fbpx
Wikipedia

Guge

Guge (Tibetan: གུ་གེ་, Wylie: gu ge; Chinese: 古格) was an ancient dynastic kingdom in Western Tibet. The kingdom was centered in present-day Zanda County, Ngari Prefecture, Tibet Autonomous Region. At various points in history after the 10th century AD, the kingdom held sway over a vast area including south-eastern Zanskar, upper Kinnaur district, and Spiti Valley, either by conquest or as tributaries. The ruins of the former capital of the Guge kingdom are located at Tsaparang in the Sutlej valley, not far from Mount Kailash and 1,200 miles (1,900 km) west from Lhasa.

Guge
Ruins of the Guge capital at Tsaparang
Location of Guge and neighbouring polities in the early 1000s.[1]
CapitalTsaparang
Religion
Tantric Hinduism, Tibetan Buddhism, Shamanism, Bon
GovernmentMonarchy
• c. 910c. 930
Kyide Nyimagon (first)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofChina; India; Nepal

History edit

Founding edit

Guge was founded in the 10th century. Its capitals were located at Tholing 31°28′55″N 79°48′01″E / 31.48194°N 79.80028°E / 31.48194; 79.80028 and Tsaparang.[2] Kyide Nyimagon, a great-grandson of Langdarma, the last monarch of the Tibetan Empire, fled to Ngari (West Tibet) from the insecure conditions in Ü-Tsang in 910. He established a kingdom around 912, annexing Purang and Guge. He established his capital in Guge.

Nyimagon later divided his lands into three parts. The king's eldest son Palgyigon became ruler of Maryul (Ladakh), his second son Trashigon (bKra shis mgon) received Guge-Purang, and the third son Detsukgon received Zanskar.

Second diffusion of Buddhism edit

 
A brass alloy statue of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara, Guge, c. 1050 CE.

Trashigon was succeeded by his son Srong nge or Yeshe-Ö (Ye shes 'Od) (947–1024 or (959–1036), who was a renowned Buddhist figure. In his time a Tibetan lotsawa from Guge called Rinchen Zangpo (958–1055), after having studied in India, returned to his homeland as a monk to promote Buddhism. Together with the zeal of Yeshe-Ö, this marked the beginning of a new diffusion of Buddhist teachings in western Tibet. In 988 Yeshe-Ö took religious vows and left kingship to his younger brother Khor re.

According to later historiography, the Turkic Karluks (Gar log) took the Yeshe-Ö prisoner in a war.[3] The episode has a prominent place in Tibetan history writing. The Karluks offered to set him free if he renounced Buddhism, which he refused to do. They then demanded his weight in gold to release him. His junior kinsman Byang chub 'Od visited him in his prison with a small retinue, but Yeshe-Ö admonished him not to use the gold at hand for ransom, but rather to invite the renowned Mahayana sage Atiśa (982–1054). Yeshe-Ö eventually died in prison from age and poor treatment.[4] The story is historically debated since it contains chronological inconsistencies.[citation needed]

Successions edit

 
Donor depiction, presumably king Lha lde of Guge. Northwest stupa, Tholing Monastery, ca. 1025 CE.[5]

In 1037, Khor re's eldest grandson 'Od lde was killed in a conflict with the Kara-Khanid Khanate from Central Asia, who subsequently ravaged Ngari. His brother Byang chub 'Od (984–1078), a Buddhist monk, took power as secular ruler. He was responsible for inviting Atiśa to Tibet in 1040 and thus ushering in the so-called Chidar (Phyi-dar) phase of Buddhism in Tibet. Byang chub 'Od's son rTse lde was murdered by his nephew in 1088. This event marked the break-up of the Guge-Purang kingdom, since one of his brothers was established as separate king of Purang. The usurping nephew dBang lde continued the royal dynasty in Guge.[6]

A new Kara-Khanid invasion of Guge took place before 1137 and cost the life of the ruler, bKra shis rtse. Later in the same century the kingdom was temporarily divided. In 1240 the Mongol khagan, at least nominally, gave authority over the Ngari area to the Drigung Monastery in Ü-Tsang.

