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Bardo

A Wisdom Archive on Bardo

Bardo

A selection of articles related to Bardo

We recommend this article: Bardo - 1, and also this: Bardo - 2.
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bardo, Bardo

ARTICLES RELATED TO Bardo

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardo

The Tibetan word Bardo means literally "intermediate state" - also translated as "transitional state" or "in-between state". In Sanskrit the concept has the name antarabhava. Used somewhat loosely, the term "bardo" refers to the state of existence intermediate between two lives on earth. According to Tibetan tradition, after death and before one's next birth, when one's consciousness is not connected with a physical body, one experiences a variety of phenomena. These usually follow a particular sequence of degeneration f ...

Read more here: » Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardo

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardos
Bardos can refer to: Bardos, a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département, in France Lajos Bárdos Hungarian composer and conductor Bardos, The Transitional realms, from Tibetan Buddhism Other related archivesBardos, Bardos, The, France, Lajos Bárdos, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, département

Read more here: » Bardos: Encyclopedia - Bardos

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardos The

In Tibetan Buddhism, the term bardo can be translated as a transitional realm, an in-between state, or a state of consciousness. Most commonly used to refer to the state(s) between one life and the next. Bardos The - Friendly Guides. [tba] Bardo Thodol, Tibetan Buddhism Bardos The - Unfriendly Guides. [tba] See also. Bardo Thodol Tibetan Buddhism ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bardos The: Encyclopedia - Bardos The

Bardo: Traditional Chinese Funeral Arrangements

Buddhist Rituals: Traditional Chinese Funeral Arrangements

On the passing away of the father, the eldest son becomes the head of the family. f the eldest son passes away, his second brother does not assume leadership of the family. Leadership passes to the eldest son of the eldest son or the grandson of the father. He must assume the responsibilities and duties to the ancestors on behalf of the family

 

Read more here: » Buddhist Rituals: Traditional Chinese Funeral Arrangements

Bardo: : Buddhist texts

There are a great variety of Buddhist texts. Buddhists place varying value on them: attitudes range from worship of the text itself, to dismissal of some texts as falsification of the ineffable truth. They therefore cannot be called "scripture" in the sense of other religions. The texts can be categorized in a number of ways, but the most fundamental division is that between canonical and non-canonical texts. The former, also called the Sutras (Sanskrit) or Suttas (Pali), are held to be, literally or metaphoricall ...

Including:

  • Buddhist texts - Canonical texts
  • Buddhist texts - Non-canonical texts
  • Buddhist texts - Texts of the Nikaya Schools
    • Buddhist texts - Sutta
    • Buddhist texts - Abhidharma
    • Buddhist texts - Non-canonical texts
  • Buddhist texts - Mahayana texts
    • Buddhist texts - Perfection of Wisdom Texts
    • Buddhist texts - Saddharma-pundarika
    • Buddhist texts - Pure Land Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - The Vimalakirti Nirdesha Sutra
    • Buddhist texts - Samadhi Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Confession Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - The Avatamsaka Sutra
    • Buddhist texts - Third Turning Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Tathagatagarbha class sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Collected Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Transmigration Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Discipline Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Sutras Devoted to Individual Figures
    • Buddhist texts - Proto-Mahayana Sutras
    • Buddhist texts - Non-canonical texts
    • Buddhist texts - References
  • Buddhist texts - Vajrayana Texts
    • Buddhist texts - Buddhist tantras
    • Buddhist texts - Other products of the Vajrayana literature

Read more here: » Buddhist texts

Bardo: Finality of Death Is a Myth

In literature, art and cinema, death has been almost always depicted as a terrible thing, the final end, although in reality it is merely a release from the burden of the physical body.

 

Every religious tradition recognises that to reach the final truth, one must pass through death. This is the meaning behind Aanea's descent to the underworld in Virgil, of Dante's descent into hell in the Divine Comedy and the Christian baptism: “You were baptised into the death of Christ”.

 

(See also: Life and Death, Life and Beyond, Death and Dying, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Read more here: » Life and Death: Finality of Death Is a Myth

Bardo: The Way of Pain

The Way of Pain

The Sanskrit word saha means "to endure, to go patiently through hardships without rebelling."1 The process of disillusionment is an unquestionably painful process at times. Genuine spiritual life has never been popular, and never will be, because most people are unwilling to open to and accept pain.

 

Read more here: » Pain: The Way of Pain

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardo Thodol

The Bardo Thodol, sometimes called the Tibetan Book of the Dead, is a funerary text that describes the experiences of the consciousness after death during the interval known as bardo between death and rebirth. It is recited by lamas over a dying or recently deceased person, or sometimes over an effigy of the deceased. It has been suggested that it is a sign of the influence of shamanism on Tibetan Buddhism. The name means literally "lib ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bardo Thodol: Encyclopedia - Bardo Thodol

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bardos Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Bardos (Basque Bardoze) is a small village in the traditional Basque province of Labourd, now a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département of southern France. Bardos Pyrénées-Atlantiques - External link. BARDOZE in the Bernardo Estornés Lasa - Auñamendi Encyclopedia (Euskomedia Fundazioa) Information available in Spanish ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bardos Pyrénées-Atlantiques: Encyclopedia - Bardos Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Ars moriendi

Ars moriendi ("The Art of Dying") is the name of two related Latin texts dating from 1415 and 1450 which offers advice on the protocols and procedures of a good death and on how to "die well", according to Christian precepts of the late Middle Ages. It was written within the historical context of the effects of the macabre horrors of the Black Death 60 years earlier and consequent social upheavals of the 15th century. It was very popular, translated into most West European languages, and was the first in a weste ...

