Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dakini> ?p ?o }
- Dakini abstract "A ḍākinī (Tibetan: མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, Wylie: mkha' 'gro ma THL Khadroma; Mongolian: хандарма; Chinese: 空行母; pinyin: Kōngxíng Mǔ; another Chinese and Japanese: 荼枳尼) is placed as Vajravārāhī in tantrism and as Tennin in Vajrayana Buddhism. The Sanskrit term is likely related to the term for drumming, while the Tibetan term means \"sky goer\" and may have originated in the Sanskrit khecara, a term from the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra. Dakinis are often represented as consorts in Yab-Yum representations. The masculine form of the word is ḍāka, which is usually translated into Tibetan as pawo \"hero\" (Wylie: dpa' bo).The dakini (and the daka) appeared in medieval legends in North India (such as in the Bhagavata Purana, Brahma Purana, Markandeya Purana and Kathasaritsagara) as a demon in the train of Kali who feeds on human flesh. They are comparable to malevolent or vengeful female spirits, deities, imps or fairies in other cultures, such as the Persian peri.As a key tantric figure, the dakini does appear in Tangmi; the dakini figure disseminated into Japanese culture from Shingon Buddhism, evolving into the dakini-ten (\"ten\" means \"deva\" in Japanese), becoming linked to the kitsune iconography.The dakini appears in a Vajrayana formulation of the Three Jewels' Buddhist refuge formula, known as the Three Roots. Most commonly she appears as the dharmapala, alongside a guru and yidam.The dakini, in her various guises, serves as each of the Three Roots. She may be a human guru, a vajra master who transmits the Vajrayana teachings to her disciples and joins them in samaya commitments. The wisdom dakini may be a yidam, a meditational deity; female deity yogas such as Vajrayogini are common in Tibetan Buddhism. Or she may be a protector; the wisdom dakinis have special power and responsibility to protect the integrity of oral transmissions\"The archetypal dakini in Tibetan Buddhism is Yeshe Tsogyal, consort of Padmasambhava.".
- Dakini thumbnail Varjayogini.jpg?width=300.
- Dakini wikiPageExternalLink blackdakini.html.
- Dakini wikiPageExternalLink www.dakini.demon.co.uk.
- Dakini wikiPageExternalLink www.dakinipower.com.
- Dakini wikiPageExternalLink ni75.htm.
- Dakini wikiPageExternalLink dakini_khandro.htm.
- Dakini wikiPageID "1356363".
- Dakini wikiPageLength "17847".
- Dakini wikiPageOutDegree "116".
- Dakini wikiPageRevisionID "696361748".
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Anahata.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Angel.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Anuttarayoga_Tantra.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Apsara.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Bhagavata_Purana.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Bodhisattva.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Bon.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Brahma_Purana.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Buddhahood.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Cakrasaṃvara_Tantra.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Dakinis.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Deities,_spirits,_and_mythic_beings.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Demons_in_Hinduism.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Female_legendary_creatures.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hindu_Tantric_deities.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tantric_practices.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tibetan_Buddhist_practices.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Completion_stage.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Daayan.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Deity.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Deva_(Buddhism).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Devata.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Dharmadhatu.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Dharmakāya.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Dharmapala.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Dzogchen.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Edo.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_of_Japan.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Empowerment.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Energy_(esotericism).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Enlightenment_(spiritual).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Enthronement_of_the_Japanese_Emperor.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Five_Dhyani_Buddhas.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Gelug.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Genpei_Jōsuiki.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Guru.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Heian_period.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Houri.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Inner_Tantras.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Jan_Willis.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_language.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Judith_Simmer-Brown.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kali.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Karma_Kagyu.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Karmamudrā.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kathasaritsagara.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kelsang_Gyatso.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Khenpo_Karthar_Rinpoche.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kitsune.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kleshas_(Buddhism).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Kūkai.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Lama.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Lung_(Tibetan_Buddhism).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Mahasiddha.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Mahayana.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Mandala.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Markandeya_Purana.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Meditation.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Miranda_Shaw.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Muse.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Nirmanakāya.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Padmasambhava.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Pawo.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Peri.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Prajnaparamita.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Samantabhadrī_(tutelary).
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Samaya.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Sambhogakāya.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Sermey_Khensur_Lobsang_Tharchin.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Shingon_Buddhism.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Shogun.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Six_Yogas_of_Naropa.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Subtle_body.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink THL_Simplified_Phonetic_Transcription.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Taira_no_Kiyomori.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Tangmi.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Tantra.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Tennin.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Three_Jewels.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Three_Roots.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Thubten_Yeshe.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Tibetan_Buddhism.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Trikaya.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Twilight_language.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Richmond.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Vajra.
- Dakini wikiPageWikiLink Vajravārāhī.