Tai Situpa, 8th: Difference between revisions

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== Names ==
'''Tibetan:''' <span class=TibetanUnicode20>[[ཆོས་ཀྱི་འབྱུང་གནས་]]</span><br>
<br>
'''Wylie:'''<br>
*[[chos kyi 'byung gnas]]<br>
*[[rje chos kyi 'byung gnas]]<br>
*[[si tu 08 chos kyi 'byung gnas]]<br>
*[[si tu paN chen chos kyi 'byung gnas]]<br>
*[[bstan pa'i nyin byed]]<br>
*[[gtsug lag chos kyi snang ba]]<br>
 
'''Other Transliterations in use:'''<br>
*[[Chökyi Jungne]]
*[[Chokyi Jungne]]
*[[Je Chökyi Jungne]]
*[[Je Chokyi Jungne]]
*[[Tenpe Nyinje]]
*[[Situpa, 8th]]
*[[8th Tai Situpa]]
*[[Eighth Tai Situpa]]
 
== Dates ==
Born: 1699/1700<br>
Died: 1774<br>
== Affiliation ==
*[[Karma Kagyu]]
*[[Tai Situpa]]
== Other Biographical Information ==
 
[http://tbrc.org/link?RID=P956 TBRC RID: P956]
 
[http://www.kagyuoffice.org/kagyulineage.karmapa12.html Biography from kagyuoffice.org]
 
[http://www.palpung.org/english/lineage/tai_8.htm Biography from palpung.org]
 
1717 - Founds dpal spungs chos 'khor gling monastery
== Main Students ==
*bstan 'dzin chos kyi nyi ma
*bstan 'dzin phun tshogs
*tshe dbang nor bu
*rdo rje drag po rtsal
*[[Karmapa, 13th]] ([[bdud 'dul rdo rje]])
*gtsug lag dga' ba'i dbang po
*kun gzigs chos kyi snang ba
*karma nges legs bstan 'dzin phrin las rab rgyas
*tshe dbang kun khyab
*blo bzang rnam rgyal
*kun dga' sangs rgyas
*mgon po lhun grub
*dri med zhing skyong mgon po
*dbang gi rdo rje
*'jam dbyangs
*ngag dbang rgyal
*bkra shis 'bum
*kun khyab
== Main Teachers ==
*tshe dbang nor bu
*[[Karmapa, 12th]] ([[byang chub rdo rje]])
*dkar brgyud 'phrin las shing rta
*[[Shamarpa, 8th]] ([[dpal chen chos kyi don grub]])
*karma dpal grub
*bhi bhu ba ti
== Quotes ==
 
== Writings About {{PAGENAME}} ==
 
== Writings ==
<noinclude>{{DRL Tibetan Authors | {{PAGENAME}}}}</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 17:34, 28 March 2018

Eighth Tai Situpa Chökyi Jungne
ཆོས་ཀྱི་འབྱུང་གནས་

Tibetan Buddhist scholar recognized as the eighth Tai Si tu incarnation, remembered for his wide learning and his editorial work on the Tibetan Buddhist canon. He traveled extensively throughout his life, maintaining strong relationships with the ruling elite of eastern Tibet and the Newar Buddhists of the Kathmandu Valley. Born in the eastern Tibetan region of Sde dge, Chos kyi 'byung gnas was recognized as a reincarnate lama (sprul sku) by the eighth Zhwa dmar, from whom he received his first vows. He would go on to study with Kah thog Rigs 'dzin Tshe dbang nor bu (1698–1755), from whom he learned about gzhan stong (“other emptiness”). At the age of twenty-one, he accompanied several important Bka' brgyud hierarchs, the Zhwa dmar and the twelfth Karma pa, to Kathmandu, a journey that was to have a profound impact on the young Si tu's life. He returned to eastern Tibet in 1724, where he was received favorably by the king of Sde dge, Bstan pa tshe ring (Tenpa Tsering, 1678–1738). Under the latter's patronage, Chos kyi 'byung gnas founded Dpal spungs monastery in 1727, which became the new seat for the Si tu lineage (they are sometimes called the Dpal spungs si tu). Between the years 1731 and 1733, he undertook the monumental task of editing and correcting a new redaction of the bka' 'gyur section of the Tibetan Buddhist canon, to be published at the printing house of Sde dge. Although in his day Tibetan knowledge of Indian linguistic traditions had waned, Chos kyi 'byung gnas devoted much of his later life to the study of Sanskrit grammar and literature, which he had first studied with Newar paṇḍitas during his time in Kathmandu. He sought out new Sanskrit manuscripts in order to establish more precise translations of Sanskrit works aiready translated in the Tibetan canon; he is esteemed in Tibet for his knowledge of Sanskrit grammar. In addition to his prolific scholarly work, Chos kyi 'byung gnas was an accomplished painter as well as a gifted physician, much sought after by the aristocracy of eastern Tibet. In 1748, he visited Nepal once again, where he translated the Svayambhūpurāṇa, the legends concerning the Svayambhū stūpa, into Tibetan. He was received amicably by the rulers Jayaprakāśamalla (1736–1768) of Kathmandu, Raṇajitamalla (1722–1769) of what is now Bhaktapur, and Pṛthvīnārāyaṇa Śāha, who would unify the Kathmandu Valley under Gorkhali rule several decades later. Chos kyi 'byung gnas' collected writings cover a vast range of subjects including lengthy and detailed diaries and an important history of the Karma bka' brgyud sect coauthored by his disciple Be lo Tshe dbang kun khyab (Belo Tsewang Kunkyap, b. 1718). He is retrospectively identified as an originator of what would become known as Khams ris med movement, which gained momentum in early nineteenth century Sde dge. (Source: "Chos kyi 'byung gnas." In The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, 189. Princeton University Press, 2014)


Tertön Gyatsa Information from the Rinchen Terdzö
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The full Tertön Gyatsa text can be found at the following page: Volume 1 (ཀ), 341-765, 1a1-213a4.

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