Ngok Loden Sherab

Loden Sherab Ngog (Tib. blo ldan shes rab rngog ) or Ngog Loden Sherab Lotsawa (Tib. རྔོག་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་བློ་ལྡན་ཤེས་རབ; Wylie: ba blo ldan rngog lo ts'a shes rab; * 1059, † 1109 ) was an important figure in the introduction of Buddhism from India to Tibet, he previously lived seventeen years in Nepal and Kashmir. He is one of the most famous translator in Tibetan history and as one of the "Ten Pillars of Tibetan Buddhism " (ka chen bcu ) known. He is also known under the name Matiprajna (Sanskrit ). The monastery Sangphu Ne'uthog ( gsang phu ne'u thog ), founded in 1073 by Ngog Legpe Sherab was his place of work.

Translations

Tibetan Tanjur

Two versions of the Ratnagotravibhāga translated by Loden Sherab in Srinagar in Kashmir under the supervision of the Kashmiri Pandits Ratnavajra and Sajjana towards the end of the 11th century:

  • Theg -pa chen-po rgyud - bla Mahi bstan - bcos ( Mahāyāna Uttaratantrashastra Sastra ), Tohaku Catalogue no. 4024
  • Theg -pa chen-po rgyud - bla -mahi bstan - bcos rnam - par - BSAD -pa ( Mahāyāna Uttaratantrashastra Sastra - vyākhyā ), Tohaku Catalogue no. 4025th
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