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Bon Glossary of Terms
Bon Glossary of Terms
(http://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=1387)
Amnye Machen: the name of both a mountain range and mountain god in the
Amdo region of north eastern Tibet.
Bon (truth): the full name is Yungdrung Bon meaning Everlasting Truth, the
indigenous religion of Tibet, the Himalayan regions and parts of Central Asia and
China.
Bon Sarma (New Bon): a form of the Bon religion and culture that has
incorporated many Buddhist elements.
Bongya Monastery: a center of Bon culture in the Rebkong area of Amdo, Eastern
Tibet.
Bonri, Mountain:
Cha Kyung: a mountain god belonging to the retinue of Amnye Machen and the
special protector for the town of Rebgong in Amdo, specifically the region on the
north side of the river.
Cham: religious dance. The principle Bon dances revolve around the deity Sipai
Gyalmo, origin myths, and her animal headed daughters.
Chariots: a common image found depicted in paintings illustrating the life story of
Tonpa Shenrab. These chariots can be drawn by any number of animals such as
horses or elephants or self propelled.
Choga Chunyi: the Twelve Ritual deities depicting various appearances of Tonpa
Shenrab as described in his life story. These twelve forms are typically found as a
painted set.
Chorten: a reliquary mound comparable to the Buddhist stupa. Bon chorten can be
immediately distinguished from the Buddhist stupa by a set of Horned Eagle (kyung)
horns that are placed on the top.
Cuckoo Bird: the physical appearance that Tonpa Shenrab assumed for his descent
from the heavens down to earth and entry into his mother's womb.
Dolpo, Nepal: a region of west Nepal that is ethnographically Tibetan with many
adherents of the Bon religion. (Images of the area).
Dough Molds (Tibetan: tor par): lengths of wood, intricately carved and used to
create specific symbolic shapes when barley dough (tsampa) is pressed against the
carved surface. The dough molds are used to produce large numbers of offerings for
use in ritual services.
Dralha Yesi Gyalpo: a protector god associated with the family of Tonpa Shenrab
and described in stories narrating the early childhood of Tonpa Shenrab.
Drenpa Namka: an early Bon teacher of the 8th century from the Shangshung
Kingdom. He is regarded as an emanation of Tonpa Shenrab. Comparable to the
Buddhist Padmasambhava, Drenpa Namka is an important early teacher of Bon.
Dulwa Shen Drug: the Six Teachers of Discipline, forms of Tonpa Shenrab that are
associated with each of the six realms of existence: god, demi-god, human, animal,
ghost and hell realm.
Five Gods of the Head: an ancient system enumerating five personal gods that
each human child is born with and accompanies that person throughout their life.
The gods are believed to dwell on the four sides of the head and above the top of the
head.
Five Sciences: art, language, medicine, the cosmos and the occupants of the
cosmos. See the Gods of the Five Sciences.
Flat Bell (Tib.: shang, silnyen): a flat metal bell shaped like a cymbal with a
decorative clapper made with semi-precious stones such as coral and turqouise. The
flat bell is a unique Bon ritual object.
Four Transcendent Lords: the four supreme deities of the Bon religion: Satrig
Ersang, Shenla Okar, Sangpo Bumtri and Tonpa Shenrab. The subject of the Four
Transcendent Lords is described in detail in chapter 30 of the Ziji with the story of
the death of Prince Trishang of Tazik. The Four Lords are the principal deities in the
funeral ritual for the prince. In chapter 61 the Four Lords are further discussed with
reference to the death and funeral of Tonpa Shenrab. The Ziji is a twelve volume,
sixty-one chapter, biography of Tonpa Shenrab.
Initiation Cards (tsak li, tsa ka li): small paintings, generally the size of playing
cards, created in sets and used in religious rituals and initiations. They depict
illustrations of deities, animals, objects, and abstract images.
Jang, or Naxi: a minorities people of China centered in the city of Lijiang and
surrounding areas. They have a unique culture, language and written script. Both the
Bon religion and Tibetan Buddhism are practiced amongst other belief systems.
Kailash, Mountain: (see Tise).
