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Rnying ma Tantras Tibetan scholars conventionally divide their canonical tantric literature under two major rubrics: the old tantras (rnying ma) of the earlier spread of the doctrine (bstan pa snga dar) and the new tantras (gsar ma), of the later spread of the doctrine (bstan pa phyi dar). The terminology developed after many previously unknown translations of Indian texts began to enter Tibet from the late 10th century onward, becoming known as the new tantras: hence the tantric traditions that had appeared before became known as the old tantras. This distinction applied only within the most esoteric types of tantras, mainly those that had begun to appear after the 8th century, and which accepted prominent use of charnel ground (kāpālika) symbolism. Doctrinally, they were associated with a radical non-dualism, that could, if not understood, be misconstrued as subversive of conventional morality. Doxographical classification in tantric Buddhism has never been uniform, so that precise definitions are difficult. Nevertheless, at slight risk of generalisation, one can say that the term old tantras nowadays implies texts from the three categories of mahāyoga, anuyoga, and atiyoga, indicating progressive gradations of subtlety and inwardness: mahāyoga focuses on deity meditation and visualisation; anuyoga on more inward yogas of subtle physical veins and wheels (nạ̄ī, cakra); and atiyoga (also known as rdzogs chen) on the highest formless meditations on the ultimate nature of reality. The term new tantras usually implies texts classified as rnal ‘byor bla na med pa’i rgyud (equivalent to the Sanskrit terms yogottaratantras, yoginītantras, or yoganiruttaratantras; Sanderson, 2009, 146). The more exoteric tantras, which had appeared in India in earlier centuries, categorized by different authorities in various ways and under various rubrics, including kriyātantras, caryātantras, upāyatantras, ubhayatantras, and yogatantras, were, along with the Mahāyāna and, in Tibetan parlance, so-called Hīnayāna scriptures, mainly accepted as a shared common heritage of all Tibetan Buddhism. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2015 Also available online – www.brill Issues of Canonicity The distinction between new tantras and old tantras is more than merely a chronological designation, since despite a considerable overlap of shared materials and approaches, the old and new tantric traditions can also reflect differences of ethos and doctrine. While the new tantras adopted a simple lexical approach to translation privileging text autonomy, the old tantras reflect the earliest efforts at transplanting tantric culture in a much broader sense from India to Tibet, thus privileging target audience needs, and involving a significant degree of adaptive localization to Tibetan culture and civilisation (Mayer, 1996, 1–153). As a consequence, although they were compiled largely from Indic materials and to Indic templates, there existed in many cases no exact Indian equivalent texts from which the old tantras had originally been translated. A related and more important factor was that the old tantras persisted in celebrating an original Indian tantric vision (Gray, 2010), of a canon that was in theory unclosable, since infinite quantities of tantras as yet unknown would always remain in the buddha fields, whence they could be transmitted to fortunate human siddhas (perfected masters) at any time. A moderate number of new tantric scriptures thus continue to appear within the old tantra tradition until the present day, amongst the revealed treasure literature (gter ma). By contrast, and especially after the decline of Buddhism in India, the new tantras eventually became associated with the conception of a canon that was in theory closable, in the sense that all the Buddha’s teachings intended for Tibet had already been uttered, even if a small number might still remain to be collected. As a result, the canonicity of the old tantras has sometimes been questioned by those who believe exclusively in a closable canon. Thus, very few old tantras were included in the original redaction of Kanjur (Bka’ ’gyur), the 14th-century scriptural compilation which marked Tibet’s first effective attempts at canonical closure. Partly inspired by the decline of Buddhism in India, and partly by the example of a state-regulated canon in China, at least according to tradition the Tibetan Kanjur was BEB, vol. I Rnying ma Tantras initiated at Narthang (Snar thang) by a Bka’ gdams pa follower of the new tantras, Jamyang (’Byams dbyangs), who was at the time serving in China at the court of the Yuan Emperor Renzong (仁宗) or Buyantu Khan (r. 1311–1320), and who sent funds back to Narthang together with requests urging that such a canon be made (Harrison, 1996, 74–76; see also Gzhon nu dpal, 1984–1985, 410–412). However, some slightly