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Phagmodrupa dynasty

The Phagmodrupa dynasty or Pagmodru (Tibetan: ཕག་མོ་གྲུ་པ་, Wylie: phag mo gru pa, IPA: [pʰʌ́kmoʈʰupa]; Chinese: 帕木竹巴) was a dynastic regime that held sway over Tibet or parts thereof from 1354 to the early 17th century. It was established by Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen of the Lang (Wylie: rlangs) family at the end of the Yuan dynasty. The dynasty had a lasting importance on the history of Tibet; it created an autonomous kingdom after Yuan rule, revitalized the national culture, and brought about a new legislation that survived until the 1950s. Nevertheless, the Phagmodrupa had a turbulent history due to internal family feuding and the strong localism among noble lineages and fiefs. Its power receded after 1435 and was reduced to Ü (East Central Tibet) in the 16th century due to the rise of the ministerial family of the Rinpungpa. It was defeated by the rival Tsangpa dynasty in 1613 and 1620, and was formally superseded by the Ganden Phodrang regime founded by the 5th Dalai Lama in 1642. In that year, Güshi Khan of the Khoshut formally transferred the old possessions of Sakya, Rinpung and Phagmodrupa to the "Great Fifth".[1]

Phagmodrupa dynasty
ཕག་མོ་གྲུ་པ་
帕木竹巴
1354–1618
The Phagmodrupa dynasty in 1354
CapitalNêdong
Common languagesTibetan
Religion
Tibetan Buddhism
GovernmentBuddhist theocracy
Monarch 
• 1354-1364
Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen (first)
• c.1600-1618
Mipham Sonam Wangchuk Drakpa Namgyal Palzang (last)
History 
• Established
1354
• Disestablished
1618
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofChina

The foundation of the Phagmodrupa edit

Founder Changchub Gyaltsen came from the monastic principality Phagmodru ("sow's ferry crossing"), which was founded as a hermitage in 1158 by the famous Kagyu scholar Phagmo Drupa Dorje Gyalpo.[2] It was situated in the Nêdong district southeast of Lhasa. Some time after the death of the founder in 1170, some of his disciples met and organized a true monastery, called Dansa Thil [de] (Wylie: gdan sa mthil, 1198).[3] Phagmodru evolved into a large and wealthy estate around the monastery, which was governed by members of the Lang family. They maintained a variant of the Dagpo Kagyu school of Buddhism known as the Phagdru Kagyu. When Mongol rule was imposed on Tibet in the mid-13th century, Phagmodru became an appanage under Hülegü Khan (d. 1266), forming one of the thirteen myriarchies (divisions) of Central Tibet. Towards the end of the 13th century the myriarchy fell on hard times and lost territory. Its fortunes were revived by Changchub Gyaltsen, who became lord of the fief in 1322. He managed to defeat various local opponents at a time when the Yuan dynasty, overlord of Tibet, was on the decline. The Sakya regime, centered in Tsang (West Central Tibet) had hitherto wielded power over Tibet on behalf of the Mongols.[4] However, Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen superseded Sakya in the period 1354–1358, thereby recreating an autonomous Tibetan state.[5]

Mongol ruler Toghon Temür was beset by inner troubles, and so preferred to confirm the acquisitions of Changchub Gyaltsen, and conferred the titles darakache and tai situ (grand tutor) on him. The Ming dynasty made no attempt to reinstate the tight grip on Tibet once exercised by the Mongols. In 1372 the Hongwu Emperor conferred the title Guanding Guoshi on Changchub Gyaltsen's successor Jamyang Shakya Gyaltsen (r. 1364–1373) together with a jade seal.[6]

Administrative renewal edit

The new regime governed from their palace in Nêdong in the Yarlung Valley. Changchub Gyaltsen did not take royal titles but preferred the title desi (sde srid) that means regent, namely for the ancient kings of Tibet (600-842) whose glory he wished to revive.[7] The new regent reorganized the old Mongol-Sakya administration by sharing up the territory in divisions (de or dzongchen), under which were dzong (rdzong), districts. These were headed by dzongpons who governed from fortified cities (also called dzong) and combined civil and military functions; these were chosen from among Changchub Gyaltsen's close followers and initially were not hereditary. He abolished Mongol laws and customs in favour of traditional Tibetan ones, which were much less harsh. Three centuries later his laws were revised by the Fifth Dalai Lama and Sangye Gyatso, and then remained in effect until the invasion of Tibet by Maoist China. The dynasty in the first place wielded power over Central Tibet (Ü and Tsang).[8]