Grags pa lde was an important ruler who united the Guge area around 1265 and subjugated the related Ya rtse (Khasa) kingdom. After his death in 1277 Guge was dominated by the Sakya monastic regime. After 1363, with the decline of the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty and their Sakya protégés, Guge was again strengthened and took over Purang in 1378. Purang was henceforth contested between Guge and Mustang, but was finally integrated into the former. Guge also briefly ruled over Ladakh in the late 14th century. From 1499 the Guge king had to acknowledge the Rinpungpa rulers of Tsang. The 15th and 16th centuries were marked by a considerable Buddhist building activity by the kings, who frequently showed their devotion to the Gelug leaders later known as the Dalai Lamas.[7]

Ladakhi invasions edit

 
Guge in Maryul during 11th century
 
Tsaparang, the ruins of the ancient capital of Guge

The first Westerners to reach Guge were António de Andrade, a Jesuit missionary, and his companion brother Manuel Marques, in 1624. De Andrade reported seeing irrigation canals and rich crops in what is now a dry and desolate land. Perhaps as evidence of the kingdom's openness, de Andrade's party was allowed to construct a chapel in Tsaparang and instruct the people about Catholic Christianity.[8] A letter by De Andrade relates that some military commanders revolted and called the Ladakhis to overthrow the ruler. There had been friction between Guge and Ladakh for many years, and the invitation was heeded in 1630. The Ladakhi forces laid siege to the almost impenetrable Tsaparang. The King's brother, who was chief lama and thus a staunch Buddhist, advised the pro-Christian ruler to surrender against keeping the state as tributary ruler. This treacherous advice was eventually accepted. Tibetan sources suggest that the Guge population was maintained in their old status. The last king, Tashi Drakpa De, (Khri bKra shis Grags pa lde) and his brother and other kin, were deported to Ladakh, where they lived comfortably until their death. The prince married a wife from the Ladakhi royal family.[9][10]

Annexation to Central Tibet edit

Tsaparang and the Guge kingdom were later conquered in 1679–80 by the Lhasa-based Central Tibetan government under the leadership of the 5th Dalai Lama, driving out the Ladakhis.

Historiography edit

Western archeologists heard about Guge again in the 1930s through the work of Italian Giuseppe Tucci. Tucci's work was mainly about the frescoes of Guge. Lama Anagarika Govinda and Li Gotami Govinda visited the kingdom of Guge, including Tholing and Tsaparang, in 1947–1949. Their tours of central and western Tibet are recorded in black-and-white photos.[11]

Rulers edit

A list of rulers of Guge and the related Ya rtse kingdom has been established by the Tibetologists Luciano Petech and Roberto Vitali[12]

A. Royal ancestors of the Yarlung dynasty

  • 'Od srungs (in Central Tibet 842–905) son of Glang Darma
  • dPal 'Khor btsan (in Central Tibet 905–910) son
  • Kyide Nyimagon (in Ngari Korsum, c. 912–?) son
  • Palgyigon (received Ladakh, 10th century) son
  • Detsukgon (received Zanskar, 10th century) brother

B. Kings of Guge and Purang.

  • Trashigon (received Guge and Purang, fl. 947) brother
  • Yeshe-Ö (?–988 or 959–1036) son
  • Nagaraja (religious leader, d. 1023) son
  • Devaraja (religious leader, d. 1026) brother
  • Khor re (988–996) uncle
  • Lha lde (996–1024) son
  • 'Od lde btsan (1024–1037) son
  • Byang chub 'Od (1037–1057) brother
  • Zhi ba 'Od (religious leader, d. 1111) brother
  • Che chen tsha rTse lde (1057–1088) son of Byang chub 'od

C. Kings of Ya rtse.

  • Naga lde (early 12th century)
  • bTsan phyug lde (mid-12th century)
  • bKra shis lde (12th century)
  • Grags btsan lde (12th century) brother of bTsan phyug lde)
  • Grags pa lde (Kradhicalla) (fl. 1225)
  • A sog lde (Ashokacalla) (fl. 1255–1278) son
  • 'Ji dar sMal (Jitarimalla) (fl. 1287–1293) son
  • A nan sMal (Anandamalla) (late 13th century) brother
  • Ri'u sMal (Ripumalla) (fl. 1312–1214) son
  • San gha sMal (Sangramamalla) (early 14th century) son
  • Ajitamalla (1321–1328) son of Jitarimalla
  • Kalyanamalla (14th century)
  • Pratapamalla (14th century)
  • Pu ni sMal (Punyamalla) (fl. 1336–1339) of Purang royalty
  • sPri ti sMal (Prthivimalla) (fl. 1354–1358) son