later Kanjurs, following the 14th-century Tshal pa redaction, did begin to accept a small segregated old tantras section, while a regional late 17th-century Kanjur from Tawang, connected with the fifth and sixth Dalai Lamas, includes many more old tantras amongst the main body of its collection (Samten, 1994). There is little evidence for a closed canon of Vajrayāna texts in the great Indian centers of learning to which Tibetans had traditionally turned, such as the monastic universities of Nālandā or Vikramaśīla, or, for that matter, even of a closed Indian canon for Mahāyāna scriptures. On the contrary, the Indian siddhas’ vision was more often one of unlimited tantric scriptures existing in the buddha fields, which could be progressively revealed to human siddhas on earth over the course of time. A model for a closed canon was of course supplied by the Tripiṭaka of mainstream texts. However, there is little evidence this model was applied by the early Indian missionaries to the tantric scriptures they brought to Tibet; for at that time, from the late 8th century to the 10th century, Indian Tantrism was still in its most productive phase, so that for the first two hundred years and more of tantric Buddhism in Tibet, numerous new tantric Buddhist scriptures were still being revealed in India, some of which, like the Hevajratantra and the Kālacakratantra, were to become highly influential in many parts of Asia. In China, by contrast, a systematic control of the Buddhist canon modelled on secular precedents had first been attempted as early as the 6th century, and in subsequent centuries, the regulation of the Buddhist canon increasingly became a significant aspect of Chinese governance, supported by a growing bibliographical literature that sought to identify undesirable texts by virtue of their non-Indic origins or their excessively transgressive tantric content (Lancaster, 1989, 187; Tokuno, 1990). A major difference between the old and new tantra traditions is thus that while the former remained conservatively attached to the original Indian model of an open, somewhat distributed, and only informally regulated tantric scriptural literature, the latter promoted the reforming, modernizing 391 agenda of a single monolithic and highly regulated set of tantras to be included in a single canon alongside the sūtras and other non-tantric Buddhist scriptures which, while different from the Chinese model in its internal arrangement of texts, its rejection in most cases of multiple translations, and its inclusion of esoteric tantras, nevertheless resembled the Chinese canon in its basic rationale of regulation, normalization, and centralization, and in its adoption of the proven existence of an exact Indian equivalent, as the only valid criterion of orthodoxy. While for these reasons excluded from the prestigious new Kanjur (the so-called Old Narthang), many old tantras continued to be preserved within their original collections, simply known as tantra collections (rgyud ’bum) or, after a while, old tantra collections (rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum). Some texts are preserved in more specialized collections, such as the Vairo Rgyud ’bum and the Rgyud bcu bdun, which have only atiyoga texts, or the Rnying ma Bka’ ma, which was compiled slightly later and has a few tantric scriptures accompanied by many more commentaries. Other old tantras have never joined such collections, but have simply remained dispersed within various collections of revealed treasure literature (gter ma). It is not known when the first large collections of old tantras appeared, but it was probably quite early: there is, for example, mention of an 11th- or 12th-century collection of old tantras at the seat of the Zur family, a famous Rnying ma hereditary lineage (Mayer, 1996, 224). A collection in 30 volumes containing 335 texts (or 375 by another count) is also mentioned in the biography of the Rnying ma master Nam mkha’ dpal (1171[?]–1237[?]), who is said to have compiled it on the occasion of the death of his father, the great codifier of the old tantras, Nyang ral nyi ma ’i ’od zer (1124–1192), although this collection seems to have also included a number of new tantras (Nyang ral, vol. I, 1977, 55–59). Over succeeding centuries, many further collections of old tantras were made, which varied in both size and contents. A notable development was the old tantra collection in 42 volumes organized by Ratna Gling pa in the 15th century, based on the Zur family collection mentioned above, which is said to be the basis of modern recensions and transmissions (Mayer, 1996, 225). The surviving old tantra collections still vary in size and contents, between 929 texts in 46 volumes, in the probably 17th-century Bhutanese manuscript recension, and 448 texts in 26 volumes in the late 18th-century Sde dge xylograph. Excluding the unknown number of scriptures