Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "In Tibetan Buddhism, the Sarma (Tibetan: གསར་མ, Wylie: gsar ma) or \"New Translation\" schools include the three newer of the four main schools, comprising the following traditions and their sub-branches with their roots in the 11th century:KagyuSakyaKadam and Gelug the minority Jonang school.The Nyingma, a name contemporary to the emergence of the above schools in the 11th century, is the sole snga 'gyur (Tibetan: སྔ་འགྱུར།) \"Old Translation\" school and is often equated as originating with the widespread introduction of Buddhism to Tibet around the turn of the 8th century."@en }
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- Sarma_(Tibetan_Buddhism) abstract "In Tibetan Buddhism, the Sarma (Tibetan: གསར་མ, Wylie: gsar ma) or \"New Translation\" schools include the three newer of the four main schools, comprising the following traditions and their sub-branches with their roots in the 11th century:KagyuSakyaKadam and Gelug the minority Jonang school.The Nyingma, a name contemporary to the emergence of the above schools in the 11th century, is the sole snga 'gyur (Tibetan: སྔ་འགྱུར།) \"Old Translation\" school and is often equated as originating with the widespread introduction of Buddhism to Tibet around the turn of the 8th century.".
- Sarma_(Tibetan_Buddhism) comment "In Tibetan Buddhism, the Sarma (Tibetan: གསར་མ, Wylie: gsar ma) or \"New Translation\" schools include the three newer of the four main schools, comprising the following traditions and their sub-branches with their roots in the 11th century:KagyuSakyaKadam and Gelug the minority Jonang school.The Nyingma, a name contemporary to the emergence of the above schools in the 11th century, is the sole snga 'gyur (Tibetan: སྔ་འགྱུར།) \"Old Translation\" school and is often equated as originating with the widespread introduction of Buddhism to Tibet around the turn of the 8th century.".