-
Rinchen,
meaning "treasure", is a
Tibetan name, used by
speakers of
various Tibetic languages. It is also used as a
given name by Mongols, seen as early...
-
Rinchen Lhamo (18
August 1901 – 13
November 1929), also
written as Rin-chen Lha-mo, was a
Tibetan writer. Her book, We Tibetans, was
published in English...
-
Byambyn Rinchen (Mongolian: Бямбын Ринчен; 21
November 1905 – 4
March 1977), also
known as
Rinchen Bimbayev (Russian: Ринчен Бимбаев), was a Mongolian...
-
Sengge Rinchen (1811 – 18 May 1865) or
Senggelinqin (Mongolian: Сэнгэринчен) was a
Mongol nobleman and
general who
served under the Qing
dynasty during...
-
Colonel Chewang Rinchen MVC & Bar, SM (Kalon
Tsewang Rigdzin, 1931–1997) was a
highly decorated officer in the
Indian Army from the
Union territory of...
-
Lochen Rinchen Zangpo (958–1055; Tibetan: རིན་ཆེན་བཟང་པོ་, Wylie: rin-chen bzang-po), also
known as Mahaguru, was a prin****l
lotsawa or
translator of...
- Ma
Rinchen Chok (Tibetan: རྨ་རིན་ཆེན་མཆོག, Wylie: rma rin chen mchog), is
numbered as one of the twenty-five prin****l
disciples of Padmasambhava. Rinchen...
-
corpus was
excluded from the Tengyur, a
compilation of
texts by
Buton Rinchen Drub that
became the
established canon for the
Sarma traditions. This means...
-
other uses, see
Rinchen Gyaltsen (disambiguation).
Rinchen Gyaltsen (Tibetan: རིན་ཆེན་རྒྱལ་མཚན, Wylie: rin chen
rgyal mtshan, THL:
rinchen gyaltsen; Chinese:...
-
Rinchen Barsbold (Mongolian: Ринченгийн Барсболд,
Rinchyengiin Barsbold, born
December 21, 1935, in Ulaanbaatar) is a
Mongolian paleontologist and geologist...