preserved only 392 Rnying ma Tantras within gter ma collections, the total number of different texts within the extant old tantra collections per se has recently been estimated by the University of Virginia’s online Tibetan and Himalayan Library as 1,133, of which 478 are classified as rdzogs chen, 45 as anuyoga, 568 as mahāyoga, and 42 as supplementary texts (kha skong). No other categories of texts are included within the old tantra collections other than these three most esoteric types of tantras, all of which are believed to record the utterances of or dialogues between enlightened buddhas. The modern study of the old tantra collections is not so advanced as that of the Kanjur, and their study is additionally hampered by the destruction since the 1950s by the Chinese of about 95% of old tantra collection witnesses (personal communication, E.G. Smith). While every Rnying ma monastery of substance once sought to own an old tantra collection, nowadays, only 13 witnesses are known to survive, all but two in Bhutan and Nepal. Collectively, they fall within six different doxographical redactions (see below, where they are listed within their groupings). Being largely excluded from the Kanjur does not seem to have adversely affected the status or circulation of the old tantras. Their carefully honed adaptations to Tibetan culture garnered popularity, not only within the Rnying ma school, but across the other traditions too. Although notionally based upon the new tantras, the important Bka’ brgyud traditions in particular have made copious use of the old tantras, to the extent that in some cases, they practice as much or even more old tantra than new tantra. The ’Khon clan hierarchs, hereditary heads of the Sa skya school which notionally upholds a new tantra orthodoxy, retain the old tantra cycle of Rdo rje Phur pa as their main meditational deity (yi dam), and the great Dge lugs monastery of Se ra, one of Tibet’s major institutions and notionally based on the new tantras, also took the old tantra cycle of Rta mgrin yang gsang (Hayagrīva) as its main meditational deity (Dreyfus, 2003, 348n48). Several Dalai Lamas, notably the fifth, thirteenth, and fourteenth, have been active promoters of the old tantras, not least because the visionary old tantra usage of Tibetan national narratives has rendered them a key element in attempts at national reunification, throughout Tibetan history (Kapstein, 2000, 141–162). So while some might assume Tibet to have a notionally closed canon, the actual historical reality is more complex: the case was rather that of a dual system in which notionally closed and open tantric canons co-existed in parallel. If some advocates of the closed canon rejected the open canon as apocryphal, and if some advocates of the open canon likewise deprecated the closed canon as including texts inferior to their own (Ogyan Tanzin, 2013), and as having lost its revelatory vitality, it seems more probable that over the longer course of Tibetan history, an overall majority of lamas have de facto accepted in parallel the simultaneous validity of both open and closed canons. Historical Origins Tibetan historiography associates the old tantras with the great state-sponsored introduction of Buddhism that began in the late 7th century, when Emperor Khri Srong lde btsan invited many famous Buddhist teachers to Tibet, including some masters of Tantra. Yet the evidence from this period is by no means unambiguous. More exoteric tantric systems were indeed translated, and some of these were actively promoted, for example, the Mahāvairocanābhisaṃbodhitantra as a part of state ritual, and the Sarvadurgatipariśodhanatantra as a mortuary text to replace the traditional funerary rite. However, the more esoteric forms of tantric Buddhism (Vajrayāna) that made prominent use of charnel ground imagery, which were still relatively new and controversial even in India at that time, seem to have been controlled (Ishikawa, 1990, 4). The two surviving official catalogues of texts translated (’Phang thang ma and Ldan dkar ma/Lhan dkar ma) show little sign of the vast repertoire of highly esoteric mahāyogatantras, anuyogatantras, and atiyogatantras, which the later Rnying ma tradition takes as its most prestigious and important scriptures, and upon which it is founded (although we cannot say whether some such texts might have appeared in the third catalogue that is no longer extant, the Mchims phu ma; Hermann-Pfandt, 2002, 129–149; Halkias, 2004, 46–105). Likewise, esoteric Vajrayāna translational terms were not systematically included in the official lexicographic tracts prepared to facilitate and standardise translation. One of them, the Sgra sbyor bam po gnyis pa of 814 ce, specified that such tantras should be kept secret by order of the state because of their unsuitability for the spiritually immature, and then observed that the existing translations