Biographies
Son-kha-pa (Tib.). Written also Tsong-kha-pa. A famous Tibetan reformer of the fourteenth century, who introduced a purified Buddhism into his country. He was a great Adept, who being unable to witness any longer the desecration of Buddhist philosophy by the false priests who made of it a marketable commodity, put a forcible stop thereto by a timely revolution and the exile of 40,000 sham monks and Lamas from the country. He is regarded as an Avatar of Buddha, and is the founder of the Gelukpa (“ yellow-cap ”) Sect, and of the mystic Brotherhood connected with its chiefs. The “tree of the 10,000 images” (khoom boom) has, it is said, sprung from the long hair of this ascetic, who leaving it behind him disappeared for ever from the view of the profane.—Theosophical Glossary
Works
[Tsongkhapa’s] collected writings in one Tibetan blockprint edition consist of eighteen volumes. Along with these are the collected works of his two main disciples, mKhas-grub-rje in twelve volumes, and rGyal-tshab-rje in eight volumes. Together these comprise the rJe yab sras gsung ’bum, the collected writings of rJe Tsongkhapa, father and [spiritual] sons. A twenty-volume Tibetan blockprint edition of Tsongkhapa’s collected writings includes 210 works, ranging from very short to very long. These were reproduced and catalogued in The Tibetan Tripitaka, Peking Edition, edited by Daisetz T. Suzuki, Tokyo-Kyoto: Tibetan Tripitaka Research Institute, 1955-1961, part III: “Extra, Tibetan Works,” vols. 152-161, works numbered 6001-6210. Tsongkhapa’s most famous work is the Lam rim chen mo, now available in complete English translation in three volumes, The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, 2000-2004.— from Bibliographic Guide, The Works of Tsongkhapa: English Translations, by Eastern Tradition Research Institute (includes complete list of works by Tsong Kha Pa)
Lam Rim Chen Mo: The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment (English Translation) — Volume 1, Volume 2, Volume 3
Selected Articles related to Tsong Kha Pa and Gelugpa Buddhism
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