(Redirected from Samye Ling)
The main temple building at Samye Ling.
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'Kagyu Samyé Ling Monastery and Tibetan Centre' is a
Tibetan Buddhist complex associated with the
Kagyu school located at
Eskdalemuir, near
Langholm,
Dumfries and Galloway,
Scotland.
History
The building that now houses Samyé Ling was originally a
hunting lodge. The ''Johnstone House Contemplative Community'' was founded there by a Canadian
Theravada monk named Anandabodhi. When the community declined, Anadabodhi returned to Canada; he was subsequently ordained in the Tibetan
Mahayana tradition and enthroned as
Namgyal Rinpoche by the 16th
Gyalwa Karmapa.
In 1967, the Theravadins sold the centre to two Tibetan lamas and refugees named
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche and
Akong Rinpoche, who renamed it ''Samyé Ling''.
[ True path from Tibet to... Eskdalemuir Claire Smith ] Samye refers to the first Buddhist monastic university in
Tibet, while Ling means a large house with grounds. Trungpa Rinpoche later left and founded further centres in the
United States and elsewhere.
The centre flourished and developed under the guidance of Akong Rinpoche and his brother
Lama Yeshe Losal, who serves as both Abbot and Retreat Master. The centre includes the first Tibetan temple to be constructed in
Europe, a large
stupa, and accommodation for those taking a range of courses on
Buddhism,
meditation, spiritual development and art.
Preservation of Tibetan art and crafts

The main stupa at Samye Ling.
Under the guidance of the celebrated Tibetan artist
Sherab Palden Beru, Samyé Ling has also become a centre for the creation, repair and restoration of
thangkas, principally in the Karma Gadri style. Since the 1970s Sherab has trained a number of western practitioners in the highly specialised techniques needed to create thangkas. The temple walls are decorated with many exquisite examples of the work of both Sherab Palden Beru and his western pupils.
Traditional deity and monumental sculpture and the creation of prayer-wheels are also carried out at the centre under the direction of resident and visiting Tibetan experts. The grounds of the centre feature many examples of their work, such as a statue of
Nagarjuna.
Tourist attraction
Listed as a
tourist attraction by
VisitScotland , the centre attracts visitors who come simply to see a spectacular
gilded temple,
stupas and gardens with
statues of
bodhisattvas and
Buddhas.
See also
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Abbeys and priories in Scotland
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Religion in the United Kingdom
References
External links
★
Samye Ling web site
★
1997 UK ''Daily Telegraph'' profile of the Samye Ling community
★
2007 profile from ''The Scotsman'', including much on the early days of Samye Ling