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Indo-Iranian Journal  () – brill.nl/iij On the Making of the Tibetan Translation of Laksmı̄’s *Sahajasiddhipaddhati: ˙ ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags and his Translation Endeavors. (Materials for the Study of the Female Tantric Master Laksmı̄ of Uddiyāna, part )1 ˙˙ ˙ Ulrich Timme Kragh Geumgang Center for Buddhist Studies Abstract The medieval Tantric literature entails many uncertainties about authorship and dating. The line between authentic and pseudepigraphical in this genre has traditionally been very fluid, and every Tantric text needs to be treated with due caution. In the case of the *Sahajasiddhipaddhati, the Tibetan tradition maintains its author to be the th–th century female master Laksmı̄ from Uddiyāna. ˙˙ Given this work’s significance, its possible female authorship˙and its inclusion of hitherto unresearched hagiographies of twelve Uddiyāna Tantric teachers includ˙ ˙ provenance. If its authenticing four women, it is most crucial to examine its ity can be established, the text would become one of the earliest hagiographical collections of the Indian Tantric tradition, predating by two to three centuries Abhayadattaśrı̄’s standard anthology, *Caturaśı̄tisiddhapravrtti, which differs con˙ siderably from Laksmı̄’s work. ˙ The *Sahajasiddhipaddhati is only extant in a Tibetan translation by the Kashmirian scholar Somanātha and the Tibetan translator ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags. Since the translated work is undated, the investigation of its provenance must begin with ascertaining the date of its Tibetan witness. Through a wide-ranging reading of medieval Tibetan historical sources and colophons of th-century Tantric works, it will be concluded that the translation was produced in Nepal 1) The research presented here was supported by a Korea Research Foundation grant (MEST, KRF-–-AM). The author wishes to thank his colleagues at Geumgang Center for Buddhist Studies (GCBS) as well as Drs. Sanjay Kumar, Will TuladharDouglas, Christian K. Wedemeyer, Elliot M. Stern, Iain Sinclair, Dmitriy N. Lielukhine, David B. Gray, Hartmut Buescher, Luke Thompson, and Min Bahadur Shakya. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden,  DOI: 10.1163/001972410X520009  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – somewhere between the years  and . The discovery sets a terminus ante quem for the Sanskrit original, placing its composition at least a century earlier than Abhayadattaśrı̄’s compilation. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, . Keywords Buddhist Tantric tradition; Laksmı̄; Laksmı̄mkarā; Uddiyāna; Indrabodhi; Soma˙ ˙˙ nātha; ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab˙ Grags; ˙Sahajasiddhipaddhati; Tibetan literature history of the th century Introduction When researching the lives of the Tantric Buddhist masters of the th– th centuries, the source that most readily comes to mind is the familiar *Caturaśı̄ti-siddha-pravrtti, “Stories of the  Mahāsiddhas,” written by ˙ scholar Abhayadattaśrı̄.2 There exists, however, the th-century Bengali what appears to be a much earlier collection of stories found within a little-known text entitled *Sahajasiddhipaddhati (lhan cig skyes grub kyi gzhung ’grel, henceforth SSP), meaning “Guide to the Accomplishment of the Inborn.”3 This text contains a lineage-history which provides brief hagiographies of twelve masters4 thought to have lived in Uddiyāna, i.e., the ˙ ˙ centuries. Its Swat valley in NW Pakistan, possibly in the th to the th 2) *Caturaśı̄ti-siddha-pravrtti (grub thob brgyad cu rtsa bzhi’i lo rgyus; Q, N, ˙ composed by Abhayadattaśrı̄ (c. th century, from Campā ≈ G., omitted DC), Bengal), and translated into Tibetan by the Tangut scholar mi nyag lo tsā ba smon grub shes rab (th century). German translation by Grünwedel (), English translations by Robinson (), and Dowman (). For my system of sigla and citations, see the list of “Primary Sources” at the end of this article. 3) The existence of these stories has formerly been noted by Shaw (:–), who summarized the story of Vajravatı̄ Brāhmanı̄. ˙ in SSP, are: (. the hermit *Rsi Jagadāśvasa), 4) The twelve masters, whose stories are given ˙ . princess *Śrı̄ Lalitā Devı̄ (a.k.a. *Lı̄lā Devı̄), . King *Vı̄ravajra, . the ˙Brahman-priest (*purohita) *Samayavajra, . *Padmavajra, . *Sahajavajrā, . *Ānandavajra, . *Vajravatı̄ Brāhmanı̄, . *Siddhavajra, . guru ‘sleeping-monk’ (*Suptabhiksu), a.k.a. Kambala, here ˙ as King Indrabuddhi (dbang po’i blo), . Sarvajagannātha, ˙ . Cittavajra, and . identified Laksmı̄ (a.k.a. Laksmı̄mkarā). Among these, the names Vı̄ravajra, Samayavajra, Padmavajra, ˙ ˙ ˙ Brāhmanı̄, Indrabuddhi (≈ Indrabhūti?), Kambala, and Laksmı̄ or Ānandavajra, Vajravatı̄ ˙ Laksmı̄mkarā correspond to the˙ names of well-known Buddhist Tantric authors, although ˙ their˙ identity in some instances is a matter of uncertainty. Moreover, the stories of Kambala, Indrabhūti, and Laksmı̄mkarā are also found in Abhayadattaśrı̄’s *Caturaśı̄ti-siddha-pravrtti, ˙ ˙ versions. ˙ albeit in very different Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  author is said to have been the female master Laksmı̄ (a.k.a. Laksmı̄mkarā), ˙5 ˙ ˙ who lived in Uddiyāna in the th–th centuries. ˙ ˙ If Laksmı̄’s authorship is authentic, SSP would provide a set of very ˙ early Tantric biographical narratives, predating Abhayadattaśrı̄’s text by two or three centuries, and it would closely link Laksmı̄’s account both ˙ masters it claims geographically and chronologically with the lives of the to depict. Yet, before SSP can be relied on as a historical witness for the Indian Tantric tradition, the authenticity of the text must first be evaluated on the basis of all the available external and internal evidence. In this article, I begin this evaluation-process by considering the history of the only surviving version of the text, namely its Tibetan translation found in the Tibetan canon. The Translation of the Root-Text Sahajasiddhi Laksmı̄’s SSP is a commentary on a root-text entitled *Sahajasiddhi (hence˙ SS), meaning “Accomplishment of the Inborn,” an anonymous text forth whose author is said in the commentary to be a king of Uddiyāna named ˙ ˙ originally to Indrabuddhi.6 Both the root-text and its commentary seem have been written in Sanskrit,7 but their Sanskrit versions seem unfortu5) For a survey of the various Buddhist texts authored by the different female and male persons named Laksmı̄, Laksmı̄mkarā, or Laksmı̄mkara, and a brief discussion of each ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ authorship, see Dimitrov (). 6) SSP provides the forms Indrabuddhi as well as Indrabhūti in the various versions of its Tibetan colophon (indrabuddhi D: indrabhūti NG: indrabhūni Q), but internally the text gives the Tibetan translation of the name as dbang po’i blo (D.a1, a2, a3, a7, a2, a4, a1, a3, b2), corresponding to Skt. *Indrabuddhi, which therefore must have been the primary reading of the Sanskrit manuscript upon which the Tibetan translation was based. The commentary (D.a1) also gives the name *Mahāsukhavajra (bde ba chen po’i rdo rje) as another name for the King. In two passages of SSP, he is indicated as being Laksmı̄’s elder brother (D.b2 ming po = ‘elder brother’; D.b4 sring ˙ mo = ‘little sister’). Whether this Indrabuddhi corresponds to the Uddiyāna-king(s) known as Indrabhūti and / or Indrabodhi remains an open question. For˙ a˙ parallel problem in naming the Guhyasamāja-author(s) *Nāgabodhi and / or Nāgabuddhi, see van der Kuijp (:–, –, –). 7) From the various extant Indian Buddhist works written in Uddiyāna in the th–th ˙ centuries, it is known that the literary language of that region and˙period was Sanskrit. For example, the only text by Laksmı̄ from Uddiyāna preserved in its original language, namely ˙ ˙ its Sanskrit mss and editions, see Tsukamoto, ˙ Sanskrit (for her Advayasiddhi, is written in Matsunaga & Isoda, :). Dimitrov (:–) considers SSP and Advayasiddhi as belonging to the authorship of the same Laksmı̄mkarā. Sanskrit is also the language of ˙ the three extant Indian texts by Indrabhūti of U˙ddiyāna, namely his Vajravārāhı̄-sādhana, ˙˙  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – nately not to have been preserved. Instead, the texts are only preserved in the form of Tibetan translations, and it is these translations that shall be considered in the present article. First, the history of the Tibetan translation of the root-text, Indrabuddhi’s SS, will be presented. SS is extant in the five xylograph and manuscript versions contained within the five th-century compilations of the Tibetan canon of Indian Buddhist commentaries called the bstan ’gyur.8 Its colophon, which probably was written at the time of the text’s translation into Tibetan,9 provides the names of the translators: The *Sahajasiddhi is completed. [It] was translated by the Indian scholar Somanātha and the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags.10 Besides this colophon, the text offers no other clues about the circumstances of the making of its Tibetan translation. The colophon mentions two names: the Indian scholar Somanātha11 and the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags. the Paramagāmbhı̄ra-śrı̄-vajrayoginı̄-mantrārtha-tattva-nirdeśa, and his Jñānasiddhi (for the Sanskrit mss and editions, see Tsukamoto, Matsunaga & Isoda, :, , ). 8) The title of the Tibetan translation is lhan cig skyes grub ( folios). Its versions are: Q, N, D, G-, and C rgyud ’grel vol. zhi, folios – (C was not available to me). For a comparative edition, see bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma, vol.  (rgyud wi-zhi), pp. – . 9) While this particular colophon does not offer any evidence that it was written at the time of the text’s translation and not at a later time, there are other examples of such colophons that provide a level of detailed information which could only have been written at the actual time of the given text’s translation. For example, see the discussion of Shes rab Grags’s translation of Vajragarbha’s *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā (Q / D) below (p. ˙ ˙ ). Hence, there is no strong reason to doubt the ˙composition of such colophons as having been written by the actual translators themselves, unless there is other evidence speaking clearly against such an assumption. 10) N.a , D.a 6–7 2–3, G-.a6, bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma vol.  p. : lhan cig skyes grub rdzogs so// rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po zla ba mgon po dang/ bod kyi lo tsā ba shes rab grags kyis bsgyur ba’o//. Variants: chen po]: omitted G. mgon po]: mgon NG. lo tsā ba]: lotstsha ba NG. 11) The Tibetan text gives Somanātha’s name in the form of its Tibetan translation zla ba mgon po, literally meaning “Moon-Protector.” It is evident that zla ba mgon po corresponds to the Sanskrit name Somanātha when the story of Somanātha and the colophons of the various translations he produced are considered in combination. Thus, when the Blue Annals (henceforth BA) tell the story of how Pandita Somanātha spread the Kālacakra˙ teachings in Tibet, BA (tha.b7, p. ; Roerich, ˙:) first cites the Sanskrit name Somanātha, and thereafter refers to him by the Tibetanized name zla mgon, which is the abbreviation of zla ba mgon po (see, e.g., BA tha.a1, p. ; Roerich, :). Bu ston Rin chen Grub’s History of Kālacakra (henceforth HK) only uses the Tibetan Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  Somanātha was a well-known Kashmirian scholar who visited Tibet twice in the second half of the th century and who, in collaboration with the Tibetan translator ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags, was responsible for translating nine major and minor works of the Kālacakra-system into Tibetan. His Kālacakra-transmission subsequently became known in Tibet as the ’Bro-tradition (Tib. ’bro lugs) or—more rarely—as the Somanāthatradition (Tib. zla mgon lugs).12 Given the close collaboration between Somanātha and ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags on the texts of the Kālacakratradition, the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags mentioned in the colophon of SS can also be identified as the same ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags. The exact dates of both Somanātha and Shes rab Grags are unknown, but by analyzing the Tibetan historical sources on the Kālacakra-tradition as well as the colophons of the various translations made by Shes rab Grags it is possible to narrow down considerably when the collaboration between Somanātha and Shes rab Grags took place. Somanātha was Kashmirian from a Brahmin-family, born in the first half of the th century.13 When studying under a Kashmirian pandita named ˙˙ form zla mgon (see, e.g., HKa b6, p. ; HKb b4ff., p. ). From these stories, it is evident that zla mgon was the Kashmirian pandita engaged in translating several ˙ ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags. major Kālacakra-texts into Tibetan in collaboration ˙with Several of the colophons of those translations (viz., Q / D, Q / D, Q / D, Q / D, Q / D, Q / D, and Q / omitted D) provide the names of the translators as Somanātha (in its Sanskrit form) and Shes rab Grags. Hence, zla ba mgon po can be established as being identical with the Sanskrit name Somanātha. 12) See, for example, Tāranātha’s (–) Kālacakra-history dpal dus kyi ’khor lo chos skor gyi ’byung khung nyer mkho bsdus pa (henceforth DCB), where Tāranātha says: “In Tibet, there are quite many [Kālacakra]-traditions, such as those of Gyi co Lotsā ba Zla ba’i ’Od zer, Rma Dge ba’i Blo gros, ’A zha Rgya gar Brtsegs, Khyung po Chos brtson, Rwa Chos rab, Rtsa mi Sangs rgyas Grags, etc., but if I should [here] explain [the history of the Kālacakra-tradition] in accordance with the highest of them all, namely the tradition of ’Bro, or the tradition of Somanātha, then …” DCB a6–7 (p. ): bod du yang/ gyi co lo tsā ba zla ba’i ’od zer/ rma dge ba’i blo gros/ ’a zha rgya gar brtsegs/ khyung po chos brtson/ rwa chos rab/ rtsa mi sangs rgyas grags sogs kyi lugs shin tu mang yang/ mchog tu gyur pa ’bro lugs sam/ zla mgon lugs ltar bshad na/ … 13) HK (HK b ; HK b , p. ). His birth-year must be estimated relatively to his a 6 b 4 departure for Tibet in the late s or s (see below). Before he went to Tibet, he had completed twelve years of Brahmanical studies (HK ibid.). Thereupon, he took up Buddhist studies, at which point he was a handsome young man, given the love-affair he had with the daughter of his Buddhist teacher (see below). Having studied for some years under his Kashmirian Buddhist teacher, he traveled to Magadha to learn the novel Kālacakra-teachings, a study which it must also have take some years to complete. Having returned to Kashmir, he displeased a local senior scholar (see below), and was told to leave, which indicates that he still was a junior scholar at the time of his departure for Tibet.