84000 Glossary of Terms

Our trilingual glossary combining entries from all of our publications into one useful resource, giving translations and definitions of thousands of terms, people, places, and texts from the Buddhist canon.

བདུད་བཞི། | Glossary of Terms

    བདུད་བཞི།

    bdud bzhi

    caturmāra

  • Term
Publications: 6
Translation by Thomas Doctor
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi
  • caturmāra

The deities ruled over by Māra are also symbolic of the defects within a person that prevent awakening. These four personifications are (1) the divine māra (devaputra­māralha’i bu’i bdud), which is the distraction of pleasures, (2) the māra of the Lord of Death (mṛtyumāra’chi bdag gi bdud), (3) the māra of the aggregates (skandhamāraphung po’i bdud), which is the body, and (4) the māra of the defilements (kleśamāranyon mongs pa’i bdud).

Translation by Wiesiek Mical · Timothy Hinkle
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi
  • cāturmāra

Personification of the four factors that keep beings in saṃsāra‍—afflictions, death, aggregates, and pride arising through meditative states.

Translation by Dr. Anne Burchardi · Tulku Dakpa Rinpoche · Dr. Ulrich Pagel
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi

The deities ruled over by Māra are also symbolic of the defects within a person that prevent awakening. These four personifications are (1) devaputra­māra (lha’i bu’i bdud), the divine māra, which is the distraction of pleasures, (2) mṛtyumāra (’chi bdag gi bdud), the māra of the Lord of Death, (3) skandhamāra (phung po’i bdud), the māra of the aggregates, which is the body, and (4) kleśamāra (nyon mongs pa’i bdud), the māra of the afflictive emotions.

Translation by Benjamin Collet-Cassart
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi
  • caturmāra

Four symbols or personifications of the defects that prevent awakening. These four are devaputramāra (lha’i bu’i bdud), the divine māra, which is the distraction of pleasures; mṛtyumāra (’chi bdag gi bdud), the māra of death; skandhamāra (phung po’i bdud), the māra of the aggregates, which is the body; and kleśamāra (nyon mongs pa’i bdud), the māra of the afflictions.

Translation by Wiesiek Mical
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi
  • caturmāra

In the sūtra system, these four types of demonic influence are: the māra of aggregates, the māra of afflictive emotions, the māra of death, and the māra of divine pride.

Tantra Text Warning

Warning: Readers are reminded that according to Vajrayāna Buddhist tradition there are restrictions and commitments concerning tantra. Practitioners who are not sure if they should read this translation are advised to consult the authorities of their lineage. The responsibility for reading this text or sharing it with others who may or may not fulfill the requirements lies in the hands of readers.

Translation by Wiesiek Mical · Anna Zilman · Andreas Doctor · Adam Krug
  • Four māras
  • བདུད་བཞི།
  • bdud bzhi
  • caturmāra

The four māras are personifications of the practitioner’s pitfalls‍—inappropriate exhilaration during meditation is the divine māra (devaputramāra), being controlled by afflictions is the māra of afflictions (kleśamāra), identifying with the five skandhas is the māra of the skandhas (skandhamāra), and having one’s life cut short by Yama is the māra of Yama (mṛtyumāra).