The Treasury of Lives

Hamid Sardar Hamid Sardar is a professional photographer as well a a scholar of Tibetan and Mongol languages who received his Ph.D. from Harvard University.

Published November 2016

Bibliography

Altangerel. C. 1968. D. Ravjaa. In Ts. Damdinsüren (ed.) Mongol Zohiolchdiin Tobodoor Bichsen Büteel, vol. 2. Ulaanbaatar: Academy of Sciences.

Bira, S. 2002. Mongolian Historical Writing from 1200-1700, (trans. J. Krueger). Bellingham: Center for East Asian Studies, Western Washington University.

Bya mgrin sngon zla ba'i rtogs brjod. 1981 [2000 (reprint)]. Lha sa: Bod ljongs mi dmangs dpe skrun khang.

Charleux, I. 2002. “Padmasambhava's travel to the north. The pilgrimage to the Monastery of the Caves of the old schools of Tibetan Buddhism in Mongolia.” Central Asiatic Journal 46(2), 168- 233. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.

Damdinsüren, Ts. (ed.). 1962. 'Noyon Qutuqtu Rabjai': Saran kokügen-u namtar. Corpus Scriptorum Mongolorum, Tomus XII. Ulaanbaatar: Instituti Linguae et Litteratum Academiae Scientiarum Reipublicae Populi Mongoli.

Dbal dmang Pandita & Dkon mchog bstan pa rub rgyas. 1990. Rgya bod hor gyi lo rgyus byis pa'i bab stegs. Zi ling: Tso ngon Nationality Publishing House.

Edou, J. 1995. Machig Labdron and the Foundations of Chod. Ithaca: Snowlion.

Endon D. (ed.) 1992. D. Ravjaa. Ulaanbaatar.

Gaadan. K. & Shagdar, A. (eds). 1993. Dogshin Noyon Khutagt. Zohist Ayalguu. March 7-9th (60-62), 2, Ulaanbaatar.

Heissig, W. 1972. Geschichte der mongolischen Literatur. Band I: 19. Jahrhundert his zum Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts; Band II. 20. Jahrhundert bis zum Einfluss moderner Ideen. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.

Jalsan. 2002. “The reincarnations of the Desi Sangye Gyatso in Alashan and the secret history of the Sixth Dalai Lama.” In H. Diemberger (ed.) Special issue of Inner Asia 4(2), 347-61.

Khürelbaatar. L. 1996. Ogtorguin Tsagaan Gardi. Ulaanbaatar: Mongol Uls Shinjlekh Ukhaanii Akademiin Khel Zokhioliin Khureelen.

Khürelbaatar. L. 1998. Ravjaasudlaliig toirson arvan asuudal. Suutandaa Tuuk Hairtai. Ulaanbaatar: Noyon Khutagt Danzanravjaagiin neremjit Mongol medlegiin ikh surguuli Ravjaasudlaliin töv, pp. 72-84.

Bulag, Uradyn E. (Editor). Brill's Tibetan Studies Library, Volume 10/9 : Proceedings of the Tenth Seminar of the IATS, 2003, Volume 9, The Mongolia-Tibet Interface : Opening New Research Terrains in Inner Asia. Leiden, NLD: Brill, 2007, p 292.

Kiripolska, M. 1999. “Who was Dulduitu?” (A note on Rabjai). Zentral-asiatische Sludien 29, 97- 108. Wiesbaden.

Kohn, Michael. 2010. Lama of the Gobi: How Mongolia's Mystic Monk Spread Tibetan Buddhism in the World's Harshest Desert. Hong Kong: Blacksmith Books.

Lkhagvasuren, G. 2003. Noyon Khutugtu Danzanrabja. Second edition. Ulaanbaatar: The Research Center for the Buddhist Culture. National University of Mongolia.

Sarkozi, A. 1992. Political Prophecies in Mongolia in the l7th-20th Centuries. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.

Sngak mang zhib 'jug. 2002 (vol. 3). Zhang khang: Zhang khang gyi ling dpe skrun khang.

Sperling, E. 1987. “Lama to the King of Hsia.” Journal of the Tibet Society (7), 31-50: Bloomington.

Stag phu Mati Slob bzang Bstan pa'i Rgyal mtshan. 1981 [2000 (reprint)]. Bya mgrin sgnon zla ba'i rtogs brjod. Lhasa: Bod ljongs mi dmangs dpe skrun khang.

Sujata. V. 2005. Tibetan Songs of Realisation: Echoes from a Seventeenth-Century Scholar and Siddha in Amdo. Leiden; Boston: Brill.

Tsagaan, D. 1992. Introduction ill D. Endon (ed.) D. Ravjaa. Ulaanbaatar.

Tüdev, A. & Z. Altangerel. 2003. Goblin V Noyon Hutagt Lubsandanzanravjaa, (eds A. Shartolgoi & S. Bayinjargal). Ulaanbaatar: Jikom Press.

Worman, C. 2002. Dantsaan Ravjaa. Terrible Noble Saint of the Gobi. 19th Century Social Reform and the Arts in Mongolia. Ulaan Baatar: School for International Training.

Ye shes thabs mkhas & Lokesh Chandra. 1961. Bla ma dam pa rnams kyi gsung 'bum gyi dkar chag gnyen 'brel dran gsol'i me long, (Eminent Tibetan Polymaths of Mongolia). New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture.

View this person’s associated Works & Texts on the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center’s Website.