-
misplaced vowels or
missing conjuncts instead of
Tibetan characters.
Songtsen Gampo (classical Tibetan: [sroŋpt͡san zɡampo],
pronounced [sɔ́ŋt͡sɛ̃ ɡʌ̀mpo])...
-
result of
expansion under the
Yarlung dynasty heralded by its 33rd king,
Songtsen Gampo, in the 7th century. It
expanded further under the 38th king, Trisong...
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Namri Songtsen (Tibetan: གནམ་རི་སྲོང་བཙན, Wylie: gnam ri
srong btsan, ZYPY:
Namri Songzän), also
known as "Namri Löntsen"[citation needed] (Wylie: gnam...
- The
Potala is on
ruins of the
White or Red Palace,
built by
decree of
Songtsen Gampo in 637.
Built at an
altitude of 3,700metres, on the side of Ri Marpo...
- to give
Songtsen Gampo a
distant niece,
Princess Wencheng, in marriage. The
peace held for the
remainder of the
reigns of
Taizong and
Songtsen Gampo. Although...
-
married King
Songtsen Gampo of the
Tibetan Empire in 641. She is also
known by the name
Gyasa or "Chinese wife" in Tibet. Both
Wencheng and
Songtsen Gampo's...
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Tridu Songtsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་འདུས་སྲོང་བཙན་, Wylie: Khri 'dus-srong btsan),
Tridu Songtsen or
Dusong Mangban, (b.668 – 704d.; r. 676–704 CE) was an emperor...
- Bulantai/Boluntay in the
western part of the
Qinghai province. By the mid 7th century,
Songtsen Gampo became the
leader of the
Tibetan Empire that had
risen to
power in...
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Trinyen Songtsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་གཉན་གཟུངས་བཙན; Wylie: Khri-gnyan gZung-btsan, Chinese:赤宁松赞) was the 29th King of Bod
according to
Tibetan legendary tradition...
-
Emperor Taizong of Tang
refused a
marriage alliance, the
Tibetan emperor Songtsen Gampo sent an army to
attack the
Chinese frontier city of
Songzhou (松州...