Vajrabodhi (, p=Jīngāngzhì, 671–741 CE) was an Medieval India Vajrayana Bhikkhu and teacher in Nalanda and later in Tang dynasty. He is one of the eight patriarchs in Shingon as well as Zhenyan Buddhism. He is notable for introducing Vajrayana Buddhism in the territories of the Srivijaya which subsequently evolved into a distinct form known as Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism.
As is common with many Buddhist masters, his biographers portray him as an intelligent child who studied many texts including those belonging to Jainism. He also studied for a time under the Buddhist logician, Dharmakīrti while at Nalanda. Under Santijnana, Vajrabodhi studied Vajrayāna teachings and was duly initiated into yoga.
Seeking further knowledge he travelled to Sri Lanka and Sriwijaya (present-day Palembang in the South Sumatra, Indonesia), where he apparently was taught a Vajrayāna tradition distinct from that taught at Nālandā. This Tamraparni route had been traversed by several scholars prior, and mirrored the reach of Agastya. From Srivijaya he sailed to China via the escort of thirty-five Persian Empire merchant-vessels, Iranian cultural impact on south-east Asia and by AD 720 was ensconced in the Jianfu Temple at the Chinese capital, Chang'an (present-day Xi'an). Accompanying him was his soon-to-be-famous disciple, Amoghavajra.
Like Subhakarasimha, who preceded him by four years, Vajrabodhi spent most of his time in ritual activity, in translating texts from Sanskrit to Chinese language, and in the production of Esoteric art. Particularly important was his partial translation of the Sarvatathāgatatattvasagraha between the years 723 and 724. This Yoga Tantra - along with the Mahāvairocana Sutra, translated by Subhakarasimha the same year - provides the foundation of the Zhenyan school in China and the Shingon and Esoteric branch of the Tendai school in Japan. Like Subhakarasimha, Vajrabodhi had ties to high court circles and enjoyed the patronage of imperial princesses; he also taught Korean monk Hyecho; who went on to travel India and Umayyad Persia. Vajrabodhi died in 741 and was buried south of the Longmen Grottoes. He was posthumously awarded the title Guoshi ("Teacher of the Realm").
Vajrabodhi passed on to his disciple, Amoghavajra, that the Tattvasaṃgraha Tantra originated from the cosmic Buddha, Vairocana who initiated Vajrapani, the bodhisattva. These teachings were said to have been passed to a "great worthy who gained access to an iron stupa" (some have identified this as Nagarjuna) and who then, after hundreds of years transmitted them to Nāgabodhi; after a further “several hundred years,” Nāgabodhi had passed them to Vajrabodhi himself.
Other than Amoghavajra and Yi Xing, Vajrabodhi also had other students including Yifu (638-736) and a Huichao who came from Silla. Many, academics including Frederick M. Smith and Michael Strickmann argued that Vajrabodhi introduced methods that would inform Fangxiangshi practices throughout the period of the Tang dynasty, the Five dynasties and the Song dynasty.
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