Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Light of Kailash Volume Two by Chögyal Namkhai Norbu Now Available From Shang Shung Editiones, Translated by Professor Donatella Rossi



    The second volume of Rinpoche's trilogy on the origins of Tibetan culture,The Light of Kailash, is now available from the webshop of the Shang Shung Institute:
    This summa of Chögyal Namkhai Norbu’s research is dedicated first and foremost to his fellow countrymen and women and to Tibetan youth in particular. The text was originally conceived as a set of university lectures that Chögyal Namkhai Norbu was invited to give at the University of Nationalities in Beijing in 1988, forming a first abridged version of The Light ofKailash subsequently enlarged by the author after further research; the manuscript through meticulous selection and a critical use and analysis of a vast array of literary and frequently unpublished sources became a work of 1,900 pages divided in three volumes.

    The first volume, The Early Period, the History of Ancient Zhang Zhung, considers the rise of early human generations and the Bon lineages of ancient Zhang Zhung, its dynasties, language, and culture.

    The second volume, The History of the Intermediate Period: Tibet and Zhang Zhung” is focused upon human generations, the Bonpo lineages, the spread of Bon during the lifetimes of the first Tibetan monarchs, the dynasties, written language, and civilization of ancient Tibet, as well as upon the reigns of specific kings, the Bon religion, and Bonpo religious figures (Dran-pa Nam-mkha’ in particular) of Zhang Zhung during that period.

    The third volume, The History of the Later Period: Tibet, is concerned with an assessment of the genealogies, Bonpo lineages, royal dynasties (from the first monarch gNya’-khri bTsan-po until the forty-fifth monarch Khri-dar-ma ’U-dum-btsan), language, and civilization of Tibet.

    This amazing trilogy, aptly named The Light of Kailash, offers an open, daring, holistic, unbiased approach to the study of the cultural and spiritual heritage of Tibet and to the understanding of the origin of this fascinating and endangered civilization.
Translated and edited by Professor Donatella Rossi


Donatella Rossi holds a Ph.D. in History of Religions and Tibetology from the University of Oslo. She is Associate Professor at the Italian Institute of Oriental Studies, Sapienza University of Rome, where she  teaches BA and MA courses on religions and philosophies of Eastern Asia, and Tibetan Language and Literature. Her main research interests are focused on the Bon tradition.


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