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – *Brāhmanapāda Bhadra, a.k.a. Sūryaketu,14 he one day read a manuscript ˙ of the Kālacakra-text Sekoddeśa,15 and wishing to learn more of this system, Somanātha went to Magadha,16 where he learnt the Kālacakra-teachings from Kālacakrapāda.17 Thereafter, he returned to Kashmir. At this point, two early sources for Somanātha’s story differ slightly, which is of some consequence to the analysis of SS’s translation. Both the sources are written by the same author, namely the Tibetan Kālacakra- Consequently, he must have been at around thirty-forty years of age when he left for Tibet in the late s or s, and his birth-year is therefore likely to have been in the s or early s. For information on Somanātha, see also Naudou (:–). 14) HK (HK b ; HK b , p. ) gives the name of Somanātha’s Kashmirian teacher a 6 b 5 as *Brāhmanapāda (bram ze zhabs), while BA (tha.b6, p. ; Roerich, :) gives it as ˙ *Brāhmanapāda Bhadra (bram ze zhabs bzang po) as well as Sūryaketu. Tāranātha (DCB a2, ˙ it as *Brāhmana Bhadra (bram ze bzang po). HK (ibid.) also narrates the story of p. ) has ˙ how Somanātha was first educated for twelve years in Brahmanical learning, but that he then took up Buddhist studies at the behest of his mother. Yet, it was first when the daughter of his Buddhist teacher fell in love with him that he seriously became involved in Buddhist studies. Moreover, in terms of the authorship of SSP by Laksmı̄, it may be noteworthy that BA (ibid.) ˙ named Laksmı̄mkara (laksmı̄m ka ra), in this passage mentions another student of Sūryaketa ˙ ˙ probably being a male pandita, who later needs to be considered ˙as a ˙possibly candidate for the authorship of SSP. ˙ ˙ 15) HK (HK b ; HK b , p. ) and BA (tha.a –a , pp. –; Roerich, a 7 b 5 7 1 :). BA (ibid.) adds the Kālacakra-text *Sekaprakriyā to the manuscripts that Somanātha saw in Kashmir. BA (ibid.) also adds that the manuscripts were sent to Kashmir by a pandita named Vinayākaramati, and that these novel texts caused quite a stir in the ˙ ˙ millieu of Kashmir, pointing to the circumstance that the Kālacakra-teachings intellectual still must have been unknown in Kashmir till this point in time. Newman (:) has established the final composition or redaction of the Kālacakra-Tantra and its major commentary Vimalaprabhā to have been completed in the period –. It is noteworthy that Somanātha had to go to Magadha to study these texts with Nālandapāda (perhaps at Nālanda?) (see fn. ), which may point to the texts’ dissemination up till then. It is also to be noted that Somanātha must have studied the commentary Vimalaprabhā in Magadha, because it is—among other Kālacakra-works—this text that he shortly thereafter brought to Tibet and translated there in the late s or early s (see the discussion of these dates below). 16) HK (HK b ; HK b , p. ). On the other hand, BA (tha.a , p. ; Roerich, a 7 b 6 1 :) gives the less specific Madhyadeśa (yul dbus). 17) HK (HK a ; HK b , p. ) says that he met both Kālacakrapāda Senior and a 1 b 6 Junior: ma ga dhar byon pa dang/ dus ’khor ba yab sras dang mjal/ byang chub sems dpa’i chos skor rnams zhus so/. “He went to Magadhar, met Kālacakrapāda Senior and Junior, and requested the cycle of the bodhisattva-teachings.” BA (tha.a2, p. ; Roerich, :) just mentions Ācārya Kālacakrapāda (slob dpon dus zhabs pa) without specifying which one. Tāranātha (DCB a2–3, p. ) makes Somanātha a student of Bodhibhadra (a.k.a. Nālandapāda), i.e., Kālacakrapāda Junior, who in turn is presented as a student of Kālacakrapāda Senior. Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  savant and historian Bu ston Rin chen Grub (–). Bu ston’s History of Buddhism,18 written in , where Somanātha only is mentioned in passing, says: Having gone to Kashmir and invited the pandita Somanātha, ’Bro Shes rab ˙˙ Grags translated the Kālacakra with its extensive auxiliaries, Vajragarbha’s [Hevajra]-commentary, the commentary on the Praise to Vajrapāni, and so ˙ forth.19 This passage primarily concerns the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags. Shes rab Grags (dates unknown) hailed from an area called la stod,20 located in southern Tibet in the Ding ri county (Zhāng, :). Bu ston’s statement that Shes rab Grags went to Kashmir and invited Somanātha to Tibet suggests that Shes rab Grags in his youth traveled to Kashmir, perhaps learnt Sanskrit there, and then invited Somanātha to Tibet. If that is so, it is possible that their translation of SS was made in Kashmir prior to Somanātha’s arrival in Tibet. Nevertheless, in Bu ston’s History of Kālacakra (HK), which was written in ,21 seven years after he wrote the History of Buddhism, and which 18) bde bar gshegs pa’i bstan pa’i gsal byed chos kyi ’byung gnas gsung rab rin po che’i mdzod chos ’byung, included in Bu ston’s Collected Works (bu ston thams cad mkhyen pa’i bka’ ’bum, Zhol edition, volume ). For a critical edition, see Szerb (); English translation by Obermiller (). 19) Szerb (:): ’bro shes rab grags kyis kha cher byon te/ pandi ta zla ba mgon po spyan ˙ ˙ rdor stod ’grel la sogs pa drangs te/ dus ’khor cha lag rgyas pa dang/ rdo rje snying ’grel/ phyag bsgyur ro/. 20) Shes rab Grags’s association with la stod is evident in Szerb’s dbu med manuscript B of Bu ston’s History of Buddhism, which at the name ’Bro Shes rab Grags adds the gloss “of La stod” (la stod kyi); see Szerb (:, fn. ), where the line ’bro shes rab grags dang thus is changed into la stod kyi ’bro shes rab grags dang in ms B. Shes rab Grags is regularly referred to as ’Bro Lotsā ba, i.e., “the translator from ’Bro.” Although I have still not found any clear evidence, the ’bro element of Shes rab Grags’s name seems to be a clan-name and not a toponym of La stod. The very detailed map of Tibet bod rang skyong ljongs srid ’dzin sa khul gyi sa bkra published in  in China by rgyal srid spyi khyab khang does not mention any toponym called ’bro in the Ding ri county or elsewhere (see the index by Verhufen, ). 21) HK’s colophon gives the year and date for the completion of its composition as “the first day of the Vaiśākha-month of the Śukla-year” (HKa a6–7, p. ; HKb a7–8, p. : dkar po’i lo sa ga can zla ba’i dkar po’i tshes gcig la yongs su rdzogs par sbyar ba’i …). In the Kālacakra sexagenary-cycle, the Śukla-year (dkar po’i lo) is the third year (see the table in Newman, :–), which is equivalent to the earth-snake year (sa sbrul) of the Tibetan elementary-animal calendar (see the table in Zhāng, :). In Bu ston’s lifetime (–), that must correspond to the sa-brul year of the sixth prabhava-cycle (rab byung drug pa). The Vaiśākha-month (sa ga can zla ba) is the fourth month of the  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – provides much more detail on Somanātha, Bu ston describes the circumstance for Somanātha’s travel to Tibet in completely different terms. He says: In a debate with the Kashmirian pandita Ratnavajra, [Ratnavajra] could not ˙ ˙ said: “My students will lose their conwithstand Somanātha. Ratnavajra then fidence in me—go someplace else!” Hence, Somanātha thought of disseminating this teaching [of Kālacakra] in Tibet, and thus went to Tibet.22 According to this story, Somanātha was a junior-scholar who was so unfortunate as to be victorious in a scholarly debate with his superior, the famous senior-scholar of the Kashmirian Jana-family, Ratnavajra. Since Ratnavajra did not want to lose face, he commanded the young Somanātha to leave Kashmir, and Somanātha then went to Tibet with the intention of spreading there the new Kālacakra-teachings that he had earlier obtained in Magadha. In this version, there is no mention of Shes rab Grags’s coming to Kashmir and inviting Somanātha to Tibet, and hence it does not suggest that Somanātha and Shes rab Grags could have translated SS in Kashmir prior to Somanātha’s travel to Tibet. The version that Somanātha was not invited to Tibet by Shes rab Grags is corroborated by the various stories concerning the early period of Somanātha’s first stay in Tibet, where he had some difficulties in finding a suitable sponsor and translator for his dissemination of the Kālacakra-teachings,23 and also by the fact that he calendar (hor zla bzhi pa; Zhāng, :). According to the calendar-tables of Schuh (:* ), the first day of the fourth month of the third year of the sixth sexagenary cycle corresponds to April , . The same calculation of its date is confirmed by Buescher & Tarab (:). 22) HK a , p. ; HK b a 1–2 b 6–7, p. : /mkhas pa kha che rin chen rdo rje dang rtsod pas zla mgon ma thub/ rin chen rdo rje na re/ nga la slob ma mi dad par ’ong gzhan du byon gsung/ de nas chos ’di bod du spel dgongs nas bod du byon no/. It is unclear whether HKb has thub or ma thub, since this word appears at the beginning of a line and only part of the ma-negation is written, which could also be read as a tsheg-stroke; in any event, the course of the narrative is clear regardless, and with a missing negation, the sentence would have to be translated “Somanātha withstood [Ratnavajra].” Ratnavajra was a major pandita ˙ in Kashmir in the mid-th century, patriarch of the famous Jana-family of panditas˙ (see ˙ ˙ Naudou, :–). 23) In HK (HK a , p. ; HK b a 2–3 b 7–8, p. ), Bu ston explains that Somanātha after arriving in Tibet first met Kha rag Gnyos, i.e., a person from the Gnyos-clan in Kha rag, and began to translate the large Kālacakra-commentary Vimalaprabhā, but that the payment he had been promised was short of one hundred srang-measures of gold. It is not entirely clear whether Bu ston with the name Kha rag Gnyos implies Gnyos Lotsā ba, who was a Tibetan Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  first encountered ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags some time after arriving in Tibet, having already had to abandon his first attempt to translate the large Kālacakra-commentary Vimalaprabhā. Hence, it can be concluded that the possibility that Somanātha and Shes rab Grags met in Kashmir and translated SS there can be rejected as quite unlikely.24 When did Somanātha first travel to Tibet? The Tibetan historical text The Blue Annals (BA) provides a terminus post quem by saying that Somanātha’s visit took place some time after the death of Atiśa in .25 Hence, the earliest possible date for Somanātha’s arrival in Tibet is . translator who went to Nepal and India at the same time as Mar pa Lotsā ba Chos kyi Blo gros, and whose travel to Nepal-India is difficult to date (see Davidson, :–). In any event, Somanātha must have collaborated with some Tibetan translator during his stay in Kha rag. HK (ibid.) also mentions the name Gnyos Ye shes Mchog, being a person from the Gnyos clan, who later paid part of the promised payment to Somanātha to settle the matter. The chronicle of the Gnyos-clan entitled kha rag gnyos kyi brgyud pa byon tshul mdor bsdus (see Martin, :) might clarify this matter, but this text is unfortunately currently not available to me. Davidson (:) mentions that the chronicle of the Gnyos-clan states that Gnyos Lotsā ba translated the whole Vimalaprabhā with Somanātha, but I could not verify this information. Moreover, the exact locality of Kha rag, where Somanātha first worked on his translation of Vimalaprabhā, remains unidentified; Gyatso (:–) writes in a different context that “Kharag (usually spelled Kha-rag) is an area south of the Tsangpo river and east of Gampala and includes the Kharag Gangtse mountains.” Bu ston further narrates (HK ibid.) that Somanātha due to the problem with the payment abandoned the translation-project after having completed the first three chapters of Vimalaprabhā, and then traveled to Grab in ’Phen yul (north of Lha sa). There, Zhang pho chung (unidentified) became his student (and sponsor), and it was at this time that ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags became Somanātha’s new translator, and together they completed the translation of the Vimalaprabhā. HK’s version of Somanātha’s early stay in Tibet differs somewhat from the story in BA (tha.a3–b2, pp. –; Roerich, :). According to BA, Somanātha first encountered a translator from the Gnyos-clan named Gnyos ’Byung po (i.e., Lotsā ba Gnyos ’Byung po; cf. BA ja.a5–7, p. ; Roerich, :), who was unable to assist in the translation-work, but who helped Somanātha obtain Dge-bshes Lce pa from Bzang yul in G-yor po as his sponsor, and Somanātha first worked with A zha Rgya gar Brtsegs as his translator. BA makes no mention at all of ’Bro Lotsā ba, which is strange given how wellknown Somanātha’s and ’Bro Lotsā ba’s collaboration is, and which is also amply attested by the colophons of the texts they translated. 24) Admittedly, it remains uncertain where and how Shes rab Grags learnt Sanskrit, but there is a sentence in HK that appears to indicate that Shes rab Grags learnt Sanskrit in Tibet after meeting Somanātha; see fn. . 