After 1373 the rulers periodically dispatched formal tributes to the emperors of the Ming dynasty in China, and received from them the title Chanhuawang (Chinese: 闡化王, prince who expounds Buddhism) in 1406.[9] The Ming court formally established a number of prefectures (都司) and counties (寨) in Central Tibet. A Chinese I military commissioner was appointed in Hezhou close to the border in 1374. The emperor bestowed on him general governing authority over Do-Kham (Eastern Tibet) and Ü-Tsang (Central Tibet). However, there is no trace of this office in the Tibetan chronicles or documents. Tibetan sources show that the titles and seals sent by the Chinese authorities were valued by the Phagmodrupa as adding to their prestige,[10] but that no ordinances, taxes or laws were imposed by the Ming.[11] The emperor clearly preferred to issue formal appointments of Tibetans as rulers rather than to try to send officials or military commanders. Only essential matters, for instance the ownership of Sakya Monastery, were to be judged by the emperor.[12] Overall, as argued by Martin Slobodník, "the Phag-mo-gru did not represent an important ally or a dangerous enemy of the Ming Dynasty in its Inner Asian policy. The amount of information on these relations available in Chinese and Tibetan sources reflects the fact that at any time it did not represent a priority either for the Chinese or the Tibetan side. In relations with China Tibet was only one of numerous peripheral regions".[13]

Period of political stability edit

The first rulers were lamas who did not marry, and the succession up to 1481 went via collateral kinsmen. The dynasty was divided into three branches or rather functionaries: the ruling desi, the spiritual masters (chen-nga) of the Dansa Thil and Tsethang monasteries, and the preserver of the family (dunggyu dsinpa) who sired children to continue the Lang lineage.[14] While the first four rulers declined to take royal titles, being content with the dignity of desi, the fifth ruler Drakpa Gyaltsen appropriated the royal titles gongma (the high one, superior) and chogyal. From 1354 to 1435 the rulers managed to uphold a balance between the various fiefs. In particular the 47-years reign of Drakpa Gyaltsen (1385–1432) was remembered as generally peaceful and prosperous. The early Phagmodrupa era is famous for being culturally productive, and has even been termed a "golden age".[15] There was an intense interest in reviving the glories of the ancient Tibetan kingdom, and many supposedly ancient texts were "rediscovered" by learned clerics. The monasteries gained increasing influence on the life of the Tibetans. This period included the work of the Buddhist reformer Je Tsongkhapa, founder of the Gelug sect, and that of his younger kinsman Gedun Drub, posthumously counted as the first Dalai Lama.[16] The rulers in the first century of the dynasty were as follows:

  1. Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen (Wylie: ta'i si tu byang chub rgyal mtshan) (1302–1364, r. 1354–1364)
  2. Desi Shakya Gyaltsen (Wylie: sde srid sh'akya rgyal mtshan, ZYPY: Sagya Gyaincain) (1340–1373, r. 1364–1373) nephew
  3. Desi Drakpa Changchub (Wylie: sde srid grags pa byang chub) (1356–1386, r. 1373–1381) nephew
  4. Desi Sonam Drakpa(Wylie: sde srid bsod nams grags pa) (1359–1408, r. 1381–1385) brother
  5. Gongma Drakpa Gyaltsen (Wylie: gong ma grags pa rgyal mtshan) (1374–1432, r. 1385–1432) cousin
  6. Gongma Drakpa Jungne (Wylie: gong ma grags pa 'byung gnas) (1414–1445, r. 1432–1445) nephew

