- as 'emperor' of Tibet.
Traditional Tibetan titles for the king
include tsenpo ("Chief") and
lhase ("Divine Son"). In the list the
common transliteration...
-
Drigum Tsenpo was an
emperor of Tibet.
According to
Tibetan mythology, he was the
first king of
Tibet to lose his
immortality when he
angered his stable...
- Tri
Songdetsen had four sons:
Mutri Tsenpo, Muné
Tsenpo,
Mutik Tsenpo, and Sadnalegs. The
eldest son,
Mutri Tsenpo, died early. Tri
Songdetsen retired...
- Muné
Tsenpo (Tibetan: མུ་ནེ་བཙན་པོ་, Wylie: Mu-ne btsan-po) was the 39th
Emperor of
Tibet (r. c. 797?-799?). This
period of
Tibetan history,
towards the...
-
Nyatri Tsenpo (Wylie: gnya' khri
btsan po, lit. '"Neck-Enthroned King"') was a king of Tibet. He was a
legendary progenitor of the
Yarlung dynasty. His...
-
Nyatri Tsenpo Mutri Tsenpo (son)
Dingtri Tsenpo (son)
Sotri Tsenpo (son)
Mertri Tsenpo (son)
Daktri Tsenpo (son)
Siptri Tsenpo (son)
Drigum Tsenpo (son)...
- The eldest,
Mutri Tsenpo,
apparently died young. When
Trisong Detsen retired he
handed power to the
eldest surviving son, Muné
Tsenpo (Mu-ne btsan-po)...
-
Mutik Tsenpo (Tibetan: མུ་ཏིག་བཙན་པོ་, Wylie: Mu-tig btsan-po) or
Murug Tsenpo (Tibetan: མུ་རུག་བཙན་པོ་, Wylie: Mu-rug btsan-po) is
sometimes considered...
-
Emperor (705–755)
Trisong Detsen,
Emperor (755–797) Muné
Tsenpo,
Emperor (797–c.799)
Mutik Tsenpo,
disputed Emperor (c.799) Sadnalegs,
Emperor (c.800/04–c...
-
airline Richard "Beebo"
Russell of the 2018
Horizon Air Q400
incident Muné
Tsenpo,
Zhangzhung name of the 39th
Emperor of
Tibet Dave
Kingman (born 1948),...