-
misplaced vowels or
missing conjuncts instead of
Tibetan characters.
Songtsen Gampo (classical Tibetan: [sroŋpt͡san zɡampo],
pronounced [sɔ́ŋt͡sɛ̃ ɡʌ̀mpo])...
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imperial expansion under the
Yarlung dynasty heralded by its 33rd king,
Songtsen Gampo, in the 7th century. The
empire further expanded under the 38th king...
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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...
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Nyenzig (son)
Namri Songtsen ?–618 (son)
Songtsen Gampo 618–641 (son of
Namri Songtsen)
Gungsong Gungtsen 641–646 (son)
Songtsen Gampo 646–649 (second...
- 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...
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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...
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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...
- "House of
Religious Science") was the Jokhang's
ancient name. When King
Songtsen Gampo built the temple, his
capital city was
known as Rasa ("Goats"), since...
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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...
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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...