of such tantras had already caused damage through their concealed meanings not being understood, so that further translation should stop (Ishikawa, 1990, 4). It is noteworthy also that an important early Rnying ma Tantras historical source, the Dba’ bzhed (Testament of Ba), describes how the great master of Vajrayāna, Padmasambhava, was invited to Tibet by the emperor, but created alarm through his inordinate and frightening displays of miraculous powers, and so was sent back to India after only a short time (Wangdu & Diemberger, 2000, 52–60). Elsewhere the same text mentions that the translation was banned of the type of teachings with which Padmasambhava was associated, the mahāyogatantras (Wangdu & Diemberger, 2000, 88), It is unfortunate that a serious dearth of sources renders the early history of the old tantras frustratingly obscure. After the collapse of the Tibetan Empire in the mid-9th century, disorder prevailed across most of the region for nearly a 150 years, in a period known as the “Time of Fragments” (bsil ba’i dus), when the historical record became largely erased. It is therefore very hard to ascertain if kāpālika-style Vajrayāna was entirely banned during the empire, or if it was merely restricted to small elite circles who had already obtained it, or if it was at first restricted, and later allowed more widely. Scholars are still struggling to understand the early history of the old tantras. Proto-Rnying ma texts at Dunhuang That Vajrayāna did become successful quite early on is established by a partial glimpse into the latter part of the “Time of Fragments,” offered by an ancient sealed document store which remained undisturbed in Dunhuang, a cave temple site at the Chinese side of the Silk Routes, until its recovery in the 20th century. The numerous largely 10th-century tantric manuscripts amongst its holdings reveal a snapshot from shortly before the phyi dar, of what one might call a flourishing proto-Rnying ma, already showing many of the texts, named personages, doctrines, and tantric doxographical categories, associated with the later Rnying ma school. For example, the greater part of the Dunhuang materials on the popular phur pa rituals reappeared within later Rnying ma texts (Cantwell & Mayer, 2008), and the longest of them (IOL Tib J 331.III) became quite prominent, through its incorporation complete and verbatim into the definitive 12th-century codification of Rnying ma mahāyoga, Nyang ral nyi ma’i ’od zer’s Bka’ brgyad bde gshegs ’dus pa (see below). Another influential survivor from Dunhuang is the ’Phags pa Thabs kyi zhags pa padma ’phreng 393 gi don bsdus pa (henceforth Thabs zhags), which together with its commentary, comprises IOL Tib J 321 in the British Library (Cantwell & Mayer, 2012). This unique manuscript, intact in 85 folios, gives us our most fully comprehensive, detailed, and entirely unmodified view into proto-Rnying ma Tantrism before the phyi dar. The Thabs zhags has remained canonical for the Rnying ma, who consider it one of their 18 tantras of mahāyoga, a core grouping of highly prestigious texts, several of which are referred to amongst the Dunhuang finds (Almogi, 2014). As ever, the dating of tantric texts is difficult, but here we can take advantage of the Indological work of A. Sanderson. The Thabs zhags and others among the 18 tantras of mahāyoga share several historical indicators with the Sarvabuddhasamāyog ạākinījālaśaṃvara, a version of which is also mentioned at Dunhuang, and which itself also became one of the 18 tantras of mahāyoga. A. Sanderson has established this text to be historically intermediate between the Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha and the Guhyasamāja on the one hand, and the full-on yoginī or yoganiruttaratantras on the other hand. Thus Sanderson locates its production in India from the late 8th through 9th centuries (Sanderson, 2009, 145ff), in other words, broadly contemporaneous with Emperor Khri Srong lde btsan and his successors. So if tantric texts of this type did indeed enter Tibet at that time, they will still have been very new in India, and not yet universally accepted there. The Thabs zhags still retains reasonably clear doctrinal connections with the earlier more exoteric yogatantras, of the type that had not been banned by the Tibetan emperor. It maintains two parallel pantheons: a maṇ̣ala (circle) of fifty peaceful deities which was an adaptation of the 37 deity maṇ̣ala of the Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha basic to yogatantra, but here, the male and female figures are paired as consorts, and a number of further female deities are added to complete the set. Then there is a parallel more esoteric maṇ̣ala of terrifying charnel-ground deities, whose central form is the ferocious Ś rī Heruka still familiar to modern Rnying ma, with 9 heads and 18 arms, surrounded by the still popular ten wrathful