D. Kings of Guge.

 
Ruins of Tsaparang.
  • Bar lde (dBang lde) (1088 – c. 1095) nephew of Che chen tsha rTse lde
  • bSod nams rtse (c. 1095 – early 12th century) son
  • bKra shis rtse (before 1137) son
  • Jo bo rGyal po (regent, mid-12th century) brother
  • rTse 'bar btsan (12th century) son of bKra shis rtse
  • sPyi lde btsan (12th century) son
  • rNam lde btsan (12th/13th century) son
  • Nyi ma lde (12th/13th century) son
  • dGe 'bum (13th century) probably an outsider
  • La ga (died c. 1260) of foreign origin
  • Chos rgyal Grags pa (c. 1260–1265)
  • Grags pa lde (c. 1265–1277) prince from Lho stod
  • unknown rulers
  • rNam rgyal lde (c. 1396 – 1424) son of a Guge ruler
  • Nam mkha'i dBang po Phun tshogs lde (1424–1449) son
  • rNam ri Sang rgyas lde (1449–?) son
  • bLo bzang Rab brtan (died c. 1485) son
  • sTod tsha 'Phags pa lha (c. 1485 – after 1499) son
  • Shakya 'od (early 16th century) son
  • Jig rten dBang phyug Pad kar lde (fl. 1537–1555) son?
  • Ngag gi dBang phyug (16th century) son
  • Nam mkha dBang phyug (16th century) son
  • Khri Nyi ma dBang phyug (late 16th century) son
  • Khri Grags pa'i dBang phyug (c. 1600) son
  • Khri Nam rgyal Grags pa lde (fl. 1618) son
  • Tashi Drakpa De (before 1622–1630) son
  • Kingdom conquered by Ladakh (1630)
  • Kingdom later conquered by Tibet under the Fifth Dalai Lama (1679–1680)

See also edit

References edit

Specific references:

  1. ^ Chandra, Satish (2004). Medieval India: From Sultanat to the Mughals-Delhi Sultanat (1206–1526) – Part One. Har-Anand Publications. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-81-241-1064-5.
  2. ^ .Snelling, John. (1990). The Sacred Mountain: The Complete Guide to Tibet's Mount Kailas. 1st edition 1983. Revised and enlarged edition, including: Kailas-Manasarovar Travellers' Guide. Forwards by H.H. the Dalai Lama of Tibet and Christmas Humphreys, p. 181. East-West Publications, London and The Hague. ISBN 0-85692-173-4.
  3. ^ Beckwith, Christopher I. (2009). Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present. Princeton University Press. pp. 169–. ISBN 978-0-691-13589-2.
  4. ^ Shakabpa, Tibet: A Political History (1984), pp. 56–57.
  5. ^ Heller, Amy (1 January 2018). "Tibetan Inscriptions at Alchi, Part I Towards a reassessment of the chronology". Tibetan Genealogies: Studies in Memoriam of Guge Tsering Gyalpo (1961–2015), Guntram Hazod and Shen Weirong, Editors, China Tibetology Publishing House.
  6. ^ Hoffman, Early and Medieval Tibet (1990), pp. 388, 394; Petech, Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-ran (2003), pp. 53–66
  7. ^ Petech, Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-ran (2003), pp. 42–45, 68–89.
  8. ^ McKinnon, John. "The Kingdom of Guge, Western Tibet: an account of its history, Western visitors and significance". www.greenkiwi.co.nz. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  9. ^ Petech, The Kingdom of Ladakh (1977), pp. 44–45.
  10. ^ Petech, Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-ran (2003), p. 44.
  11. ^ Li Gotami Govinda, Tibet in Pictures (Berkeley, Dharma Publishing, 1979), 2 volumes.
  12. ^ Petech, Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-ran (2003); R. Vitali (1996), The kingdoms of Gu.ge Pu.hrang. Dharamsala: Tho.ling gtsug.lag.khang.

General references:

  • Allen, Charles. (1999) The Search for Shangri-La: A Journey into Tibetan History. Little, Brown and Company. Reprint: 2000 Abacus Books, London. ISBN 0-349-11142-1.

