Difference between revisions of "Pagsam Wangpo"

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<span class=TibUni16>[[དཔག་བསམ་དབང་པོ།]]</span> ([[dpag bsam dbang po]])
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<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[གཉག་ཛྙཱ་ན་ཀུ་མ་ར།]]</span></noinclude><br>
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[[Image:pagsamwangpo.GIF|frame|The 5th Drukchen Pagsam Wangpo Rinpoche]]
<noinclude>[[gnyag jna na ku ma ra]]</noinclude><br>
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===Short Biography===
<noinclude>[[Yeshe Zhonnu]]</noinclude><br>
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'''The 5th Gyalwang Drukpa Pagsam Wangpo Rinpoche''' (1593-1653), was born in Chongye (in Tsang, western Tibet) into the same family as the 5th Dalai Lama. He was an extraordinary yogi, and spent many years alone in a solitary meditation retreat. During his time, the Drukpa lineage was most popular in the Himalayan range around northern India, and Pagsam Wangpo received the royal patronage of many kings in the area. He was a unique yogi as he spent most of his time in solitary retreat.
<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[ཡེ་ཤེས་གཞོན་ནུ།]]</span></noinclude><br>
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<noinclude>[[ye shes gzhon nu]]</noinclude><br>
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Pagsam Wangpo had many disciples, the most important of whom was the yogi Taktsang Repa, who went to Ladakh at the request of the Buddhist king of that region Sengay Namgyal (1570-1642). In Ladakh, Taktsang Repa and this king founded the Hemis Monastery, which remains the principal Drukpa monastery in that area today. With the introduction of Tibetan Buddhism and the Drukpa tradition, Ladakh experienced an influence that altered its people's lifestyle. It was this change and the interaction of such varied cultures that gave Ladakh its unique description as "Little Tibet".
===Short biography===
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'''Jñanakumara of Nyag''', was one of the early Tibetan monk and expert translator who received the [[Four Great Rivers of Transmission]] from [[Padmasambhava]], [[Vimalamitra]], Vairotsana and [[Yudra Nyingpo]]. He worked closely with Vimalamitra in translating tantras of [[Mahayoga]] and [[Ati Yoga]]. He is also known as [[Nyag Lotsawa]] and by his secret initiation name [[Drimey Dashar]], 'Flawless Moonlight.' His initiation flower, along with Trisong Deutsen's, fell on [[Chemchok Heruka]]. Subsequently, he received the transmission of [[Nectar Medicine]] from Padmasambhava. He practiced in the [[Crystal Cave of Yarlung]], where he drew water from solid rock; it is said this water still flows today.  
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Pagsam Wangpo's other disciples were the 1st Zigar Choktrul Rinpoche, who founded the Dzigar Monastery, and the 1st Khamtrul Rinpoche who established the Khampagar Monastery. Both monasteries were located in eastern Tibet and were renowned for their strict discipline, meditation and Tantric practices.
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Pema Karpo's other reincarnation, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal (1594-1651; Shabdrung in Tibetan means "at whose feet we submit"), was born into the royal Gya family. He was the 18th Abbot of Ralung, the first Drukpa monastery to be established in Tibet. Following the prophecy of Pema Karpo, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal left for western Bhutan, where the Drukpa Kargyud School had already been established, and founded the Cheri Monastery in 1619 in Thimphu valley. In 1629, he founded his first fortress, Dzong Simtokha, near Thimphu. As the temporal and spiritual ruler of Bhutan, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal unified Bhutan for the first time in its history. In time, Bhutan became known in the Tibetan and Bhutanese language as "Druk Yul" or "The Country of the Dragon", in which the dragon symbolizes the Drukpa lineage of Tibetan Buddhism.
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===Primary Teachers===
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===Primary Students===
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===Primary Lineage===
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===Publications===
  
Jnana Kumara means 'Youthful Wakefulness.'
 
* Among his later incarnations is [[Dabzang Rinpoche]], a 19th-century contemporary of [[Jamgön Kongtrül the First]]. 
 