Kandro: female deities that can also function as meditational deities as found in the
Magyu cycle of practice, or as attendant figures and helpers along the path to
spiritual realization.
Kula Kari: the name of a god associated with a mountain on the border between
Tibet and Bhutan. The ritual texts for this mountain god were discovered by the
Terton Dorje Lingpa [1346-1405] who was regarded as being both a Bon and a
Buddhist follower. (See Dorje Lingpa Terma discoveries in Bhutan, PDF).
Kundun: a title of honour originally used for the highest abbot of Menri Monastery.
It is not commonly used these days and more commonly heard with reference to the
Dalai Lama of Tibetan Buddhism.
Kuntu Zangpo: the All-good, a deity that represents primal purity and goodness.
Kunzang Akor: the All-good 'A' Circle is a meditational form of Shenlha Okar. He is
generally recognized by the Tibetan letter 'A' placed on the chest at the level of the
heart. The two hands generally rest in the lap and hold the stems of two flower
blossoms supporting a yungdrung (svastika) on the right and a vase on the left.
There are numerous traditions of ritual cycles and meditation practices for Kunzang
Akor.
Kunzang Gyalwa Gyatso: the peaceful form of the wrathful deity Walse Ngampa.
In the Bon religion all deities have both a peaceful and a wrathful form. Each of
these forms has a distinct name.
Kyung: a mythical Horned Eagle, sometimes said to be the king of birds and similar
to the Garuda of Indian literature.
Lama: a religious teacher or preceptor. Ponse Lama is a higher title that refers to a
teacher that is both a master of the common and secret teachings (exoteric and
esoteric).
Lamlha: the Goddess of Travel, a patron deity for travelers, merchants, pilgrims and
robbers. She rides on the back of a queen bee and is accompanied by a host of
figures and animal creatures.
Ligmincha, King (8th century): the 18th and last king of the Shangshung
kingdom of the western Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau. According to the
histories of the Bon religion the Buddhist King Trisong Detsen, of central Tibet,
murdered King Ligmincha during his expansionist campaigns. Ligmincha's queen was
later able to avenge the death and likewise murdered King Trisong Detsen. (Note:
There is confusion between the Bon and Buddhist histories about the identity of the
Buddhist King. The Bon say Trisongdetsen and the Buddhists say Songtsen Gampo).
Lion, Snow: (see snow lion)
Magyu Sangchog Tartug: a principal meditational deity popular with the New Bon
tradition.
Mawai Sengge: a peaceful Bon deity associated with wisdom and learning.
Menri Tridzin: the Throne Holder of Menri Monastery. Currently the head abbot is
Lungtok Tenpa'i Nyima, the 33rd Abbot of Menri.
Meri, Zhang Zhung: a meditational deity of the Bon religion arising from the
ancient kingdom of Zhangzhung and the holy Mount Tise in the center of that
kingdom.
Nampar Gyalwa: a specific depiction of Tonpa Shenrab associated with stories from
the biographies and episodes related to an emperor of China named Kongtse.
Olmo Lungring: the sacred land of the Bon founder Tonpa Shenrab. It is believed to
be a kingdom located to the west of the Tibetan Plateau.
Pesha: the name for the most important monastic hat worn by Bon teachers having
the title of Ponse. The hat is surrounded with eight lotus petals, however images in
paintings often depict only four or five petals.
Ponse Lama: a title signifying the highest of Bon religious teachers. The title refers
to a teacher that is both a master of the common and highest secret teachings
(exoteric and esoteric).
Prayer Flags: a printed image on paper or cotton cloth intended to be thrown into
the wind or fixed in place where the wind blows. The flags often contain prayers and
mantras along with images of deities and animals. Prayer Flags are common in the
popular practice of both the Bon and Buddhist religions of the Himalayas and Tibet.
Purba Drugse Chempa: one of the five principal meditational deities of the Bon
religion. (See Five Excellent Ones of the Se Fortress).
Satrig Ersang: one of the Four Transcendent Lords. She is identical to the mother
goddess Sherab Chamma. When appearing as on of the Four Lords she is referred to
by her Shangshung language name - Satrig Ersang. The two names Satrig Ersang
and Sherab Chamma are said to both mean the same thing - Loving Mother of
Wisdom.
