མན་དཱ་ར་བ། | Glossary of Terms
-
མ་ནྡ་ར་བ།
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- མན་དཱ་ར།
- མནྡཱ་ར་བ།
- མེ་ཏོག་མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- ma n+da ra ba
- man dA ra
- me tog man dA ra ba
- man+dA ra ba
- māndārava
- mandārava
- mandārapuṣpa
- Term
One of the five trees of Indra’s paradise, its heavenly flowers often rain down in salutation of the buddhas and bodhisattvas and are said to be very bright and aromatic, gladdening the hearts of those who see them. In our world, it is a tree native to India, Erythrina indica or Erythrina variegata, commonly known as the Indian coral tree, mandarava tree, flame tree, and tiger’s claw. In the early spring, before its leaves grow, the tree is fully covered in large flowers, which are rich in nectar and attract many birds. Although the most widespread coral tree has red crimson flowers, the color of the blossoms is not usually mentioned in the sūtras themselves, and it may refer to some other kinds, like the rarer Erythrina indica alba, which boasts white flowers.
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- māndārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- māndārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- མ་ནྡ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- ma n+da ra ba
- mandārava
- mandārapuṣpa
- 曼陀羅花
- 曼陀羅花
Flowers of the heavenly Mandārava tree, whose blossoms often rain down in salutation of buddhas and bodhisattvas.
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
Erythrina indica or Erythrina variegata. Also known as mandarava, flame tree, and tiger’s claw. In the summer it is covered in large crimson flowers, which are believed to also grow in Indra’s paradise. The coral tree is the most widespread species of Erythrina or mandārava, taller than the others, and all are collectively known as coral trees.
- māndārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
The coral tree, Erythrina indica. One of the five trees of paradise, which has brilliant scarlet flowers.
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
The coral tree, Erythrina indica. One of the five trees of paradise, it has brilliant scarlet flowers.
- mandārava
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- coral tree
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
- coral tree
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
Erythrina indica or Erythrina variegate. Mandarava, flame tree, tiger’s claw. In the summer it is covered in large crimson flowers, which are believed to also grow in Indra’s paradise. The coral tree is the most widespread species of Erythrina or māndārava, taller than the others, and all are collectively known as coral trees.
- coral tree
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- māndārava
- Coral tree
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
Erythrina indica or Erythrina variegata. Also known as mandarava, flame tree, and tiger’s claw. In the summer it is covered in large crimson flowers, which are believed to also grow in Indra’s paradise. The coral tree is the most widespread species of Erythrina or māndārava, taller than the others, and all are collectively known as coral trees.
- coral tree
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- མནྡཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- man+dA ra ba
- māndārava
- 曼陀羅[花]
- mandārava flowers
- མེ་ཏོག་མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- me tog man dA ra ba
- mandārava
The flowers of the coral tree, Erythrina indica, one of the five trees of paradise, which has brilliant scarlet flowers.
- mandārava flowers
- མེ་ཏོག་མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- me tog man dA ra ba
- mandārava
Erythrina indica, native to India and commonly known as the coral tree. The flowers have scarlet red petals.
- coral flower
- མེ་ཏོག་མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- me tog man dA ra ba
- mandārapuṣpa
- coral tree flower
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava
- mandārava flower
- མན་དཱ་ར་བ།
- man dA ra ba
- mandārava