Dingpoche monastery
Tibetan name |
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Tibetan script :
སྡིངས་ པོ་ ཆེ
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Wylie transliteration : sdings po che
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THDL transcription : Dingpoché
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Other spellings: Dingboche
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Chinese name |
Simplified :
顶 布钦 寺
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Pinyin : Dǐngbùqīn sì
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The Dingpoche Monastery ( Tib . : sdings po che dgon pa ) is a monastery of the Drugpa Kagyu School - one of the so-called "eight small schools" of the Kagyu school tradition of Tibetan Buddhism . It is located 15 kilometers south of Chanang (Dranang) and 30 kilometers southwest of Mindrölling in the area of the municipality of Kyilru (Chinese: Jiru 吉 汝 乡) of the Chanang (Dranang) district of Shannan (Lhoka) of the Tibet Autonomous Region in the People's Republic of China .
The monastery was founded in 1567 by Rinchen Phüntshog ( rin chen phun tshogs ; 1529–1611), according to other information by Rinchen Pelsang ( rin chen dpal bzang ), a pupil of Pema Karpos . It was heavily fortified, but was destroyed by the Djungars in the 18th century and also suffered destruction during the Cultural Revolution . It was rebuilt in the 1980s.
Initially it consisted of just a meeting hall. Under the 2nd abbot Nyendrag Pelsang ( snyan grags dpal bzang ; 1613–1682) it was gradually enlarged.
Incarnation series of the monastery are (Chin.) Juezhi 觉 智 活佛 and (Chin.) Jiong 迥 活佛.
The monastery is on the list of monuments of the Tibet Autonomous Region .
literature
- Keith Dowman: The power-places of Central Tibet: the pilgrim's guide . ISBN 9780710213709
- Gyurme Dorje: Tibet Handbook . ISBN 9781900949330
Web links
- Dingboche - French
References and footnotes
- ↑ Chinese Dingbuqin si 顶 布钦 寺
- ↑ chin, Renqin Pingcuo 仁钦 平措
- ↑ tibet.news.cn: Gaju pai simiao - Dingbuqin si 噶举派 寺庙 - 顶 布钦 寺 (Monasteries of the Kagyü School: Dingpoche Monastery) ( Memento of the original from March 17, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: Der Archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (accessed on May 21, 2011)
- ↑ or Rinchen Pelzang, see literature: Victor Chan, Gyurme Dorje, Keith Dowman. - The name appearing in the Chinese texts is 仁钦 平措, where 平措 (Pinyin: Pingcuo) in the legend after Wylie is phun tshogs (Phüntshog).
- ↑ Chin. Nianzha Baisang 念 扎 白 桑
Dingpoche monastery (alternative names of the lemma) |
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顶 布钦 寺, Dingboche; Dingpoche Monastery; lding po che dgon pa; Dingboche (sDings po che); Dingboche Gompa |
Coordinates: 29 ° 8 ′ 20.4 ″ N , 91 ° 17 ′ 39.1 ″ E