Shangshung: a language and a kingdom that existed in the western Tibetan plateau
up until the 8th century C.E. The center of the kingdom was Mount Tise and the last
king was Ligmincha.
Shangshung Meri: a visually complex meditational deity associated with Mount Tise
and the Shangshung Kingdom.
Shenlha Okar: a deity of peaceful appearance that is associated with funeral rituals
and purification.
Sipai Gyalmo: the principal protector deity of the Bon religion. She is both a
meditational deity and a protector and has six main manifestations (white, yellow,
red, black, blue and dark brown) along with twenty-eight retinue attendant figures.
Six Teachers of Discipline: the six teachers are forms of Tonpa Shenrab, each
appearing in a slightly different manner for the purpose of ministering to the six
different types of beings in the world: god, demi-god, human, animal, ghost and
hell-being.
Snow Lion: a mythical creature of Central Asia, the Himalayan regions and Tibet.
There is some evidence to suggest that there are three types of mythical lions: the
Snow Lion, the Gold Lion and the Conch Lion.
Tagla Membar: a Bon deity fearsome in appearance. Tagla Membar was originally a
human being that became deified over the course of time and now functions both as
a meditational deity and protector.
Tapihritsa: an early Bon teacher associated with the Shangshung Nyengyu Cycle of
ritual and meditation practice.
Tazik: a kingdom located to the west of the Tibetan Plateau and associated with the
kingdom of Shangshung and Olmo Lungring.
Terton: a treasure finder, a person that finds lost treasures such as religious texts
and objects. In the Bon tradition a terton can be anybody with any level of spiritual
attainment.
Tise, Mount (Mount Kailash): the mountain at the center of the Shangshung
kingdom in the western Himalayas.
Tonpa Shenrab: founder of the Bon religion and ruler of the kingdom of Tazig which
is thought to be located somewhere west of the Tibetan Plateau.
Torma: dough sculpture, torma are generally cone shaped ritual food offerings made
from barley flour, hand sculpted in a variety of shapes and sizes, coloured and then
adorned with flat circular 'buttons' made from butter.
Torpar: ritual barley dough molds created from pressing dough into pre-set shapes
carved in wood. The molds are required for specific functions such as sacred rituals
and funerals.
Transcendent Lords: the group of Four Transcendent Lords, the four most important
sacred figures in the Bon religion. They are Satrig Ersang, Shenlha Okar, Sangpo
Bumtri and Tonpa Shenrab. They are described in detail in chapter 30 of the Ziji with
reference to the story of the death of Prince Trishang of Tazik. The Four Lords are
the principal deities in the funeral ritual for the prince. In chapter 61 they are further
discussed at the time of the death and funeral of Tonpa Shenrab.
Tsakli (Initiation Cards): (Tib.: tsak li): small paintings, generally the size of
playing cards, created in sets and used in Buddhist and Bon rituals and initiations.
The ritual cards depict illustrations of deities, animals, objects, and abstract images.
Tsewang Rigdzin : The son of Drenpa Namka and the brother of Yungdrung
Tongdrol. Like his father and brother Tsewang Rigdzin has also become deified and
represented in many ritual cycles, especially common in the New Bon tradition (Bon
Sarma).
Tsultrim Tanpai Gyaltsen: a 20th century Bon teacher in Eastern Tibet and a
student of Shardza Tashi Gyaltsen.
Walchen Gekho: a wrathful and complex meditational deity associated with Mount
Tise and the kingdom of Shangshung.
Wensaka, or Yeru Wensaka: the traditional main monastery of the Bon built in
1072. It was destroyed by a flood in 1386 and soon after that, and close by, Menri
Monastery was built by Nyamme Sherab Gyaltsen a former teacher at Wensaka.
Werma Nyenya: a class of worldly gods that are very popular in the religious art of
the Naxi tradition of the Bon religion.
Yeshe Walmo: a special form of the female protector deity Sipai Gyalmo and
associated with meditations and rituals concerning health and long-life.