Further reading edit

  • Bellezza, John Vincent: Zhang Zhung. Foundations of Civilization in Tibet. A Historical and Ethnoarchaeological Study of the Monuments, Rock Art, Texts, and Oral Tradition of the Ancient Tibetan Upland. Denkschriften der phil.-hist. Klasse 368. Beitraege zur Kultur- und Geistesgeschichte Asiens 61, Verlag der Oesterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien 2008.
  • Hoffman, Helmut (1990), "Early and Medieval Tibet", in Denis Sinor; Sinor Denis (eds.), The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-24304-9
  • Petech, Luciano (September 1947), "The Tibetan-Ladakhi Moghul War of 1681-83", The Indian Historical Quarterly, 23 (3): 169– – via archive.org
  • Petech, Luciano (1977), The Kingdom of Ladakh, c. 950–1842 A.D. (PDF), Instituto Italiano Per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente – via academia.edu[dead link]
  • Petech, Luciano (2003), "Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-ran: A new study", in Alex McKay (ed.), History of Tibet, Volume 2: The Medieval Period: c.850–1895, Routledge, pp. 33–52, ISBN 0-415-30843-7 – via archive.org
    • Petech, Luciano (1980), "Ya-ts'e, Gu-ge, Pu-raṅ: A New Study", Central Asiatic Journal, 24 (1/2): 85–111, JSTOR 41927281
  • Shakabpa, Tsepon Wangchuk Deden (1984) [1967], Tibet: A Political History, New York: Potala Publications, ISBN 0-9611474-0-7
  • van Ham, Peter. (2017). Guge--Ages of Gold: The West Tibetan Masterpieces. Hirmer Verlag, 390 pages, ISBN 978-3777426686
  • Zeisler, Bettina. (2010). "East of the Moon and West of the Sun? Approaches to a Land with Many Names, North of Ancient India and South of Khotan." In: The Tibet Journal, Special issue. Autumn 2009 vol XXXIV n. 3-Summer 2010 vol XXXV n. 2. "The Earth Ox Papers", edited by Roberto Vitali, pp. 371–463.

External links edit

  • [1] "Submerged in the Cosmos" by David Shulman, The New York Review of Books, February 24, 2017, retrieved March 2, 2017.
  • "Unravelling the mysteries of Guge" by Xiong Lei, China Daily, May 8, 2003, retrieved November 24, 2005