deities (Khro bo bcu), each accompanied by two zoocephalic female emanations. The central terrifying female is specified in the commentary as Ral gcig ma (Ekajaṭā), still to this day the main ma mo or wrathful female deity of the Rnying ma pantheon. IOL Tib J 321 has a marginal note connecting the revelation of the Thabs zhags root scripture with Padmasambhava, the highly mythologised founder 394 Rnying ma Tantras of Tibetan tantric Buddhism, here already presented as a uniquely great enlightened being. Another marginal note cites Śāntigarbha, an Indian yogatantra master whom later Rnying ma tradition describes as one of Padmasambhava’s gurus, praising either Padmasambhava or his work. The concluding verse of the commentary is a praise of Padmasambhava as the “Lotus King” (padma rgyal po), which verse was later incorporated into the mainstream Padmasambhava hagiographical tradition (Cantwell & Mayer, 2012, 93). The doctrinal ethos of the Thabs zhags is not at all dissimilar to that of later Rnying ma authors, such as Rong zom pa (11th cent.; exact dates unknown) and Klong chen pa (1308–1362), who cite it several times. One of its principal concerns is to interiorize ritual, as we can see, for example, in the empowerment rite of chapter 3. Usually, tantric empowerments are described as complex external ritual procedures engaging numerous material implements. But here, it is redefined as essentially an interiorized contemplative process, based upon the spiritual qualities naturally innate to the human mind. Another preoccupation is to integrate the pragmatic rituals so typical of tantric literature, and ostensibly for worldly ends such as wealth and power, with doctrine. More than half of all the chapters of the Thabs zhags commentary (chs. 18–40) are dedicated specifically to the encoding of mainstream abstract Buddhist doctrines within a wide range of quotidian pragmatic rituals, so that the rehearsal of those doctrines was rendered inseparable from and integral to the performance of such rituals (Cantwell & Mayer, 2012, 78–82). The Thabs zhags version of mahāyoga bears a close resemblance to the doctrine of the sameness of all dharmas (mnyam pa’i chos) of the Rgyud gsang ba’i snying po or *Guhyagarbhatantra, which is nowadays considered the most prestigious of all tantras by the Rnying ma school. Like the Rgyud gsang ba’i snying po, the Thabs zhags too, on numerous occasions, uses terminology built around the words mnyam pa or mnyam pa nyid or mnyam nyid (“even,” “evenness,” or “sameness”). Hence it is not surprising that later doxographers often paired the Thabs zhags with the *Guhyagarbha. This famous doctrine, which involves realising all phenomena of saṃsāra and nirvāṇa alike as primordially pure, is seen by some modern scholars (Karmay, 1988, 11) as one of the historical roots of the Rdzogs chen (“Great Perfection”) mysticism of the Rnying ma pa. Recent modern research into Dunhuang documents has now shown that despite all the traditional uncertainties about their origins, the old tantra traditions extant today do reflect at least some genuinely old traditions, including several that were already well developed by the time the Dunhuang caves were sealed in the 11th century; and moreover that a small but important core of old tantra texts did have close Indian counterparts, even if further redactions might have been made to them in Tibet. There are in fact direct suggestions within some Dunhuang sources that early Tibetan tantric scriptures were deliberately redacted by Indian siddhas to suit Tibetan audiences. PT44 describes Padmasambhava redacting the full textual corpus of the Kīla (“Stake”) deity that he had procured from the Indian monastic university of Nālandā into a new arrangement for transmission to his Tibetan and Nepalese disciples, now redacted to incorporate Himalayan protector deities that he himself had newly tamed (Cantwell & Mayer, 2008, 41–68). Likewise, IOL Tib J 321 seems to suggest Padmasambhava as the revealer of the Thabs zhags scripture (Cantwell & Mayer, 2012, 91–99). If so, this could be of interest because it is the earliest known text to introduce the distinctively old tantra form of the winged Heruka. References to such winged Herukas seem to be extremely infrequent in Indian sources, unless in rare hybridized forms with Garuḍa; yet the classic old tantra form of Heruka is both independently winged and quite ubiquitous. This seems significant because birds, wings, and avian symbolism in general, are fundamental to indigenous Tibetan religion, so that the highly accentuated presence of wings on the old tantric Herukas might have originated as a means of adaptive indigenization. Some Differences between Old Tantras and New Tantras It seems likely that most old tantras were produced in Tibet through the 9th and 10th centuries, by Tibetan masters quite possibly emulating their Indian siddha counterparts, who