The Vimalaprabha (Tibetan: Dri-med ‘od , དྲི་མེད་འོད་) was composed in the late 10th or early 11th century by the legendary figures of Shambhala. According to tradition, King Manjushri Yashas of the mythical kingdom of Shambhala compiled this commentary based on the original Kalachakra Mulatantra spoken by the Buddha. Later, his son, Pundarika, edited and finalized the text.
The Vimalaprabha organizes the Kalachakra system into three distinct "wheels" or dimensions, which are often the focus of academic PDFs and translations: vimalaprabha pdf
The Vimalaprabha provides an encyclopedic explanation of the three cycles of Kalachakra: . The Vimalaprabha (Tibetan: Dri-med ‘od
The Vimalaprabha (Tibetan: Dri-med ‘od , དྲི་མེད་འོད་) was composed in the late 10th or early 11th century by the legendary figures of Shambhala. According to tradition, King Manjushri Yashas of the mythical kingdom of Shambhala compiled this commentary based on the original Kalachakra Mulatantra spoken by the Buddha. Later, his son, Pundarika, edited and finalized the text.
The Vimalaprabha organizes the Kalachakra system into three distinct "wheels" or dimensions, which are often the focus of academic PDFs and translations:
The Vimalaprabha provides an encyclopedic explanation of the three cycles of Kalachakra: .