25) See BA (kha.a –b , pp. –; Roerich, :): jo bo bod la byon pa’i nyer gsum pa 7 2 la ’brom gshegs/ de dang nye bar bla chen po ’brog mi yang gshegs/ ’brog mi gshegs rjes su rgya gar phyag na bod du byon/ gtsang stong du ston chen nyi shu rtsa gcig la sogs pa ’grub snying gi chos rnams rgya cher gsungs/ jo bo rje gshegs ’phral tsam la dam pa sangs rgyas bod du byon/ gra pa dang lce dwags sgang pa rnams la zhi byed brgyud pa snga ma’i chos rnams gsungs/ kha  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – According to Bu ston’s History of Kālacakra (HK), after Somanātha’s arrival in Tibet he stayed for some years giving teachings to various students and translating the Kālacakra-texts. It is clear from the narrative that it was during Somanātha’s first stay in Tibet that his collaboration with Shes rab Grags took place,26 and further that it was during this period that Somanātha gave teachings to the Tibetan scholar Gra pa Mngon shes.27 che zla mgon yang bod du phebs nas/ de gnyis kyi bla ma mdzad de dus kyi ’khor lo gsungs/. “ ’Brom ston died  years after Jo bo rje [Atiśa] came to Tibet [in ; i.e., ’Brom ston Rgyal ba’i ’Byung gnas died in ]. The great Lama ’Brog mi died around this time, too. After the death of ’Brog-mi, the Indian Vajrapāni came to Tibet and taught extensively the ˙ Grub-Snying cycles (i.e., grub pa sde bdun and snying po skor drug; see Kragh, :–) to twenty-one major teachers in Stong in Gtsang. Right after the death of Jo bo rje [Atiśa], Dam pa Sangs rgyas came to Tibet and taught the earlier Zhi-byed transmission to Gra pa [Mngon shes] and Lce Dwags Sgang pa. The Kashmirian Somanātha also came to Tibet, became the guru of the same two persons (i.e., Gra pa and Lce Dwags Sgang pa), and taught them the Kālacakra.” There has been some confusion about the dates that can be calculated based on this passage. The passage states that ’Brom ston died in , that ’Brog mi died around the same time, and that Vajrapāni came to Tibet thereafter. It then mentions the death of Atiśa, ˙ was ten years earlier in . It then states that Pha Dam pa which, it must be underlined, Sangs rgyas came to Tibet immediately thereafter and gave teachings to Gra pa Mngon Shes and Lce Dwags Sgang pa, and that some time thereafter Somanātha came to Tibet and gave Kālacakra teachings to the same two Tibetans. It is to be noted that the passage does not say that Pha Dam pa Sangs rgyas and Somanātha came to Tibet after . Nevertheless, it seems that it was such a misunderstanding that caused the authors of Tshig mdzod Chen mo (Zhāng, :) to state in their survey-table of Tibetan history that Somanātha came to Tibet in : kha che zla ba mgon po bod du byon. It has not been possible to verify that date based on any other source available to me. The information that Somanātha came to Tibet in  was then disseminated in a number of secondary sources, but it appears to be unfounded. Newman (:) has also expressed his scepticism of this precise dating given in Zhāng (op.cit.), and instead dated Somanātha’s visits as having taken place in the third quarter of the th century, which must however, be considered slightly too late, at least with regard to Somanātha’s first visit. 26) HK a , p. ; HK b , p. : zhang pho chung bas bla mar bzung/ ’bros lotstsha a 3 b 9 ba byas nas yongs su rdzogs par bsgyur/. “Zhang Pho Chung ba took [Somanātha] as his guru. When ’Bro had become a translator (lotsā ba), they completed the translation [of Vimalaprabhā].” This passage may indicate that ’Bro Shes rab Grags learnt the craft of translating Sanskrit in Tibet under Somanātha at this time, if the expression “had become a translator” (lotstsha byas) can be taken as carrying this implication and if it does not simply mean “hired as a translator.” The basic meaning of the Tibetan verb byas is “made” and it is noteworthy that the syntactical agent of the verb is ’Bro as marked by the ergative particle, thus implying an effort by ’Bro, and that ’Bro is not a grammatical object in the sentence, as would be the case in “[they] made ’Bro the translator, i.e., they hired ’Bro.” 27) HK a , p. ; HK a , p. : gra pa mngon shes kyis lo gsum chos ston drangs/ nam a 5 b 1 mjal dus phyag rten ma chad par byas/. “Gra pa Mngon shes invited [Somanātha] to come and teach for three years, and when they met, he gave him unending financial support.” Somanātha’s teaching to Gra pa Mngon shes is also narrated in BA (kha.a2–7, page ; Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  Ending his first stay in Tibet, Somanātha went to India for six years to bring offerings to his Indian gurus and to obtain more teachings.28 Thereupon, Somanātha returned to Tibet for a second stay, during which there is no mention of any collaboration with Shes rab Grags. It is not reported whether or when Somanātha finally left Tibet for good, but at least there exists no record of his eventual death in Tibet. The information that Somanātha gave teachings to Gra pa Mngon shes (–) provides a terminus ante quem for Somanātha’s first stay in Tibet and his collaboration with Shes rab Grags. In the Blue Annals’ (BA) narrative, Somanātha’s meeting with Gra pa Mngon shes takes place quite Roerich, :–). Concerning the fact that this meeting took place during Somanātha’s first visit to Tibet, see BA (tha.b2, p. ; Roerich, :). 28) Somanātha stayed several years in Tibet during his first visit and taught various Tibetan students, including Jo Btsun Tshul khrims Rin chen, G-yo ru ’Gar ston, Mang yul Ston Ma Sri Dar, Smon ’Gro’i ’Jam Sgom, and especially Sgom pa Dkon mchog from Grab in ’Phen yul Grab as well as Sgro Gnam la Brtsegs from Spras pa also in ’Phen yul. Tāranātha (DCB b1–4, p. ) clarifies that Sgom pa Dkon mchog hailed from Grab in ’Phen yul, while Gnam la Brtsegs, whose clan-name was Sgro, was born in Spras pa in ’Phen yul. After mentioning all these students and that Somanātha taught them, HK states that Somanātha withheld teachings from Sgro Gnam la Brtsegs. Sgro then offered a bit of gold to Sgom pa Dkon mchog, but the latter refused to give him Somanātha’s instructions. Thereupon, HK says (HKa b4, p. ; HKb a7–8, p. ): pandi ta rgya gar gshegs pa dang shul du lo gsum dang yer par lo gsum go bteg mdzad de zhus˙pas man ngag ma lus pa gnang/ pandi ta phyis bod du byon pa la slob ma kun gyis/ sgom pas sgro la gdams ngag ma lus pa byin˙ ˙byas te … Variant: The xylograph in Bu ston’s gsung ’bum (HKa) omits dang yer par lo gsum, which is evidently attested by the dbu med manuscript found in Bo dong pa’s gsung ’bum (HKb). The omission seems to be a clear case of saut du même au même, i.e., skipping text due to an occurrence of two identical words or phrases, here lo gsum. Hence, the reading of HKb should be adopted, and thereby Somanātha’s stay in India was six years (acc. to HKb) and not just three years (acc. to HKa). “When the pandita [Somanātha] had gone to India, [Sgro] held his head high for three years in Shul and˙ ˙for three years in Yer pa, but since he then [again] requested [the instructions from Sgom pa Dkon mchog, Sgom pa] imparted all the instructions [to him]. When the pandita [Somanātha] returned again ˙˙ to Tibet, all the students said [to him]: ‘Sgom pa has imparted all the instructions to Sgro …’ ” This information regarding Somanātha’s stay in India can be supplemented by BA (tha. b2–3, p. ; Roerich, :–), which explains that Somanātha went to India to bring offerings to his teachers and Vajrāsana, and to obtain clarifications about the teachings: /de nas kha che zla mgon rgya gar du bla ma la ’bul ba dang rdo rje gdan du mchod pa la gshegs nas gser mang po phul ba’i dus su/ snga ma’i mched po ’dul ba’i ’byung gnas blo gros dang/ seng ge rgyal mtshan la yang sgro ’dogs bcad nas slar bod du byon pa … “Thereafter, the Kashmirian Somanātha went to India in order to give presents to his gurus and offerings to Vajrāsana. When he had offered much gold, he clarified misinterpretations with his former brothers [-in-study], Vinayākaramati and Simhadhvaja.” ˙  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – some time before Gra pa built the Gra thang temple in ,29 and  is therefore the terminus ante quem for Somanātha’s arrival in Tibet and his subsequent collaboration with Shes rab Grags, which began before they were invited to visit Gra pa Mngon shes for three years.30 There is no doubt that Somanātha’s first stay in Tibet lasted many years, for he stayed several years individually with various students and sponsors,31 and his translation-work with Shes rab Grags must also have extended over five to eight years, since Shes rab Grags not only first needed to learn sufficient Sanskrit to be able to translate the complicated works on Kālacakra,32 but also since Somanātha and Shes rab Grags together translated ten works with a total of  double-sided folios of Tibetan text. These works include nine on the Kālacakra-system and the SS root-text as the only non-Kālacakra-work.33 It is here important to note that Shes 29) See BA (kha.a2–7, p. ; Roerich, :–). See fnn.  and , keeping in mind that the HK-passage mentioned in fn.  occurs earlier in the text than the HK-passage quoted in fn. . 31) See fn. . 32) See fnn.  and . 33) The translations made by Somanātha and ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags include: 30) Works on Kālacakra: i. Q / D, Sekoddeśa (dbang mdor bstan pa,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita ˙ Somanātha (ka che’i pandi ta so ma nā tha) and the Tibetan translator, the monk ˙from ’Bro, Shes rab grags pa˙ ˙(bod kyi lotsā ba ’bro dge slong shes rab grags pa). Later revised by Sgra tshad pa Rin chen Rgyal mtshan (b. th century) on the basis of Nāropa’s commentary. Cf. Tsukamoto et al. (:). ii. Q / D, Śrimad-ādibuddhoddhrta-śrı̄-kālacakra-nāma-tantrarājā (mchog gi dang po’i sangs rgyas las phyung ba rgyud kyi˙ rgyal po dpal dus kyi ’khor lo,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha and the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, ˙ ˙revised by Zhang ston Mdo sde Dpal, Tshul khrims dar, and the Shes rab grags. Later monk Shong ston in the temple of Dpal Sa skya on the basis of two manuscripts from Madhyadeśa. Cf. Tsukamoto et al. (:–). iii. Q / D, Mūlatantrānusārinı̄-dvādaśasāhasrikā Laghu-kālacakra-tantrarāja-tı̄kā Vimala-prabhā (bsdus pa’i rgyud kyi˙rgyal po dus kyi ’khor lo’i ’grel bshad rtsa ba’i rgyud˙ kyi rjes su ’jug pa stong phrag bcu pa bcu gnyis pa dri ma med pa’i ’od,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha and the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, ˙ ˙ revised by Zhang ston Mdo sde Dpal, Tshul khrims dar, and Shes rab grags. Later the monk Shong ston in the temple of Dpal Sa skya on the basis of two manuscripts from Madhyadeśa. Later, revised again by Dharmakı̄rti Śrı̄bhadra, the great pandita ˙ ˙on Sthiramati, and the translators Blo gros Rgyal mtshan and Blo gros Dpal bzang po the basis of several Indian manuscripts. Cf. Tsukamoto et al. (:). iv. Q / D, Kālacakrapāda’s Sekoddeśa-tı̄kā (dbang mdor bstan pa’i rgya cher ’grel pa,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pan˙ dita Somanātha (zla ba mgon po) and the ˙ ˙ Tsukamoto et al. (:) gives the translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags. author’s name as Śrı̄ Nadapāda, whom they identify with Nāropa. ˙ Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  rab Grags in the colophons of all the translations he produced in Tibet with Somanātha always referred to himself 34 by his Tibetan name Shes rab Grags,35 to which various epithets then were added.36 v. Q / D, Dārikapa’s *Śrı̄-kālacakra-tantrarājasya Sekaprakriyā-vrtti-vajrapadod˙ po dpal dus kyi ’khor lo’i dbang gi rab tu byed pa’i˙ ’grel pa rdo rje’i ghati (rgyud kyi rgyal ˙ ’byed pa,  folios), transl. by the Tibetan translator-monk Shes rab grags pa by tshig listening to the guru (i.e., probably Somanātha). vi. Q / D, Kālacakrapāda’s *Śrı̄mad-naksatra-mandala-sādhana-ekādaśāṅga (dpal ˙ lag bcu˙gcig ˙ pa,  folios), transl. by the ldan rgyu skar gyi dkyil ’khor gyi sgrub thabs yan Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha and the Tibetan translator-monk Shes rab Grags. ˙ ˙ Mañjuśrı̄rājakı̄rti’s *Tri-yoga-hrdaya-vyākarana (rnal ’byor gsum gyi vii. Q / D, ˙ snying po gsal ba,  folios), transl. by Pandita Somanātha and˙the translator ’Bro Shes ˙ ˙ rab Grags. viii. Q / D, Kālacakrapāda’s *Ārya-kālacakrapāda-sampradāya-nāma-sad-aṅga-yo˙ ˙ pa’i snyan gopadeśa (sbyor ba yan lag drug gi man ngag rje dus ’khor zhabs kyis mdzad rgyud zhal gyi gdams,  folios), transl. by Pandita Somanātha and the translator ’Bro ˙˙ Shes rab Grags. ix. Q / omitted D, *Sekaprakriyā (dbang gi rab tu byed pa,  folios), transl. by the great Indian scholar Somanātha and the Tibetan translator Shes rab grags. Non-Kālacakra Translations: x. Q / D, Indrabuddhi’s *Sahajasiddhi (lhan cig skyes grub,  folios), transl. by the Indian scholar Somanātha and the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags. 34) See my remark in fn.  regarding why I see these colophons as having been written by the Tibetan translators themselves and in most cases not simply added by later copyists or canon-compilers. 35) In two cases (Q / D; Q / D), the name Shes rab Grags pa also appears. 36) The epithets of Shes rab Grags vary, and might in a loose way be understood as developing over time, thereby perhaps implying the order in which the different texts were translated. The simplest epithet, occuring in two texts, including the translation of our root-text SS, simply says “the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags” (bod kyi lotsā ba shes rab grags). A minimal variant thereof, occuring in two other texts, says “the translator ’Bro Shes rab Grags” (lotsā ba ’bro shes rab grags), thus adding his clan-name ’Bro. In a slightly more elaborate epithet, also occurring in two texts, Shes rab Grags has become a monk (dge slong), since it is said, “the Tibetan translator-monk Shes rab Grags” (bod kyi lotsā ba dge slong Shes rab Grags). To this may be added his clan-name, as seen in one text, “the translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags” (lotsā ba ’bro dge slong shes rab grags). Finally, as appearing in three colophons, Shes rab Grags calls himself by his most elaborate epithet “the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags” (bod kyi lotsā ba ’bro dge slong shes rab grags). It may also be noted that the most elaborate epithets occur in the translations of the longest texts, which on the contrary might indicate that the variants of these epithets might not reflect a chronology but rather show a concern with the amount of work involved in the given translation. Nevertheless, if a chronology might be derived from the development of these epithets, then an approximate order of Somanātha’s and Shes rab Grags’s translation-work can be posited as follows (for full citations, see fn. ):  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – At some point, the collaboration between Somanātha and Shes rab Grags seems to have come to an end. Shes rab Grags left Tibet for Nepal, by this time knowing Sanskrit very well. Either before going to Nepal or perhaps after returning to Tibet, Shes rab Grags also worked briefly with two other scholars, including a Kashmirian pandita named Jñānavajra with whom he ˙ ˙ Indian pandita, Mañjughosa, with translated a brief ritual text,37 and an ˙˙ ˙ i. ii. iii. iv. *Sahajasiddhi (the Tibetan translator Shes rab Grags). *Sekaprakriyā (the Tibetan translator Shes rab grags). *Tri-yoga-hrdaya-vyākarana (the translator ’Bro Shes rab Grags). ˙ ˙ *Ārya-kālacakrapāda-sampradāya-nāmasad-aṅga-yogopadeśa (the translator ’Bro Shes ˙ ˙ rab Grags). v. *Śrı̄mad-naksatra-mandala-sādhana-ekādaśāṅga (the Tibetan translator-monk Shes rab ˙ ˙˙ Grags). vi. *Śrı̄-kālacakra-tantrarājasya Sekaprakriyā-vrtti-vajrapadodghati (the Tibetan translator˙ ˙ monk Shes rab Grags pa). vii. Sekoddeśa-tı̄kā (the translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags). viii. Sekoddeśa ˙(the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags pa). ix. Śrimad-ādibuddhoddhrta-śrı̄-kālacakra-nāma-tantrarājā (the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes˙ rab grags). x. Mūlatantrānusārinı̄-dvādaśasāhasrikā Laghu-kālacakra-tantrarāja-tı̄kā Vimala-prabhā ˙ ˙ (the Tibetan translator, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab grags). 