Wylie:Rgyud kyi rgyal po rnyog pa med pa: Difference between revisions
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|title = | |title=rgyud kyi rgyal po rnyog pa med pa | ||
|collection = | |titletib=རྒྱུད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་པོ་རྙོག་པ་མེད་པ་ | ||
|associatedpeople = | |titleintext=rgyud kyi rgyal po rnyog pa med pa zhes bya ba/ | ||
|titleintexttib=རྒྱུད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་པོ་རྙོག་པ་མེད་པ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ། | |||
|titletrans=The Unsullied State, A Monarch of Tantras | |||
|translator = | |translation=None | ||
| | |collection=gdams ngag mdzod | ||
|collectiontib=གདམས་ངག་མཛོད་ | |||
|author=Author Not Found | |||
|printer = Jayyed Press, Ballimaran, Delhi-6 | |authortib=Author Not Found | ||
|publisher = | |associatedpeople=Gayadhara; 'brog mi lo tsA ba; paN+Di ta gzhon nu zla ba; lo tsA ba ye shes 'byung gnas; Kumāracandra; ? | ||
|place = New Delhi | |translator=Gayadhara; 'brog mi lo tsA ba; paN+Di ta gzhon nu zla ba; (Kumāracandra?); lo tsA ba ye shes 'byung gnas | ||
|year = 1999 | |translatortib=ག་ཡ་དྷ་ར་; འབྲོག་མི་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་; པཎྜི་ཏ་གཞོན་ནུ་ཟླ་བ; (Kumāracandra?); ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་ཡེ་ཤེས་འབྱུང་གནས་ | ||
| | |printer=Jayyed Press, Ballimaran, Delhi-6 | ||
|volnumber = | |publisher=Shechen Publications | ||
| | |place=New Delhi | ||
|totalpages = 6 | |year=1999 | ||
|totalfolios = 4 | |volwylie=mar pa bka' brgyud pod dang po | ||
|pagesinvolume = 2-7 | |volnumber=7 | ||
|beginfolioline = 1b1 | |VolumeLetterTib=ཇ་ | ||
|endfolioline = 4a7 | |textnuminvol=001 | ||
|linesperpage = 7 (2 pages of 4) | |totalpages=6 | ||
| | |totalfolios=4 | ||
|pagesinvolume=2-7 | |||
|beginfolioline=1b1 | |||
|endfolioline=4a7 | |||
|linesperpage=7 (2 pages of 4) | |||
|pechatitleinfo='''Title Page (ཁ་ཤོག་):''' | |||
'''Title Page (ཁ་ཤོག་):''' | |||
:No title page | :No title page | ||
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:*གཡས་: (#) | :*གཡས་: (#) | ||
::Right: (#) | ::Right: (#) | ||
|partialcolophonwylie='di rnams don ni rtogs pa yis/_/sangs rgyas kun gyi bdag nyid 'gyur/_/dpal bde ba dam pa rtogs par byed pa dang ldan pa zhes bya ba'i rgyud byin kyis brlabs pa'i rim pa chen po mkha' 'gro ma drwa ba sdom pa'i brtags pa rnyogs pa med pa zhes bya ba rdzogs so/_/rgya gar gyi mkhan po paN+Di ta ga ya d+ha ra dang /bod kyi lo tsA ba dge slong shA kya ye shes kyis bsgyur pa'o/_(see note)_/'di ni spros pa dang bcas pa'i spyod pa thams cad spros med de kho na nyid phyag rgya chen po la sbyar ba'i nges pa don gyi rgyud de khyad pa ba 'phags pa ste/_paN+Di ta gzhon nu zla bas mdzad pa'i 'grel ba rgya gar phyag na dang /_mtshur lo tsA ba ye shes 'byung gnas kyis bsgyur ba'ang yod/_/mchan/ | |||
|partialcolophontib=འདི་རྣམས་དོན་ནི་རྟོགས་པ་ཡིས། །སངས་རྒྱས་ཀུན་གྱི་བདག་ཉིད་འགྱུར། །དཔལ་བདེ་བ་དམ་པ་རྟོགས་པར་བྱེད་པ་དང་ལྡན་པ་ཞེས་བྱ་བའི་རྒྱུད་བྱིན་ཀྱིས་བརླབས་པའི་རིམ་པ་ཆེན་པོ་མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་དྲྭ་བ་སྡོམ་པའི་བརྟགས་པ་རྙོགས་པ་མེད་པ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ་རྫོགས་སོ། །རྒྱ་གར་གྱི་མཁན་པོ་པཎྜི་ཏ་ག་ཡ་དྷ་ར་དང་།བོད་ཀྱི་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་དགེ་སློང་ཤཱ་ཀྱ་ཡེ་ཤེས་ཀྱིས་བསྒྱུར་པའོ། <ref>the following material is a scribal note added on after the colophon of the actual text</ref> །འདི་ནི་སྤྲོས་པ་དང་བཅས་པའི་སྤྱོད་པ་ཐམས་ཅད་སྤྲོས་མེད་དེ་ཁོ་ན་ཉིད་ཕྱག་རྒྱ་ཆེན་པོ་ལ་སྦྱར་བའི་ངེས་པ་དོན་གྱི་རྒྱུད་དེ་ཁྱད་པ་བ་འཕགས་པ་སྟེ། པཎྜི་ཏ་གཞོན་ནུ་ཟླ་བས་མཛད་པའི་འགྲེལ་བ་རྒྱ་གར་ཕྱག་ན་དང་། མཚུར་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་ཡེ་ཤེས་འབྱུང་གནས་ཀྱིས་བསྒྱུར་བའང་ཡོད། །མཆན། | |||
