Jigme Lingpa's childhood monastery was the
Nyingma school's
Palri monastery, or Pelri Tekchen Ling, in Chonggye, established by Sherab Ozer. Prefiguring
Jamgon Kongtrul's creation of the
Five Collections, Jigme Lingpa gathered
Nyingma texts that had become rare, starting with Nyingma tantras held in the manuscript collection of the
Mindrolling Monastery. This collection of the Nyingma tantras led to the amassing of the
Nyingma Gyübum (, "Collection of Nyingma Tantras") for which
Getse Mahapandita wrote the catalogue, proofread and arranged for its printing by soliciting the expensive and labour-intensive project of carving the woodblocks for the
woodblock printing. The wood block carving was forded through the patronage of the royal family of
Derge () of
Kham, who favoured and honoured Jigme Lingpa. Getse Mahapandita also arranged for the printing of texts by Jigme Lingpa and
Longchenpa. Getse Mahapandita proofread the works of Jigme Lingpa, Longchenpa and the
Nyingma Gyübum. Jigme also wrote a nine-volume history of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism and other works. His non-sectarian presentation of the
Madhyamaka (Middle Way view) follows
Je Tsongkhapa's system. A major precursor of the
Rimé movement, Jigme Lingpa had many distinguished disciples in all four lineages. The first Dodrupchen Rinpoche,
Dodrupchen Jigme Trinle Ozer, became his main lineage-holder. Among those held by tradition to be Jigme Lingpa's reincarnations are Ye shes rdo rje, the Mdo mkhyen brtse ye shes rdo rje (1800–66, his mind-emanation),
Patrul Rinpoche (speech-emanation) and
Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo (body-emanation). In Bhutan his tradition is held by successive incarnation of the
Padtselling tulku and
Jikmé Kündröl Namgyel. Both Druptop Namgyel Lhündrup, 1st Padtselling Tulku (1718-1786) and
Jigmé Tenpé Gyeltshen, 2nd Padtselling Tulku (1788-1850) were students of Jigme Lingpa. Jigme Lingpa, translated by
Sam van Schaik, states how his learnings commenced:
Janet Gyatso states that: ==Terma==