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.
ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་། | Glossary of Terms
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ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་ཆེན་པོ།
- ག་ཡའ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ག་ཡཱ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga ya ’od srung
- ga ya ’od srung chen po
- ga y’a ’od srung
- —
- gayākāśyapa
- mahāgayākāśyapa
- gayā-kāśyapa
- Note: this data is still being sorted
- Person
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga ya ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
Close Śravaka disciple of the Buddha.
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡའ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga y’a ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
One of the monks attending this teaching in Śrāvastī, at Jeta Grove.
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡཱ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga yA ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
The brother of Nadīkāśyapa and Uruvilvākāśyapa. A practitioner of fire offering at Uruvilvā (Bodhgaya), he and his two hundred pupils were converted to becoming bhikṣus of the Buddha. He and his brothers and their pupils were the third group to become followers of the Buddha after his enlightenment.
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡཱ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga yA ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga ya ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
The brother of Nadīkāśyapa and Uruvilvākāśyapa. A practitioner of fire offering at Uruvilvā (Bodhgaya), he and his two hundred pupils were converted to the Dharma, becoming bhikṣus (monks) under the Buddha. He and his brothers and their pupils were the third group to become followers of the Buddha Śākyamuni after his awakening. Also known as Mahāgayākāśyapa.
- Gayākāśyapa
- —
- gayākāśyapa
One of the śrāvakas attending the delivery of the MMK.
- Gayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga ya ’od srung
- gayākāśyapa
- Gayā-Kāśyapa
- ག་ཡཱ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga yA ’od srung
- gayā-kāśyapa
A disciple of the Buddha.
- Gayā-Kāśyapa
- ག་ཡཱ་འོད་སྲུང་།
- ga yA ’od srung
- gayā-kāśyapa
A monk (bhikṣu) and disciple of the Buddha.
- Mahāgayākāśyapa
- ག་ཡ་འོད་སྲུང་ཆེན་པོ།
- ga ya ’od srung chen po
- mahāgayākāśyapa
Alternate name of Gayākāśyapa, the brother of Nadīkāśyapa and Uruvilvākāśyapa. A practitioner of fire offering at Uruvilvā (Bodhgaya), he and his two hundred pupils were converted to becoming bhikṣus (monks) under the Buddha. He and his brothers and their pupils were the third group to become followers of the Buddha Śākyamuni after his awakening.