- དོན་ཡོད་རྡོ་རྗེ།
- ཨ་མོ་གྷ་བཛྲ།
- a mo gha badzra
- don yod rdo rje
- a mo g+ha badz+ra
- amoghavajra
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- Person
Amoghavajra was an eleventh-century Indian paṇḍita and an abbot of the Vajrāsana, the monastic complex at Bodh Gayā in India. He was one of the primary teachers of Bari Rinchen Drakpa, and the two collaborated on a number of translations. Not to be confused with the eighth-century translator Amoghavajra (Ch. Bukong) who translated texts into Chinese.
- Amoghavajra
- དོན་ཡོད་རྡོ་རྗེ།
- don yod rdo rje
- amoghavajra
An important ca. eleventh-century Indian tantric master and translator. He is also known as Vajrāsana the younger, and is said to have been the abbot of Vajrāsana Monastery in what is now Bodh Gaya. This Amoghavajra should not be confused with the eighth-century translator of the same name, who is renowned for his Chinese translations of Indian Buddhist esoteric works.
- Amoghavajra
- ཨ་མོ་གྷ་བཛྲ།
- དོན་ཡོད་རྡོ་རྗེ།
- a mo g+ha badz+ra
- don yod rdo rje
- amoghavajra
The name of an Indian preceptor and abbot of the Vajrāsana at Bodhgayā who lived sometime in the eleventh–twelfth century and was responsible for translating a large number of works found in the various recensions of the Tengyur.
- Amoghavajra
- དོན་ཡོད་རྡོ་རྗེ།
- don yod rdo rje
- amoghavajra
Ca. eleventh century; a paṇḍita who worked with Khampa Lotsāwa Bari Chödrak on a number of translations. Not to be confused with the eighth century translator of the same name who translated texts into Chinese.