A NEW TIBETO-MONGOL PANTHEON.

VOLUME 21 - PART 20

of SATA-PITAKA SERIES 

INDIO-ASIAN LITERATURES

PROF. DR. RAGHU VIRA & PROF. DR. LOKESH CHANDRA

 NEW DELHI: INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF INDIAN CULTURE, April 1972. Very good hardcover folding case holds 50 plates printed in red on yellow card (numbered 251-300 plate #274 is mismarked as 374). Sata-Pitaka Series Volume 21 (20).  Very good condition, clean unmarked sheets, measures approx. 11” x 9-34”. 7 pages plus 50 plates. 

from preface "This part continues the lineage of the abbots of the Dgah-Idan monastery near Lhasa. Starting from Tson-kha-pa, the present abbott is the 97th in the lineage. He is King Rimpoche, Senior Tutor to His Holiness the Dalai Lama XIV. This part also comprises the teachers of the Kalacakra and the 25 Kulika kings od Sambhala. Eminent Indian and Tibetan Masters are followed by the Eighteen Arhats or apostles of Buddhism. The tradition of the 21 Taras represented here differs from that of the Suryagupta and Atisa. Other concatenations are the 8 Taras which grant freedom from the eight fears and the 12 guardian goddesses, the Bstan ma."

Loc: A10

TIBET BUDDHIST DALAI LAMA TUTORS DGAHIDAN MONASTERY KALACAKRA KULIKA KINGS TARAS

A NEW TIBETO-MONGOL PANTHEON.

VOLUME 21 - PART 20

of SATA-PITAKA SERIES 

INDIO-ASIAN LITERATURES

PROF. DR. RAGHU VIRA & PROF. DR. LOKESH CHANDRA

 NEW DELHI: INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY OF INDIAN CULTURE, April 1972. Very good hardcover folding case holds 50 plates printed in red on yellow card (numbered 251-300 plate #274 is mismarked as 374). Sata-Pitaka Series Volume 21 (20).  Very good condition, clean unmarked sheets, measures approx. 11” x 9-34”. 7 pages plus 50 plates. 

from preface "This part continues the lineage of the abbots of the Dgah-Idan monastery near Lhasa. Starting from Tson-kha-pa, the present abbott is the 97th in the lineage. He is King Rimpoche, Senior Tutor to His Holiness the Dalai Lama XIV. This part also comprises the teachers of the Kalacakra and the 25 Kulika kings od Sambhala. Eminent Indian and Tibetan Masters are followed by the Eighteen Arhats or apostles of Buddhism. The tradition of the 21 Taras represented here differs from that of the Suryagupta and Atisa. Other concatenations are the 8 Taras which grant freedom from the eight fears and the 12 guardian goddesses, the Bstan ma."

Loc: A10