounts of the event see http://www.orgyendorjeden.org/rinchen_terdzod.html
 
RIGPA WIKI: http://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Rinchen_Terdz%C3%B6
 
HimalayanArt Tsagli “Rinchen Terdzo Initiation Cards List”: http://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=1924
 
TBRC: Interesting Outline here of the Shechen version, but only includes up until the 21st volume on Amitabha http://tbrc.org/#!rid=W1KG14
Also, http://tbrc.org/#!rid=W20578 - the earlier 111 volume version order by DKR based mostly on the Todlung Tsurphu redaction with some additions from Palpung redaction. 
And, the 63 volume Chengdu printing based on the Palpung redaction http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W1PD96185
And here is the list of related texts on TBRC including published versions of the RTZ dkar chag and a couple brief histories http://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=W10MS14668
 
Editions
 
The dPal spungs edition in 60 volumes was the first of the woodblock-printing versions, which was followed some two decades or so later by the stod lung mtshur phu edition in 63 volumes.  The latter was put together under the guidance of the 15th Karmapa Khakhyap Dorje, whom added three volumes which included Terdag Lingpa and Lochen Dharma Shri's sadhana compilation known as the sgrub thabs 'dod 'jo'i 'bum bzang, a biography of Kongtrul, as well as Chogyur Lingpa's Lam rim ye shes snying po along with Kongrul's commentary to that. (Of the various early editions, the Palpung edition has the greatest reputation for accuracy.)
 
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche published an edition in 111 volumes (or 70 volumes depending on the printing) put together over the years 1976-1980, which was based on the Tsurpu edition as supplemented with blockprints from Palpung and other great monasteries of Kham.  DKR appended the following terma cycles to the Tsurpu edition:  rtsa gsum 'od gsal snying thig (re)discovered by Khyentse Wangpo, the Padma gsang thig revealed by Jedrung Thrinle Jampa Jungne, Jigme Lingpa's Longchen Nyingthig, and Chogyur Lingpa's rdzogs chen sde gsum. 
 
Finally, there was a printing done in Chengdu during the 1990's, which was a reproduction of the Palpung block printing in 63 volumes.
 
Further Reading
 
Schwieger, P. "Collecting and Arranging the gTer ma Tradition: Kong sprul’s Great Treasury of the Hidden Teachings" in Anne Chayet, Cristina Scherrer-Schaub, Françoise Robin & Jean-Luc Achard, eds., Edition, éditions: l’écrit au Tibet, évolution et devenir München: Indus Verlag, 2010.
Tulku Thondup, Hidden Teachings of Tibet (Boston: Wisdom, reprint edition 1997), 'Appendix 5: Categories of Texts in The Precious Treasury of Termas'.
In German
 
Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. - Teil 15: Die mTshur-phu-Ausgabe der Sammlung Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo nach dem Exemplar der Orientabteilung, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Hs or 778 ; Gesamtindex / erstellt von Saadet Arslan. - Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, 2011. - XXV, 277 S.
རིན་ཆེན་གཏེར་མཛོད། - Rinchen Terdzö -
 
ENGLISH TITLE - Treasury of Precious Termas
1855-56
 
Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo entrusted a number of minor terma text that he had collected in four volumes to Kongtrul who expanded the collection to ten volumes. These were known as the gTer phren collection and became the precursor for Rinchen Terdzö.
 
1855 - 1893
Collected and arranged at various times over the course of almost forty years.
 
1875 - 1895
 
Woodblocks carved and texts printed at Palpung .
 
1909-1912
 
Carving of blocks and printing of the Rin chen gter mdzod at mTshur pu with some additions from the Karmapa.
 
Modern Publications
 
1976 - 1980
 
111 volume edition created at the order of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche and published in Paro, Bhutan by Ngodrup and Sherab Drimay. This larger edition is based on both of the earlier editions and adds three volumes of useful practice texts.
 
1990's
 
63 volume edition printed in Chengdu which was a reproduction of the Palpung block printing
 
2007 - 2008 - 2016?
 
A new Tsadra edition is being created in 70 volumes, 50 volumes of which were already published by Shechen Publications, 2007-2008. This will be a new edition based on all previous editions with multiple levels of editing based on all existing editions of individual texts and research of rare manuscripts done by Dakpo Tulku. The final volumes should be available by 2016. In the following years two supplemental volumes of practice materials will also be produced.
 
 
 
OTHER RESEARCH
 
Barron, Richard, trans. Kongtrul, Jamgon. 2003. The Autobiography of Jamgon Kongtrul. Boston: Snow Lion Publications.
 
Blondeau, A. M. 1988. "La controverse soulevée par l'inclusion de rituels bon po dans le Rin-chen gter-mdzod. Note préliminaire." Tibetan Studies. Proceedings of the 4th Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Schloss Hohenkammer, Munich, 1985, J. L.
 
Panglung, ed. München: Kommission fur Zentralasiatische Studien, Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften: 59-76.
 
Burchardi, Anne. 2001. Kongtruls Fem Samlinger. Fund Og Forskning.
 
