- ཁྲི་གཙུག་ལྡེ་བཙན, Wylie: khri
gtsug lde btshan),
better known by his
nickname Ralpachen (Tibetan: རལ་པ་ཅན, Wylie: ral pa chen) (c. 806 CE–838), was the 40th king...
- and last king of the
Tibetan Empire who in 838
killed his brother, King
Ralpachen, then
reigned from 841 to 842 CE
before he
himself was ********inated. His...
-
Borders were
again confirmed during the
later reign of the 41st king
Ralpachen through his 821–823
treaty between the
Tibetan Empire and Tang dynasty...
-
Three Great Dharma Kings (Tri
Songtsen Gampo, Tri
Songdetsen and Tri
Ralpachen) will
vanish without anything remaining. The
property of all people, high...
- Tibet. With the
reign of King
Langdarma (836–842), the
brother of King
Ralpachen, a time of
political instability ensued which continued over the next...
- in the
context of a
political vacuum spurred by the ********ination of
Ralpachen,
which saw
monastic centers develop political power in a
second spreading...
- Dé, and the
Indian translator Surendrabodhi during the
reign of King
Ralpachen (r. 815–38). This
version most
closely matches the
Chinese version of...
-
marked by a
political vacuum in
Tibet following the ********ination of
Ralpachen.
Initially rooted in
political and
mercantile motives, it
later acquired...
- 756–797 (son) Muné
Tsenpo 797–799 (son)
Tride Songtsen 799–815 (brother)
Ralpachen 815–838 (son)
Langdarma 838–842 (brother)
Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen...
-
respected translators,
under the
royal decree of the
Tibetan king Tri
Ralpachen. In it, 'Sanghāta sutra' is
translated as 'The
Sutra of the Pair of Monastic...