|chokyigenre=Instruction manual | |||
|dkarchaggenre=gzhung rtsa 'grel | |||
|keywords=gces btus; phyag chen chos drug | |||
|tbrc=[http://tbrc.org/link?RID=W23605 VolumeI1CZ3969] | |||
|tbrccontents=No note on contents | |||
|hascommentary=Kumārachandra. Śryanāvilanāma-tantrapañjikā, dPal rnyog pa med pa zhes bya ba’i rgyud kyi ’grel pa. Toh. 1204. | |||
|volumeTranslator=Person:Callahan, E. | |||
|introAuthor=Person:Callahan, E. | |||
|translatorintro= | |||
''The Unsullied State, A Monarch of Tantras,'' the sole Kangyur selection in the four Marpa Kagyu volumes, is also the first text in the seventh Karmapa’s Indian Mahāmudrā Collection, where it is also the only text | |||
included from the Kangyur. ''The Unsullied State'' is part of the Cakrasaṃvara | |||
cycle and is the last of the thirty-two Rali tantras, the only one of that cycle | |||
that all Tibetan Kangyur catalogers and compilers agreed was authentic.*<ref>*Butön considered all the Rali tantras (Toh. 383–414) to have been translated from Sanskrit and therefore to be authentic, but others, including Sakya Paṇḍita, regarded them as Tibetan compositions. The Lhasa and Narthang Kangyurs excluded all Rali tantras but the last text, ''The Unsullied State, A Monarch of Tantras''. See Stearns, ''Luminous Lives'', 220–21n62.</ref> Its colophon states that it is a section of a larger text, the ''Monarch of Tantras Called “Endowed with the Means to Realize Glorious Sacred Bliss,”'' a text that | |||
does not seem to exist at this time. ''The Unsullied State'' is also included in the | |||
Ten Dharmas of Mahāmudrā, a collection Gö Lotsāwa says was transmitted | |||
to Tibet by the eleventh-century Indian master Vajrapāṇi,<ref>2</ref> which, as Roger | |||
Jackson observes,<ref>3</ref> is probably the source of its Mahāmudrā canonical status. | |||
Even though the term “mahāmudrā” does not appear in this text (and it | |||
does in other tantras, such as the ''Hevajra Tantra, Cakrasaṃvara, Kālacakra, | |||
Guhyasamāja,'' and the ''Name-Chanting of Mañjuśrī''), as the interlinear note | |||
at the end of this edition says, this text states and connects the elements of | |||
the elaborate practices with mahāmudrā, unelaborate suchness. | |||
In Maitrīpa’s biography it is said that Śavaripa “spoke a few words” about | |||
this text, which is called space-like, along with the ocean-like ''Guhyasamāja | |||
Tantra,'' the wisdom-like ''Hevajra Tantra'', and the blessing-like ''Cakrasaṃvara Tantra''.<ref>4</ref> Jamgön Kongtrul cites three lineages of transmission for thistext, all beginning with Vajradhara. The third, which Maitrīpa passed to | |||
Vajrapāṇi, continued through the seventh Karmapa and is the one Jamgön | |||
Kongtrul received. | |||
There is one Tibetan commentary by Kumāracandra (eleventh century) | |||
on this text found in the Tengyur and in the Indian Mahāmudrā Collection, | |||
which was referred to in the preparation of this translation. Unfortunately, | |||