Renewed political fragmentation edit

At length the Phagmodrupa were crippled by internal dissent in the Lang family. A brief civil war in 1434 weakened their position. Powerful feudatories took the opportunity to increase their power, in particular the Rinpungpa family who came to dominate Tsang. In 1481 one of their line, Donyo Dorje, managed to have the king Kunga Lekpa (r. 1448–1481) deposed.[17] The Rinpungpa tended to associate with the Karmapa sect of Buddhism while the Phagmodrupa often (but not exclusively) favoured the rival Gelug sect. In the political landscape at this period it was important for rulers to find alliances with powerful monasteries and sects. Kunga Lekpa's grandnephew Ngawang Tashi Drakpa (r. 1499–1554, 1556/57–1564) managed to push back the Rinpungpa from the Lhasa area in 1517–18.[18] He was the last effective king of the dynasty, keeping good relations with the Second and Third Dalai Lamas, but his influence was mainly restricted to Ü. As he grew old, new infighting beset the family, and his death in 1564 was followed by a long interregnum. Eventually his grandson Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen was placed on the increasingly hollow throne in 1576. Though largely powerless, he maintained some importance as a focal point around whom the various noble and clerical factions of East Central Tibet balanced.[19] At the same time a new powerful dynasty arose in Tsang. This was the Tsangpa (1565–1642) who overthrew the Rinpungpa and increased their territory in various parts of Tibet. Like the Rinpungpa they allied with the Karmapa sect.[20]

The history of the Phagmodrupa after the death of Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen in 1603/04 is very obscure since they were by now entirely eclipsed by other political factions. They were defeated by the Tsangpa in 1613 and again in 1620, and the final incumbent was expelled from Lhasa in 1635.[21] After his victory over the Tsangpa in 1642, the Fifth Dalai Lama entertained friendly relations with the last titular lord of the line. Some years after the latter's death in 1671, Nêdong was however given to an outsider and the Lang family lapsed into obscurity.[22] In spite of its inglorious later history, the dynasty has a good reputation in traditional historiography. A history translated by Sarat Chandra Das in 1905 says: "During the reign of the Phag[mo]du dynasty all Tibet enjoyed peace and prosperity. People became rich in money and cattle. The country enjoyed immunity from famine and murrain, and was not harassed by foreign invasion. Although some petty fights and quarrels with some of the disaffected and rapacious ministers now and then disturbed the peace of the country, yet on the whole, the dynasty was beneficial to Tibet".[23]

The last eight rulers were:

  1. Gongma Kunga Lekpa (Wylie: gong ma kun dga' legs pa) (1433–1483, r. 1448–1481) brother
  2. Gongma Ngagi Wangpo (Wylie: gong ma ngag gi dbang po) (1439–1491, r. 1481–1491) nephew
  3. Tsokye Dorje (Wylie: mTs'o skyes rdo rje) (1450–1510, r. 1491–1499) regent from the Rinpungpa line
  4. Gongma Ngawang Tashi Drakpa (Wylie: gong ma ngag dbang bkra shis grags pa) (1488–1564, r. 1499–1554, 1556/57–1564) son of Gongma Ngagi Wangpo
  5. Gongma Drowai Gonpo (Wylie: gong ma gro ba'i mgon po) (1508–1548, r. 1524–1548) son
  6. Gongma Ngawang Drakpa (Wylie: gong ma ngag dbang grags pa) (d. 1603/04, r. 1554–1556/57, 1576–1603/04) son
  7. Mipham Wanggyur Gyalpo (Wylie: mi pham dbang sgyur rgyal po) (c. 1589–1613, r. 1604–1613) grandnephew (?)
  8. Mipham Sonam Wangchuk Drakpa Namgyal Palzang (Wylie: mi pham bsod nams dbang phyug grags pa rnam rgyal pal bzang) (d. 1671, r. after 1613) grandson of Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen[24]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Zahiruddin Ahmad, Sino-Tibetan relations in the seventeenth century. Rome 1970, p. 102.
  2. ^ David Snellgrove & Hugh Richardson (1986) A Cultural History of Tibet, Boston & London: Shambhala, pp, 135-6.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-22. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
  4. ^ Luciano Petech (1990) Central Tibet and the Mongols, Rome: ISMEO.
  5. ^ David Snellgrove & Hugh Richardson, (1986), pp. 152-4.
  6. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1949) Tibetan Painted Scrolls, 2 Volumes, Rome: La Libreria dello Stato, p. 22, 692.
  7. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1949) p. 23.
  8. ^ However, they did hold authority over the three regions of Tibet (Ü, Tsang and Kham-Amdo) according to Tsepon W. D. Shakbpa (1967) Tibet: A Political History. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 89; and W.. Rockhill (1910) 'The Dalai Lamas of Lhasa and their relations with the Manchu Emperors of China, 1644-1908', T'oung pao 11, p. 7.
  9. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1949) pp. 692-4.
  10. ^ Peter Schwieger (2009/10) 'Significance of Ming titles conferred upon the Phag mo gru rulers: A reevaluation of Chinese-Tibetan relations during the Ming Dynasty', The Tibet Journal 34-35, http://www.ltwa.net/library/images/downloads/publication/procedings2009.pdf
  11. ^ Elliot Sperling (2004) The Tibet-China Conflict: History and polemics, Washington: East-West Center, p. 27.
  12. ^ Chinese perspectives on this may be found in Ya Hanzhang [] (1991) The Biographies of the Dalai Lamas, Beijing: Foreign Language Press, pp. 12-3; Chenqing Ying (2003) Tibetan History, Beijing: China Intercontinental Press, pp. 42-52.
  13. ^ Martin Slobodník, "The relations between the Chinese Ming Dynasty and the Tibetan ruling house of Phag-mo-gru in the years 1368-1434: political and religious aspects", Asian and African Studies 13, [1] p. 168.
  14. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1949 p. 28.
  15. ^ Sam van Schaik (2011) Tibet: A History, New Haven & London: Yale University Press, pp. 85–113.
  16. ^ David Snellgrove & Hugh Richardson (1986) pp. 153-4, 180-2; Laurent Deshayes (1997) Histoire du Tibet, Paris: Fayard, p. 120
  17. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1971)Deb t'er mar po gsar ma: Tibetan chronicles by bSod nams grags pa, Roma: IsMEO, p. 225-6.
  18. ^ Giuseppe Tucci (1971) pp. 231-2.
  19. ^ Olaf Czaja (2013) Medieval rule in Tibet: The Rlangs Clan and the political and religious history of the ruling house of Phag mo gru pa, Vol. I-II, Wien: ÖAW, p.291-2.
  20. ^ Laurent Deshayes (1997) pp. 122-3, 134-46.
  21. ^ Günther Schulemann (1958) Geschichte der Dalai-Lamas, Leipzig: Harassowitz, p. 230.
  22. ^ Olaf Czaja (2013) pp. 327-42.
  23. ^ Sarat Chandra Das (1905) 'A short history of the house of Phagdu, which ruled over Tibet on the decline of Sakya till 1432', Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 1:8 1905, p. 207.
  24. ^ List of rulers culled from Ngag-dBang Blo-bZang rGya-mTSHo (1995) A History of Tibet, Indiana University, Bloomington, pp. 126-60; Giuseppe Tucci (1971) Deb t'er dmar po gsar ma. Tibetan chronicles by bSod nams grags pa, Roma: IsMEO; Giuseppe Tucci (1949) Tibetan Painted Scrolls, 2 Vols., Rome: La Libreria dello Stato; Olaf Czaja (2013), Medieval rule in Tibet: The Rlangs Clan and the political and religious history of the ruling house of Phag mo gru pa, Vol. I-II, Wien: ÖAW. A list, questionable in some details, is found in Sarat Chandra Das, 'Contributions on the religion, history &c, of Tibet', Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 1881, p. 242.

Sources edit

  • Dung-dkar blo-zang 'phrim-las (1991) The Merging of Religious and Secular Rule in Tibet, Beijing: Foreign Language Press.
  • Rossabi, Morris. China Among Equals: The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors, 10th-14th Centuries (1983) Univ. of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04383-9
  • Shakapa, Tsepon W. D. (1981) 'The rise of Changchub Gyaltsen and the Phagmo Drupa Period', Bulletin of Tibetology, 1981 Gangtok: Namgyal Institute of Tibetology [2]
  • Shakapa, Tsepon W. D. (1967) Tibet: A Political History, New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
  • Sorensen, Per, & Hazod, Guntram (2007) Rulers of the Celestial Plain: Ecclesiastic and Secular Hegemony in Medieval Tibet. A Study of Tshal Gung-thang. Vol. I-II. Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
  • Tucci, Giuseppe (1949) Tibetan Painted Scrolls, 2 Volumes, Rome: La Libreria dello Stato.
  • Tucci, Giuseppe (1971) Deb t'er dmar po gsar ma. Tibetan Chronicles by bSod nams grags pa. Roma: IsMEO.