Yewang Rignga: The Gods of the Five Sciences are the God of the Cosmos, the
physical world, Yewang Sai Gyalpo, God of Art, Yesi Zangpo Bumtri, God of
Language, Yechen Dralai Gyalpo, God of Medicine, Yeje Tutob Gyalpo, and God of the
Occupants of the Cosmos, Yewel Tutob Gyalpo.
Yungdrung (ever-lasting): the Tibetan word for the bent four-legged cross known
as the svastika. When turning to the left it is the principal symbol representing the
Bon religion.
Yungdrung Gu Tseg Ri: the nine yungdrung stacked mountain at the center of the
land of Tazig (Olmo Lungring), the birth place of Tonpa Shenrab.
Yungdrung Monastery: the second most important Bon monastery in Central Tibet.
Wensaka (ruins), Menri and Yungdrung Monasteries are cloe in proximity located half
way between Lhasa and Shigatse just off the main highway. Yungdrung Monastery
can be seen across the river from the main highway.
Yungdrung Scepter (Tibetan: yungdrung chag tsen): a small hand held scepter,
like a dumb-bell, with a yungdrung inscribed at each end. The scepter is depicted in
art for both sculpture and painting displayed in the right hand of Tonpa Shenrab
(example 1, example 2). The symbol does not appear to be very old possibly
originating in the 18th century. The oldest dateable painting depicting the scepter is
from the early 19th century.
Number Sets
Three Protectors: Ma, Du, Tsen: meaning Sipai Gyalmo, Midud and Tsen Apse.
Four Deathless Ones (Chime Yabse Shi): Drenpa Namka and his consort along with
the two sons Tsewang Rigdzin and Yungdrung Tongdrol.
Four Guardian Kings: these four are similar to the Kings of the Indian tradition.
Five Bonpo Families: the Dru, Shu, Pa, Meu and Shen.
Five Deity Sherab Chamma: a focus for meditation using five forms of Sherab
Chamma.
Five Excellent Ones of the Se Fortress: Walse Ngampa, Lhago Togpa, Tsochog
Kagying, Walchen Geko and Purba Drugse Chempa.
Five Gods of the Five Sciences (Yewang Rignga): (see other entry).
Five Gods of the Head (Gowai Lha Nga): (see other entry).
Six Guardians of the Six Realms (Dulwa Shen Drug): six different forms of
Tonpa Shenrab.
Six Kandros of the Magyu: relating to six special esoteric practices such as
transference, bardo, etc.
Six Realms of Existence: god, demi-god, human, animal, ghost and hell-being.
Six Sipai Gyalmo Manifestations: each appearing as white, yellow, red, black,
blue and dark brown in colour.
Eight Chamma Protecting From the Eight Fears: a meditational practice focusing
on the deity accompanied by eight forms each protecting from a common fear.
Eight Offering Goddesses:
Twelve Ritual Deities: different forms of Tonpa Shenrab that follow from his
biography and represent different stories and episodes from his life.
Forty-five Peaceful Deities: related to the Shitro, peaceful and wrathful deities of
the between state.
Eighty-six Wrathful Deities: related to the Shitro, peaceful and wrathful deities of
the between state.
One Hundred and Twenty-one Chorten (Stupa) of the Bon Religion: from a
larger system of 360 chorten divided between the underworld, the earth and the
heavens.
Two Hundred and Fifty Deity Satrig Ersang: the 250 deities surrounding the
central Satrig Ersang in the painted depictions of the Four Transcendent Lords.
Two Hundred and Fifty Deity Shenlha Okar: the 250 surrounding the central
figure (see Satrig Ersang above).
Two Hundred and Fifty Deity Sangpo Bumtri: the 250 surrounding the central
figure (see Satrig Ersang above).
Two Hundred and Fifty Deity Tonpa Shenrab: the 250 surrounding the central
figure (see Satrig Ersang above).
One Thousand Sanggye of the Bon: the set of the Four Transcendent Lords
together with their two-hundred and fifty attendant figures in total adds up to the
One Thousand Sanggye (enlightened ones) of the Bon religion. Note that two-
hundred and fifty of the thousand are female.