it does not provide as much clarification as a text of this nature requires.<ref>5</ref> | |||
'' | ''Transmission lineage received by Jamgön Kongtrul''. Vajradhara to Ratnamati, | ||
the great brahman Saraha, the glorious protector Ārya Nāgārjuna, the | |||
mahāsiddha Śavaripa, the master Maitrīpa, and to Marpa Chökyi Lodrö. | |||
Another transmission was from Vajradhara to Nairātmyā, Nāgārjuna, | |||
Tilopa, Nāropa, Marpa, Metön Sönam Gyaltsen, Tsakyapa Śākya Yeshe, | |||
Gya Yönten Zangpo, Khampa Śākya Dorje, Upa Sangye Bum, Lotsāwa | |||
Chokden, Lama Palden Senge, Butön Rinchen Drup, and Yungtön Dopal. | |||
And yet another transmission was from Maitrīpa to the Indian Vajrapāṇi, | |||
Ngari Nakpo Sherde, Lama Sotön, Nyangtön Tsakse, Roktön Dewa, Che | |||
Yönten, Che Dode Senge, Chöku Özer, Upa Sangye Bum, Lotsāwa Chokden, Baktön Zhönu Tsultrim, and Gyalwa Yung Tönpa. | |||
The transmission continued to Lama Sönam Zangpo, Lama Tsultrim | |||
Gönpo, Jangsem Sönam Gyaltsen, Khenchen Sönam Zangpo, Gośrī | |||
Paljor Döndrup, the seventh Gyalwang Karmapa Chödrak Gyatso, the | |||
mahāsiddha Sangye Nyenpa, the eighth lord Mikyö Dorje, Karma Lekshe Drayang, Gelong Dorje Chö, Chetsang Karma Tenkyong, the exalted Könchok Tenzin, Jamgön Sungrap Gyatso, the omniscient Tenpai Nyinje, | |||
Gyalwang Dudul Dorje, the glorious Pawo Tsuklak Chökyi Gyatso, and | |||
Jamgön Kongtrul.<ref>6</ref> | |||
|tibvol=ja | |||
|notes=The only thing close to a matching name that I've found for [[paN+Di ta gzhon nu zla ba]] is [http://tbrc.org/link?RID=P0RK389]. but his dates most likely predate the founding of [[mtshur pu]] by a few centuries, so he's probably not the right one. Any ideas on this? | |||
|topic=Instruction manual | |||
|tibcategory=gzhung rtsa 'grel | |||
|pechaside1=gces btus | |||
|pechaside2=phyag chen chos drug | |||
|fulltibtext=<span class=TibUni18>[[རྒྱུད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་པོ་རྙོག་པ་མེད་པ་]]</span> | |||
}} | |||
' | <onlyinclude> | ||
= Tibetan Text = | |||
{{ {{#show: {{FULLPAGENAME}} |?titletib#}} }} | |||
= Wylie Text = | |||
WYLIE TEXT WILL APPEAR HERE | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
<references/> | |||
</onlyinclude> | |||
<headertabs /> | |||
{{Footer}} | |||
[[Category: | [[Category: Gayadhara]][[Category: 'brog mi lo tsA ba]][[Category: lo tsA ba ye shes 'byung gnas]] {{DRL Tibetan text categories}} [[Category: Gdams ngag mdzod Shechen Printing]] [[Category: Gdams ngag mdzod Catalog]] |
Latest revision as of 17:07, 7 February 2023
The Unsullied State, A Monarch of Tantras, the sole Kangyur selection in the four Marpa Kagyu volumes, is also the first text in the seventh Karmapa’s Indian Mahāmudrā Collection, where it is also the only text included from the Kangyur. The Unsullied State is part of the Cakrasaṃvara cycle and is the last of the thirty-two Rali tantras, the only one of that cycle that all Tibetan Kangyur catalogers and compilers agreed was authentic.