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A list of all pages that have property "english-def" with value "Paṇ-chen Sö-nam-drag-pa; [1478-1554]; textbook author for the Lo-sel-ling College of Dre-pung University". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/17493  + ('dul nag pa; scholar of dge lugs pa tradition; author of [[gsang 'dus dka' gnad mtha' gcod]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/7374  + ('jam dpal chos kyi bstan 'dzin 'phrin las - author of [['dzam gling rgyas bshad]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/26583  + ((16th cent); author of [[byams pa'i smon lam gyi 'grel pa]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/88  + ((1852-1910), alias [[dge 'dun bstan 'dzin rgya mtsho]]; author of [[byang chub bde lam gyi khrid dmigs skyong tshul shin tu gsal bar bkod pa dge legs 'od snang 'gyed pa'i nyin byed]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/3996  + ((1926-) author of a detailed commentary on the hevajra tantra)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/10727  + (1) Dharmakirti. n. of a logician, author of [[tshad ma sde bdun]]. 2) [['bri gung rig 'dzin]] b. 1595)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/10932  + (1) Highest [mundane] qualities / attribute. One of [[nges byed cha mthun bzhi]], Abbr. of [['jig rten pa'i chos kyi mchog]] supreme phenomenon on the path of connection. 2) Dharmottara, [author of Nyaya-bindu-tika])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/29431  + (1) Syn [[kham tshan]], smaller institutional unit, Monastic house, regional division [within a monastic college], regional section of a [[grva tshang]] in a monastery)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/23680  + (1) the monk group, assembly, monastic community / college. 2) the place where the monks live, monks' quarters / department / segment)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/25514  + (1350?-1414; author of the [[g.yag Tik]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/25111  + (1452-1507 - Tsang Nyön Heruka, the Mad Yogi of Tsang Bedecked with Bones, a great Kagyü yogi and the author of Milarepa's biography)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/17478  + (16th century. alias [[dpal khang lo tsA ba]] author of [[dag yig ngag sgron]])
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/02-RangjungYeshe/15814  + (1801--? - Könchok Tenpa Rabgye, author of a religious history of Amdo)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/dbyig gnyen  + (<p>(Fourth century). The younger bro<p>(Fourth century). The younger brother of Āryāsaṅga, he was one of the greatest scholars in Buddhist history, author of the Abhidharmakośa, the most definitive work on the Abhidharma, and later of numerous important works on the Vijñānavāda philosophy.</p>portant works on the Vijñānavāda philosophy.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/gnas len gyi bu  + (<p>A learned brahmin and author of "Māṭhara's Treatise." He was also the grandfather of Upatiṣya, that is Śāriputra.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/bad tsa  + (<p>A rishi of ancient India, said to be the author of the Nyaysūtrabhāśya and the famous Kāmasūtra.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/bi dyA ka ra pra bha  + (<p>According to Nyangral Nyimai Özer<p>According to Nyangral Nyimai Özer's history, Ralpachen invited the Indian abbot Vidyākaraprabha to Tibet along with Jinamitra, Surendrabodhi, and Dānaśīla in the first part of the ninth century (Martin, 2002, n. 13). Vidyākaraprabha was the author of the Madhyamakanayasārasamāsaprakaraṇa, a work in the Yogācāra-Madhyamaka school pioneered by Śāntarakṣita (Ruegg, 1981, 99, n. 311), translated into Tibetan with Paltsek under the name dbu ma'i lugs kyi snying po mdor bsdus pa'i rab tu byed pa (Toh 3893, Degé Tengyur, vol. HA, folios 43b.5–50a.6). He worked with Paltsek on numerous other translations on topics as diverse as the Sphuṭārthā commentary to the Abhisamayālaṅkāra, an extract from Buddhaghoṣa's Vimuktimārga, and the early tantra Vidyottamamahātantra (see Martin, 2006).</p>tra Vidyottamamahātantra (see Martin, 2006).</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/grog mkhar  + (<p>Ancient Indian rishi who is renowned as the author of the Rāmāyaṇa.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/chos kyi bshes gnyen  + (<p>Ninth-century Indian author.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/gau ta ma  + (<p>One of the seven great rishis of ancient India. Author of some of the vedas. His Dharmasūtra specified renunciation as yellow robes, shaved head, and being called a bhikṣu. Buddha Śākyamuni was his descendant.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/dpal brtsegs  + (<p>Paltsek, from the village of Kawa<p>Paltsek, from the village of Kawa north of Lhasa, was one of Tibet's preeminent translators. He was one of the first seven Tibetans to be ordained by Śāntarakṣita and is counted as one of Guru Rinpoche's twenty-five close disciples. In a famous verse by Ngok Lotsawa, Paltsek is named with Chokro Luyi Gyaltsen and Zhang Nanam Yeshé as part of a group of translators whose skills were surpassed only by Vairotsana. He translated works from a wide variety of genres, including sūtra, śāstra, vinaya, and tantra and was an author himself (for a list of his translations and writings, see Martin, 2011). Paltsek was also one of the most important editors of the early period, one of nine translators installed by Trisong Deutsen to supervise the translation of the Tripiṭaka and help catalogue translated works for the first two of three imperial catalogs (the ldan kar ma and bsam yas mchims phu ma catalogs, which were probably the initiative of Tride Songtsen; see Raine, 2010, 8).</p>tive of Tride Songtsen; see Raine, 2010, 8).</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/44-84000Definitions/klu sgrub  + (<p>Saint, scholar, and mystic of Bud<p>Saint, scholar, and mystic of Buddhist India from about four hundred years after the Buddha; discoverer of the Mahāyāna sūtras and author of the fundamental Madhyamaka treatise.</p><p>Second- or third-century Indian master whose writings formed the basis for the Madhyamaka tradition. In following centuries there were other masters and authors of the same name, and in Tibet all their works became attributed to one person.</p>n Tibet all their works became attributed to one person.</p>)
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/01-Hopkins2015/2689  + (Bu-dön (1290-1364), the great Sa-kya scholar, author of the History of Buddhism (chos 'byung))
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/01-Hopkins2015/3528  + (Chö-ding Hermitage (above what became Se-ra Monastic University on the northern outskirts of Lhasa))
  • Steinert App Dictionaries/01-Hopkins2015/3374  + (Dharmakīrti [name of the Indian philosopher, author of the Seven Treatises on Valid Cognition])