PREFACE yii BIB LIO G R APH Y x iii IN T R O D U C T IO N I. Apologetic i II. Origins n III. Subject-matter 19 IV. Observations 39 T R A N S L A T IO N PART I Chapter i. The Body of Hevajra 47 Chapter ii. Mantras 50 Chapter iii. Hevajra and his Troupe 56 Chapter iv. Self-consecration 59 Chapter v. Reality 60 Chapter vi. The Performance 63 Chapter vii. Secret Signs 66 Chapter viii. The Troupe of Yoginīs 73 Chapter ix. The Spherès of Purification 78 Chapter x. Consecration 81 Chapter xi. The Four Gazes 84 PART II Chapter i. Consecrations and Oblations 88 Chapter ii. The Certainty of Success 89 Chapter iii. The Basis of all Tantras 94 Chapter iv. Answers to Various Questions 100 Chapter v. The Manifestation of Hevajra 109 Chapter vi. T he Making of a Painting 114 Chapter vii. Books and Feasting 115 Chapter viii. Subjugating 116 Chapter ix. Mantras 116 v CONTENTS Chapterx. On Reciting Mantras 118 Chapter xi. The Five Families 118 Chapter xii. The Four Consecrations 119 RÉSUMÉ OF COŃTENTS 121 DIAGRAM S 126 GLOSSARY OF SPECIAL TERMS 131 INDEX I 43
The Hevajra Tantra: A Critical Study. Part 1, Introduction and Translation
In this groundbreaking work, the author presents a full translation of, and commentary on, the Hevajra tantra, providing not only deep insight into arguably the most important surviving tantric Buddhist text but also placing the entire corpus of such works into a more accurate context.
Snellgrove presents the Hevajra tantra, and tantric texts of this class, not as degenerate products of a faith at the time in terminal decline in India—as has often beeb claimed by puritanical scholars—but rather as a wholly legitimate expression of esoteric ritual and meditative practice developed as a natural evolution within the madhyamaka tradition.
While based primarily on Nepalese manuscript editions of the text, Snellgrove makes extensive reference to the Tibetan translation as well as to extant Indian commentaries. The first half of the work comprises an introduction and the actual translation with detailed annotations, while the second consists of the Romanized original Sanskrit and Tibetan texts and an extensive glossary. (Source: Back Cover)
Citation | Snellgrove, D. L., trans. The Hevajra Tantra: A Critical Study. Part 1, Introduction and Translation. London Oriental Series 6, pt. 1. London: Oxford University Press, 1976. |
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- The critical editions of the source texts for this translation can be found in the second volume, The Hevajra Tantra: A Critical Study. Part 2, Sanskrit and Tibetan Texts.
- For general info see: Columbia AIBS
- For Derge Kangyur version see: kye'i rdo rje zhes bya ba rgyud kyi rgyal po. In bka' 'gyur (sde dge par phud), Vol. 80:1-26. Delhi: delhi karmapae chodhey gyalwae sungrab partun khang, 1976-1979.