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|PersonPage='gos lo tsA ba gzhon nu dpal | |PersonPage='gos lo tsA ba gzhon nu dpal | ||
|PersonName=Gö Lotsāwa Zhönu Pal | |PersonName=Gö Lotsāwa Zhönu Pal | ||
}}{{Book-person | |||
|PersonPage=Roerich, G. | |||
|PersonName=George N. Roerich | |||
}}{{Book-person | |||
|PersonPage=Chöpel, Gendün | |||
|PersonName=Gendun Chöpel | |||
}} | }} | ||
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* PART I | * PART I | ||
* {{i|Book I The Beginning of the story of the Doctrine. | * {{i|Book I: The Beginning of the story of the Doctrine.—The Royal<br> Chronicle.—The Period of the Early Spread of the Doctrine|1}} | ||
** {{i|II: Later Spread of the Doctrine: The story of the Beginning of the Period of<br> the Later Spread of the Doctrine|63}} | |||
Spread of the Doctrine|1}} | ** {{i|III: The Early Translations of the Mantrayāna Tantras ...|102}} | ||
* {{i| | ** {{i|IV: The New Tantras (gsan-snags gsar-ma) and the Followers of the "Path<br> and Fruit" (Lam-'Bras) Doctrine|204}} | ||
* {{i|III The Early Translations of the | ** {{i|V: The Venerable Lord (Jo-bo-rje, Atisa) and his spiritual Lineage|241}} | ||
* {{i|IV The New Tantras (gsan-snags gsar-ma) and the Followers of the "Path and Fruit" (Lam-'Bras) Doctrine|204}} | ** {{i|VI: rNog lo-tsa-ba, Pa-tshab lo-tsa-ba and their Lineage. The origin (of the<br> teaching) of the Mādhyamika, the Nyāya and the "Five Treatises" of<br> Maitreya-Asaṅga|328}} | ||
** {{i|VII: The Preaching of the Tantras|351}} | |||
* {{i| | * PART II | ||
** {{i|VIII: The Spiritual Lineage of the Lord Translator Mar-pa which<br> was known as Dwags-po bKa-brgyud|399}} | |||
* {{i| | ** {{i|IX: The Book on Ko-brag-pa and Ni-gu|726}} | ||
** {{i|X: The Kālacakra|753}} | |||
* {{i| | ** {{i|XI: The Mahāmudrā|839}} | ||
** {{i|XII: The Early, Later and Intermediate Lineages of zi-byed|867}} | |||
** {{i|XIII: The (system) of gCod-yul and Kha-rag-pa|982}} | |||
** {{i|XIV: The Cycle of the Mahākaruṇika and that of the Vajrāvali|1006}} | |||
** {{i|XV: The origin of religious schools such as the four Tshogssde, and others,<br> Queries and replies (concerning the "Blue Annals", zu-Ian). The story<br> of the printing of this edition|1062}} | |||
* INDEXES | |||
* {{i|Sūtras & Sastras (Sanskrit)|1095}} | |||
* {{i|Personal Names (Sanskrit)|1104}} | |||
* {{i|Book Titles (Tibetan)|1123}} | |||
* {{i|Personal Names (Tibetan)|1138}} | |||
* {{i|Chinese Names|1265}} | |||
* {{i|Mongol Names|1267}} | |||
* {{i|List of Errata|1269}} | |||
Sūtras & Sastras (Sanskrit) 1095 | |||
Personal Names (Sanskrit) 1104 | |||
Book Titles (Tibetan) 1123 | |||
Personal Names (Tibetan) 1138 | |||
Chinese Names 1265 | |||
Mongol Names 1267 | |||
List of Errata 1269 | |||
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Latest revision as of 14:08, 25 August 2020
The Blue Annals is a landmark in the historical literature of Tibet composed by a well known scholar and translator Gos lo-tsa-ba-gZon-nu dpal (1392-1481 A.D.). It is the main source of information for all later historical compilations in the Land of Snows. This work is invaluable inasmuch as it establishes a firm chronology of events of Tibetan history and works out in detail the list of the names of famous religious teachers and their spiritual lineage. The work is divided into fifteen chapters, each dedicated to the history of a particular school or sect of Tibetan Buddhism. It provides a comparative study of the chronological data given by T`ang Annals, Blue Annals, and Tunhuang chronicles. The Blue Annals appears to be a faithful reproduction of the list given in the T`ang Annals with minor differences. The book concludes with the portrayal of the origin, etc. of the communities of the four schools. It contains indexes for Sutras and Sastras, Personal Names and Book Titles and Personal Names (Tibetan), etc. (Source)
Citation | Roerich, George N., and Gendün Chöpel. The Blue Annals. Parts 1 & 2. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 2007. https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.283021/mode/2up. |
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