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... With Śākyaśrībhadra, Chak translated Abhayākaragupta's Bodhipaddhati-nāma (Toh ...
Read more from the biography of Chak Drachompa
... Working with Paṇḍita Ratnarakṣita, he translated Abhayākaragupta's Svādhiṣṭhānakramopadeśa (Toh ...
Read more from the biography of Chak Lotsāwa Choje Pel
Pema Karpo (padma dkar po, 1527-1592) offers a solution to the above problem in his Scholars' Feast, where he lists Niṣkalaṅka as a student of Abhayākaragupta, who himself was a student of Mahāvajrāsana.[21] Abhayākaragupta himself is credited with authoring over twenty texts included in the Tengyur, including a tantric Vajrāvali commented on by such later Tibetan scholars as Buton, Tsongkapa, and others.[22] ...
Read more from the biography of Niṣkalaṅka
Based on the names included in the colophons, in addition to Dhirapāla, Nyen collaborated in translating with Sunayaśrīmitra, Kṛṣṇācārya, Abhayākaragupta Puṇyaśrī, and possibly with Sumatikīrti and Atiśa (982–1054). ...
Read more from the biography of Nyen Lotsāwa Darma Drak
Read more from the biography of Pakpa Sherab
... Finally, he is credited with the translation of Abhayākaragupta's Jñānaḍākinīsādhana (D1618). ...
Read more from the biography of Rinchen Gyeltsen
Abhayākaragupta ...
Read more from the biography of Tengpa Lotsāwa Tsultrim Jungne
... After a brief tour of Samye and Chimphu, Vanaratna continued his teachings, transmitting among other things Abhayākaragupta's Vajrāvalī cycle ...
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At some point Zhonnu Pel went to India, where he became a student of both Tsami Lotsāwa Sanggye Drak (tsa mi lo tsA ba sangs rgyas grags, d.u.), a Tangut lama who held the abbacy of Vajrāsana and Nālandā, and also with Abhayākara (c.1104-c.1125) ...
Read more from the biography of Ga Lotsāwa Zhonnu Pel