during that period produced many new tantras in India. We thus witness two Vajrayāna traditions proliferating at a similar time and under similar conditions of political instability, but largely independently: In the political chaos of postimperial Tibet, what were to become Tibet’s old tantras were compiled in Tibetan, while in India, in the political chaos between the first and second Pala empires, what were to become Tibet’s new tantras were compiled in Sanskrit. Rnying ma Tantras A number of cultural differences therefore characterize the new and old tantras. While the Indian yoganiruttaratantras or yoginītantras freely incorporated numerous verses directly from Śaiva scriptures (Sanderson, 2001, 41ff), less evidence of such direct verbatim reproduction of Śaiva wording has so far been discovered in the numerous old tantras that were redacted in Tibet. By contrast, they show occasional evidence of the absorption of indigenous Tibetan ritual categories, such as the protective deities that hover around the body (’go ba’i lha lnga; Mayer, 1996, 132) and a type of fierce female deity known as gze ma (Cantwell & Mayer, 2007, 27–28, 196–203). While many yoganiruttara­ tantras or yoginītantras became increasingly concerned to invert the peculiarly Indian ritual notions of purity and pollution, thus becoming increasingly violent, sexual, and linguistically crude, the old tantras tended to be less directly concerned with such inversions. Hence they could appear less extreme, often connecting wrathful maṇ̣alas with peaceful ones, and even including the vast genre of atiyoga, comprising one third of all old tantras, which were not necessarily transgressive of Indian ritual notions of purity at all, but dedicated only to the poetic description of Buddhism’s formless ultimate truths about the nature of mind. No comparable genre to atiyoga was ever developed in India, and there are no new tantra equivalents; and several scholars have discussed their affinity with Chinese Chan Buddhism (van Schaik, 2004, 2012). While the Indian yoganiruttaratantras or yoginītantras introduced new inner yogas involving subtle physical veins and wheels (nạ̄ī, cakra), these do not seem to have been prominent in the earliest old tantras, since there is little sign of them at Dunhuang, although the Rnying ma tradition did subsequently absorb the methods. By contrast, the old tantras considerably accentuated the use of narrative within ritual, an indigenous Tibetan predilection (Cantwell & Mayer, 2009). While the yoganiruttaratantras or yoginītantras were often intertextual amongst themselves (as well as with Śaiva texts), they showed little sign of iconographical organization into a single grand unified system; but the most widely practiced genre of old tantra, known as mahāyoga, did at some stage become organized into a symmetrical set of eight identical fierce Heruka deities, each with three heads, six arms, four legs, and two wings, differentiated mainly by their hand implements. Such systematization is certainly apparent by the time of Nyang ral nyi ma’i ’od zer (1124–1192), a great codifier of Rnying 395 ma Tantrism, but might have had its roots in earlier times. Doctrinal features of mahāyoga were also standardized, for example, in the use across numerous of its sādhanas of the same sequence of three meditations (trisamādhi; ting ’dzin gsum) through which the deity is visualized. Bibliography Primary Sources The extant editions of the old tantra collection (Rnying ma’i rgyud ‘bum): (a) Bhutanese recension in 46 volumes, with six extant manuscript witnesses: (1) Mtshams brag: the Mtshams brag manuscript of the Rñi̇ ma rgyud ’bum (rgyud ’bum/mtshams brag dgon pa). 1982. Thimphu: National Library, Royal Government of Bhutan. 46 volumes. An electronic version made from the paper publication is available from the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center (TBRC, at http://www.tbrc.org), under the title, rnying ma rgyud ’bum, mtshams brag dgon pa’i bris ma (W21521). It is also available online, linked to its detailed catalogue by THL, at http://www.thlib.org/ encyclopedias/literary/canons/ngb/catalog.php#cat=tb. More recent color images are available from the British Library Endangered Archives Research Project (EAP) 310/4/1/1– 4/1/47, a digitization project by Karma Phuntsho, at http://eap.bl.uk/database/overview_project.a4d?projID= EAP310;r=20825. (2) Sgang steng-a: the first of two Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum manuscript editions preserved by Sgang steng Monastery, Bhutan. 46 volumes. Digital images were made by Karma Phuntsho as part of the British Library Endangered Archives Research Project EAP039, 2005, and preserved in the British Library, in the National Library and Archive of Bhutan, and at Gangtey Monastery, but their widespread distribution remains forbidden by the monastery. (3) Sgang steng-b: the second of two Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum manuscript editions preserved by Sgang steng Monastery, Bhutan. 