Turrell V. Wylie

Turrell Verl Wylie (1927–August 25, 1984) was for many years Professor of Tibetan at the University of Washington and the first chair of the Department of Asian Languages and Literature. Professor Wylie founded the Tibetan Studies Program at the University of Washington, the first such program in the United States.

In 1960, following the People's Liberation Army takeover of Tibet, Turrel Wylie invited Sakya Dagchen Rinpoche, one of the main heirarchs of the Sakya school of Tibetan Buddhism, along with his family and his tutor Dezhung Rinpoche to Seattle where they settled.

Amongst students of Tibetan, Professor Wylie is best known for the system of Tibetan transliteration he described in his article A Standard System of Tibetan Transcription (1959). This has subsequently become the almost universally adopted scheme for accurately representing the orthography of Tibetan in the Roman alphabet and is commonly known as Wylie transliteration.

Wylie died of cancer on August 25, 1984. Upon his death, the Dalai Lama remarked, "Dr. Wylie's strong and genuine feelings for the Tibetan people and their just cause will long remain deeply appreciated. In the death of Dr. Wylie we have lost a true friend and a distinguished scholar of Tibetan studies."[1]

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  1. ^ Reflections on Tibetan Culture: Essays in Memory of Turrell V. Wylie. ed. Lawrence Epstein & Richard F. Sherburne. Edwin Mellen Pr: 1990 ISBN 10: 0889460647 pg x

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