- zɡampo],
pronounced [sɔ́ŋt͡sɛ̃ ɡʌ̀mpo]) (Tibetan: སྲོང་བཙན་སྒམ་པོ, Wylie:
srong btsan sgam po, ZYPY: Songzän Gambo; 569–649/650), also
Songzan Ganbu (Chinese:...
- Tri
Songdetsen (Tibetan: ཁྲོ་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བརྩན། ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བཙན, Wylie: khri
srong lde brtsan/btsan, ZYPY:
Chisong Dêzän,
Lhasa dialect: [ʈʂʰisoŋ tetsɛ̃])...
- Gtsaṅ) has come to be
called Dbus-gtsaṅ (Central Tibet)."
Songtsen Gampo (
Srong-brtsan Sgam-po) (c. 604 – 650) was the
first great emperor who expanded...
-
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...
-
Arjhan Srong-ngamsub (Thai: อาจหาญ ทรงงามทรัพย์) is a Thai
football coach. He
coached the
Thailand national football team at the 1996 AFC
Asian Cup. He...
-
released by the club
after the
season finished and was
replaced by
Arjhan Srong-ngamsub. In 2014, ****anese head
coach Sugao Kambe guided Nakhon Ratchasima...
-
Chatchai Paholpat (1994–1995, 2004)
Thawatchai Sartjakul (1996)
Arjhan Srong-ngamsub (1996)
Dettmar Cramer (1997)
Witthaya Laohakul (1997–1998) Peter...
-
Namri Songtsen (gNam-ri
Srong-btsan) ?–629 33
Songtsen Gampo (
Srong-btsan sGam-po) 618–649 34
Gungsrong Gungtsen (Gung-
srong gung-btsan) 638–655? 35 Mangsong...
-
Namri Songtsen (Tibetan: གནམ་རི་སྲོང་བཙན, Wylie: gnam ri
srong btsan, ZYPY:
Namri Songzän), also
known as "Namri Löntsen"[citation needed] (Wylie: gnam...
-
Tritsuk Detsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་གཙུག་ལྡེ་བཙན, Wylie: khri
gtsug lde btshan),
better known by his
nickname Ralpachen (Tibetan: རལ་པ་ཅན, Wylie: ral pa chen)...