This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2013) |
Bidia Dandarovich Dandaron | |
---|---|
Born | Kizhinga, Buryatia, Russian Empire | December 28, 1914
Died | October 26, 1974 Vydrino, Buryatia, RSFSR | (aged 59)
Occupation | Dharmaraja, tibetologist |
Language | Russian |
Nationality | Russian |
Alma mater | Aircraft Device Construction Institute, Leningrad |
Subject | Tibetan Buddhism |
Literary movement | Buddhist tantra of Gelug tradition, Buddhist review of Western history |
Bidia Dandaron (Vidyadhara, Russian: Бидия Дандарович Дандарон) (December 28, 1914, Soorkhoi, Kizhinga, Buryatia — October 26, 1974, Vydrino, Buryatia) was a major Buddhist author and teacher in the USSR. He also worked in academic Tibetology, contributed to the Tibetan-Russian Dictionary (1959) and made several translations from Tibetan into Russian. He is mostly remembered as a Buddhist teacher whose students in Russia, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania continued both religious and scholarly work, and as an early Buddhist author who wrote on European philosophy, history, and science within a Buddhist framework. Among his students were Alexander Piatigorsky and Linnart Mäll.