37) The text that Shes rab Grags translated with Jñānavajra is Q / D *Supratistha˙˙ tantra-samgraha (rab tu gnas pa mdor bsdus pa’i rgyud,  folios), translated by the Kashmirian ˙ pandita Jñānavajra (kha che’i pandi ta jñāna badzra) and Lotsā ba ’Bro dge slong Shes rab ˙ ˙ pa. This Kashmirian pan˙dita ˙ Jñānavajra of the th century seems to have been Grags ˙ ˙who lived in Tibet, learnt Tibetan, and produced at least the same Kashmirian Jñānavajra one translation by himself, namely Q / D, *Śrı̄-śambara-khasama-tantrarāja (dpal bde mchog nam mkha’ dang mnyam pa’i rgyud kyi rgyal po,˙  folios), translated alone by the Kashmirian scholar Jñānavajra (kha che’i mkhan po dznyā na badzras rang ’gyur du mdzad pa). The designation Kashmirian is here significant, because there also seems to have been a Nepalese Jñānavajrapāda in the second half of the th century (see fn. ). There are, indeed, several Jñānavajras and several translators named Ye shes Rdo rje (i.e., the Tibetan equivalent of Skt. Jñānavajra), and the task still remains to sort out who is who and who was responsible for which translation work. One translator named Dpal Ye shes Rdo rje produced translations of four texts composed by Jayasena, viz. Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D. Another (?) Lotsā ba Ye shes Rdo rje translated a text by Indrabhūti (Q / D). Then there is the learned Ye shes Rdo rje, who worked with the Tibetan translator (skad bsgyur) Gnyan Ban Bsod [nams] (perhaps ≈ Gnyan Chung Lotsā ba, b. th century?) to produce a translation of a ritual text composed by the Kashmirian pandita Ratnavajra (th century) (Q / D). There is a pandita named Jñānavajra (ye˙ ˙shes rdo rje) who worked with Lotsā ba Nag tsho Chen ˙˙ po (perhaps Nag Tsho Lotsā ba Tshul khrims Rgyal ba, –) to translate a stotra (Q / D). There is an Indian scholar named Jñānavajra who collaborated with Lotsā ba Rngog Buddhapāla (unidentified) in the “Lha khang Vihāra” (≈ Rgyal Lha khang?) to translate Jñānavajra’s own *Tattva-mārga-darśana (de nyid mthong ba’i lam, Q / D) Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  whom Shes rab—again using his Tibetan name—made a translation of a short work on Tantric hermeneutics by pseudo-Nāgārjuna. The latter translation was made in the retreat-place of [Brag] Yer pa, located  miles NE of Lha sa.38 Shes rab Grags’s travel to Nepal and India might have coincided with Somanātha’s six-year journey to India after his first visit to Tibet. Somanātha later returned to Tibet,39 but it does not seem that he continued his work with Shes rab Grags in Tibet, and aside from the translations done with Shes rab Grags, Somanātha did not produce any Tibetan translation with other Tibetan collaborators, or at least none that have been preserved in the Tibetan canon. Instead, Somanātha had meanwhile mastered the Tibetan language himself,40 and ventured to produce his own Tibetan translations of four additional works, including two Kālacakra-texts and two other Tantric works.41 after having been requested in dpal shing kun du tshogs ’khor sar (?). Finally, there is an th century author Jñānavajra who composed a great many texts on mantra practice, for example one text (Q / D) that was translated by Ka ba Dpal brtsegs (th–th century) and revised by Śraddhākaravarman and Rin chen Bzang po (–), and another (Q / D) that was translated by Śraddhākaravarman and Rin chen Bzang po. 38) See Q / D, pseudo-Nāgārjuna’s *Sandhi-bhāsā-tı̄kā (dgongs pa’i skad kyi ’grel pa, ˙  folios), transl. the Indian scholar Mañjughosa and the˙Tibetan translator ’Bro dge slong ˙ in the retreat-place of Yer pa (yer pa’i dben Shes rab Grags (bod kyi lotsā ba Shes rab Grags), gnas). Yer pa is also called Yer pa Lha ri or Brag Yer pa. Pandita Mañjughosa is also known ˙˙ ˙ to have collaborated with Lce Dga ba’i Dpal (Q / ). To the list of texts translated by Shes rab Grags under his Tibetan name, and therefore perhaps produced in Tibet, must be added two works: () a short purificatory text entitled *Guru-mandala-samādāna-vidhi (bla ma’i mandal yi dam gyi cho ga,  folio; Q / ˙ ˙ Krsna’s *Krama-catustaya-vibhaṅga D), transl.˙ ˙by ’Bro Lotsā ba; () Q / D: ˙˙ (rim pa bzhi’i rnam par ’byed pa,  folios), transl. by the˙Tibetan translator˙˙’Bro Shes rab Grags. Given that neither text mentions any collaborating pandita, it seems that ’Bro Lotsā ˙˙ ba worked on these texts by himself. 39) While the other sources only speak of two Tibetan visits by Somanātha, Tāranātha (DCB a4, p. ) says that he visited Tibet thrice. Bu ston’s HK (HKa a5, p. ; HKb b7, p. ) says that Somanātha later lived in a place called dkar chung (unidentified). 40) See BA (Tha.b , p. ; Roerich, :) and the colophons of his four translations 6 paraphrased in fn. . 41) Somanātha’s own Tibetan translations include: Kālacakra-works: i. Q / D, Pundarı̄ka’s Paramārtha-sevā (dpal don dam pa’i bsnyen pa,  folios), ˙˙ transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha (kha che’i pandi ta zla ba mgon po). Cf. ˙˙ Tsukamoto et al. (:).˙ ˙ ii. Q / D, *Padminı̄-nāma-pañjikā (padma can zhes bya ba’i dka’ ’grel,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha. ˙˙  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – Ending this discussion of the Tibetan translation of the root-text SS, it can be concluded that Indrabuddhi’s SS probably was brought to Tibet by the Kashmirian scholar Somanātha and translated there by the Tibetan translator ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags at some point in the period – . The text of SS may either have come out of the Kashmirian Tantric tradition, in which Somanātha had grown up, or he may have obtained its transmission during his studies in Magadha during his youth. The Translation of the Commentary *Sahajasiddhipaddhati To analyze the history of the Tibetan translation of Laksmı̄’s SSP,42 the ˙ translation’s colophon must first be presented. It says: [The *Sahajasiddhapaddhati] was translated by the great Indian scholar (rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po) of *Mānavihāra and the Tibetan translator-monk (bod kyi lotstsha ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti, after having listened well [to its explanation].43 This colophon mentions two persons: an Indian scholar and the Tibetan translator Prajñākı̄rti. Since the translator is Tibetan, it is clear that his Indian name Prajñākı̄rti is a Sanskritized form of his Tibetan name. In fact, Prajñākı̄rti is Sanskrit for Tibetan Shes rab Grags, and this Prajñākı̄rti is indeed identical to our Tibetan translator ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags. Prajñākı̄rti is simply the pen-name that Shes rab Grags used during his time of working in Nepal and India. Non-Kālacakra-works: iii. Q / D, Vajrapāni’s *Tattva-garbha-sādhana (de kho na nyid kyi snying po sgrub ˙ great Indian scholar Somanātha for the sake of Gnyal mi pa,  folios), transl. by the Shes rab Mchog. iv. Q / D, Lokanātha’s *Tattvāloka (de kho na nyid kyi snang ba,  folios), transl. by the Kashmirian Pandita Somanātha at the earnest request of Le’u ston Rgya nag. ˙˙ 42) The Tibetan translation is entitled lhan cig skyes grub kyi gzhung ’grel ( folios). It is only preserved in the manuscripts and xylographs found in the five mid-th-century editions of the Tibetan bstan ’gyur: Q, N, D, G-, and C (not available to me). For a comparative edition, see bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma, vol.  (rgyud wi-zhi), pp. – . 43) N.a , D.b –a , G-.a , bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma vol. , 1 7 1 2–3 p. : //rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po ma na bi ha ra la dang/ bod kyi lotstsha ba dge slong pradznyā kı̄rtis legs par mnyan nas bsgyur pa lags so//. Variants: ma na bi ha ra la] Q: ma n’a bhi ha la la NDG. The Q-edition is currently not available to me, but its readings have been Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  After Shes rab Grags ended his work with Somanātha in Tibet he traveled to Patan (a.k.a. Lalitpur) in present-day Kathmandu, Nepal, where he began working with several local panditas and produced Tibetan transla˙˙ tions of sixteen Sanskrit works. The Kālacakra-system that Shes rab Grags had worked on earlier was also transmitted in Nepal, for example by the Newar pandita Samantaśrı̄ from Patan, whom Rwa Chos rab (the nephew ˙ ˙ ba Rdo rje Grags) invited to Tibet to teach the Kālacakraof Rwa Lotsā teachings there (Lo Bue, :). Nevertheless, Shes rab Grags did not work any further on Kālacakra-materials in Nepal, but instead turned his attention to the translation of Tantric works belonging to various other cycles. Shes rab Grags seems to have continued using his Tibetan name for some time after arriving in Nepal before he began to write under the name Prajñākı̄rti. If this observation may be taken as a guiding principle for a chronology of his work in Nepal, then one of his first collaborations was with the Nepalese master Kanakaśrı̄mitra, together with whom Shes rab Grags produced a translation of Jetāri’s *Sugata-mata-vibhaṅga-bhāsya.44 At this stage, Shes rab Grags still wrote under his Tibetan name, but˙ in this colophon he changed his Tibetan epithet dge slong, meaning ‘monk’, to the corresponding Nepalese word bande. Shes rab Grags also worked under the guidance of several other Nepalese scholars. With the Nepalese pandita Jayākara, he translated Viśākhadeva’s ˙ rab Grags already worked under the Vinayakārikā,45 at which point ˙Shes obtained from bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma. The readings of C, which likewise is not available to me, are not included in bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma, and have not been considered here. 44) Namely, Q / D, Jetāri’s *Sugata-mata-vibhaṅga-bhāsya (bde bar gshegs pa’i ˙ gzhung rnam par ’byed pa’i bshad pa,  folios), transl. by the great Indian scholar Kanakaśrı̄mitra (rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po ka na ka shrı̄ mi tra) and the Tibetan translator-monk Shes rab Grags (bod kyi lotsā ba ban de shes rab grags). Although Kanakaśrı̄mitra (≈Kanakaśrı̄) in this colophon is designated as an Indian scholar, Kanakaśrı̄ is explicitly called a Nepalese scholar (bal po’i mkhan po) in the colophon of his and Shel dkar Lotsā ba Chos kyi Shes rab’s (b. th century) translation of Mañjuśrı̄mitra’s *Śrı̄-sarva-guhya-vidhi-garbhālamkāra ˙ (dpal gsang ba thams cad kyi spyi’i cho ga’i snying po rgyan, Q / D). In Kanaka[śrı̄]’s and [Rma ban] Lotsā ba Chos ’Bar’s (–) translation of Udgataśı̄la’s *Cittaparı̄ksā (sems brtags pa, Q / D), Kanaka’s origin is not stated and he is only designated˙ a pandita. BA (ja.b1, p. ; Roerich, :) clearly describes Kanakaśrı̄ as a Nepalese ˙ ˙ po ka na ka shrı̄) and says that he was the teacher of the Nepalese master Mahākaruna (bal ˙ (bal po thugs rje chen po); similarly elsewhere in BA (cf. ja.a4, p. ; Roerich, :). Lo Bue (:) explains that Kanakaśrı̄ was a Newar scholar educated in India at the Vikramaśı̄la monastery in Magadha. 45) I.e., Q / D *Viśākhadeva’s (Sa ga’i lha) Vinayakārikā (’dul ba’i tshig le’ur byas pa), transl. by the Nepalese scholar (bal po’i pandi ta) Jayākara and the Tibetan translator˙˙  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – name Prajñākı̄rti. With the Nepalese Ācārya Varendraruci,46 Shes rab Grags made two translations of ritual texts composed by Bhānucandra,47 also monk (bod kyi lots’a ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti. The colophon goes on to state that their translation later was slightly revised by the learned (sgra’i don mkhas pa) Rong ston Shes bya Kun rig (–), after he had met the Indian scholar Vanaratna Mahāsthāvira (–) hailing from [the town] Sadnagara in East India, [who visited Tibet several times in the mid-th century] (see D.a). Besides that Jayākara was Nepalese, little else is known about him. BA (kha.b3, p. ) comments on this translation in its quotation of a series of unidentified verses describing the Vinaya transmission-history in Tibet, saying: /dge slong gi ni kā ri kā/ /ne pa la yi pandi ta/ /lung dang rtogs pa’i bdag nyid ˙ ˙bsgyur/. “The Kārikā for the bhiksus can/ /mkhas pa dza yā ka ra las/ /dge slong pradznyā kı̄rtis was translated by the monk Prajñākı̄rti [having obtained it] from the scholar Jayākara,˙ a Nepalese pandita, a master of scripture and realization.” For a different English translation, ˙ see Roerich ˙(:). Since Jayākara did not engage in many other collaborations with Tibetans and thus does not seem to have been active in Tibet itself, it may be assumed that the collaboration took place in Nepal. Lo Bue (:) states that Jayākara flourished in the mid-th century. The only other Tibetan collaboration that Jayākara was involved in was the translation of three short Vajrapāni-sādhanas translated by a Tibetan called Mar pa Lotsā ba, probably ˙ Mar pa Lotsā ba, viz. Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug referring to the second (–). These three texts are: Q / D Meghavegin’s *Vajrapāny-analajihva˙ transl. by vrtti-muktāvalı̄ (phyag na rdo rje lce dbab kyi ’grel pa mu tig gi phreng ba), ˙ ndita Jayākara and Lotsā ba Mar pa; Q / D Meghavegin’s *Bhagavad-vajrapānyPa ˙˙ ˙ analajihva-guhyasa mveśa-sādhana (bcom ldan ’das phyag na rdo rje lce dbab kyi gsang ba’i yang ˙ bkol gyi sgrub pa’i thabs), transl. by Guru Jayākara and Mar pa Lotsā; and Q / D, Meghavegin’s *Vajrapāny-analajihva-purahsarakalpa-yogacaryāmārgāstaka (phyag na rdo rje ˙ ba’i yan lag rnal˙’byor gyi spyod lam brgyad˙pa), ˙ transl. by Jayākara lce dbab kyi sngon du ’gro and Mar pa Lotsā ba. Mar pa Do ba is known to have worked in Nepal in the s and ’s. Aside from visiting Nepal at the beginning of his travel to India, BA (ja.b5–a3, pp. –; Roerich, :–) mentions that Mar pa Do ba later returned to Nepal and studied with several masters there. For more information on Mar pa Do ba, see Roberts (:, ). 46) The colophons of Prajñākı̄rti’s two translations refer to the collaborating pandita as Śrı̄ ˙ ˙ canon, Varendra. Such a name does not appear with any other translation in the Tibetan and so appears to be unidentifiable, but it is highly likely that the famous Nepalese scholar Varendraruci is intended. 