Dromtonpa was the chief disciple of Buddhist master Atisha, who was preaching in Tibetan area since 1042. As a prominent successor, he has been remembered as initiator of the Tibetan Tantric SchoolKadampa - meaning to practise by Buddha's teaching. A replica of an ancient statue found among the ruins of a temple at Sarnath Buddhism is a philosophy based on the teachings of the Buddha, SiddhÄrtha Gautama, a prince of the Shakyas, whose lifetime is traditionally given as 566 to 486 BCE. It had subsequently been accepted by... AtiÅa Dipamkara Shrijnana (Bangla: ঠতà§à¦¶ দà§à¦ªà¦à§à¦à¦° শà§à¦°à§à¦à§à¦à¦¾à¦¨) (982 - 1054 CE) was a Buddhist teacher who reintroduced Buddhism into Tibet after King Langdharma had nearly destroyed it. ... This article does not cite its references or sources. ... Events April 18/April 19 - Emperor Michael V of the Byzantine Empire attempts to remain sole Emperor by sending his adoptive mother and co-ruler Zoe of Byzantium to a monastery. ... There are many divisions and subdivisions of the schools of Buddhism. ... The Kadampa (Bka-gdams-pa) Tradition was a Tibetan Mahayana Buddhist school. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
It was Dromptonpa's student Chekawa Yeshe Dorje who first compiled Atiśa's core teachings on the practice of bodhicitta in written form, as The Seven Point Mind Training. In Buddhist thought, bodhicitta (Ch. ...
Reference
Dilgo Kyentse. Enlightened Courage, Snow Lion 1993. ISBN 1-55939-023-9
Dromtonpa, another disciple of Lama Atisha, didn’t meditate because he was always so busy translating and neither did Lama Atisha’s cook, always being busy cooking.
Dromtonpa’s were much higher, and even the cook’s realizations were higher than the meditator’s.
Dromtonpa achieved clairvoyance and was able to read the mind even of tiny insects, of ants at a distance that would take an eagle 18 days to fly.
Geshe Putowa (1031-1106) received the transmission and responsibility to hold the teachings of the scriptural traditions, the six Kadampa treatises and hidden verbal transmission of both sutra and tantra from Dromtonpa.
Je Atisha had three chief students, beside the famous Dromtonpa (Drontön Gyalwe Jungne) who established the Radreng monastery there were Khu (Khutön Tsöndru Yungdrang) and Ngok (Ngok Legpe Sherap).
Ngok established the dharma center of Sangphu Neuthok and this institute was later developed further by his nephew, the translator, Ngok Loden Sherap and it became the source of all the Tibetan centers for advanced study (Shedra).