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Atisha and Buddhism in Tibet
Doboom Tulku & Glenn H. Mullin - Atisha and Buddhism in TibetAtiśa Dīpankara Śrījñāna (Bengali: অতীশ দীপংকর শ্রীজ্ঞান, romanized: ôtiś dīpôṅkôr śrigyen; 982–1054)
was a Buddhist religious leader and master. He is generally associated with his work carried out at
the Vikramashila monastery in Bihar. He was one of the major figures in the spread of 11th-century
Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism in Asia and inspired Buddhist thought from Tibet to Sumatra.
He is recognised as one of the greatest figures of medieval Buddhism. Atiśa's chief disciple,
Dromtön, was the founder of the Kadam school, one of the New Translation schools of Tibetan
Buddhism, later supplanted by the Gelug tradition in the 14th century which adopted its teachings
and absorbed its monasteries.
In 2004, Atiśa was ranked 18th in the BBC's poll of the greatest Bengalis of all time.
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