Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives

Many contemporary efforts have been put to (re-)establish the order of fully ordained nuns in Tibetan Buddhism. Those who are in favor of such practice often refer to premodern Tibetan hagiographies to claim the existence of indigenous fully ordained nuns in the past. A series of female practitioner...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fan Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-10-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/11/1037
_version_ 1797466709941026816
author Fan Wu
author_facet Fan Wu
author_sort Fan Wu
collection DOAJ
description Many contemporary efforts have been put to (re-)establish the order of fully ordained nuns in Tibetan Buddhism. Those who are in favor of such practice often refer to premodern Tibetan hagiographies to claim the existence of indigenous fully ordained nuns in the past. A series of female practitioners, indeed, appear as fully ordained nuns in such narratives dating from approximately the fourteenth century to the seventeenth century. Their monastic identities as such, however, are contested by Tibetan Buddhist masters because the methods of their ordinations, seemingly conferred by the male <i>sa</i><i>ṃgha</i> alone, do not strictly follow the Mūlasarvāstivāda <i>Vinaya</i> tradition, which is observed by the Tibetan Buddhists. In an effort to investigate as to how these female practitioners were fully ordained and the purposes of composing such narratives about their ordinations, this article revisits relevant hagiographies with particular reference to <i>The biography of Chokyi Dronma, the Third incarnation of the Wisdom</i><i>Ḍākinī Sonam Peldren</i> (<i>Ye shes mkha’ ‘gro bsod nams dpal ‘dren gyi sku skye gsum pa rje btsun ma chos kyi sgron ma’i rnam thar</i>) and a detailed exposition of <i>The biography of Shākya Chokden</i> (<i>Shākya mchog ldan gyi rnam thar zhib mo rnam par ‘byed pa</i>). It suggests that depicting these personas as fully ordained nuns serves the purpose of highlighting the hagiography subjects’ outstanding spiritual performance, while the recognition of monastic identity as such may not go beyond the context of these writings.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T18:42:31Z
format Article
id doaj.art-e14f69863c5e4387ba80cd45374df084
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2077-1444
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T18:42:31Z
publishDate 2022-10-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Religions
spelling doaj.art-e14f69863c5e4387ba80cd45374df0842023-11-24T06:35:45ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442022-10-011311103710.3390/rel13111037Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical NarrativesFan Wu0Department of Religious Studies, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903, USAMany contemporary efforts have been put to (re-)establish the order of fully ordained nuns in Tibetan Buddhism. Those who are in favor of such practice often refer to premodern Tibetan hagiographies to claim the existence of indigenous fully ordained nuns in the past. A series of female practitioners, indeed, appear as fully ordained nuns in such narratives dating from approximately the fourteenth century to the seventeenth century. Their monastic identities as such, however, are contested by Tibetan Buddhist masters because the methods of their ordinations, seemingly conferred by the male <i>sa</i><i>ṃgha</i> alone, do not strictly follow the Mūlasarvāstivāda <i>Vinaya</i> tradition, which is observed by the Tibetan Buddhists. In an effort to investigate as to how these female practitioners were fully ordained and the purposes of composing such narratives about their ordinations, this article revisits relevant hagiographies with particular reference to <i>The biography of Chokyi Dronma, the Third incarnation of the Wisdom</i><i>Ḍākinī Sonam Peldren</i> (<i>Ye shes mkha’ ‘gro bsod nams dpal ‘dren gyi sku skye gsum pa rje btsun ma chos kyi sgron ma’i rnam thar</i>) and a detailed exposition of <i>The biography of Shākya Chokden</i> (<i>Shākya mchog ldan gyi rnam thar zhib mo rnam par ‘byed pa</i>). It suggests that depicting these personas as fully ordained nuns serves the purpose of highlighting the hagiography subjects’ outstanding spiritual performance, while the recognition of monastic identity as such may not go beyond the context of these writings.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/11/1037Tibetan hagiographiesTibetan womenfull female ordination
spellingShingle Fan Wu
Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
Religions
Tibetan hagiographies
Tibetan women
full female ordination
title Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
title_full Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
title_fullStr Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
title_full_unstemmed Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
title_short Fully Ordained Nuns in Fourteenth-to-Seventeenth Tibetan Hagiographical Narratives
title_sort fully ordained nuns in fourteenth to seventeenth tibetan hagiographical narratives
topic Tibetan hagiographies
Tibetan women
full female ordination
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/11/1037
work_keys_str_mv AT fanwu fullyordainednunsinfourteenthtoseventeenthtibetanhagiographicalnarratives