• ཏཱ་ར།
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tA ra
  • tārā
  • Note: this data is still being sorted
  • Term
  • Person
Publications: 24
  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

Female bodhisattva of compassion; the chief goddess of the activity family, personifying the true nature of the element wind; one of the five goddesses personifying the five “hooks of gnosis.”

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

The Buddhist goddess of compassion.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

Lit. “the Saviouress.”

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā AS
Definition in this text:

A deity in the maṇḍalas of Śumbhavajra and Heruka.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

Female bodhisattva of compassion; also one of the vidyārājñīs dwelling with Śākyamuni in the realm of the Pure Abode.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess whose name can be translated as “Savior.” She is known for giving protection and is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A female deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A female deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A female deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A female deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā AD
Definition in this text:

A goddess whose name can be translated as “Savior.” She is known for giving protection and is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • ཏཱ་ར།
  • sgrol ma
  • tA ra
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

The Buddhist goddess of compassion.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā AD
Definition in this text:

A female deity (lit. “Deliverer”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

Female bodhisattva of compassion; the chief goddess of the activity family, personifying the true nature of the element wind; one of the five goddesses personifying the five “hooks of gnosis.”

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess whose name can be translated as “Savior.” She is known for giving protection and is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess (lit. “Savior”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

Lit. “Savior.” Though often described as a goddess known for giving protection, she is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess whose name can be translated as “Savior.” She is known for giving protection and is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess whose name can be translated as “Savior.” She is known for giving protection and is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A goddess (lit. “Savior”) known for giving protection. She is variously presented in Buddhist literature as a great bodhisattva or a fully awakened buddha.

  • Tārā
  • སྒྲོལ་མ།
  • sgrol ma
  • tārā
Definition in this text:

A vidyā queen (vidyārājñī), Tārā is more generally regarded as a deity from the Buddhist pantheon known for bestowing her protection.