guge, search, engine, that, formerly, used, chinese, name, google, china, tibetan, wylie, chinese, 古格, ancient, dynastic, kingdom, western, tibet, kingdom, centered, present, zanda, county, ngari, prefecture, tibet, autonomous, region, various, points, history. For the search engine that formerly used the Chinese name Gu Ge see Google China Guge Tibetan ག ག Wylie gu ge Chinese 古格 was an ancient dynastic kingdom in Western Tibet The kingdom was centered in present day Zanda County Ngari Prefecture Tibet Autonomous Region At various points in history after the 10th century AD the kingdom held sway over a vast area including south eastern Zanskar upper Kinnaur district and Spiti Valley either by conquest or as tributaries The ruins of the former capital of the Guge kingdom are located at Tsaparang in the Sutlej valley not far from Mount Kailash and 1 200 miles 1 900 km west from Lhasa GugeRuins of the Guge capital at TsaparangSouth Asia1000 CEKARAKHANIDKHANATEKHOTANGHAZNAVIDEMPIREMULTANEMIRATEGURJARA PRATIHARASPALA EMPIRENAGVANSHISKAMARUPAHINDUSHAHISKUMAONMARYULUTPA LASGUHILASCHAULUKYASCHUDASAMASHABBARIDEMIRATECHAHAMANASTOMARASPARAMARASSHILA HARASWESTERNCHALUKYASEASTERNCHALUKYASCHOLASKADAMBASCHANDELASKALACHURISSOMAVAMSHISKALINGASGUGE Location of Guge and neighbouring polities in the early 1000s 1 CapitalTsaparangReligionTantric Hinduism Tibetan Buddhism Shamanism BonGovernmentMonarchy c 910 c 930Kyide Nyimagon first Preceded by Succeeded by Era of Fragmentation LadakhToday part ofChina India Nepal Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Second diffusion of Buddhism 1 3 Successions 1 4 Ladakhi invasions 1 5 Annexation to Central Tibet 2 Historiography 3 Rulers 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editSee also Timeline of the Era of Fragmentation and Purang Guge Kingdom Founding edit Guge was founded in the 10th century Its capitals were located at Tholing 31 28 55 N 79 48 01 E 31 48194 N 79 80028 E 31 48194 79 80028 and Tsaparang 2 Kyide Nyimagon a great grandson of Langdarma the last monarch of the Tibetan Empire fled to Ngari West Tibet from the insecure conditions in U Tsang in 910 He established a kingdom around 912 annexing Purang and Guge He established his capital in Guge Nyimagon later divided his lands into three parts The king s eldest son Palgyigon became ruler of Maryul Ladakh his second son Trashigon bKra shis mgon received Guge Purang and the third son Detsukgon received Zanskar Second diffusion of Buddhism edit nbsp A brass alloy statue of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara Guge c 1050 CE Trashigon was succeeded by his son Srong nge or Yeshe O Ye shes Od 947 1024 or 959 1036 who was a renowned Buddhist figure In his time a Tibetan lotsawa from Guge called Rinchen Zangpo 958 1055 after having studied in India returned to his homeland as a monk to promote Buddhism Together with the zeal of Yeshe O this marked the beginning of a new diffusion of Buddhist teachings in western Tibet In 988 Yeshe O took religious vows and left kingship to his younger brother Khor re According to later historiography the Turkic Karluks Gar log took the Yeshe O prisoner in a war 3 The episode has a prominent place in Tibetan history writing The Karluks offered to set him free if he renounced Buddhism which he refused to do They then demanded his weight in gold to release him His junior kinsman Byang chub Od visited him in his prison with a small retinue but Yeshe O admonished him not to use the gold at hand for ransom but rather to invite the renowned Mahayana sage Atisa 982 1054 Yeshe O eventually died in prison from age and poor treatment 4 The story is historically debated since it contains chronological inconsistencies citation needed Successions edit nbsp Donor depiction presumably king Lha lde of Guge Northwest stupa Tholing Monastery ca 1025 CE 5 In 1037 Khor re s eldest grandson Od lde was killed in a conflict with the Kara Khanid Khanate from Central Asia who subsequently ravaged Ngari His brother Byang chub Od 984 1078 a Buddhist monk took power as secular ruler He was responsible for inviting Atisa to Tibet in 1040 and thus ushering in the so called Chidar Phyi dar phase of Buddhism in Tibet Byang chub Od s son rTse lde was murdered by his nephew in 1088 This event marked the break up of the Guge Purang kingdom since one of his brothers was established as separate king of Purang The usurping nephew dBang lde continued the royal dynasty in Guge 6 A new Kara Khanid invasion of Guge took place before 1137 and cost the life of the ruler bKra shis rtse Later in the