47) Namely, Q / D Bhānucandra’s *Arghavidhi (argha’i cho ga,  folios), transl. by the Indian scholar Śrı̄ Varendra and the translator-monk (lots’a ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti (see D.b4); and Q / D Bhānucandra’s *Pratisthāvidhi (rab tu gnas pa’i cho ga,  ˙˙ folios), transl. by the Indian scholar Varendra and the translator-monk (lots’a ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti (see D.b3–4); cf. Tsukamoto et al. (:) for an unidentified Sanskrit manuscript by this title. Varendraruci was a well-known Nepalese scholar active in the second half of the th century, particularly in the s–s. BA (ja.a4–5, p. ; Roerich, :) states that he also was known Ca-Haṅdu (ha mu dkar po), meaning “the white māntrika” (Roberts, :); for the Sanskrit form ca-haṅdu signified by the Tibetan translation ha mu dkar po, see its attestation in the colophon of Q / D. Besides teaming up with Prajñākı̄rti, Varendraruci also worked with several other Tibetan translators, the most Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  using the name Prajñākı̄rti. With the pandita named Sumatikı̄rti,48 Shes ˙˙ famous of whom is Rngog Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (–), who translated five Tantric texts with Varendraruci, when Rngog visited Nepal in the s (see passage from BA in fn. ). The texts translated by Varendraruci and Rngog Lotsā ba include: Q / D Śūnyatāsamādhi’s Tattva-jñānasiddhi nāma svādhisthāna(-krama) (dpal de kho na nyid ye shes grub ˙˙ cf. Tsukamoto et al, :), transl. by the pa [zhes bya ba bdag byin gyis brlab pa’i rim pa]; Nepalese Ācārya Varendraruci (bal po’i ātsārya bharendrarutsi) and Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (see D.a3); Q / D Avadhūta-Advayavajra’s Sarvārtha-siddhi-sādhana (don thams cad grub pa zhes bya ba’i sgrub thabs; cf. Tsukamoto et al, :, ), transl. by the Nepalese Ācārya Varendraruci and Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab (see D.b7); Q / D Śūnyatāsamādhi’s *Jñānāveśa (ye shes dbab pa), transl. by the Nepalese Ācārya Varendraruci and Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (see D.b7); Q / D Śrı̄matidevā’s *Chinnamunda-vajravārāhı̄-sādhana (rdo rje phag mo dbu bcad ma’i sgrub ˙˙ thabs), transl. by the Nepalese Ācārya Varendraruci and Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (see D.a1); and Q / D Buddhadatta’s *Śrı̄-vajrayoginı̄-homa-vidhi (dpal rdo rje rnal ’byor ma’i sbyin sreg gi cho ga), transl. by the Nepalese Pandita Varendraruci and the ˙ ˙ colophons, Varendraruci Tibetan Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (see D.b6). In these is always described as “the Nepalese Ācārya” (bal po’i ātsārya) or “the Nepalese Pandita” (bal po’i pandi ta), and there can thus be little doubt that Varendraruci was Nepalese.˙ ˙ ˙˙ Varendraruci is further known to have been involved in producing two translations with the Tibetan translator Rma ban Chos ’Bar (a.k.a. Rma Lotsā ba, –), who is also known to have worked for some time in Nepal. These works are: Q / D Virūpa’s Chinnamunda-sādhana (dbu bcad ma’i sgrub thabs; see Nihom, ), transl. by ˙ ˙ Varendraruci and the Tibetan translator (bod kyi lotsā ba) Rma Chos the Nepalese Pandita ˙˙ ’Bar (see D.a 4); and Q / D Sahajavilāsa’s *Śrı̄-heruka-sādhana (he ru ka’i sgrub thabs; cf. Tsukamoto et al, :, for an unidentified Sanskrit manuscript with this title), transl. by the Indian scholar Varendraruci (rgya gar gyi mkhan po bhalendrarutsi) and the Tibetan translator Rma ban Chos ’Bar (see D.a3). For information on Rma ban Chos ’Bar, see BA (nga.b5–a, pp. –; Roerich, :–) and Roberts (:–, , ). Finally, Varendraruci produced one translation with someone named Ye shes Rdo rje, who remains unidentified: Q / D Varendraruci’s own *Śisyānugraha-vidhi (gzhan ˙ don slob ma rjes su gzung ba’i cho ga; cf. Tsukamoto et al, :, for an unidentified Sanskrit manuscript with a reminiscient title), transl. by the Nepalese Guru translator (bla ma bal po lotsā ba, = Varendraruci) and the highly compassionate Ye Shes Rdo rje (ye shes rdo rje thugs rje chen po dang ldan pa, perhaps ≈ Jñānavajra Mahākaruna?; cf. Mahākaruna ˙ ˙ in fn. ); for this colophon, see D.b1–2. Lo Bue (:) identifies this Ye shes Rdo rje as the Nepalese Ācārya Jñānavajrapāda (bal po ā tsā rya dznyā na badzra’i zhabs), who produced the Tibetan translation of Advayavajra’s *Trayodaśātmaka-śrı̄-cakrasamvarasya abhiseka-vidhi (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i bcu gsum ma’i bdag nyid kyi dbang bskur˙ ba’i cho ˙ ga, Q / D,  folios) in collaboration with the Tibetan translator Zhang zhung (perhaps ≈ Zhang zhung Lotsā ba Byang chub Shes rab?). For other persons named Ye shes Rdo rje, cf. fn. . For more information on Varendraruci, see Lo Bue (:–), Roberts (: –), and BA (ja.b6–a, pp. –; Roerich, :–). 48) In the colophons, Shes rab Grags always refers to him as Sumatikı̄rti, with the exception of one colophon (Q / D) where the pandita is only named Sumati, although it still ˙˙  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – rab Grags, again always using the name Prajñākı̄rti, translated six minor Tantric works, mostly sādhanas and various blessing-rituals.49 The pandita Sumatikı̄rti was, in fact, a well-known scholar, active in ˙ ˙ the second half of the th century. Collaborating with at Nepal50 during seems that the name “Sumatikı̄rti” is intended, since no other pandita merely called Sumati ˙˙ is known in the colophons of the Tibetan canonical texts. 49) The five works that Shes rab Grags translated in collaboration with Sumatikı̄rti are: i. Q / D: *Pindapātika’s *Śrı̄-mahākāla-sādhana (dpal mgon po nag po sgrub ˙˙ thabs,  folios; cf. Tsukamoto et al, :), transl. by the Indian scholar Sumatikı̄rti and the translator-monk Prajñākı̄rti. ii. Q / D: Jetāri’s *Mahāpratisara-cakra-lekhana-vidhi (so sor ’brang ma chen mo’i ’khor lo bri ba’i cho ga,  folios), transl. by the monk Prajñākı̄rti in the presence of the Indian scholar Sumatikı̄rti. iii. Q / D: Sumatikı̄rti’s *Pratisthā-vidhi (rab tu gnas pa’i cho ga,  folios; cf. ˙ the Pandita Śrı̄ Sumatikı̄rti and the translator Tsukamoto et al, :), transl. ˙by ˙˙ Prajñākı̄rti. iv. Q / omitted D: *Sundarı̄nanda’s *Śrı̄-cakra-samvara-pratisthā-vidhi (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i rab tu gnas pa’i cho ga,  folios), transl. by˙the Indian˙˙scholar Sumatikı̄rti and the Tibetan translator-monk Prajñākı̄rti. v. Q / D: Manakaśrı̄’s *Śrı̄-cakra-samvaraikavı̄ra-sādhana (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa ˙ by the Indian Scholar Sumati (≈Sumatidpa’ bo gcig bu’i sgrub thabs,  folios), transl. kı̄rti) and the monk Prajñākı̄rti. 50) While it is certain that Sumatikı̄rti lived and worked in Nepal, perhaps in Patan (?), during the second half of the th century, it remains uncertain whether he was of Nepalese origin. Many of the colophons of the Tibetan translations he helped to produce simply characterize him as an “Indian scholar” (rgya gar gyi mkhan po). This designation is, however, the most general of the designations used in such colophons, and need not indicate actual “Indian” origin, because it is often used of scholars hailing from Kashmir or Nepal, even though more specific designations for scholars from those places exist. Yet, there are also colophons that specify Sumatikı̄rti as a “Nepalese pandita” (bal po’i pandi ta sumatikı̄rti); e.g., ˙ ˙ all of which˙ ˙are translations made Q / omitted D, Q / D, Q / D, with Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug (the list is not exhaustive). Roberts (:) reports that the Tibetan author Si tu Padma Nyin byed (–) described Sumatikı̄rti as a Newar student of the Indian master Vajrapāni (rgya gar gyi phyag na), but Si tu’s writings ˙ not been able to verify this information. are currently not available to me, and I have thus There is also other evidence pointing to a Sumatikı̄rti who taught at the North Indian Buddhist monastery Nālanda. Consequently, van der Kuijp (:) has described the Sumatikı̄rti with whom Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab worked in Nepal as being formerly from Nālanda. This evidence occurs in BA’s (ta.a3–4, p. ) account of the travels of Khyung po Rnal ’byor ( / –), which says: nālandar nā ro pa’i slob ma dā chen po/ sumatikı̄rti/ ramapāla/ natekara/ kamkata’i rje btsun ma rin chen lha mo/ kukuripa’i ˙ la chos mang du zhus/. “At Nālanda, [Khyung slob ma grub thob nyi ma’i snying po rnams po Rnal ’byor] requested many teachings from Nāropa’s student the great Dā[naśı̄la], Sumatikı̄rti, Ramapāla, Nategara, Lady Ratnadevı̄ of Kamkata, and Kukuripa’s student Sid˙ ˙ dha Sūryagarbha.” For another English translation, see Roerich (:). It is noteworthy that the list of Khyung po’s teachers in Nālanda includes two well-known students Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  least six known Tibetan translators, he was involved in the translation of  texts into Tibetan, and thus seems to have run a veritable workshop for Tibetan translation and to have had very close bonds with his Tibetan disciples. Aside from the transmissions he gave to Shes rab Grags, Sumatikı̄rti also worked with: Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug (–),51 Lo chung Grags mchog Shes rab (dates unknown),52 Gnyan Darma Grags of Maitrı̄pāda, namely Ramapāla and Nategara (a.k.a. Sahajavajra); see Tatz (:). It ˙ must, however, be underlined that Sumatikı̄rti’s association with Nālanda has still only been confirmed in this late Tibetan source of the th century. It has not yet been attempted to trace it to any earlier biography of Khyung po Rnal ’byor, or other sources. 51) Sumatikı̄rti and Mar pa Do ba translated the following works into Tibetan: Q / D Vajraghanta’s *Śrı̄-bhagavac-cakraśambara-sādhana-ratnacintāmani (bcom ldan ’das ˙ ˙ Q / D dpal ’khor lo bde ˙mchog sgrub pa’i thabs rin po che yid bzhin gyi nor bu); Vajraghanta’s *Mandaladeva-stotra-ratnamāyādāna (dkyil ’khor gyi lha la bstod pa rin po che ˙ ˙sbyin pa); ˙ ˙ (Q / D Vajraghanta’s *Vajravārāhı̄-sādhana?, rdo rje phag mo’i sgyu ’phrul ˙˙ sgrub thabs); Q / D Kambala’s *Bhagavac-chrı̄-cakraśambarasya Sādhana Ratnacūdāmani (bcom ldan ’das dpal ’khor lo bde mchog gi sgrub thabs rin po che gtsug gi nor ˙ Q ˙ bu); / omitted D, Krsna’s *Bhagavac-chrı̄-cakraśambara-mandala-vidhi (bcom ldan ˙ ’khor gyi cho ga) (revision only); ˙Q ˙ ’das dpal bde mchog ’khor lo’i˙˙dkyil / D Krsna’s ˙ Vasantatilaka (dbyid kyi thig le, cf. Tsukamoto et al, :); Q / D K˙r˙sna’s ˙˙ ˙ *Guhyatattvaprakāśa (gsang ba’i de kho na nyid rab tu gsal ba, revision only); Q / D Bhraman Bhrimkara’s *Śrı̄-heruka-bhattāraka-prasādhanopāyı̄kā-pindikā (rje btsun dpal he ˙˙ ru ka sgrub pa’i ˙thabs mdor bsdus pa, revision only); Q / omitted˙ ˙D, Prajñābhadra’s *Śrı̄vajravārāhı̄-sādhana (dpal rdo rje phag mo’i sgrub thabs); Q / D Tāraśrı̄’s *Hevajradvibhuja-sādhana (kye rdo rje phyag gnyis pa’i sgrub thabs); Q / D Vāgı̄śvarakı̄rti’s *Samksipta-abhiseka-vidhi-sāmāsika (’dus pa’i dbang bskur ba’i cho ga mdor bsdus pa, in col˙ ˙ laboration with ˙the Tibetan translator Klog skya Gzhon nu ’Bar); Q / D Śrı̄dhara’s *Vajra-sarasvatı̄-stotra (rdo rje dbyangs can ma’i bstod pa); Q / D *Bhagavad-āryamañjuśrı̄-sādhisthāna-stuti (bcom ldan ’das ’phags pa ’jam dpal gyi bstod pa byin brlabs dang ˙˙ bcas pa) attributed to Candragomin (in collaboration with Rngog Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab); Q / D Jetāri’s Vajraśrṅkhalā-sādhana (rdo rje lu gu rgyud kyi sgrub thabs, cf. ˙ Tsukamoto et al, :–); Q / omit D, Dākaśrı̄’s *Sadyoginı̄-sādhana (rnal ’byor ˙ *śiksā-kusuma-mañjarı̄ ˙ ˙ sita’s ma drug gi sgrub pa’i thabs); and Q / D Vairocanarak ˙ (bslab pa me tog snye ma, revision only). Additionally, there is˙ Sumatikı̄rti’s and Mar pa do ba’s extra-canonical translation of the Cakrasamvaratantra entitled Śrı̄herukābhidhāna, ˙ information on this translation, see which is currently not available to me. For general Gray (a:; b:). For a modern edition of the latter text based on two extracanonical manuscripts, see Gray (forthcoming). For information on Mar pa Do ba, see Lo Bue (:). 52) Sumatikı̄rti and Lo chung Grags mchog Shes rab produced two translations: Q / D Sumatikı̄rti’s own *Laghu-samvara-tantra-patalābhisandhi (sdom pa’i rgyud chung ˙ ˙ ngu’i mtshams sbyor); and Q / D, Krsna’s *Krama-catu staya (rim pa bzhi po). In ˙ ˙ ˙ ˙ which seems to refer the latter text, the translator’s name is given as Grags pa Shes ˙rab, to Grags mchog Shes rab. The commentary to Krsna’s *Krama-catustaya (Q / D ˙ ˙ pa) was translated ˙˙ *Krama-catustaya-vibhāga, rim pa bzhi’i rnam par ˙’byed by ’Bro Lotsā ba ˙˙ Shes rab Grags.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – (th–th century),53 Zha ma Seng ge Rgyal mtshan (second half of th century),54 Glog skya Gzhon nu ’Bar (dates unknown),55 Mal gyo Blo gros Grags (th century),56 and Rngog Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab (– ).57 Shes rab Grags also worked on revising the Tibetan translation 53) Gnyan Darma Grags also wrote under the Sanskritized name Dharmakı̄rti. He was active in the second half of the th century. He left Tibet for Kashmir, India, and Nepal in . His collaboration with Sumatikı̄rti includes two translations: Q / D Buddhajñāna’s *Mahāpratisarā-raksā (so sor ’brang ma chen mo’i bsrung ba); and Q / ˙ D Prajñākaramati’s Bodhicaryāvatāra-pañjikā (byang chub kyi spyod pa la ’jug pa’i dka’ ’grel, see de La Vallée Poussin, –). 54) Sumatikı̄rti and Zha ma Seng ge Rgyal mtshan made the following two translations: Q / omit D, Sundarı̄nanda’s *Śrı̄-cakrasamvara-homa-vidhi (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i sbyin ˙ sreg gi cho ga); and Q / D, Vairocanarak sita’s *śiksā-kusuma-mañjarı̄ (bslab pa me ˙ nu ’Bar). ˙ tog snye ma, in collaboration with Glog skya Gzhon 55) Working under the supervision of Pandita Sumatikı̄rti, Glog skya Gzhon nu ’Bar ˙ ˙ with other Tibetan translators, namely on seems only to have worked in collaboration the following two texts: Q / D Vāgı̄śvarakı̄rti’s *Samksipta-abhiseka-vidhi-sāmāsika ˙ ˙ with Mar ˙ pa [Do ba] Lotsā (’dus pa’i dbang bskur ba’i cho ga mdor bsdus pa, in collaboration ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug); and Q / D Vairocanaraksita’s *Śiksā-kusuma-mañjarı̄ ˙ (bslab pa me tog snye ma, in collaboration with Zha ma Seng ge˙ Rgyal mtshan). 56) Mal gyo Blo gros Grags produced a revised translation of the Cakrasamvara-tantra ˙ has been in collaboration with Sumatikı̄rti (Gray, a:–; b:), which preserved in the Phug brag manuscript bka’ ’gyur. For a diplomatic edition of this text, see Gray (forthcoming). 