Vasubandhu.JPG | frame | Vasubandhu Vasubandhu (Skt.; Tib. དབྱིག་གཉེན་, Yiknyen, Wyl. dbyig gnyen) (ca. 316-396)<ref>According to S. Anacker's estimation. According to others such as Thomas Lee Dowling, Vasubandhu would have lived more towards the beginning of the 5th cent.</ref> numbers among the ‘Six Ornaments’, the greatest Buddhist authorities of Ancient India. He was born in Purusapura, present-day Peshawar, Pakistan, in what was then the Kingdom of Gandhara, and was the younger half-brother of Asanga. He composed the Treasury of Abhidharma, a complete and systematic account of the Abhidharma, the peak of scholarship in the Fundamental Vehicle. Later he followed the Mahayana Yogachara view, and wrote many works, such as Thirty Stanzas | Thirty Stanzas on the Mind.
Vasubandhu was a prolific author and wrote texts on a wide variety of subjects, his most famous work being the Abhidharmakosha.
A set of eight texts are referred to as the Eight Treatises (the Eight Prakarana):
Other texts include:
He famously had four students who were more learned than himself:
These students are not necessarily considered to be his direct students, but perhaps more in the sense that they followed in his lineage.
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