• གསུམ་ཅུ།
  • བཅུ་གསུམ།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་གསུམ་ལྷ།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་གསུམ།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་པ།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་གྱི་གནས།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་གྱི་རིས།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་པ།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་རིས།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་ལྷའི་གནས།
  • སུམ་ཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ།
  • སུམ་བཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ་པ།
  • སུམ་བཅུ་རྩ་གསུམ།
  • sum cu rtsa gsum
  • sum cu rtsa gsum pa
  • sum cu rtsa gsum gyi gnas
  • sum cu pa
  • sum bcu rtsa gsum
  • bcu gsum
  • gsum cu
  • sum bcu rtsa gsum pa
  • sum cu rtsa gsum gyi ris
  • sum cu gsum
  • sum cu rtsa gsum ris
  • sum cu rtsa gsum lha’i gnas
  • sum cu gsum lha
  • trāyastriṃśa
  • trayastriṃśa
  • tṛdaśa
  • trayatriṃśa
  • trayastṛṃśa
  • trayastriṃśat
  • trāyastriṃśatkāyika
  • tridaśa
  • trāyastriṃśāḥ
  • tridaśaloka
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Publications: 98

In Buddhist cosmology, the Heaven of the Thirty-Three is the second lowest of the six heavens in the desire realm (kāmadhātu). Situated on the flat summit of Mount Sumeru, it lies above the Heaven of the Four Great Kings (Caturmahārāja­kāyika) and below the Yāma Heaven. It consists of thirty-three regions, each presided by one of thirty-three chief gods, and the overall ruler is Śakra. The presiding gods are divided into four groups named in the Abhidharma­kośa­ṭīkā (Toh 4092): the eight gods of wealth, two Aśvin youths, eleven fierce ones, and twelve suns. The thirty-three regions themselves are enumerated and described in The Application of Mindfulness of the Sacred Dharma, Toh 287, 4.B.2 et seq.).