57) Sumatikı̄rti and Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab made the following Tibetan translations: Q / D Vajraghanta’s *Śrı̄-cakrasamvara-pañcakrama (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i rim pa ˙ ˙ / D Prajñārak ˙ lnga pa, revision only); Q sita’s *Śrı̄-Abhisamaya-nāma-pañjikā (dpal mngon par rtogs pa zhes bya ba’i dka’ ’grel); Q /˙D Prajñāraksita’s *Śrı̄-cakrasamvara˙ ga); Q / D ˙ pūja-meghamañjarı̄ (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i phyi rol gyi mchod pa’i cho Prajñāraksita’s *Śrı̄-cakrasamvara-bali-mañjarı̄ (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i gtor ma’i cho ga); ˙ ˙ *Śrı̄-cakrasamvara-hastapūja-vidhi (dpal ’khor lo sdom pa’i lag Q / D Prajñāraksita’s ˙ ˙ mchod kyi cho ga); Q / D *Bhagavad-ārya-mañjuśrı̄-sādhi sthāna-stuti attributed to ˙˙ brlabs dang bcas pa, Candragomin (bcom ldan ’das ’phags pa ’jam dpal gyi bstod pa byin in collaboration with Mar pa Do ba); Q / D Vajraghanta’s *Śrı̄-cakraśambarapañcakrama (dpal ’khor lo bde mchog gi rim pa lnga pa, revision˙ ˙only); Q / D Prajñākaramati’s Abhisamayālamkāra-vrtti-pindārtha (mngon par rtogs pa’i rgyan gyi ’grel ˙ Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra ˙˙ pa’i bsdus don); Q / D˙Śāntideva’s / Bodhicaryāvatāra (byang chub sems dpa’i spyod pa la ’jug pa, revision only); Q / D Jetāri’s *Bodhicittotpādasamādāna-vidhi (byang chub kyi sems bskyed pa dang yi dam blang ba’i cho ga); Q / D Jetāri’s *Bodhicittotpāda-samādāna-vidhi (byang chub kyi sems bskyed pa dang yi dam blang ba’i cho ga); and Q / D Dharmottara’s Nyāyabindutı̄kā (rigs pa’i thigs pa’i rgya cher ˙ ’grel pa, revision only, on the basis of a North Indian manuscript (*Madhyadeśa, yul dbus kyi dpe)). It is notable that Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab, after he returned to Tibet from Kashmir in  (return-date according to Zhāng, :), is said in BA to have worked with Sumatikı̄rti in Tibet and not in Nepal. BA (ca.b4–5, p. ) says: slar bod du byon/ bod du yang pandi ta ’bum phrag gsum pa dang/ su ma ti kı̄rtih gnyis la chos gsan zhing bal por ˙˙ ˙ Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  of the Cakrasamvara-tantra together with another of Sumatikı̄rti’s Tibetan ˙ Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug.58 The colophon students, namely of this revision makes no mention of Sumatikı̄rti, but given that Shes rab yug cig byon nas atulyavajra dang/ varendraruci la sogs pa la sngags kyi gsan pa yang mdzad/. “Having returned to Tibet [from Kashmir], [Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab] again listened to the Dharma in Tibet from the two Panditas Trilaksa [Sthirapāla] and Sumatikı̄rti, and ˙ received teachings ˙ having then gone to Nepal for some time,˙he on mantra from Atulyavajra, Varendraruci, and others.” For another English translation, see Roerich (:). Van der Kuijp’s (:) remark that Rngog worked with Sumatikı̄rti in Tibet after his return from Kashmir is presumably based on the above passage from BA, although he did not indicate his source for that information. My cursory reading of Rngog Blo ldan Shes rab’s hagiography written by [Gro lung pa] Blo gros ’Byung gnas (b. th century) in  (lcags po’i rta’i lo), entitled gro lung pa blo gros ’byung gnas kyis mdzad pa’i blo ldan shes rab kyi rnam thar (modern title given to the text in bka’ gdams gsung ’bum), which truly is more hagiography than biography, did not reveal any information on Sumatikı̄rti, although a more thorough study may be needed. Besides BA, I have still not found other evidence to corroborate that Sumatikı̄rti visited Tibet. Trilaksa worked with Gnyan Darma Grags on the translation of a short Mahākāla˙ / D), which could likewise have taken place in Tibet and which would sādhana (Q thus support the above passage form BA, but since Gnyan Darma Grags also stayed in Nepal for twelve years (see Bu ston’s History of Dharma; Szerb, :; Obermiller, :), this is not evidence in itself. Bu ston’s History of Dharma (Szerb, :–; Obermiller, :) further mentions Sumatikı̄rti as one of the several collaborators of the Tibetan translator Khri Bkra shis Dbang phyug Nam mkha’ Btsan (dates unknown), who is said (ibid.) to have stayed  years in Kashmir and two periods of  years in Tibet. It may be noteworthy that Nepal is not mentioned as a residence of Khri Bkra shis, but to use this as evidence would be highly circumstantial. Given that Sumatikı̄rti lived in Nepal and also visited Tibet in the s, it is equally possible that Shes rab Grags made (some of ) his translations with Sumatikı̄rti in Tibet in the s (perhaps those using his Tibetan name instead of the pen-name Prajñākı̄rti?). 58) The revision made by Shes rab Grags and Mar pa Do ba is: Q / D, LaghuCakrasamvara-tantra (rgyud kyi rgyal po dpal bde mchog nyung ngu,  folios, cf. Tsukamoto ˙ et al, :–), originally translated by Padmākara and Rin chen Bzang po (– ) on the basis of a Kashmirian manuscript (kha che’i dpe), and later revised by the translator-monk (sgra sgyur dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti and Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug on the basis of a North Indian manuscript (*Madhyadeśa, yul dbus dpe). For general information on this revision, see Gray (a:; b:), and for a modern edition of the text, see Gray (forthcoming). It is noteworthy that this is not the only collaboration that Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug had with other Tibetan students of Sumatikı̄rti. Other such collaborations include: Q / D Vāgı̄śvarakı̄rti’s *Samksipta-abhiseka˙ ˙by Sumatikı̄rti ˙ vidhi-sāmāsika (’dus pa’i dbang bskur ba’i cho ga mdor bsdus pa) translated and Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug in collaboration with the Tibetan translator Klog skya Gzhon nu ’Bar; and Q / D *Bhagavad-ārya-mañjuśrı̄-sādhisthāna-stuti ˙˙ (bcom ldan ’das ’phags pa ’jam dpal gyi bstod pa byin brlabs dang bcas pa) attributed to Candragomin, translated by Sumatikı̄rti and Mar pa Do ba Chos kyi Dbang phyug in collaboration with Rngog Lotsā ba Blo ldan Shes rab. For more information on Sumatikı̄rti, see Roberts (:).  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – Grags here went by Prajñākı̄rti, it it very possible that the revision was made during his stay in Nepal. One of the most significant59 transmissions that Shes rab Grags received in Nepal was the text and explanation of Vajragarbha’s Hevajra-commentary entitled *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā (kye’i rdo rje bsdus pa’i don gyi rgya ˙ chapters ˙ cher ’grel pa). The first ˙five of this commentary had formerly 60 been translated into Tibetan by the ’Bro Seng dkar Śākya ’Od,61 working with the Indian scholar Dānaśı̄la.62 Their translation was later revised by Subhūtiśrı̄śānti and Lotsā ba Cog gru Ting nge ’dzin Bzang po, and this revised translation was then revised again by Shes rab Grags, writing as Prajñākı̄rti, working with the Indian scholar Prince Śrı̄ Abhayadeva,63 59) Certainly significant enough for Bu ston to single out this particular translation among Shes rab Grags’s translations that he mentions in his History of Buddhism (see fn. ). 60) For all the following information on this partial translation, see the internal colophon of the text, found inside the Tibetan translation at the end of the fifth chapter on Tattva (D.a4–6). 61) ’Bro Seng dkar Śākya ’Od (born in the first quarter of the th century) was a Tibetan translator, who traveled to Nepal and India. He was of the ’Bro-family (in the colophons also spelled ’Gro), i.e., the same clan as ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags. Besides his partial Hevajra-commentary translation made with Dānaśı̄la, Śākya ’Od also worked with the Nepalese scholar Jeta Ca-Hamdu Śāntibhadra to translate Vimuktisena’s vārttika on the Abhisamayālamkāra (’phags pa˙ shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa stong phrag nyi shu lnga pa’i ˙ man ngag gi bstan bcos mngon par rtogs pa’i rgyan gyi tshig le’ur byas pa’i rnam par ’grel pa, Q / D), Haribhadra’s pañjika on the Ratnagunasamcayagātha (bcom ldan ’das yon ˙ / D), Prajñākaragupta’s tan rin po che sdud pa’i tshigs su bcad pa’i dka’ ’grel, ˙Q *Sahāvalamba-nirnaya-siddhi (lhan cig dmigs pa nges par grub pa, Q / D), and ˙ Ratnākaraśānti’s *Vijñaptimātratā-siddhi (rnam par rig pa tsam nyid du grub pa, Q / D). For information on Śāntibhadra, see Lo Bue (:–). With Ajitaśrı̄bhadra, Śākya ’Od translated the *Śārdūlakarna-avadāna (stag rna’i rtogs pa brjod pa, Q / D), ˙ Advayavajra’s Tattva-vimśikā (de kho na nyid theg pa and with Dhiriśrı̄jñāna, he translated ˙ chen po nyi shu pa, Q / D, cf. Tsukamoto et al, :–). ’Bro Seng dkar Śākya ’Od should not be confused with the translator Śākya ’Od (Śākyaprabha) of the th– th century. 62) According to Roerich’s translation of BA (:), Dānaśı̄la is the pandita sometimes ˙˙ referred to as “the great Dā” (dā chen po) from Nālanda monastery. For a translation of this BA-passage, see fn. , where Roerich adds Dānaśı̄la in parenthesis after the name “the great Dā.” If that is so, then the passage in question identifies Dānaśı̄la as a student of Nāropa who resided in Nālanda. There are several translations by this Dānaśı̄la in the Tibetan canon, but his works must be distinguished from the numerous translations made by the th–th century translator Dānaśı̄la, collaborating mostly with Jinamitra and Ye shes Sde. 63) Prince Śrı̄ Abhayadeva (rgyal po’i sras dpal ’jigs med lha) is difficult to identify. He does not seem to have collaborated with any other Tibetan translator under that name, but he did translate two other works together with Shes rab Grags, namely: Q / D *Simhamukha Visnugupta’s *Śrı̄vajravārāhı̄sādhana (dpal rdo rje phag mo sgrub pa’i thabs, ˙ ˙ ˙ the venerable Śākya-monk (sh’akya’i dge slong btsun pa) Prajñākı̄rti in  folios), transl. by Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  relying on a manuscript from Madhyadeśa. Yet, Shes rab Grags went much further in his work on this text than any of his predecessors had done. the presence of the Indian Scholar *Śrı̄ Mahāvadhūtipa Prince Abhayadeva (dpal a wa dh’u t’i pa chen po/ /rgyal po’i sras ’jigs med lha) (for this colophon, see D.a7); and Q / D Śaṅku’s *Siddha-garuda-śāstra (mkha’ lding grub pa’i bstan bcos,  ˙ folios), transl. by the Indian scholar, the glorious Brahman, the matchless Mahāvadhūti (Abhayadeva?) and the translator monk Prajñākı̄rti … copied from a manuscript belonging to Gtsang pa Lo tsā ba (see D.a2–3–b3: //rgya gar gyi mkhan po dpal bram ze a ba dhū tı̄ chen po dpe med kyi zhal sngar/ lo tsā ba bande prajnyā kı̄rtis bsgyur ba’o// … gtsang pa lo tsā ba’i phyag dpe las bris so). It is noticeable that Shes rab Grags in all his collaborations with Abhayadeva worked under the name Prajñākı̄rti, and the translations therefore might have been produced in India or Nepal. On one hand, in the two latter colophons, Abhayadeva’s name is prefixed with the title Mahāvadhūti, but this title does not lead to any clear conclusion because it was a relatively frequent epithet of Indian and Nepalese masters of the th century. Among the Avadhūtipas appearing in colophons of texts contained in the Tibetan canon, at least the following five Avadhūtipas can be distinguished: i. Avadhūtipa Advayavajra = Maitrı̄pa, who under that name was the author of several works, including Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; and Q / D. ii. Avadhūtipa Kumāracandra, the author of Q / D. iii. unspecified Avadhūtipa(s), who is / are the author(s) of Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / ; Q / D; Q / D; Q / D; Q / omitted D; Q / D; and Q / D. iv. the Indian scholar Avadhūtipa Sūryagupta, who worked with Śākya Brtson ’grus (th century) on the following Tibetan translations: Q / D, Q / D, and Q / D. The latter text was according to its colophon translated in a temple (gtsug lag khang) in the Tibetan district of ru lag rgyang (in Southern Tibet, gtsang province), and Avadhūtipa Sūryagupta must therefore have visited Tibet. v. an unspecified Avadhūtipa, who collaborated with Ba ri Lotsā ba Rin chen Grags (–) to produce the translation of Q / D (stated in the modern catalog of Q compiled by Suzuki, –, although D contains no such colophon). On the other hand, the name Abhayadeva is reminiscent of at least two other well-known scholars belonging to the second half of the th–th century having the word Abhaya° in their names. One such pandita is the famous Abhayākaragupta (c. –) of the ˙˙ north-Indian monasteries Vikramaśı̄la and Nālanda, who was involved in the translation of ca.  works into Tibetan working with various Tibetan translators. For information on this scholar, see Erb (:–) and English (: with fn. ). Another Abhaya° is the Nepalese scholar Abhayakı̄rti, who was the elder of the two Pham thing pa brothers (Lo Bue, :–), and who perhaps also went under the name Dharmamati (Lo Bue, ibid.). However, neither Abhayākaragupta nor Abhayakı̄rti ever seem to be referred to by the epithet Avadhūtipa, and it is therefore unlikely that our Abhayadeva is either of these. Hence, it is not possible on the basis of the currently considered sources to identify Mahāvadhūtipa Abhayadeva any further than by the general information given in the colophons of Prajñākı̄rti’s translations that he was an Indian scholar.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – According to the final colophon of the text, Shes rab Grags obtained a rare manuscript of and explanation on this commentary,64 and after he had returned from Nepal to Tibet he produced an auto-translation65 of the remainder of the text.66 The final colophon of his translation explains: Translated by the Tibetan lotsā ba, the monk from ’Bro, Shes rab Grags,67 after having made repeated requests to the Indian master, the great guru Maitrı̄pāda, and having then listened well [to its explanation]. This extensive commentary on the condensed Hevajratantra composed by the bodhisattva Vajragarbha, which is hard to obtain, had hitherto not been translated further than the commentary up to and including the Tattva-chapter. Therefore, the translatormonk from ’Bro now obtained it in *Lalitapattana (i.e., Lalitpur, Patan)68 in ˙˙ Nepal from the Pandita Maitrı̄pāda. Having brought the manuscript to Tibet, ˙ ˙ [he] translated it, after having been requested [to do so] by the monk and Yoga-practitioner Dbang phyug Grags pa.69 64) *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā consists of explanations on the two basic sections (kalpa, brtag ˙˙ ˙ having eleven and twelve chapters respectively. The earlier, partial pa) of the Hevajratantra, Tibetan translation (D, folios a–a) covered only chapters – of the first Section (prathama-kalpa), i.e., up to the Tattva-chapter (Tattva-patala). Regarding the Hevajratantra ˙ itself and its structure, see Snellgrove (). 