Translations of Māra | |
---|---|
English | Mara; Demon |
Sanskrit | मार, Māra |
Pali | Māra |
Burmese | မာရ်နတ် (MLCTS: Marnat) |
Chinese | 天魔; 魔羅; 魔罗 (Pinyin: Tiān Mó; Mó Luó; Mó Luó) |
Indonesian | Mara; Setan; Iblis |
Japanese | 魔羅; マーラ; 天魔 (Rōmaji: Mara; Māra; Tenma) |
Khmer | មារ (UNGEGN: Méru) |
Korean | 마라 (RR: Mara) |
Sinhala | මාරයා (Mārayā) |
Tibetan | བདུད (Wylie: bdud) |
Thai | มาร (RTGS: Māra) |
Vietnamese | Thiên Ma |
Glossary of Buddhism |
Mara,[note 1] in Buddhism, is a malignant celestial Asura king who tried to stop Prince Siddhartha from Awakening by trying to seduce him with his celestial Army and a vision of beautiful women who, in various legends, are often said to be Mara's daughters.[1]
In Buddhist cosmology, Mara is associated with death, rebirth and desire.[2] Nyanaponika Thera has described Mara as "the personification of the forces antagonistic to enlightenment."[3]
He is Yama's fearsome persona and all beings associated with him, darkness and death, become forces of Mara. These forces consist of Asuras, Rakshasa, Pisacas, Aratis and animals.[4]
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