Cāmara

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Cāmara (T. rnga yab རྔ་ཡབ་) has the following denotations:

  1. In Buddhist cosmology, the "Land of Cāmara" (Skt. Cāmara-dvīpa; T. rnga yab gling) is one of the eight smaller continents that exist on each side of the four main continents that surround Mount Meru.[1][2] It is one of the two smaller continents on either side of Jambudvīpa. It is inhabited by rākṣasas.[3] In the Tibetan tradition, it is said to be the site of the Pure Land of Padmasambhava, which is known as the Copper-Colored Mountain of Glory (zangs mdog dpal ri).[2]
  2. The bushy tail of the yak used as a whisk for repelling flying insects. It is one of the insignia of royalty.[1] In the Chan tradition, the fly whisk became a symbol of the rank of a Chan master.[4]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Internet-icon.svg རྔ་ཡབ་, Christian-Steinert Dictionary
  2. 2.0 2.1 Rangjung a-circle30px.jpg rnga_yab, Rangjung Yeshe Wiki
  3. Jigme Lingpa & Kangyur Rinpoche 2010, Glossary, "four continents".
  4. Buswell & Lopez 2014, s.v. vālavyajana.

Sources

Further reading