Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q848771> ?p ?o }
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q584528.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q612910.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q613140.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q6401305.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q6480743.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q650035.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q6844974.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q6961065.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q7085214.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q7333868.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q734666.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q746345.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q747371.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q751147.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q7678454.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q785447.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q8054352.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q8082045.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q815628.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q844421.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q848771.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q849734.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q8716174.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q9044407.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q9441.
- Q848771 wikiPageWikiLink Q947177.
- Q848771 type Thing.
- Q848771 comment "The Nyingma tradition is the oldest of the four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism (the other three being the Kagyu, Sakya and Gelug). "Nyingma" literally means "ancient," and is often referred to as Ngangyur (IPA: [ŋaɲɟuː], Tibetan: སྔ་འགྱུར།, Wylie: snga 'gyur, "school of the ancient translations" or "old school") because it is founded on the first translations of Buddhist scriptures from Sanskrit into Old Tibetan in the eighth century.".
- Q848771 label "Nyingma".
- Q848771 depiction Guru_Rinpoche_-_Padmasambhava_statue.jpg.