Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra

From Buddha-Nature
Revision as of 11:57, 12 July 2018 by Mort (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Text |FullTextRead=No }}")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


बुद्धावतंसकसूत्र
Buddhāvataṃsakamahāvaipūlyasūtra
སངས་རྒྱས་ཕལ་པོ་ཆེ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ་ཤིན་ཏུ་རྒྱས་པ་ཆེན་པོའི་མདོ།
sangs rgyas phal po che zhes bya ba shin tu rgyas pa chen po'i mdo
大方廣佛華嚴經
Dà fāng guǎng fó huá yán jīng
D44   ·  T278,279
SOURCE TEXT

One of the longest works in the entire Buddhist canon, the Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra is widely considered to be a compilation of independent scriptures, which was expanded upon over the course of time. It was extremely influential in East Asia, where it was preserved in an eighty-scroll recension. The Tibetan translation of this work fills four volumes in the Derge Kangyur. Though only two sections—namely, the Gaṇḍavyūhasūtra and the Daśabhūmikasūtra—have survived in Sanskrit, both of which have also circulated as independent works.

Relevance to Buddha-nature

The Uttaratantra cites a verse from the Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra that appears in the section titled the Daśabhūmikasūtra.

Text Metadata

Text exists in ~ Tibetan
~ Chinese
Canonical Genre ~ Kangyur · Sūtra · phal chen · Avataṃsaka
Literary Genre ~ Sūtras - mdo

This Text on Adarsha - If it doesn't load here, refresh your browser.


The wikipage input value is empty (e.g. <code>, [[]]</code>) and therefore it cannot be used as a name or as part of a query condition.