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- Sakya - Wikipedia
The Sakya (Tibetan: ས་སྐྱ་, Wylie: sa skya, 'pale earth') school is one of four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism, the others being the Nyingma, Kagyu, and Gelug It is one of the Red Hat Orders along with the Nyingma and Kagyu Virūpa, 16th century It depicts a famous episode in his hagiography when he stopped the sun in the sky [1]
- Sakya History – Sakya Monastery
The Sakya tradition, which developed from the early Nyingma teachings, has been preserved to the present day through the pure and unbroken succession of Khön lineage holders and through the transmission of the profound Sakya Lamdre (Path and Fruit) teachings
- Sakya - Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Sakya (Wyl sa skya), which is one of the four main traditions of Tibetan Buddhism, takes its name from the Sakya Monastery, founded by Khön Könchok Gyalpo in 1073
- Sakya History – Sakya Heritage Society
Sakya (Tibetan: sa skya, English: grey, whitish earth), is named after a large area of white earth in the shape of a lion’s face on the side of Ponpori Mountain in South Western Tibet In the Manjushri Root Tantra, Buddha had prophesied that a Sakya Monastery would cause his teachings to flourish in the land of Snows
- The Sakya School | Karmapa – The Official Website of the 17th . . .
The Sakya school of Tibetan Buddhism traces its origin back to Buddha Shakyamuni The most important source of the Sakya order is the great Indian yogi Virupa (9th century), one of the 84 Mahasiddhas and foremost in miraculous attainments, through Gayadhara (994-1043) to his Tibetan disciple, Drokmi Lotsawa Shakya Yeshe (992-1072)
- The Sakya Tradition
The Sakya tradition is one of the four major religious schools of Tibetan Buddhism It was founded in 1073 in Sakya, Tibet by a member of the illustrious Khön family, Khön Konchok Gyalpo The Sakya School has, since then, been headed by members of the unbroken ancestral lineage of the Khön family, themselves said to belong to a celestial race
- Sakya - buddhism-guide. com
Sakya is one of four major schools (Nyingma, Sakya, Kagyu and Gelug) in Tibetan Buddhism (Vajrayana) The Sakya tradition is known as the ‘holder of all the Buddha’s teachings’ due to the vast extent of teachings and practices it has preserved in its long history
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