65) An auto-translation (rang ’gyur) is a translation produced by a Tibetan translator working on his own without directly collaborating with an Indian or Nepalese pandita. It may ˙ ˙ has learnt also refer to a translation produced alone by an Indian or Nepalese pandita who ˙ ˙ fn. . Tibetan and who does not collaborate with any Tibetan lotsā ba; see, e.g., 66) Thus, Shes rab Grags’s new translation added chapters – of the First Section (prathama-kalpa, brtag pa dang po) and of all of the twelve chapters of the Second Section (dvitı̄ya-kalpa, brtag pa gnyis pa). This addendum to the old, partial translation is found in D, folios b–a. 67) As this translation explicitly was made in Tibet, it may again be observed that Shes rab Grags here used his Tibetan name, i.e., bod kyi lotsā ba ’bro dge slong shes rab grags, as seems to be the case with all his translations produced in Tibet. Given that he obtained the manuscript and its explanation during his trip to Nepal, it is clear that this translation must have been made after his return to Tibet. It thus seems that Shes rab Grags worked under his Tibetan name both before and after his Nepal-travel, whereas the name Prajñākı̄rti seems only to appear in colophons of the texts he translated while staying in Nepal (and perhaps also in India). 68) *Lalitapattana has in this colophon been translated into Tibetan as “the great city (grong ˙ Skt. *pattana or *pura) Playful (rol pa ≈ Skt. *lalita) in the land of Nepal” khyer chen po˙≈ ˙˙ chen po rol pa). Lalitapattana or Lalitapura (modern-day Lalitpur) (bal po’i yul gyi grong khyer ˙˙ is also called Ye rang in Tibetan (see Lo Bue, :), which is probably related to its modern-day Nepalese name Yala. On Lalitpur, (see Roberts :). 69) D.a , G-.b : //rgya gar gyi mkhan po bla ma chen po mai tri 5–7 1–5 zhabs la/ bod kyi lotsā ba ’bro dge slong shes rab grags pas mang du gsol ba btab nas/ legs par mnyan te bsgyur ba’o// //kye’i rdo rje’i bsdus pa’i rgyud kyi rgya cher bshad pa/ byang chub sems dpa’ rdo rje snying pos mdzad pa/ rnyed par dka’ ba ’di sngon de kho na nyid kyi le’u yan chad kyi ’grel pa las ma bsgyur ba las/ da kyi bal po’i yul gyi grong khyer chen po rol pa zhes bya ba nas/ Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  This colophon provides a detailed explanation for the circumstances in which Shes rab Grags obtained the rare Sanskrit manuscript of the *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā. It is significant as it suggests that Shes rab Grags ˙ ˙ the famous ˙ personally met Indian master Maitrı̄pāda70 in Nepal in the town of Lalitpur, also called Patan, to whom he repeatedly made his request for the manuscript. This is unique information, because there seems to be no other evidence dating from this early period that Maitrı̄pāda ever visited Patan,71 but it is not unthinkable that Maitripāda did so late in his life, as he had several direct disciples living there. If Shes rab Grags really met Maitrı̄pāda during his visit to Nepal, this is significant for establishing the period of his visit, although the exact dates of Maitrı̄pāda are somewhat uncertain: the earliest possible date for Maitrı̄pāda’s death is , whereas the latest possible is .72 Shes rab ’bro dge slong lotsā bas/ pandi ta mai tri zhabs las rnyed de/ bod yul du dpe spyan drangs nas/ ˙ ˙ pa dbang phyug grags pas gsol ba btab ste bsgyur ba’o// //. QNG dge slong rnal ’byor pa spyod further adds the following lines at the end of this colophon, which are omitted in DC: /rgya gar yul du dka’ las cher mdzad/ dge bshes lo tsā ba la/ yul dbus su byon nas/ bdag gis gsol ba btab nas/ dka’ las bgyis te byang chub sems dpa’i ’grel pa bsgyur/ zhal ngo tsha nas nyid brdzangs pa lags te dgyes par dgongs// //. The added lines run: “When I had requested the Kalyānamitra ˙ Lotsā ba, who had accomplished difficult things in the land of India and who had come to Central [Tibet] (yul dbus, or is the Indian Madhyadeśa meant?), [the Lotsā ba] did what is difficult to do and translated [this] commentary by the bodhisattva [Vajragarbha]. Letting go of my bashfulness, I think [of it] with joy.” There is a pun in the final line dgyes par dgongs (“I think [of it] with joy”), because the word dgyes par “with joy” is also part of the Tibetan name for Hevajra, dgyes pa rdo rje. Hence, the final line could also be translated, “Letting go of my bashfulness, I intend it for He[vajra],” which may explain why the honorific noun dgongs, “to think, intend,” was used by the composer of these lines, who otherwise explicitly refers to himself by the humble first person pronoun bdag, “I”. 70) A.k.a. Maitrı̄pa, Advayavajra, and Maitrı̄gupta (Tatz, :). It is notable that the Tibetan formulation of the colophon uses the expression gsol ba btab for “requested,” which literally means “prayed,” and the sentence may thus also be interpreted as meaning that Shes rab Grags only prayed to Maitrı̄pāda, without meeting him in person. Later in the colophon, it is said that Shes rab Grags “obtained” (rnyed ) the manuscript from Pandita Maitrı̄pāda, ˙ ˙ indirectly in which seems to imply a direct encounter, but which also could be understood the sense that Shes rab Grags (through someone else) got hold of a manuscript that earlier had belonged to Maitrı̄pāda. Such interpretations are, however, not the most straightforward way of reading the colophon, which rather seems to suggest an actual encounter. Further, the possibility must also be kept in mind that there may have been more than one person named Maitrı̄pāda (and the various variants of that name). 71) The Sham Sher manuscript, which Tatz (:) believes to have been written shortly after the life of Maitrı̄pāda, makes Maitrı̄pāda a native of Kapilavastu (Tatz, ibid.), located near Lumbini some  kilometers west of Kathmandu, thereby indicating at least some bond between Maitrı̄pāda and present-day Nepal, but it mentions no visit to Patan. The later Tibetan hagiographies and religious histories likewise mention no visit to Patan. 72) The Tibetan traditions suggest two death-years and life-spans for Maitrı̄pāda: they  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – Grags’s encounter with Maitrı̄pāda may thus provide a terminus ante quem, namely the year  as the date before which his arrival from Tibet to Nepal must have taken place. Besides possibly encountering Maitrı̄pāda, Shes rab Grags certainly met at least two of Maitrı̄pāda’s students in Nepal.73 The first and most significant was the Indian master Vajrapāni (rgya gar phyag na), with whom Shes ˙ 74 Having formerly lived in rab Grags translated a short initiation-ritual. 75 northern India, Vajrapāni (–c. ) moved to Nepal in , set˙ maintain that Maitrı̄pāda died in a sheep-year or in a dog-year; one tradition also holds that Maitrı̄pāda died at the age of , while another says that he died at the age of  (Indo-Tibetan age-calculation, counting the year of birth as ; i.e., = Western age  and  respectively). For the year of death, see BA (da.a6–7, p. ): /de yang phyag rgya chen po stod lugs pa rnams kyis mai tri pa lug gi lo par bzhed la/ rjes nas chung pa’i lugs kyis khyi’i lo par bzhed cing bdun bcu rtsa brgyad pa la mya ngan las ’das par bzhed do/. “Again, those who follow the West-[Tibetan] Mahāmudrā-tradition maintain that Maitrı̄pa [was] someone of a sheepyear (lug gi lo pa), whereas, later on, the tradition of [Ras] chung pa maintained that [he was] someone of a dog-year (khyi’i lo pa) and that he passed into nirvāna at the age of .” For a different translation, see Roerich (:–). Further, in bka’˙ babs bdun ldan gyi brgyud pa’i rnam thar ngo mtshar rmad du byung ba rin po che’i khungs lta bu’i gtam, Tāranātha (–) states that Maitrı̄pa died at the age of  (TBRC W-, folio b1, p. ): dgung lo bdun cu tsam na sku ’das te/. / . Templeman (:) translates: “At  years of age he died …” The sheep- or dog-year for his birth may be  (sheep-year) and  (dog-year) according to Roberts (), who though does not provide any argument for this choice, or they may be  (sheep-year) and  (dog-year) according to Tatz (:–). With a life-span of  or , the resulting possible years of his death are:  /  /  /  or  /  /  / . Neither dates nor age for Maitrı̄pa are provided by Dpa’ bo Gtsug lag Phreng ba in his Buddhist history entitled dam pa’i chos kyi ’khor lo bsgyur ba rnams kyi byung ba gsal bar byed pa mkhas pa’i dga’ ston (p. 8–12), nor by Si tu Pan chen Chos kyi ’Byung gnas in his biographies of the Bka’ brgyud lineage entitled karma ka˙ m tshang brgyud pa’ rin po che’i ˙ rnam thar rab ’byams nor bu zla ba chu shel gyi phreng ba’i kha skong (TBRC W-vol. , folio b2 ff., p. ). For a discussion of Maitrı̄pa’s dates, see Tatz (:–). 73) For lists of Maitrı̄pāda’s students, arranged according to their significance, see Roberts (:) and BA (da.b4, p. ; Roerich, :). 74) Namely, Q / D Jālamdhara’s *Śrı̄mahākārunikābhisekaprakaranopadeśa (dpal ˙  folios), ˙ thugs rje chen po’i dbang bskur ba’i ˙man ngag rab tu byed pa, transl.˙ by the Indian Vajrapāni (rgya gar phyag na) and the Tibetan translator (bod kyi lots’a ba) Prajñākı̄rti on the basis˙ of a manuscript belonging to the master Maitrı̄pa (mnga’ bdag mai tri pa’i phyag dpe las); for this colophon, see D.a2. It is notable that another personal manuscript belonging to Maitrı̄pāda is mentioned here. 75) Year of birth according to BA (da.b , p. ; Roerich, :): phyag na ’di ni me mo 6 sbrul gyi lo la ’khrungs/. “This Vajrapāni was born in the female-fire-snake year.” The female˙ fire-snake year corresponds to  (Zhāng, :). The approximate year of death is here adopted in accordance with Roberts (:). For information on Vajrapāni, see BA ˙ (da.b4ff., p.  ff.; Roerich, : ff.), and Roberts (:–). Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  tling in Patan.76 In Nepal, Vajrapāni came into contact with several Tibetan students, and also visited Tibet for˙a short period, possibly in the late s or the s.77 He seems to have died no later than .78 Since Vajrapāni’s interactions with various Tibetans all seem to have taken place after ˙his move to Nepal, it appears that Prajñākı̄rti’s collaboration with Vajrapāni ˙ first took place thereafter, namely in the late s or the s. Given that Shes rab Grags translated the text with Vajrapāni under his name ˙ in Nepal. Shes Prajñākı̄rti, it is likely that the translation was produced rab Grags’s collaboration with Vajrapāni provides an earlier terminus ante ˙ because he would have had to go quem for Shes rab Grags’s visit to Nepal, there prior to Vajrapāni’s death before . ˙ Maitrı̄pāda’s student Vajrapāni, Shes rab Grags Besides his work with ˙ Nālandapāda,79 also worked with a minor student of Maitrı̄pāda called with whom he translated a short Vajrayoginı̄-sādhana.80 He also collaborated with a little-known master named *Digı̄śānandana,81 together with whom he produced a translation of a ritual written by the Nepalese master 76) See BA (da.b4, p. ; Roerich, :): phyis lo lnga bcu bzhes pa’i tshe ye rang du byon nas bzhugs/. “When he had reached the age of , he went to Patan (ye rang) and settled there.” The same information is also given by Lo Bue (:). The Indo-Tibetan age of  is equivalent to the Western age of , and thus if he was born in , the year when he turned  would be . 77) See fn. , where BA says that Vajrapāni came to Tibet some time after , which ˙ already in the late s. may thus indicate that Vajrapāni visited Tibet ˙ 78) See argument by Roberts (:). 79) Judging from the name Nālandapāda (nā landa pa or nā lendra pa), this pandita seems ˙ ˙ (da.b , somehow to have been associated with Nālanda monastery in Northern India. BA 7 page ; Roerich, :) lists him as one of the ten minor students of Maitrı̄pāda, and he can thus be dated as having lived in the middle into the second half of the th century. He also seems to have been involved in the transmission of the Kālacakratantra, because BA (tha.a5, p. ; Roerich, :) says in another passage that Nālandapāda also was a student of Kālacakrapāda the younger (dus zhabs pa chung ba), and mentions the hearsay that Nālandapāda appears to have visited Tibet for some time. Cf. fn. , which points to there having been more than one Nālandapāda. 80) Namely, Q / D Indrabhūti’s *Siddhivajrayoginı̄sādhana (grub pa’i rdo rje rnal ’byor ma’i sgrub pa’i thabs,  folios), transl. by the Indian scholar Śrı̄ Nālandapāda (nā lendra pa) and the translator-monk (lots’a ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti (see D.a7-b1). 81) Little is known of *Digı̄śānandana (phyogs dbang dga’ byed ). He did not participate in any other translation with Tibetan scholars, and no further information is available about him. Given that the text that Prajñākı̄rti translated under *Digı̄śanandana’s instruction was composed by the Nepalese master Devākaracandra, who was a contemporary of Vajrapāni, ˙ *Digı̄śānandana must have been active no earlier than the middle of the th century. He possibly also lived in Nepal, as did Devākaracandra.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – [Śūnyatā-]Samādhivajra (a.k.a. Devākaracandra),82 who was another major student of Maitrı̄pāda. To sum up, the following conclusions have been reached so far about Shes rab Grags’s travel to Nepal. Based on his encounters with Maitrı̄pāda and Vajrapāni, his travel could not have begun later than . During his trip, Shes˙ rab Grags worked primarily in Nepal with Nepalese teachers or with Indian teachers living in Nepal. There is hardly any evidence that he went on to India and worked extensively with Indian teachers there. The majority of the translations he produced during his stay abroad were made under the name Prajñākı̄rti, with only few works written under his Tibetan name; the only translation made in Nepal using his Tibetan name, namely the *Sugata-mata-vibhaṅga-bhāsya translation done together with ˙ Kanakaśrı̄mitra, was possibly created during the early phase of his stay. There is little or no evidence that he ever used the name Prajñākı̄rti for the translations he made while residing in Tibet, whereas there is evidence that he went back to using his Tibetan name Shes rab Grags after having returned from Nepal to Tibet, as evidenced by the colophon of his autotranslation of Vajragarbha’s *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā. ˙ time ˙ to return to our startingWith these conclusions in mind, it is˙now point, namely Shes rab Grags’s translation of Laksmı̄’s commentary SSP, which was the text containing the possibly early˙ hagiographies of several Tantric masters of Uddiyāna. As shown in the Tibetan translation’s ˙ ˙ Tibetan translation was made by Shes rab colophon quoted above, the Grags under his Sanskritized name Prajñākı̄rti. In accordance with the pattern created by the other translations made under this Indian name, the use of the form Prajñākı̄rti indicates that Shes rab Grags probably produced this translation during his travel to Nepal. Hence, Laksmı̄’s SSP was probably ˙ tradition. transmitted to Tibet from a north Indian or Nepalese Moreover, the colophon also stated that Shes rab Grags made his translation in collaboration with “the great Indian scholar of *Mānavihāra” (rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po ma na bi ha ra la).83 The first part of 82) Namely, Q / D *Samādhivajra’s (ting nge ’dzin rdo rje) *Antestavidhi (tha ma’i mchod pa’i cho ga), transl. by the Indian scholar *Digı̄śanandana (phyogs˙˙dbang dga’ byed ) and the translator-monk (lo ts’a ba dge slong) Prajñākı̄rti (see D.a6). 