Kurukullā
Female deity in Tibetan Buddhism / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kurukullā (Tibetan: ཀུ་རུ་ཀུ་ལླཱ; also Tibetan: རིག་བྱེད་མ་, Wylie: rig byed ma lit. 'vidyā woman' (i.e. 'knowledge' or 'magic woman')[1] Chinese: 咕嚕咕列佛母 lit. 'mother-Buddha kuru [kulle]' or Chinese: 作明佛母 lit. 'knowledge-causing mother-Buddha'[2]) is a female, peaceful to semi-wrathful Yidam in Tibetan Buddhism particularly associated with rites of magnetization[3] or enchantment. Her Sanskrit name is of unclear origin.[1] She is related to Shri Yantra in Hinduism, occupying the centre of the mystic diagram with varahi, together with whom the fifteen signs of moon phases (nityas) were born from. She is identified with Tripura Sundari and Tara in some sources of Hinduism.[4]
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Vietnamese | Tác Minh Phật Mẫu |
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Venerated by | Mahāyāna, Vajrayāna |
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