Mahasiddha

Four Mahasiddhas (18th century, Boston MFA). Saraha in top left, Dombhi Heruka top right, Naropa bottom left, and Virupa bottom right.

Mahasiddha (Sanskrit: mahāsiddha "great adept; Tibetan: གྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཆེན་པོ, Wylie: grub thob chen po, THL: druptop chenpo) is a term for someone who embodies and cultivates the "siddhi of perfection". A siddha is an individual who, through the practice of sādhanā, attains the realization of siddhis, psychic and spiritual abilities and powers.

Mahasiddhas were practitioners of yoga and tantra, or tantrikas. Their historical influence throughout the Indian subcontinent and the Himalayas was vast and they reached mythic proportions as codified in their songs of realization and hagiographies, or namtars, many of which have been preserved in the Tibetan Buddhist canon. The Mahasiddhas are identified as founders of Vajrayana traditions and lineages such as Dzogchen and Mahamudra, as well as among Bön,[1] Nāth,[2] and Tamil siddhars, with the same Mahasiddha sometimes serving simultaneously as a founding figure for different traditions.[2][3]

Robert Thurman explains the symbiotic relationship between Tantric Buddhist communities and the Buddhist universities such as Nalanda which flourished at the same time.[a]

  1. ^ Bstan-vdzin-rnam-dag; Ermakova, Carol; Ermakov, Dmitry; Bstan-vdzin-rnam-dag (2011). Masters of the Zhang Zhung Nyengyud: pith instructions from the experiential transmission of Bönpo Dzogchen (Repr ed.). New Delhi: Heritage Publ. ISBN 978-81-7026-268-8.
  2. ^ a b White, David Gordon (1998). The alchemical body: Siddha Traditions in medieval India. Chicago: University of Chicago press. pp. 78–87. ISBN 978-0-226-89499-7.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).


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