- ZYPY:
Chisong Dêzän,
Lhasa dialect: [ʈʂʰisoŋ tetsɛ̃]) was the son of Me
Agtsom, the 37th king of Tibet. As the 38th king, he
ruled from AD 755
until 797...
-
Tibetan Annals from
Dunhuang briefly mention that an
older brother of Me
Agtsom was
deposed in 705.
There is no
information about the cir****stances of his...
-
seven year old
Qilisuzan (Wylie: khri lde
gtsug btsan),
later known as Me
Agtsom, on the throne. 'Dus-srong is
buried next to his
father in the
Royal Burial...
- Tridé
Tsuktsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་ལྡེ་གཙུག་བཙན, Wylie: khri lde
gtsug btsan, 704–755 CE),
nicknamed Mé
Aktsom (Tibetan: མེས་ཨག་ཚོམས, Wylie: mes ag tshoms, "Bearded...
-
troops under the
leadership of
Minister Bel
Kyesang Dongtsab of
Emperor Me
Agtsom took
control of
Little Palola. By 747, the
Chinese army
under the leadership...
-
general of
Tibetan Empire who
served as Lönchen
during the
reign of Me
Agtsom. In
Chinese records, his name was
given as Xīnuòluó Gōnglù (Chinese: 悉諾邏恭祿)...
-
Gongzhu (Kim-sheng Kong co), the
Chinese wife of
Trisong Detsen's father, Me
Agtsom. Chokpori,
meaning 'Iron Mountain', is a
sacred hill,
located south of the...
-
appearing nearly successful. With the ********ination of the
Tibetan emperor Me
Agtsom in 755 in the
midst of a
major rebellion within the
Tibetan polity, final...
-
Tsuktsen (Khri-lde-gtsug-brtsan),
generally known now by his
nickname Me
Agtsom ("Old Hairy"), was born in 704. Upon the
death of
Tridu Songtsen, his mother...
- the
Tibetan emperor Me
Agtsom, in
accordance with the
heqin policy. The
princess is
usually regarded as the
consort of Me
Agtsom. However, Christopher...