External links edit

  • by Takpo Chän Nga Rinpoche

phagmodrupa, dynasty, pagmodru, tibetan, ཕག, wylie, phag, pʰʌ, kmoʈʰupa, chinese, 帕木竹巴, dynastic, regime, that, held, sway, over, tibet, parts, thereof, from, 1354, early, 17th, century, established, situ, changchub, gyaltsen, lang, wylie, rlangs, family, yuan. The Phagmodrupa dynasty or Pagmodru Tibetan ཕག མ ག པ Wylie phag mo gru pa IPA pʰʌ kmoʈʰupa Chinese 帕木竹巴 was a dynastic regime that held sway over Tibet or parts thereof from 1354 to the early 17th century It was established by Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen of the Lang Wylie rlangs family at the end of the Yuan dynasty The dynasty had a lasting importance on the history of Tibet it created an autonomous kingdom after Yuan rule revitalized the national culture and brought about a new legislation that survived until the 1950s Nevertheless the Phagmodrupa had a turbulent history due to internal family feuding and the strong localism among noble lineages and fiefs Its power receded after 1435 and was reduced to U East Central Tibet in the 16th century due to the rise of the ministerial family of the Rinpungpa It was defeated by the rival Tsangpa dynasty in 1613 and 1620 and was formally superseded by the Ganden Phodrang regime founded by the 5th Dalai Lama in 1642 In that year Gushi Khan of the Khoshut formally transferred the old possessions of Sakya Rinpung and Phagmodrupa to the Great Fifth 1 Phagmodrupa dynastyཕག མ ག པ 帕木竹巴1354 1618South Asia1400 CEDELHISULTANATE TUGHLAQS TIMURIDEMPIRESHAH MIRSULTANATEPHAGMODRUPASSAMMASMARYULGUGEKUMAONKANGRAKALMATGUJARATGOVERNORATEBAHMANISULTANATEKHANDESHSULTANATETOMARASTWIPRAEASTERNGANGASSUGAUNASMALLACHEROSNAGVANSISAHOMKAMATASCHUTIABENGALSULTANATEVIJAYANAGARAEMPIREREDDIMALWASULTANATEJAISALMERMEWARMARWARKARAULIAMBERSIROHIAMARKOTVAGADMEWATJAUNPURSULTANATEGONDWANA The Phagmodrupa dynasty in 1354CapitalNedongCommon languagesTibetanReligionTibetan BuddhismGovernmentBuddhist theocracyMonarch 1354 1364Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen first c 1600 1618Mipham Sonam Wangchuk Drakpa Namgyal Palzang last History Established1354 Disestablished1618Preceded by Succeeded by Tibet under Yuan rule TsangpaToday part ofChina Contents 1 The foundation of the Phagmodrupa 2 Administrative renewal 3 Period of political stability 4 Renewed political fragmentation 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksThe foundation of the Phagmodrupa editFounder Changchub Gyaltsen came from the monastic principality Phagmodru sow s ferry crossing which was founded as a hermitage in 1158 by the famous Kagyu scholar Phagmo Drupa Dorje Gyalpo 2 It was situated in the Nedong district southeast of Lhasa Some time after the death of the founder in 1170 some of his disciples met and organized a true monastery called Dansa Thil de Wylie gdan sa mthil 1198 3 Phagmodru evolved into a large and wealthy estate around the monastery which was governed by members of the Lang family They maintained a variant of the Dagpo Kagyu school of Buddhism known as the Phagdru Kagyu When Mongol rule was imposed on Tibet in the mid 13th century Phagmodru became an appanage under Hulegu Khan d 1266 forming one of the thirteen myriarchies divisions of Central Tibet Towards the end of the 13th century the myriarchy fell on hard times and lost territory Its fortunes were revived by Changchub Gyaltsen who became lord of the fief in 1322 He managed to defeat various local opponents at a time when the Yuan dynasty overlord of Tibet was on the decline The Sakya regime centered in Tsang West Central Tibet had hitherto wielded power over Tibet on behalf of the Mongols 4 However Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen superseded Sakya in the period 1354 1358 thereby recreating an autonomous Tibetan state 5 Mongol ruler Toghon Temur was beset by inner troubles and so preferred to confirm the acquisitions of Changchub Gyaltsen and conferred the titles darakache and tai situ grand tutor on him The Ming dynasty made no attempt to reinstate the tight grip on Tibet once exercised by the Mongols In 1372 the Hongwu Emperor conferred the title Guanding Guoshi on Changchub