46 volumes. Digital images of Sgang steng-b were made under an AHRC funded project at Oxford University in 2004 by Karma Phuntsho, Cathy Cantwell, and Rob Mayer, but their distribution remains forbidden by the monastery. A title catalogue of Sgang steng-b is available in Achard et al., 2006. (4) Dgra med rtse: Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum manuscript editions preserved by Dgra med rtse Monastery, Bhutan. 46 volumes. Digital images were made by Karma Phuntsho as part of the EAP, EAP105, and are available for free download at http://eap.bl.uk/database/results.a4d? projID=EAP105;r=41 (5) Dpa’ sgar: Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum manuscript editions preserved by Dpa ’sgar monastery, Bhutan. A full set of color digital images were made by Karma Phuntsho in January, 2012, jointly by CSMC, University of Hamburg in cooperation with the Bhutanese NGO Preservation of Bhutan’s Written Heritage, just prior to the destruction of 396 Rnying ma Tantras the monastery by fire in February, 2012 (Almogi, forthcoming), but have not been made available for distribution. (6) Sangs rgyas gling: Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum manuscript editions preserved by Sangs rgyas gling Temple, Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh. Digital images were made in 2013– 2014 by Ngawang Tsepag and Rob Mayer, and are in process of being made available from the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and from the TBRC. (b) South-Central Tibetan recension in 33 volumes, with two extant manuscript witnesses: (7) Gting skyes: Rñi̇ ma rgyud ’bum reproduced from the manuscript preserved at Gting skyes Dgon pa byang Monastery in Tibet, under the direction of Dingo Khyentse Rimpoche, Thimbu, 1973. An electronic version is available from the TBRC, under the title Rnying ma rgyud ’bum, gting skyes (W21518). It is also available online, linked to its detailed catalogue by THL, at http://www.thlib.org/ encyclopedias/literary/canons/ngb/catalog.php#cat=tk. A detailed print catalogue was published in Roman Wylie transcription with Japanese discussion (Kaneko, 1980). (8) Rig ’dzin Tshe dbang nor bu: the Rig ’dzin Tshe dbang nor bu edition of the rNying ma’i rgyud ’bum. 29 volumes are held at the British Library, with the pressmark, Or.15217. Volume Ka is held at the Bodleian Library Oxford at the shelfmark, MS. Tib.a.24(R). Microfilm is available from the British Library, and the Bodleian Library for volume Ka. Title folios to volume Ga and volume A are held at the Victoria and Albert Museum, accession nos.: IM 318–1920 and IM 317–1920. A detailed electronic inventory was made by Cathy Cantwell, Michael Fischer, and Rob Mayer, originally on ngb.csac.anthropology.ac.uk, but currently in process of transfer to the University of Vienna’s Resources for Kanjur and Tenjur Studies https://www.istb.univie. ac.at/kanjur/xml3/xml/index.php. (c) Tibetan-Nepalese borderlands recension in 37 volumes, with two extant manuscript witnesses (but many of its texts descend from the same exemplars or near ancestors as texts from the South-Central Tibetan Tradition, so that for text-critical purposes, one can sometimes more fruitfully regard it as a subbranch of the South-Central Tibetan tradition; see Cantwell & Mayer, 2007, 70–78; Almogi, forthcoming): (9) Nubri: manuscript edition of the Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum from the Nubri area, held by the National Archives, Kathmandu. Monochrome microfilm was made by the Nepal-German Manuscript Preservation Project in 1993, and can now be digitised to order: NGMPP Reel Nos. L 426/4–L 448/1. (10) Kathmandu: manuscript edition of the Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum from the Khumbu region, held by the National Archives, Kathmandu. Microfilm is available through the Nepal Research Centre of the Nepalese-German Manuscript Cataloguing Project. The short title is Rnying ma rgyud ’bum, ms. no.22, running no. 17, reel AT12/3–AT13/1. (d) Sde dge xylograph in 26 volumes (a conflated single witness): (11) Sde dge: the Sde dge edition of the Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum. Twenty-six volumes, Ka-Ra, plus Dkar chag, volume A, Sde dge par khang chen mo. The original woodblocks survive and are still in use. Hence numerous prints are available around the world. A digital catalogue is available from THL at http://www.thlib.org/ encyclopedias/literary/canons/ngb/catalog.php#cat=dg. (e) Gdong dkar la manuscript, from Bhutan, in 28 volumes (single witness): (12) Gdong dkar la: manuscript edition of the Rnying ma’i rgyud ’bum from Gdong dkar la Temple, Bhutan; said to be 17th century, and to have originated in East Tibet. Digital images were made by Karma Phuntsho and Orna Almogi as part of the