same century the kingdom was temporarily divided In 1240 the Mongol khagan at least nominally gave authority over the Ngari area to the Drigung Monastery in U Tsang Grags pa lde was an important ruler who united the Guge area around 1265 and subjugated the related Ya rtse Khasa kingdom After his death in 1277 Guge was dominated by the Sakya monastic regime After 1363 with the decline of the Mongol led Yuan dynasty and their Sakya proteges Guge was again strengthened and took over Purang in 1378 Purang was henceforth contested between Guge and Mustang but was finally integrated into the former Guge also briefly ruled over Ladakh in the late 14th century From 1499 the Guge king had to acknowledge the Rinpungpa rulers of Tsang The 15th and 16th centuries were marked by a considerable Buddhist building activity by the kings who frequently showed their devotion to the Gelug leaders later known as the Dalai Lamas 7 Ladakhi invasions edit nbsp Guge in Maryul during 11th century nbsp Tsaparang the ruins of the ancient capital of Guge The first Westerners to reach Guge were Antonio de Andrade a Jesuit missionary and his companion brother Manuel Marques in 1624 De Andrade reported seeing irrigation canals and rich crops in what is now a dry and desolate land Perhaps as evidence of the kingdom s openness de Andrade s party was allowed to construct a chapel in Tsaparang and instruct the people about Catholic Christianity 8 A letter by De Andrade relates that some military commanders revolted and called the Ladakhis to overthrow the ruler There had been friction between Guge and Ladakh for many years and the invitation was heeded in 1630 The Ladakhi forces laid siege to the almost impenetrable Tsaparang The King s brother who was chief lama and thus a staunch Buddhist advised the pro Christian ruler to surrender against keeping the state as tributary ruler This treacherous advice was eventually accepted Tibetan sources suggest that the Guge population was maintained in their old status The last king Tashi Drakpa De Khri bKra shis Grags pa lde and his brother and other kin were deported to Ladakh where they lived comfortably until their death The prince married a wife from the Ladakhi royal family 9 10 Annexation to Central Tibet edit Tsaparang and the Guge kingdom were later conquered in 1679 80 by the Lhasa based Central Tibetan government under the leadership of the 5th Dalai Lama driving out the Ladakhis Historiography editWestern archeologists heard about Guge again in the 1930s through the work of Italian Giuseppe Tucci Tucci s work was mainly about the frescoes of Guge Lama Anagarika Govinda and Li Gotami Govinda visited the kingdom of Guge including Tholing and Tsaparang in 1947 1949 Their tours of central and western Tibet are recorded in black and white photos 11 Rulers editA list of rulers of Guge and the related Ya rtse kingdom has been established by the Tibetologists Luciano Petech and Roberto Vitali 12 A Royal ancestors of the Yarlung dynasty Od srungs in Central Tibet 842 905 son of Glang Darma dPal Khor btsan in Central Tibet 905 910 son Kyide Nyimagon in Ngari Korsum c 912 son Palgyigon received Ladakh 10th century son Detsukgon received Zanskar 10th century brother B Kings of Guge and Purang Trashigon received Guge and Purang fl 947 brother Yeshe O 988 or 959 1036 son Nagaraja religious leader d 1023 son Devaraja religious leader d 1026 brother Khor re 988 996 uncle Lha lde 996 1024 son Od lde btsan 1024 1037 son Byang chub Od 1037 1057 brother Zhi ba Od religious leader d 1111 brother Che chen tsha rTse lde 1057 1088 son of Byang chub od C Kings of Ya rtse Naga lde early 12th century bTsan phyug lde mid 12th century bKra shis lde 12th century Grags btsan lde 12th century brother of bTsan phyug lde Grags pa lde Kradhicalla fl 1225 A sog lde Ashokacalla fl 1255 1278 son Ji dar sMal Jitarimalla fl 1287 1293 son A nan sMal Anandamalla late 13th century brother Ri u sMal Ripumalla fl 1312 1214 son San gha sMal Sangramamalla early 14th century son Ajitamalla 1321 1328 son of Jitarimalla Kalyanamalla 14th century Pratapamalla 14th century Pu ni sMal Punyamalla fl 1336 1339 of Purang royalty sPri ti sMal Prthivimalla fl 1354 1358 son D Kings of Guge nbsp Ruins of Tsaparang Bar lde dBang lde 1088 c 1095 nephew of Che chen tsha rTse lde bSod nams rtse c 1095 early 12th century son bKra shis rtse before 1137 son Jo bo rGyal po regent mid 12th century brother rTse bar btsan 12th century son of bKra shis rtse sPyi lde btsan 12th century son rNam lde btsan 12th 13th century son Nyi ma lde 12th 13th century son