Gene Smith's Among Tibetan Texts:
 
3. The Rin chen gter mdzod (sixty or sixty-three volumes)[1]
 
The Rin chen gter mdzod is a collection of the smaller basic texts, important supplementary works, newly written liturgical texts devoted to the initiations (abhiseka) and propitiation (sãdhana and sevavidhi), and introductory instruc- tions for the majority of the authoritative gter ma cycles that had been revealed in Tibet up to Kong sprul’s own time. The vast majority of the collection is the work of Kong sprul, who had painstakingly collected the instructions and initiations, many of which were on the point of disappearing. The Rin chen gter mdzod is sometimes inaccurately described as a collection of the gter ma texts themselves; Kong sprul’s intention was never to displace the enormous collected cycles like the Gnam chosor Ja’tshonpoddrug He seems only to want to bring some order into the chaos of this “rediscovered” literature, to establish some criteria of authenticity for this genre that had often been reviled and rejected by Tibetan scholars of a more purist bent. His approach, as ever, was eclectic.[2]"
 
Gene Smith Footnotes from Among Tibetan Texts:
883. As noted above, the Dpal spungs (sixty volumes) and Mtshur phu (sixty-three volumes) editions of the Gter mdzod differ somewhat. The Mtshur phu is considerably later than the Dpal spungs edition and is certainly not as reliable. Some examples of the Mtshur phu redaction contain Kong sprul's biography of his old friend, Mkhyen brtse. There exist later supplements to the Dpal spungs edition as well. See ’Jigs bral, Gsang sngags snga 'gyur na, commonly known as the Gter mdzod thob yig. Bdud 'joms Rin po che bestowed the initiation of the whole of the Rin chengter mdzod in 1968 at Rawalsar. The book cited here is a product of that initiation.
 
884. Gnas gsar Bkra 'phel describes quite well what must have been Kong sprul’s intention in Blo gros mtha’ yas, Phyogs med, ff. I97v-i98r: de Itar sa gter dgongs gter dag snang snyan brgyud kyi chos skor rgya che ba mams kyi dbanggi snyingpo dang/ khrid rgyunyod rigs rtsa bar bzung / sgrub thabs phrin las dbang chog bsnyen yig dang khridyig sogs gang dgos gsar du sbyar / chos tshan nyung ngu dang rgyun dkonpayi rigs /gterphran mams kyig zhung dang yig mying mams phyogs gcig tu bsdus / de dag la 'ang gsal byed dgos pa la zur ’debs sogs zhib par bkod pa ’i pu sti ’bring tshad drug cur bngspa bzhugs /gtergsar lam ńmye shes snying po ’i ’grelpa sogs kyang ’di’i khongs su sdud dgos pa yin no //.
 
Kvaerne, Per. 1987. "Protection Against Natural Dangers: A Translation and Commentary on Tibetan Ritual Texts in The Rin Chen Gter Mdzod." Bulletin of The School of Oriental and African Studies 50 (3).
 
Schwieger, Peter "Collecting and Arranging the gTer ma Tradition: Kong sprul’s Great Treasury of the Hidden Teachings" in Anne Chayet, Cristina Scherrer-Schaub, Françoise Robin & Jean-Luc Achard, eds., Edition, éditions: l’écrit au Tibet, évolution et devenir München: Indus Verlag, 2010.
 
Dieter Schuh. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke, Teil 6. (Gesammelte Werke des Kong-sprul Blo-gros mtha´-yas) . Wiesbaden 1976.ISBN 3-515-02348-8
 
Peter Schwieger. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. Teil 10. (Die mTshur-pu-Ausgabe des Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo, Band 1 bis 14). Stuttgart 1990. ISBN 3-515-05011-6
 
Peter Schwieger. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. Teil 11. (Die mTshur-pu-Ausgabe des Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo, Bände 14 bis 34). Stuttgart 1995.
 
Peter Schwieger. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. Teil 12. (Die mTshur-pu-Ausgabe des Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo, nach dem Exemplar der Orientabteilung, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Hs. or 778, Bände 34 bis 40). Stuttgart 1999. ISBN 3-515-06905-4
 
Peter Schwieger. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. Teil 13. (Die mTshur-pu-Ausgabe des Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo, nach dem Exemplar der Orientabteilung, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Hs. or 778, Bände 40 bis 52). Stuttgart 2009. ISBN 3-515-07347-7
 
Karl-Heinz Everding. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. Teil 14. (Die mTshur-pu-Ausgabe des Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo, nach dem Exemplar der Orientabteilung, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Hs. or 778, Bände 52 bis 63). Stuttgart 2008. ISBN 3-515-07348-5
 
Peter Schwieger. Tibetische Handschriften und Blockdrucke. - Teil 15: Die mTshur-phu-Ausgabe der Sammlung Rin-chen gter-mdzod chen-mo nach dem Exemplar der Orientabteilung, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Hs or 778 ; Gesamtindex / erstellt von Saadet Arslan. - Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, 2011. - XXV, 277 S.
 
Tulku Thondup, Hidden Teachings of Tibet (Boston: Wisdom, reprint edition 1997), 'Appendix 5: Categories of Texts in The Precious Treasury of Termas'.

Latest revision as of 13:59, 28 January 2019

syntax

citations

Issues

Vol. 1

  1. Text 3.1.2 g.yung ston and rmog ston are not the same person. rmog rton wrote this work based on the yig cha of g.yung ston BDRC P1454, so it should include him as the source author.
  2. Text 3.1.4 Shri Simha is included as a category in this text, though he's only quoted in the conclusion of the text.
  3. Text 3.1.6 You have the wrong Nam mkha' rdo rje. It should be this person BDRC P7962.
  4. Text 3.1.7 In reference to the Note on this page- snyan brgyud rin po che is not a person it is the Precious Hearing Lineage (of Aro).
  5. Texts 3.1.4 through 3.1.7 None of the titles for the Semde guidance manuals are actually translated, only the subtitles.

Image file names

work page