-
Tibetan monk and
State Preceptor (later
Imperial Preceptor) Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa (1235–1280) for
Kublai Khan (r. 1264–1294), the
founder of the Yuan dynasty...
- Drogön
Chogyal Phagpa (Tibetan: འགྲོ་མགོན་ཆོས་རྒྱལ་འཕགས་པ་, Wylie: ʼgro mgon chos
rgyal ʼphags pa; Chinese: 八思巴 Bāsībā; 26
March 1235 – 15
December 1280)...
-
Phagpa his
Imperial preceptor and
granted him a jade seal and the
position of
leader of Buddhism. By
doing so
Kublai officially acknowledged Phagpa as...
- Khan's enthronement. In that year he
appointed the
Sakya lama Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa to this post and soon
placed him in
charge of all
Buddhist clergy. In 1264...
- as healers. In 1253 he made Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa of the
Sakya school, a
member of his entourage.
Phagpa bestowed on
Kublai and his wife,
Chabi (Chabui)...
-
cleric left
Sakya in the
company of his two
young nephews, the ten-year-old
Phagpa and six-year-old
Chakna Dorje. As he
continually preached sermons along...
-
Jetsun Dragpa Gyaltsen (1147–1216)
Sakya Pandita (1182–1251) Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa (1235–1280)
Buton Rinchen Drub (1290–1364) was an
important scholar and...
- Khan,
Sonam Gyatso identified himself as the
incarnation of Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa, and
Altan Khan as that of
Kubilai Khan, thus
placing the Khan as heir to...
- Möngke as
Great Khan
meant that
after 1260,
Phagpa and the
House of
Sakya would only
wield greater influence.
Phagpa became head of all
Buddhist monks in the...
- The "southern monastery" was
founded under the
orders of Drogön Chögyal
Phagpa in 1268,
across a
river from the
earlier structures. 130,000
workers were...