Himalayan Art Resources

Item: Magyu Sangchog Tartug (Bon Deity)

མ་རྒྱུད་གསང་མཆོག་མཐར་ཐུག། བོན་ལྷ། 密法母续之王本尊之一(苯教本尊)
(item no. 89733)
Origin Location Tibet
Date Range 1700 - 1799
Lineages Bon
Material Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton
Collection Private
Notes about the Central Figure

Classification: Deity

Interpretation / Description

Magyu Sangchog Tartug (Tibetan: ma rgyud g.sang mchog mthar thug) is likely the most important Bon meditational deity to appear after the early formulation of the Five Excellent Ones of the Se Fortress and the very early deity Zhangzhung Meri.

The appearance and teachings of Magyu follow much more closely with those of Tantric Buddhism than the Five Excellent Ones. The Magyu is not only similar in appearance to the Buddhist deities Shri Hevajra and Chakrasamvara but also follows closely the literature and commentarial explanations especially with such arcane subjects as generation and perfection stage, dream yoga, clear light, etc.

The deity Magyu is wrathful in appearance, blue in colour, with seven heads and sixteen arms holding sixteen skullcups and each containing a heart. Embracing the consort Kyema Marmo, red in colour, one face and two arms, Magyu stands with the right legs straight and the left bent. The human lineage of Magyu is believed to have started with the Tibetan teacher Zangsa Ringtsun.

Jeff Watt 4-2011

Related Items
Thematic Sets
Bon: Deities Main Page
Subject: Meditational Deities (ishtadevata, yi dam)
Buddhist Deity: Chakrasamvara (Confusions)
Bon Deity: Magyu Sangchog Tartug
Bon Deity: Four Kings (Secondary Figures)
Bon Paintings: Masterworks
Subject: Winged Deities (Bon & Buddhist)