83) The latter part of the name, i.e., “of *Mānavihāra,” occurs with several variants in the Tibetan editions, all of which are slightly corrupt. The best reading appears in Q, where it is rendered as ma na bi ha ra la. As is the usual custom for Tibetan Sanskrit transcription, the Tibetan letter b may represent either Sanskrit b or v, and as will be argued below, it should here be read as v. The two closest variants of Q’s reading are found in the two bstan ’gyur Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  the name, viz. ma na bi ha ra, is in all likelihood to be identified as the name of the ancient Nepalese monastery Mānavihāra founded by the fifth-sixth-century Licchavi-king Mānadeva,84 which Lévi (:) identified with the present-day Cakravihāra in Patan.85 The last syllable of the name, viz. la in Tibetan, seems to be corrupt,86 and might be emended to pa, thus yielding the name *Mānavihārapa,87 meaning “of *Mānavihāra.” Less likely, it might also be emended to lāla, thus resulting in the name *Mānavihāralāla.88 There is, however, no further information available of any person with a name starting with *Mānavihāra (or similar), since the Tibetan historical sources and the colophons of the Tibetan canons do not attest any other occurrences of such a name. Nevertheless, on the basis of the information provided by the present colophon, it could be concluded catalogs by Bu ston Rin chen Grub (–) written in  and by Zhu chen Tshul khrims Rin chen (–) written in the th century. These catalogs respectively attest the forms ma nā bi ha la la and ma nā bi ha ra la. See the Lha sa Zhol xylograph of Bu ston’s Collected Works, TBRC W, vol. La, bstan ’gyur gyi dkar chag yid bzhin nor bu dbang gi rgyal po’i phreng ba, folio b5, and the sde dge bstan ’gyur dkar chags by Zhu chen Tshul khrims Rin chen, folio a6, ACIP electronic edition. Aside of Q, the other bstan ’gyur editions (NGD) all attest the highly corrupted form ma nā bhi ha la la. The Co ne bstan ’gyur was currently not available to me. As will be argued below, the first part of the name seems to correspond to the name of the Nepalese monastery Mānavihāra, and the Tibetan text must therefore be emended to *mā na bi hā ra pa or *mā na bi hā ra lā la. 84) For information on Mānavihāra, see Sanderson (:–). 85) Dmitriy N. Lielukhine (private communication) has instead suggested that Mānavihāra might have been somewhere near Gumvihāra, located outside the town of Sankhu,  km northeast of present-day Kathmandu, and today a temple devoted to Bajrayoginı̄. 86) It may be tempting to interpret the syllable la as a Tibetan locative particle, but that is impossible given its placement in the sentence and the fact that the la is immediately followed by the nominal conjunction dang. If intended as a locative phrase, the grammatically correct placement would have been at the beginning of the sentence, i.e., *mā na bi hā ra la rgya gar gyi mkhan po chen po dang/ bod kyi lotstsha ba …, because a locative clause must precede the words it refers to, viz. the Indian scholar and Prajñākı̄rti. Furthermore, there seem to be no examples in the Tibetan canon of a locative particle la followed by the conjunction dang, which renders such an interpretation highly unlikely. 87) If the la is interpreted as a corrupt form of pa, then the name *Mānavihārapa, corresponding loosely to Sanskrit *Mānavihārapāda, “the venerable one of Mānavihāra,” would be parallel to the construction of the name Nālandapa or Nālendrapa (Skt. Nālandapāda) mentioned above (see fn. ), i.e., a monastery-name followed by the Tibetan nominalizing particle pa. 88) Male names ending in °Lāla are common in Nepal and Northern India, at least in later periods, but it is not sure that such a name ever occurs as a Buddhist monastic name, or in combination with a toponym such as Mānavihāra, and I cannot furnish any examples from the th century. Therefore, the emendation *Mānavihāralāla must be considered less likely than the simpler emendation *Mānavihārapa.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – that Shes rab Grags collaborated with an Indian scholar who resided in the Nepalese monastery Mānavihāra for the production of his Tibetan translation of Laksmı̄’s SSP. ˙ Shes rab Grags’s cooperation with *Mānavihārapa, Bu ston Concerning Rin chen Grub claimed in his bstan ’gyur catalog of  that Shes rab Grags’s translation of SSP was an auto-translation (rang ’gyur), here probably meaning a translation made by Shes rab Grags by himself after he had studied the text with *Mānavihārapa.89 This interpretation may have arisen due to the fact that the colophon contains the spurious phrase “… was translated … after having listened well [to its explanation]” (legs par mnyan nas bsgyur pa lags so). A similar expression occurs in Shes rab Grags’s translation of Vajragarbha’s *Hevajra-pindārtha-tı̄kā, which is explicitly stated ˙ ˙ rab Grags ˙ first to have been translated after Shes had returned from Nepal to Tibet.90 Nevertheless, even if Bu ston may be right that the phrase “after having listened well” perhaps signals that Shes rab Grags produced his translation of SSP by himself at some point after having studied the text with *Mānavihārapa, the fact that he still used his pen-name Prajñākı̄rti 89) See the Lha sa Zhol xylograph of Bu ston’s Collected Works, TBRC W, vol. La, bstan ’gyur gyi dkar chag yid bzhin nor bu dbang gi rgyal po’i phreng ba, folio b5, where it says: lhan cig skyes grub kyi gzhung ’grel lha lcam btsun ma dpal mos mdzad pa/ pandi ta ma n’a ˙ ˙ composed bi ha la la dang/ lo tsā ba pradznyā kı̄rti’i rang ’gyur. “The Sahajasiddhipaddhati by Laksmı̄ Bhattārikā Devı̄ [is] an auto-translation of the pandita ma nā bi ha la la and ˙ ba Prajñākı̄rti.” ˙˙ the Lotsā It should be noted that other early˙ ˙bstan ’gyur catalogs of the th century do not designate this text as an auto-translation. Thus, in his two catalogs, Karma pa Rang byung rdo rje (–) merely states that the translation was made by Prajñākı̄rti without mentioning *Mānavihārapa, but in general the collaborating Indian panditas are not always named in these catalogs. See thugs dam bstan ’gyur gyi dkar chag ˙ ˙ W), vol. nga, folio b (p. ): lhan cig skyes grub slob dpon in tra bo tis (TBRC 2–3 mdzad pa dang/ de nyid kyi gzhung ’grel lha lcam dpal mos mdzad pa dang/ pradznya ghir te’i ’gyur/. “The *Sahajasiddhi composed by Ācārya Indrabodhi and its commentary composed by princess Laksmı̄ and translated by Prajñākı̄rti.” Further, see bstan bcos ’gyur ro ’tshal gyi ˙ W), vol. nga, folio a (p. ): lhan cig skyes grub shes rab dkar chag (TBRC 1–2 grags kyis ’gyur mdzad pa/ de’i ’grel pa dpal mos mdzad pa ’gyur gong ltar/. “*Sahajasiddhi translated by Shes rab Grags and its commentary composed by Laksmı̄ and translated ˙ translations in by the aforesaid.” SS and SSP are not listed among ’Bro Shes rab Grags’s Bcom ldan rig pa’i ral gri’s (–) catalog entitled Bstan pa rgyas pa rgyan gyi nyi ’od (Schaeffer & van der Kuijp, :), but the list provided there also omits many other of his known translations, and should therefore not be taken as evidence that these texts were not translated by Shes rab Grags. 90) The colophon of that text says, “Translated … after … having then listen well [to its explanation]” (legs par mnyan te bsgyur ba’o). For the complete colophon with English translation, see fn. . Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  probably indicates that the translation was made during his stay in Nepal. This may be contrasted with the colophon of the *Hevajra-pindārtha˙˙ tı̄kā, which was made after Shes rab Grags’s return to Tibet, wherein he ˙consequently used his Tibetan name. Conclusion The root-text of Indrabuddhi’s SS was translated in Tibet by the Kashmirian pandita Somanātha and the Tibetan translator ’Bro Lotsā ba Shes rab Grags ˙ ˙ time in the period –. That the root-text was translated in some Tibet is supported by Shes rab Grags’s use of his Tibetan name. The text and its explanation are likely to have been brought to Tibet from Kashmir by Somanātha. It is possible that Somanātha obtained this text and its transmission during his years of study in Magadha. Secondly, Laksmı̄’s commentary SSP was translated by Shes rab Grags working with an ˙Indian scholar residing in or associated with the Mānavihāra temple in or near Kathmandu. That the translation was produced in Nepal is supported by Shes rab Grags’s use of his Sanskritized pen-name Prajñākı̄rti. The latest possible date for Shes rab Grags’s journey to Nepal is in the late s, prior to the death of Vajrapāni, and for this reason the ˙ perhaps less likely, in translation was probably made in the s or, but s. A general estimate of the transmission-history of these texts to Tibet must therefore be that the collaboration between Somanātha and Shes rab Grags took place in the s, lasting around – years if judged from the amount of text they translated together, and that Shes rab Grags’s journey to Nepal occurred in the s, possibly lasting around – years, again if judged from the amount of translated text. I have here attempted to clarify the history of the extant witnesses of Laksmı̄’s SSP, since this commentary may turn out to be a significant ˙ for understanding the history of the Tantric traditions of India and source Pakistan, particularly the traditions of the Swat valley known in our sources as Uddiyāna. The next step in the process of evaluating the authenticity of ˙ its value as a historical witness will be to analyze the question SSP ˙and of whether its authorship really can be ascribed to Laksmı̄ from Uddiyāna, ˙ ˙ which is an analysis that must be based on the available internal and˙external evidence of the text itself. That analysis will be taken up in my next paper on this topic.  Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () – Abbreviations and Primary Sources BA The Blue Annals, Deb ther sngon po, completed in  by ’Gos Lotsā ba Gzhon nu Dpal and his students. Yangs pa can xylograph. Published by Lokesh Chandra, Sata-Pitaka Series vol. , TBRC W–. bstan ’gyur dpe bsdur ma, modern˙edition of the bstan ’gyur in  volumes, mainly based on D but including critical apparatus noting variant readings from Q, N, and D. Edited by Krung go’i bod kyi shes rig zhib ’jug lte gnas kyi bka’ bstan dpe sdur khang, , Beijing: Krung go’i bod kyi shes rig dpe skrun khang. Bu ston Rin chen Grub’s “History of Buddhism” (short title chos ’byung chen mo) entitled bde bar gshegs pa’i bstan pa’i gsal byed chos kyi ’byung gnas gsung rab rin po che’i mdzod chos ’byung,  folios, contained in bu ston thams cad mkhyen pa’i bka’ ’bum, Lha sa Zhol xylograph, vol. Ya (), text , pp. – , TBRC W–. For a critical edition, see Szerb (), and English translation by Obermiller (). C The Co ne xylograph of the Tibetan canon. D The Sde dge xylograph of the Tibetan canon, catalogued by Ui (). DCB Tāranātha’s (b. ) dpal dus kyi ’khor lo’i chos skor gyi ’byung khungs nyer mkho bsdus pa,  folios, contained in rje btsun tā ra nā tha’i gsung ’bum, ’Dzam thang edition, vol. Kha, text , pp. –, TBRC W-. Dpa’ bo Gtsug lag Phreng ba, dam pa’i chos kyi ’khor lo bsgyur ba rnams kyi byung ba gsal bar byed pa mkhas pa’i dga’ ston, Beijing: mi rigs dpe skrun khang, ,  pp. G Golden Manuscript Tengyur. Catalogued by Ngag dbang Norbu (). Gro lung pa Blo gros ’Byung gnas (th–th century), gro lung pa blo gros ’byung gnas kyis mdzad pa’i blo ldan shes rab kyi rnam thar, written in  (lcags po’i rta’i lo), contained bka’ gdams gsung ’bum phyogs bsgrigs, vol. , pp. –, Sichuan: Dpal brtsegs Bod yig Dpe rnying Zhib ’jug khang, . HKa Bu ston Rin chen Grub’s (–) “History of Kālacakra” (short title dus ’khor chos ’byung) entitled rgyud sde zab don sgo ’byed rin chen gces pa’i lde mig,  folios, written in , contained in bu ston thams cad mkhyen pa’i bka’ ’bum, Lha sa Zhol xylograph, vol. Nga (), text , pp. –, TBRC W–. HKb Bu ston Rin chen Grub’s “History of Kālacakra” entitled dpal dus kyi ’khor lo’i chos ’byung bu rin po ches mdzad pa’o (same text as KHa),  folios, dbu med manuscript contained Bo dong Pan chen Phyogs las Rnam rgyal’s (–) collected works published as˙ Encyclopedia Tibetica: the Collected Works of Bo-dong Pan-chen Phogs-las-rnam-rgyal, edited by ˙ –, vol.  Zham, text , S.T. Kazi, New Delhi: Tibet House, ˙ TBRC W-, pp. –. N The Snar thang xylograph of the Tibetan canon, catalogued by Mibu (). Q The Peking xylograph of the Tibetan canon, catalogued by Suzuki (– ). Ulrich Timme Kragh / Indo-Iranian Journal  () –  Si tu Pan chen Chos kyi ’Byung gnas, karma kam tshang brgyud pa’ rin po che’i ˙ thar rab ’byams nor bu zla ba chu shel gyi ˙ phreng ba’i kha skong (TBRC rnam W-vol. ). SS Indrabuddhi’s root-text Sahajasiddhi. SSP Laksmı̄’s commentary Sahajasiddhipaddhati. Tāranātha ˙Sgrol ba’i Mgon po (–), bka’ babs bdun ldan gyi brgyud pa’i rnam thar ngo mtshar rmad du byung ba rin po che’i khungs lta bu’i gtam contained in the ’Dzam thang edition of rje btsun tā ra nā tha’i gsung ’bum, vol.  Tsa, TBRC W-. References Buescher, Hartmut & Tarab Tulku (): Catalogue of Tibetan Manuscripts and Xylographs, vol. –, Copenhagen: Det Kongelige Bibliotek, and Richmond: Curzon Press. Davidson, Ronald M. (): Tibetan Rennaissance: Tantric Buddhism in the Rebirth of Tibetan Culture, New York: Columbia University Press. 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