- has come to be
called Dbus-gtsaṅ (Central Tibet)."
Songtsen Gampo (Srong-
brtsan Sgam-po) (c. 604 – 650) was the
first great emperor who
expanded Tibet's...
-
Songtsen Gampo had a
dispute with his
younger brother Tsensong (Wylie:
brtsan srong), the
younger brother was
burnt to
death by his own minister, Khasek...
-
Songdetsen (Tibetan: ཁྲོ་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བརྩན། ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བཙན, Wylie: khri
srong lde
brtsan/btsan, ZYPY:
Chisong Dêzän,
Lhasa dialect: [ʈʂʰisoŋ tetsɛ̃]) was the son...
- Ösung was Pälkhortsän (Dpal 'khor
brtsan) (865–895 or 893–923), who had two sons,
Trashi Tsentsän (Bkra shis
brtsen brtsan) and
Thrikhyiding (Khri khyi lding)...
- d'amérique et d'orient. 1961, p. 133. Richardson, H. E. "Khri Gtsug-lde-
brtsan's Illness."
Bulletin of the
School of
Oriental and
African Studies, 44 (1981)...
-
Trisong Detsen. The text has been
translated as follows: "Queen
Rgyal mo
brtsan,
mother and son, made this bell in
order to
worship the
Three Jewels of...
-
identifiable as the
tombs of all the
kings from Srong-
brtsan-sgam-po to Khri-lde-srong-
brtsan,
including two
princes . . . ."
Other sources, however...
-
Tibet Journal. Vol. XXII, No. 1.
Spring 1997, pp. 3–11. Richardson, Hugh E. (1965). "How Old was
Srong Brtsan Sgampo"
Bulletin of
Tibetology 2.1. pp 5–8....
-
Mangtsen 653–676 36
Tridu Songtsen 676–704 37 Me
Agtsom (Khri-lde-gtsug-
brtsan) 680–743 38
Trisong Detsen 755–797 39 Muné
Tsenpo 797–799? 40 Sadnalegs...
- of his
brothers had died, and that he
bound his
elder brother, Mur-rug-
brtsan, with an oath.
Orgyen Lingpa (1323 – 1360) was said to be his
seventh incarnarnation...