Gyaltsen s successor Jamyang Shakya Gyaltsen r 1364 1373 together with a jade seal 6 Administrative renewal editThe new regime governed from their palace in Nedong in the Yarlung Valley Changchub Gyaltsen did not take royal titles but preferred the title desi sde srid that means regent namely for the ancient kings of Tibet 600 842 whose glory he wished to revive 7 The new regent reorganized the old Mongol Sakya administration by sharing up the territory in divisions de or dzongchen under which were dzong rdzong districts These were headed by dzongpons who governed from fortified cities also called dzong and combined civil and military functions these were chosen from among Changchub Gyaltsen s close followers and initially were not hereditary He abolished Mongol laws and customs in favour of traditional Tibetan ones which were much less harsh Three centuries later his laws were revised by the Fifth Dalai Lama and Sangye Gyatso and then remained in effect until the invasion of Tibet by Maoist China The dynasty in the first place wielded power over Central Tibet U and Tsang 8 After 1373 the rulers periodically dispatched formal tributes to the emperors of the Ming dynasty in China and received from them the title Chanhuawang Chinese 闡化王 prince who expounds Buddhism in 1406 9 The Ming court formally established a number of prefectures 都司 and counties 寨 in Central Tibet A Chinese I military commissioner was appointed in Hezhou close to the border in 1374 The emperor bestowed on him general governing authority over Do Kham Eastern Tibet and U Tsang Central Tibet However there is no trace of this office in the Tibetan chronicles or documents Tibetan sources show that the titles and seals sent by the Chinese authorities were valued by the Phagmodrupa as adding to their prestige 10 but that no ordinances taxes or laws were imposed by the Ming 11 The emperor clearly preferred to issue formal appointments of Tibetans as rulers rather than to try to send officials or military commanders Only essential matters for instance the ownership of Sakya Monastery were to be judged by the emperor 12 Overall as argued by Martin Slobodnik the Phag mo gru did not represent an important ally or a dangerous enemy of the Ming Dynasty in its Inner Asian policy The amount of information on these relations available in Chinese and Tibetan sources reflects the fact that at any time it did not represent a priority either for the Chinese or the Tibetan side In relations with China Tibet was only one of numerous peripheral regions 13 Period of political stability editThe first rulers were lamas who did not marry and the succession up to 1481 went via collateral kinsmen The dynasty was divided into three branches or rather functionaries the ruling desi the spiritual masters chen nga of the Dansa Thil and Tsethang monasteries and the preserver of the family dunggyu dsinpa who sired children to continue the Lang lineage 14 While the first four rulers declined to take royal titles being content with the dignity of desi the fifth ruler Drakpa Gyaltsen appropriated the royal titles gongma the high one superior and chogyal From 1354 to 1435 the rulers managed to uphold a balance between the various fiefs In particular the 47 years reign of Drakpa Gyaltsen 1385 1432 was remembered as generally peaceful and prosperous The early Phagmodrupa era is famous for being culturally productive and has even been termed a golden age 15 There was an intense interest in reviving the glories of the ancient Tibetan kingdom and many supposedly ancient texts were rediscovered by learned clerics The monasteries gained increasing influence on the life of the Tibetans This period included the work of the Buddhist reformer Je Tsongkhapa founder of the Gelug sect and that of his younger kinsman Gedun Drub posthumously counted as the first Dalai Lama 16 The rulers in the first century of the dynasty were as follows Tai Situ Changchub Gyaltsen Wylie ta i si tu byang chub rgyal mtshan 1302 1364 r 1354 1364 Desi Shakya Gyaltsen Wylie sde srid sh akya rgyal mtshan ZYPY Sagya Gyaincain 1340 1373 r 1364 1373 nephew Desi Drakpa Changchub Wylie sde srid grags pa byang chub 1356 1386 