dGe bum 13th century probably an outsider La ga died c 1260 of foreign origin Chos rgyal Grags pa c 1260 1265 Grags pa lde c 1265 1277 prince from Lho stod unknown rulers rNam rgyal lde c 1396 1424 son of a Guge ruler Nam mkha i dBang po Phun tshogs lde 1424 1449 son rNam ri Sang rgyas lde 1449 son bLo bzang Rab brtan died c 1485 son sTod tsha Phags pa lha c 1485 after 1499 son Shakya od early 16th century son Jig rten dBang phyug Pad kar lde fl 1537 1555 son Ngag gi dBang phyug 16th century son Nam mkha dBang phyug 16th century son Khri Nyi ma dBang phyug late 16th century son Khri Grags pa i dBang phyug c 1600 son Khri Nam rgyal Grags pa lde fl 1618 son Tashi Drakpa De before 1622 1630 son Kingdom conquered by Ladakh 1630 Kingdom later conquered by Tibet under the Fifth Dalai Lama 1679 1680 See also editPurang Guge Kingdom Zhangzhung Tsaparang History of Tibet Ladakh Chronicles List of rulers of TibetReferences editSpecific references Chandra Satish 2004 Medieval India From Sultanat to the Mughals Delhi Sultanat 1206 1526 Part One Har Anand Publications pp 19 20 ISBN 978 81 241 1064 5 Snelling John 1990 The Sacred Mountain The Complete Guide to Tibet s Mount Kailas 1st edition 1983 Revised and enlarged edition including Kailas Manasarovar Travellers Guide Forwards by H H the Dalai Lama of Tibet and Christmas Humphreys p 181 East West Publications London and The Hague ISBN 0 85692 173 4 Beckwith Christopher I 2009 Empires of the Silk Road A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present Princeton University Press pp 169 ISBN 978 0 691 13589 2 Shakabpa Tibet A Political History 1984 pp 56 57 Heller Amy 1 January 2018 Tibetan Inscriptions at Alchi Part I Towards a reassessment of the chronology Tibetan Genealogies Studies in Memoriam of Guge Tsering Gyalpo 1961 2015 Guntram Hazod and Shen Weirong Editors China Tibetology Publishing House Hoffman Early and Medieval Tibet 1990 pp 388 394 Petech Ya ts e Gu ge Pu ran 2003 pp 53 66 Petech Ya ts e Gu ge Pu ran 2003 pp 42 45 68 89 McKinnon John The Kingdom of Guge Western Tibet an account of its history Western visitors and significance www greenkiwi co nz Retrieved 19 April 2018 Petech The Kingdom of Ladakh 1977 pp 44 45 Petech Ya ts e Gu ge Pu ran 2003 p 44 Li Gotami Govinda Tibet in Pictures Berkeley Dharma Publishing 1979 2 volumes Petech Ya ts e Gu ge Pu ran 2003 R Vitali 1996 The kingdoms of Gu ge Pu hrang Dharamsala Tho ling gtsug lag khang General references Allen Charles 1999 The Search for Shangri La A Journey into Tibetan History Little Brown and Company Reprint 2000 Abacus Books London ISBN 0 349 11142 1 Further reading editBellezza John Vincent Zhang Zhung Foundations of Civilization in Tibet A Historical and Ethnoarchaeological Study of the Monuments Rock Art Texts and Oral Tradition of the Ancient Tibetan Upland Denkschriften der phil hist Klasse 368 Beitraege zur Kultur und Geistesgeschichte Asiens 61 Verlag der Oesterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Wien 2008 Hoffman Helmut 1990 Early and Medieval Tibet in Denis Sinor Sinor Denis eds The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24304 9 Petech Luciano September 1947 The Tibetan Ladakhi Moghul War of 1681 83 The Indian Historical Quarterly 23 3 169 via archive org Petech Luciano 1977 The Kingdom of Ladakh c 950 1842 A D PDF Instituto Italiano Per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente via academia edu dead link Petech Luciano 2003 Ya ts e Gu ge Pu ran A new study in Alex McKay ed History of Tibet Volume 2 The Medieval Period c 850 1895 Routledge pp 33 52 ISBN 0 415 30843 7 via archive org Petech Luciano 1980 Ya ts e Gu ge Pu raṅ A New Study Central Asiatic Journal 24 1 2 85 111 JSTOR 41927281 Shakabpa Tsepon Wangchuk Deden 1984 1967 Tibet A Political History New York Potala Publications ISBN 0 9611474 0 7 van Ham Peter 2017 Guge Ages of Gold The West Tibetan Masterpieces Hirmer Verlag 390 pages ISBN 978 3777426686 Zeisler Bettina 2010 East of the Moon and West of the Sun Approaches to a Land with Many Names North of Ancient India and South of Khotan In The Tibet Journal Special issue Autumn 2009 vol XXXIV n 3 Summer 2010 vol XXXV n 2 The Earth Ox Papers edited by Roberto Vitali pp 371 463 External links edit 1 Submerged in the Cosmos by David Shulman The New York Review of Books February 24 2017 retrieved March 2 2017 Unravelling the mysteries of Guge by Xiong Lei China Daily May 8 2003 retrieved November 24 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guge amp oldid 1191794984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.