• ཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནིར་གྱུར་པ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུ་གྱུར་པ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུར་གྱུར་པ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུར་འགྱུར་པ།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ་དབྱངས།
  • འཇམ་དཔལ།
  • འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས།
  • འཇམས་དཔལ་གཞོན་ནུ་གྱུར་པ།
  • ’jam dpal gzhon nur gyur pa
  • ’jam dpal
  • ’jam dpal gzhon nu
  • ’jam dpal dbyangs
  • ’jams dpal gzhon nu gyur pa
  • ’jam pa’i dbyangs
  • ’jam dpal gzhon nur ’gyur pa
  • jam dpal gzhon nu
  • ’jam dpal gzhon nu gyur pa
  • mañjuśrī­kumāra­bhūta
  • mañjuśrī
  • mañjuśrī kumārabhūta
  • mañju
  • mañjuśrīḥ kumārabhūtaḥ
  • Note: this data is still being sorted
  • Person
Publications: 140

Mañjuśrī is one of the “eight close sons of the Buddha” and a bodhisattva who embodies wisdom. He is a major figure in the Mahāyāna sūtras, appearing often as an interlocutor of the Buddha. In his most well-known iconographic form, he is portrayed bearing the sword of wisdom in his right hand and a volume of the Prajñā­pāramitā­sūtra in his left. To his name, Mañjuśrī, meaning “Gentle and Glorious One,” is often added the epithet Kumārabhūta, “having a youthful form.” He is also called Mañjughoṣa, Mañjusvara, and Pañcaśikha.