r 1373 1381 nephew Desi Sonam Drakpa Wylie sde srid bsod nams grags pa 1359 1408 r 1381 1385 brother Gongma Drakpa Gyaltsen Wylie gong ma grags pa rgyal mtshan 1374 1432 r 1385 1432 cousin Gongma Drakpa Jungne Wylie gong ma grags pa byung gnas 1414 1445 r 1432 1445 nephewRenewed political fragmentation editAt length the Phagmodrupa were crippled by internal dissent in the Lang family A brief civil war in 1434 weakened their position Powerful feudatories took the opportunity to increase their power in particular the Rinpungpa family who came to dominate Tsang In 1481 one of their line Donyo Dorje managed to have the king Kunga Lekpa r 1448 1481 deposed 17 The Rinpungpa tended to associate with the Karmapa sect of Buddhism while the Phagmodrupa often but not exclusively favoured the rival Gelug sect In the political landscape at this period it was important for rulers to find alliances with powerful monasteries and sects Kunga Lekpa s grandnephew Ngawang Tashi Drakpa r 1499 1554 1556 57 1564 managed to push back the Rinpungpa from the Lhasa area in 1517 18 18 He was the last effective king of the dynasty keeping good relations with the Second and Third Dalai Lamas but his influence was mainly restricted to U As he grew old new infighting beset the family and his death in 1564 was followed by a long interregnum Eventually his grandson Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen was placed on the increasingly hollow throne in 1576 Though largely powerless he maintained some importance as a focal point around whom the various noble and clerical factions of East Central Tibet balanced 19 At the same time a new powerful dynasty arose in Tsang This was the Tsangpa 1565 1642 who overthrew the Rinpungpa and increased their territory in various parts of Tibet Like the Rinpungpa they allied with the Karmapa sect 20 The history of the Phagmodrupa after the death of Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen in 1603 04 is very obscure since they were by now entirely eclipsed by other political factions They were defeated by the Tsangpa in 1613 and again in 1620 and the final incumbent was expelled from Lhasa in 1635 21 After his victory over the Tsangpa in 1642 the Fifth Dalai Lama entertained friendly relations with the last titular lord of the line Some years after the latter s death in 1671 Nedong was however given to an outsider and the Lang family lapsed into obscurity 22 In spite of its inglorious later history the dynasty has a good reputation in traditional historiography A history translated by Sarat Chandra Das in 1905 says During the reign of the Phag mo du dynasty all Tibet enjoyed peace and prosperity People became rich in money and cattle The country enjoyed immunity from famine and murrain and was not harassed by foreign invasion Although some petty fights and quarrels with some of the disaffected and rapacious ministers now and then disturbed the peace of the country yet on the whole the dynasty was beneficial to Tibet 23 The last eight rulers were Gongma Kunga Lekpa Wylie gong ma kun dga legs pa 1433 1483 r 1448 1481 brother Gongma Ngagi Wangpo Wylie gong ma ngag gi dbang po 1439 1491 r 1481 1491 nephew Tsokye Dorje Wylie mTs o skyes rdo rje 1450 1510 r 1491 1499 regent from the Rinpungpa line Gongma Ngawang Tashi Drakpa Wylie gong ma ngag dbang bkra shis grags pa 1488 1564 r 1499 1554 1556 57 1564 son of Gongma Ngagi Wangpo Gongma Drowai Gonpo Wylie gong ma gro ba i mgon po 1508 1548 r 1524 1548 son Gongma Ngawang Drakpa Wylie gong ma ngag dbang grags pa d 1603 04 r 1554 1556 57 1576 1603 04 son Mipham Wanggyur Gyalpo Wylie mi pham dbang sgyur rgyal po c 1589 1613 r 1604 1613 grandnephew Mipham Sonam Wangchuk Drakpa Namgyal Palzang Wylie mi pham bsod nams dbang phyug grags pa rnam rgyal pal bzang d 1671 r after 1613 grandson of Ngawang Drakpa Gyaltsen 24 See also editHistory of Tibet List of rulers of Tibet Ming Tibet relations KagyuReferences editCitations edit Zahiruddin Ahmad Sino Tibetan relations in the seventeenth century Rome 1970 p 102 David Snellgrove amp Hugh Richardson 1986 A Cultural History of Tibet Boston amp London Shambhala pp 135 6 The Monastery of Densatil Archived