-
Nyang Mangpoje Shangnang (Tibetan: མྱང་མང་བོ་རྗེ་ཞང་སྣང་, Wylie:
myang mang po rje
zhang snang; ? – ?) was a
general of the
Tibetan Empire who
served as...
-
Predecessor Mangsong Mangtsen Successor Lha
Balpo or Me
Agtsom Born Düsong
Mangpojé (འདུས་སྲོང་མང་པོ་རྗེ་) c. 668 Drakpu,
Tibet (in
modern Zhanang County)...
- Wu Zetian's Zhou dynasty. Lun was a Tibetan, his
Tibetan name was Gar
Mangpoje (Tibetan: མགར་མང་བུ་རྗེ, Wylie: mgar mang po rje).
After his
father Gar...
- Khu
Mangpoje Lhasung (Tibetan: ཁུ་མང་པོ་རྗེ་ལྷ་ཟུང, Wylie: khu mang po rje lha zung, ? – 705), also
known as Khu
Mangpoje, was a
general of the Tibetan...
- minister,
Myang Mangpoje (Myang Mang-po-rje Zhang-shang),
defeated the
Sumpa people ca. 627. Six
years later (c. 632–33)
Myang Mangpoje was
accused of...
-
diplomacy as well as on the
field of battle. The king's minister,
Nyang Mangpoje Shangnang, with the aid of
troops from Zhangzhung,
defeated the
Sumpa in...
- to
commit suicide. Gar
family were
purged in this coup d'état. His son
Mangpoje (known as Lun
Gongren (論弓仁) by Chinese) fled to
China together with one...
-
Nangtsab མོང་ཁྲི་དོ་རེ་སྣང་ཚབ་ Gar
Tridra Zimun མགར་ཁྲི་སྒྲ་འཛི་རྨུན་
Nyang Mangpoje Shangnang མྱང་མང་བོ་རྗེ་ཞང་སྣང་
during Songtsen Gampo's
reign Plot rebellion...
- Mangpodé
Zhiteng Issue Jang Tsalhawön
Trisong Detsen Lönchen list Khu
Mangpoje Lhasung We
Trisig Shangnyen We
Trisumje Tsangshar Nge
Mangsham Taktsab...
-
hearing about this,
Tsenba surrendered to
China together with his
nephew Mangpoje (known as Lun
Gongren (論弓仁) by Chinese). The
Chinese empress Wu Zetian...