- Lha
Thothori gNyan bTsan (Tibetan: ལྷ་ཐོ་ཐོ་རི་གཉན་བཙན་, Wylie: lha tho tho ri
gnyan btsan, Chinese: 佗土度) was the 28th King of
Tibet according to the Tibetan...
- (many
terma fell from the sky in caskets)
during the
reign of king Lha
Thothori Nyantsen of Tibet.[citation needed]
Though the king did not understand...
- in China,
India and Nepal.
According to legend, the 28th king of Tibet,
Thothori Nyantsen,
dreamed of a
sacred treasure falling from heaven,
which contained...
- bTsan-nam) 26
Tridra Pungtsen 27
Tritog Jetsen (Khri-rje Thog-btsan) 28 Lha
Thothori Nyantsen (lHa-tho-tho-ri gNyan-btsan) 29
Trinyen Zungtsen (Khri-gnyan gZung-btsan)...
- (traditionally
calculated to have
lived around the
fifth century B.C.E.), and Lha
Thothori Nyentsen (ca. third-century c.e.),
during whose reign some
sacred Buddhist...
- in 255 CE,
which is a
reference to the
legendary 28th
Emperor of Tibet,
Thothori Nyantsen.
Since the
second half of the 20th
century another year notation...
- (492–506)
Tibet (Yarlung Valley) (complete list) –
Tritog Jetsen, King
Thothori Nyantsen, King (5th century)
Trinyen Zungtsen, King
Gaochang Kàn Bózhōu...
- from the sky unto the roof of the
palace of the 28th king of Tibet, Lha
Thothori Nyantsen who died in the
fifth century C.E., in
southern Tibet. This coincides...
- of Oddiyana.
Buddhism existed in
Tibet at
least from the time of king
Thothori Nyantsen (fl.173?–300? CE),
especially in the
eastern regions. The reign...
-
royal palace also
happened in the case of
Thothori Nyantsen and
these two
stories (i.e. the
story of
Thothori Nyantsen and the
narrative of King Ja) may...