The Great Tibetan Translator

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*{{i|''3 rNgog lo's Work as a Translator''|45}}
 
*{{i|''3 rNgog lo's Work as a Translator''|45}}
 
**{{i|3.1 Tibetan Translators: Some General Remarks|45}}
 
**{{i|3.1 Tibetan Translators: Some General Remarks|45}}
**{{i|3.2 Works Translared or Revised by rNgog lo|51}}
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**{{i|3.2 Works Translated or Revised by rNgog lo|51}}
***{{i|3.2.1 Translarions in the bKa' 'gyur|53}}
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***{{i|3.2.1 Translations in the bKa' 'gyur|53}}
 
***{{i|3.2.2 Translations in the bsTan 'gyur|54}}
 
***{{i|3.2.2 Translations in the bsTan 'gyur|54}}
 
***{{i|3.2.3 Uncertain Cases|68}}
 
***{{i|3.2.3 Uncertain Cases|68}}
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Part Two: Translation
 
Part Two: Translation
 
*{{i|''5 Partial Translation of rNgog lo's Biography by Gro lung pa''|81}}
 
*{{i|''5 Partial Translation of rNgog lo's Biography by Gro lung pa''|81}}
**{{i|(Including:) A List of rNgog Io's Translations|103}}
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**{{i|(Including:) A List of rNgog lo's Translations|103}}
**{{i|A List of rNgog Io's Works|109}}
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**{{i|A List of rNgog lo's Works|109}}
 
**{{i|Colophons|114}}
 
**{{i|Colophons|114}}
  

Latest revision as of 15:51, 8 October 2020

The Great Tibetan Translator
Book
Book

Abstract

Second only to the famous Rin chen bzang po (958–1055) in receiving the title of a "Great Translator" (lo chen) during the period of the "Later Propagation" (phyi dar) of Buddhism in Tibet, rNgog lo tsā ba Blo ldan shes rab (or rNgog lo) was one of the most influential figures in the establishment of Tibetan Buddhist scholasticism. After having devoted seventeen years of his life to the study of Sanskrit under scholars in Kashmir, India and Nepal, he became renowned for his more than fifty painstaking translations and revisions of Buddhist scriptures. Apart from being the foremost Tibetan translator of works on Buddhist logic and epistemology (Pramāṇa), rNgog lo’s activities as a commentator and teacher are regarded as fundamental for the later development of this field of learning in Tibet, and his tradition came to be well-known in Tibetan literature as the "rNgog tradition" (rngog lugs). This book presents a detailed examination of rNgog lo's life based on the available Tibetan accounts, including his biography (rnam thar) written by Gro lung pa Blo gros 'byung gnas (fl. late 11th to 12th c.). Annotated translations of great parts from the latter work (one of the earliest surviving examples of the rnam thar genre, possibly unique regarding its complicated and elegant style) are included in the book. rNgog lo's oeuvre as a translator and writer is dealt with in detail, making the book an important source on this hitherto little studied scholar and his tradition. (Source Accessed July 24, 2020)

Citation Kramer, Ralf. The Great Tibetan Translator: Life and Works of rNgog Blo ldan shes rab (1059–1109). Collectanea Himalayica 1. Munich: Indus Verlag, 2007. https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/6834/1/Kramer_Ralf_2007.pdf.