*[1] Its colophon states that it is a section of a larger text, the Monarch of Tantras Called “Endowed with the Means to Realize Glorious Sacred Bliss,” a text that does not seem to exist at this time. The Unsullied State is also included in the Ten Dharmas of Mahāmudrā, a collection Gö Lotsāwa says was transmitted to Tibet by the eleventh-century Indian master Vajrapāṇi,[2] which, as Roger Jackson observes,[3] is probably the source of its Mahāmudrā canonical status. Even though the term “mahāmudrā” does not appear in this text (and it does in other tantras, such as the Hevajra Tantra, Cakrasaṃvara, Kālacakra, Guhyasamāja, and the Name-Chanting of Mañjuśrī), as the interlinear note at the end of this edition says, this text states and connects the elements of the elaborate practices with mahāmudrā, unelaborate suchness. In Maitrīpa’s biography it is said that Śavaripa “spoke a few words” about this text, which is called space-like, along with the ocean-like Guhyasamāja Tantra, the wisdom-like Hevajra Tantra, and the blessing-like Cakrasaṃvara Tantra.[4] Jamgön Kongtrul cites three lineages of transmission for thistext, all beginning with Vajradhara. The third, which Maitrīpa passed to Vajrapāṇi, continued through the seventh Karmapa and is the one Jamgön Kongtrul received.
There is one Tibetan commentary by Kumāracandra (eleventh century) on this text found in the Tengyur and in the Indian Mahāmudrā Collection, which was referred to in the preparation of this translation. Unfortunately, it does not provide as much clarification as a text of this nature requires.[5]
Transmission lineage received by Jamgön Kongtrul. Vajradhara to Ratnamati, the great brahman Saraha, the glorious protector Ārya Nāgārjuna, the mahāsiddha Śavaripa, the master Maitrīpa, and to Marpa Chökyi Lodrö.
Another transmission was from Vajradhara to Nairātmyā, Nāgārjuna, Tilopa, Nāropa, Marpa, Metön Sönam Gyaltsen, Tsakyapa Śākya Yeshe, Gya Yönten Zangpo, Khampa Śākya Dorje, Upa Sangye Bum, Lotsāwa Chokden, Lama Palden Senge, Butön Rinchen Drup, and Yungtön Dopal.
And yet another transmission was from Maitrīpa to the Indian Vajrapāṇi, Ngari Nakpo Sherde, Lama Sotön, Nyangtön Tsakse, Roktön Dewa, Che Yönten, Che Dode Senge, Chöku Özer, Upa Sangye Bum, Lotsāwa Chokden, Baktön Zhönu Tsultrim, and Gyalwa Yung Tönpa.
The transmission continued to Lama Sönam Zangpo, Lama Tsultrim Gönpo, Jangsem Sönam Gyaltsen, Khenchen Sönam Zangpo, Gośrī Paljor Döndrup, the seventh Gyalwang Karmapa Chödrak Gyatso, the mahāsiddha Sangye Nyenpa, the eighth lord Mikyö Dorje, Karma Lekshe Drayang, Gelong Dorje Chö, Chetsang Karma Tenkyong, the exalted Könchok Tenzin, Jamgön Sungrap Gyatso, the omniscient Tenpai Nyinje, Gyalwang Dudul Dorje, the glorious Pawo Tsuklak Chökyi Gyatso, and Jamgön Kongtrul.[6]
- Other notes
- Genre from Richard Barron's Catalog
- Instruction manual
- Genre from dkar chag
- gzhung rtsa 'grel
- BDRC Link
- VolumeI1CZ3969
- BDRC Content Information
- No note on contents
Information about Unicode Tibetan and the digitization of this text
As the only available unicode Tibetan text at the time, Nitartha International's version of the Gdams ngag mdzod Paro Edition of the gdams ngag mdzod is provided here. However, note that it has not been thoroughly edited and that there may also be mistakes introduced through the conversion process. Eventually we will provide a fully edited version of the entire Shechen Edition, entered and edited multiple times by Pulahari Monastery in Nepal, but as of fall 2017 that project has not been finished. Note that the folio numbers that appear throughout were added by Nitartha Input Center at the time of input.
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