===Literary Works===
 
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===Main Teachers===
 
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===Main Students===
 
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===Main Lineages===
 
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===Alternate Names & Spellings===
 
===Alternate Names & Spellings===
*[[Bende Drimey Dashar]] ([[ban de dri med brda shar]])
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*5th [[Gyalwang Drukpa Rinpoche]]
*[[Drimey Dashar]]
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*[[Jnanakumara]]
 
*[[Jnanakumaravajra]]
 
*[[Jnana Kumara of Nyag]]
 
*[[Nyak Yeshe Zhonnu]] ([[gnyag ye shes gzhon nu]])
 
*[[Nyag Lotsawa]]
 
===Other Resources===
 
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===External Links===
 
===External Links===
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*[http://www.tbrc.org ADD TBRC link here]
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*[http://www.whatever.com WHATEVER TEXT YOU WRITE AFTER THE LINK WILL APPEAR ON THE PAGE (the link itself won't appear)]
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AND DON'T FORGET TO ADD THE RIGHT CATEGORIES!
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[[Category:Key Terms]][[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
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[[Category:Tibetan Buddhist Teachers]]
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]][[Category:Dzogchen Masters]]
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[[Category:Drukpa Kagyu Masters]]
[[Category:25 Disciples of Padmasambhava]]
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[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
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[[Category:]]

Latest revision as of 00:51, 31 July 2008

དཔག་བསམ་དབང་པོ། (dpag bsam dbang po)


The 5th Drukchen Pagsam Wangpo Rinpoche

Short Biography[edit]

The 5th Gyalwang Drukpa Pagsam Wangpo Rinpoche (1593-1653), was born in Chongye (in Tsang, western Tibet) into the same family as the 5th Dalai Lama. He was an extraordinary yogi, and spent many years alone in a solitary meditation retreat. During his time, the Drukpa lineage was most popular in the Himalayan range around northern India, and Pagsam Wangpo received the royal patronage of many kings in the area. He was a unique yogi as he spent most of his time in solitary retreat.

Pagsam Wangpo had many disciples, the most important of whom was the yogi Taktsang Repa, who went to Ladakh at the request of the Buddhist king of that region Sengay Namgyal (1570-1642). In Ladakh, Taktsang Repa and this king founded the Hemis Monastery, which remains the principal Drukpa monastery in that area today. With the introduction of Tibetan Buddhism and the Drukpa tradition, Ladakh experienced an influence that altered its people's lifestyle. It was this change and the interaction of such varied cultures that gave Ladakh its unique description as "Little Tibet".

Pagsam Wangpo's other disciples were the 1st Zigar Choktrul Rinpoche, who founded the Dzigar Monastery, and the 1st Khamtrul Rinpoche who established the Khampagar Monastery. Both monasteries were located in eastern Tibet and were renowned for their strict discipline, meditation and Tantric practices.

Pema Karpo's other reincarnation, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal (1594-1651; Shabdrung in Tibetan means "at whose feet we submit"), was born into the royal Gya family. He was the 18th Abbot of Ralung, the first Drukpa monastery to be established in Tibet. Following the prophecy of Pema Karpo, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal left for western Bhutan, where the Drukpa Kargyud School had already been established, and founded the Cheri Monastery in 1619 in Thimphu valley. In 1629, he founded his first fortress, Dzong Simtokha, near Thimphu. As the temporal and spiritual ruler of Bhutan, Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal unified Bhutan for the first time in its history. In time, Bhutan became known in the Tibetan and Bhutanese language as "Druk Yul" or "The Country of the Dragon", in which the dragon symbolizes the Drukpa lineage of Tibetan Buddhism.

Primary Teachers[edit]

Primary Students[edit]

Primary Lineage[edit]

Publications[edit]

Alternate Names & Spellings[edit]

Internal Links[edit]

External Links[edit]

AND DON'T FORGET TO ADD THE RIGHT CATEGORIES! [[Category:]]