from the original on 2014 09 22 Retrieved 2014 10 07 Luciano Petech 1990 Central Tibet and the Mongols Rome ISMEO David Snellgrove amp Hugh Richardson 1986 pp 152 4 Giuseppe Tucci 1949 Tibetan Painted Scrolls 2 Volumes Rome La Libreria dello Stato p 22 692 Giuseppe Tucci 1949 p 23 However they did hold authority over the three regions of Tibet U Tsang and Kham Amdo according to Tsepon W D Shakbpa 1967 Tibet A Political History New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 89 and W Rockhill 1910 The Dalai Lamas of Lhasa and their relations with the Manchu Emperors of China 1644 1908 T oung pao 11 p 7 Giuseppe Tucci 1949 pp 692 4 Peter Schwieger 2009 10 Significance of Ming titles conferred upon the Phag mo gru rulers A reevaluation of Chinese Tibetan relations during the Ming Dynasty The Tibet Journal 34 35 http www ltwa net library images downloads publication procedings2009 pdf Elliot Sperling 2004 The Tibet China Conflict History and polemics Washington East West Center p 27 Chinese perspectives on this may be found in Ya Hanzhang 1991 The Biographies of the Dalai Lamas Beijing Foreign Language Press pp 12 3 Chenqing Ying 2003 Tibetan History Beijing China Intercontinental Press pp 42 52 Martin Slobodnik The relations between the Chinese Ming Dynasty and the Tibetan ruling house of Phag mo gru in the years 1368 1434 political and religious aspects Asian and African Studies 13 1 p 168 Giuseppe Tucci 1949 p 28 Sam van Schaik 2011 Tibet A History New Haven amp London Yale University Press pp 85 113 David Snellgrove amp Hugh Richardson 1986 pp 153 4 180 2 Laurent Deshayes 1997 Histoire du Tibet Paris Fayard p 120 Giuseppe Tucci 1971 Deb t er mar po gsar ma Tibetan chronicles by bSod nams grags pa Roma IsMEO p 225 6 Giuseppe Tucci 1971 pp 231 2 Olaf Czaja 2013 Medieval rule in Tibet The Rlangs Clan and the political and religious history of the ruling house of Phag mo gru pa Vol I II Wien OAW p 291 2 Laurent Deshayes 1997 pp 122 3 134 46 Gunther Schulemann 1958 Geschichte der Dalai Lamas Leipzig Harassowitz p 230 Olaf Czaja 2013 pp 327 42 Sarat Chandra Das 1905 A short history of the house of Phagdu which ruled over Tibet on the decline of Sakya till 1432 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 1 8 1905 p 207 List of rulers culled from Ngag dBang Blo bZang rGya mTSHo 1995 A History of Tibet Indiana University Bloomington pp 126 60 Giuseppe Tucci 1971 Deb t er dmar po gsar ma Tibetan chronicles by bSod nams grags pa Roma IsMEO Giuseppe Tucci 1949 Tibetan Painted Scrolls 2 Vols Rome La Libreria dello Stato Olaf Czaja 2013 Medieval rule in Tibet The Rlangs Clan and the political and religious history of the ruling house of Phag mo gru pa Vol I II Wien OAW A list questionable in some details is found in Sarat Chandra Das Contributions on the religion history amp c of Tibet Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 1881 p 242 Sources edit Dung dkar blo zang phrim las 1991 The Merging of Religious and Secular Rule in Tibet Beijing Foreign Language Press Rossabi Morris China Among Equals The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors 10th 14th Centuries 1983 Univ of California Press ISBN 0 520 04383 9 Shakapa Tsepon W D 1981 The rise of Changchub Gyaltsen and the Phagmo Drupa Period Bulletin of Tibetology 1981 Gangtok Namgyal Institute of Tibetology 2 Shakapa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A Political History New Haven and London Yale University Press Sorensen Per amp Hazod Guntram 2007 Rulers of the Celestial Plain Ecclesiastic and Secular Hegemony in Medieval Tibet A Study of Tshal Gung thang Vol I II Wien Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Tucci Giuseppe 1949 Tibetan Painted Scrolls 2 Volumes Rome La Libreria dello Stato Tucci Giuseppe 1971 Deb t er dmar po gsar ma Tibetan Chronicles by bSod nams grags pa Roma IsMEO External links editThe Life and Liberation of Phagmodrupa the Protector of Migrating Beings by Takpo Chan Nga Rinpoche Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phagmodrupa dynasty amp oldid 1170824012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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