- The
Jonang (Tibetan: ཇོ་ནང་, Wylie: Jo-nang) is a
school of Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. Its
origins in
Tibet can be
traced to the
early 12th
century master...
-
Gunnel Jonäng (1921–2008) was a
Swedish politician. She was a
member of the
Centre Party.
Jonäng was a
member of parliament's
second chamber, 1969–1988...
-
teacher the
renowned Jonang scholar Jamyang Wangyal Dorje Mondrowa was a
master of the
Jonang tradition and
belonged to a well-known
Jonang family from Lato...
- was then
further revised by the two
Jonang translators Blo gros
rgyal mtshan and Blo gros dpal
bzang po. The
Jonang revision is
found in the
Yunglo and...
- Tāranātha (1575–1634) was a Lama of the
Jonang school of
Tibetan Buddhism. He is
widely considered its most
remarkable scholar and exponent. Taranatha...
-
Buddhist figures. The
classic shentong view was
developed and
defended by the
Jonang school of
Tibetan Buddhism,
especially by the
great scholar Dölpopa Shérap...
- and yogi who
traveled Tibet studying under Kadam, Sakya,
Drikung Kagyu,
Jonang and
Nyingma teachers.
These include the
Sakya scholar Rendawa (1349–1412)...
- (8th century),
Kagyu (11th century),
Sakya (1073), and
Gelug (1409). The
Jonang is a
smaller school that exists, and the Rimé
movement (19th century), meaning...
-
views can be
similar to
Jonang shentong and
sometimes use
shentong language, but they are
generally less
absolutist than
Jonang views (the
exception is...
-
Jonang school was
widely thought to have
become extinct in the late 17th
century at the
hands of the 5th
Dalai Lama, who
forcibly annexed the
Jonang monasteries...