EAP, EAP570, and are currently in process of being made available http://eap.bl.uk/database/results. a4d?projID=EAP570;r=41. (f) Gzhi chen dgon manuscript, from Gzhi chen dgon in Gandze, in 33 volumes (possibly a composite collection): (13) This dbu med manuscript has recently been discovered by the TBRC field team working in Khams. It has been digitized at their offices in Chengdu, and its title list is in process of compilation (personal communication, Jeff Wallman). There appear to be mixed folios from possibly more than one manuscript – without a uniform dkar chag (personal communication, Michael Sheehy). Details will eventually become available at TBRC Resource ID W2PD17382 Secondary Literature Achard, J-L., C. Cantwell, M. Kowalewski & R. Mayer, “The sGang steng-b rNying ma’i rGyud ’bum manuscript from Bhutan,” RET 11, 2006, 1–141. Almogi, O., “The Spa sgar and Gdong dkar la Rnying ma rgyud ’bum Editions: Two Newly Discovered Sets from Bhutan,” in: O. Czaja & G, Hazod, eds., Festschrift for Per Soerensen, forthcoming. Almogi, O., “The Eighteen Mahāyoga Tantric Cycles: A Real Canon or the Mere Notion of One?,” RET 30, 2014, 47–110. Cantwell, C., & R. Mayer, A Noble Noose of Methods, the Lotus Garland Synopsis: A Mahāyoga Tantra and Its Commen­ tary, Vienna, 2012. Cantwell, C., & R. Mayer, “Enduring Myths: Smrang, Rabs and Ritual in the Dunhuang Texts on Padmasambhava,” RET 15, 2008a, 289–312. Cantwell, C., & R. Mayer, Early Tibetan Documents on Phur pa from Dunhuang, Vienna, 2008b. Cantwell, C., & R. Mayer, The Kīlaya Nirvāṇa Tantra and the Vajra Wrath Tantra: Two Texts from the Ancient Tantra Collection, Vienna, 2007. Dreyfus, G., The Sound of Two Hands Clapping: The Education of a Tibetan Buddhist Monk, Los Angeles, 2003. Gray, D., “On the Very Idea of a Tantric Canon: Myth, Politics, and the Formation of the Bka’ ’gyur,” JIATS, 2010. Gzhon nu dpal, Deb ther sngon po, 2 vols., Chengdu, 1984–1985. Halkias, G.T., “Tibetan Buddhism Registered: A Catalogue from the Imperial Court of ’Phang Thang,” EB 36/1–2, 2004, 46–105. Harrison, P., “A Brief History of the Tibetan Bka’ ’gyur,” in: J. Cabezon & R. Jackson, eds., Tibetan Literature: Studies in Genre, Ithaca NY, 1996, 70–94. Herrmann-Pfandt, A., Die lHan kar ma. Ein früher Katalog der ins Tibetische übersetzten buddhistischen Texte, Vienna, 2008. Rnying ma Tantras Herrmann-Pfandt, A., “The Lhan kar ma as a Source for the History of Tantric Buddhism,” in: H. Eimer & D. Germano, eds., The Many Canons of Tibetan Buddhism: Proceedings of the Ninth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Leiden 2000, Leiden, 2002, 129–149. Ishikawa, M., A Critical Edition of the sGra sbyor bam po gnyis pa: An Old and Basic Commentary on the Mahāvyutpatti, STi 18, Tokyo, 1990. Kaneko, E., Ko­Tantora zenzhū kaidai mokuroku (古タント ラ全集解題目錄), Tokyo, 1982. Kapstein, M., The Tibetan Assimilation of Buddhism: Conver­ sion, Contestation and Memory, New York, 2000. Karmay, S.G., The Great Perfection: A Philosophical and Medi­ tative Teaching of Tibetan Buddhism, Leiden, 1988. Lancaster, L.R., “The Rock Cut Canon in China: Findings at Fang-Shan,” in: T. Skorupski, ed., The Buddhist Heritage, BBSC 1, Tring, 1989. Mayer, R., A Scripture of the Ancient Tantra Collection: The Phur­pa bcu­gnyis, Oxford, 1996. Nyang-ral Nyi-ma-’od-zer, Mnga’-bdag, Bka brgyad Bde gśegs dus pai chos skor: A Reproduction of a Manuscript Collection of Texts from the Revelations of Mṅa-bdag Ñaṅ-ral Ñi-ma-od-zer, vol. I, Dalhousie, 1977. Ogyan Tanzin, P., “The Six Greatnesses of the Early Translations according to Rong-zom Mahāpaṇḍita,” in: C. Cüppers, R. Mayer & M. Walter, eds., Tibet after Empire: 397 Culture, Society and Religion between 850–1000, Lumbini, 2013, 367–392. Samten, J., “Notes on the bKa’ ’gyur of O-rgyan-gling, The Family Temple of the Sixth Dalai Lama (1683–1706),” in: P. Kvaerne, ed., Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the 6th Seminar of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, Fagernes 1992 Vol. I, Oslo, 1994, 393–402. Sanderson, A., “The Ś aiva Age: The Rise and Dominance of Ś aivism during the Early Medieval Period,” in: S. Einoo, ed., Genesis and Development of Tantrism, Tokyo, 2009, 41–349. Sanderson, A., “History through Textual Criticism in the Study of Śaivism, the Pañcarātra and the Buddhist Yoginītantras,” in: F. Grimal, ed., Les Sources et le temps: Sources and Time, PDI 91, Pondicherry, 2001, 1–47. Schaik, S. van, “Dzogchen, Chan and the Question of Influence,” RET 24, 2012, 5–20. Schaik, S. van, “The Early Days of the Great Perfection,” JIABS 27/2, 2004, 165–206. Tokuno, K., “The Evaluation of Indigenous Scriptures in Chinese Buddhist Bibliographical Catalogues,” in: R. Buswell, ed., Chinese Buddhist Apocrypha, Honolulu, 1990. Wangdu, P., & H. Diemberger, dBa’ bzhed: The Royal Nar­ rative concerning the Bringing of the Buddha’s Doctrine to Tibet, Vienna, 2000. Robert Mayer