Including:

Read more here: » Ars moriendi: Encyclopedia - Ars moriendi

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Bard

A bard is a poet or singer, in religious or feudal contexts. Bard - Etymology. The word is a loanword from Proto-Celtic *bardos, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *gwerh2: "to raise the voice; praise". The word entered the West Germanic languages twice. The first recorded example is in 1449 from the Scottish Gaelic language into the Scots Language, denoting an itinerant musician, usually with a contemptuous connotation. A Scots ordnance of ca. 1500 orders that Including:

Read more here: » Bard: Encyclopedia - Bard

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Book of the Dead

Book of the Dead is the common name for ancient Egyptian funerary texts known as The Book of Coming [or Going] Forth By Day. The name "Book of the Dead" was the invention of the German Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius, who published a selection of some texts in 1842. "Books" were nothing like a modern book – the text was initially carved on the exterior of the deceased person's sarcophagus, but was later written on papyrus now known as scrolls and buried inside the sarcophagus with the deceased, presumably so that it ...

Read more here: » Book of the Dead: Encyclopedia - Book of the Dead

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Algiers

Algiers (French Alger, (Arabic: ولاية الجزائر) El-Jazair, The Islands) is the capital and largest city of Algeria in North Africa. According to the 1998 census, the population of the city proper was 1,519,570 whilst the total for the agglomeration was 2,135,630. Nicknamed El-Bahdja (البهجة) or Alger la Blanche ("Algiers the White") for the glistening white of its buildings as seen sloping up from the sea, it is situated on the west side of a bay of the Mediterranean Sea. The city na ...

Including:

Read more here: » Algiers: Encyclopedia - Algiers

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Tibetan people

The Tibetan people are a people living in Tibet and some surrounding areas. They are one of the largest among the fifty-six nationalities officially recognized by the People's Republic of China (PRC) to constitute the Zhonghua Minzu (Chinese nation), although in anthropological terms they could be regarded as comprising more than one ethnic group. According to an official census of 1959, the number of Tibetans in the PRC was 6,330,567 [1]. The SIL Ethnologue documents an additional 125,000 speakers of Tibetan living in India, 60,000 i ...

Including:

Read more here: » Tibetan people: Encyclopedia - Tibetan people

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Psychosynthesis

Psychosynthesis is a form of transpersonal psychology which insists on integration, or synthesis of various psychological functions in order to achieve the goal of healthy individual. As a transpersonal theory, it stresses the need of communion with "Higher" or "Transpersonal Self", or achievement of the state of transegoic existence - which is generally not accepted, or is interpreted as a psychological aberration, by other psychology schools. Psychosynthesis - Aims of Psychosynthesis. In Psychosomatic Med ...

Including:

Read more here: » Psychosynthesis: Encyclopedia - Psychosynthesis

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Buddhist texts

There are a great variety of Buddhist texts. Buddhists place varying value on them: attitudes range from worship of the text itself, to dismissal of some texts as falsification of the ineffable truth. They therefore cannot be called "scripture" in the sense of other religions. The texts can be categorized in a number of ways, but the most fundamental division is that between canonical and non-canonical texts. The former, also called the Sutras (Sanskrit) or Suttas (Pali), are held to be, literally or metaphoricall ...

Including:

Read more here: » Buddhist texts: Encyclopedia - Buddhist texts

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Chögyam Trungpa

Chögyam Trungpa (1940 - April 4, 1987) was a Buddhist meditation master, scholar, teacher and artist. Born in Tibet, Chögyam Trungpa was the eleventh in a line of Trungpa tülkus, important figures in the Kagyu tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. In 1959, after having already achieved wide renown for his teachings in his native country, he fled the Chinese invasion and crossed the Himalaya on foot into India. After familiarizing himself with the English language he studied Comparative Religion at Oxford and then came to t ...

Including:

Read more here: » Chögyam Trungpa: Encyclopedia - Chögyam Trungpa

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Archbishopric of Mainz

Between 780–82 and 1802 the Archbishop of Mainz was an influential ecclesiastic and secular prince in the Holy Roman Empire. His see was established in ancient Roman times, in the city of Mainz, which had been a Roman provincial capital called Moguntiacum, but the office really came to prominence upon its elevation to an archdiocese in 780/82. The first bishops before the 4th century have legendary names, beginning with Crescens. The first verifiable Bishop of Mainz was Mar(t)inus in 343. The ecclesiastical and secular importance of ...

Including:

Read more here: » Archbishopric of Mainz: Encyclopedia - Archbishopric of Mainz

Bardo: Encyclopedia - 1986 in music

See also: 1985 in music, other events of 1986, 1987 in music, 1980s in music and the list of 'years in music' 1986 in music - Events. January 23 - The first induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (Chuck Berry, James Brown, Ray Charles, Fats Domino, Everly Brothers, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis Presley) February 11 - Culture Club lead singer Boy George appears on an episode of The A-Team February 14 - Frank Zappa appears on an episode of the popular television ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1986 in music: Encyclopedia - 1986 in music

Bardo: Encyclopedia - Necronomicon

The Necronomicon is the title of a fictional book created by H.P. Lovecraft and often featured in stories based on the Cthulhu mythos inspired by his works. However, some people believe in the existence of an actual ancient text called the Necronomicon which may or may not fit the description given in Lovecraft's fiction. Necronomicon - The book. Lovecraft often referenced fictional works in his horror fiction, a practice common among subsequent fantasy authors like Jorge Luis Borges and Willi ...

Including:

Read more here: » Necronomicon: Encyclopedia - Necronomicon

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Bardo
Index of Articles
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Bardo



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