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Ugyen Wangchuck

Gongsar[1] Ugyen Wangchuck (Dzongkha: ཨོ་རྒྱན་དབང་ཕྱུག, Wylie: o rgyan dbang phyug; 11 June 1862 – 26 August 1926) was the first Druk Gyalpo (King) of Bhutan from 1907 to 1926. In his lifetime, he made efforts to unite the fledgling country and gain the trust of the people.

Ugyen Wangchuck
ཨོ་རྒྱན་དབང་ཕྱུག

Druk Gyalpo
King of Bhutan
Reign17 December 1907 – 26 August 1926
Coronation17 December 1907[1]
PredecessorNone (hereditary monarchy established)
SuccessorJigme Wangchuck
Born11 June 1862
Bumthang
Died26 August 1926 (aged 64)
Phodrang
Burial
Cremated at Kurjey Lhakhang
SpouseAshi Ludrong Dolma
Ashi Rinchen Pelmo
Ashi Ngodrup Pemo
Ashi Tsundue Pema Lhamo[2]
IssuePrincess Sonam Pedron
Princess Chimi Yangzom
King Jigme Wangchuck
Prince Gyurme Dorji
Princess Kencho Wangmo
Prince Karma Thinley Lhundrub
HouseWangchuck
FatherJigme Namgyal
MotherAshi Pema Choki
ReligionBuddhism
Picture of King Gongsar Ugyen Wangchuck at Paro International Airport

Life

Embattled boyhood and rise to power

Ugyen Wangchuck was born in Wangducholing Palace, Bumthang in 1862. His father, Jigme Namgyal, was the Druk Desi of Bhutan at the time and He was apprenticed at the court of his father in the art of leadership and warfare at a very young age. Because he grew up in an embattled period, Ugyen Wangchuck was trained as a skilled combatant.[3] In 1876, when he was 14, Ugyen joined his father in fighting the rebellious Penlop of Paro, Tshewnag Norbu. In early 1877 his father left Ugyen in Paro to deal with a rebellion in Punakha. Ugyen was kidnapped by one of his father's enemies, Damchö Rinchen. When Jigme Namgyal threatened to kill twelve members of Rinchen's sister's family, Rinchen released Ugyen. Soon afterwards, in 1878, Jigme Namgyal appointed Ugyen as the Penlop of Paro at the age of 16. Soon after, in 1881, Jigme died, and Ugyen took on many of his father's responsibilities. He tried to reconcile with the enemies of his father, offering gifts to monasteries that disliked Jigme Namgyal, and showing kindness and forbearance to those that had personally wronged his father.

Afterwards, Ugyen began work to consolidate power and put those he trusted into key positions of government. In 1882, after a period of strife and civil war, Ugyen assumed the position as the Penlop of Trongsa, a post his father had held. Ugyen continued to further suppress dissent. Two of Ugyen's trusted allies, Alu Dorji and Phuntsho Dorji, rebelled against him and attempted to instate a monk of their choosing as the 55th Druk Desi. This culminated in the battle of Changlimethang in 1886, the last armed civil conflict in Bhutanese history. Ugyen, now 24, held a decisive victory, eliminated all internal strife, making him the de facto ruler of Bhutan.[4]

Founding of Buddhist monarchy by unanimous agreement

Bhutan had been ruled under 54 successive Druk Desis for 256 years until Buddhist monarchy was established.[5] Ugyen Wangchuck founded the monarchy in 1907, although he had been more or less the actual ruler for more than a decade.[6] On 17 December 1907, Ugyen Wangchuck was elected unanimously by the representatives of the people, the officials and the clergy and enthroned as the first hereditary King of Bhutan in Punakha Dzong.[7] A legal document on the institution of monarchy was attested with signet-rings and thumbprints, on that day. British political officer, Sir Claude White (1853–1918), represented the British government at the enthronement ceremony. Since that day, 17 December is celebrated as the National Day of Bhutan (Gyalyong Duechen).[8]

Foreign relations and official visits abroad

Ugyen Wangchuck, then 12th Trongsa Penlop, joined the Younghusband Expedition to Tibet in 1904, as a mediator between Britain and Tibet.[9] His next official visit abroad took place in 1906 when he travelled to Kolkata to meet the Prince of Wales.[8] Penlop Ugyen Wangchuck was not yet formally the King, but the role he took clearly suggests that he was indeed the ruler for all practical purpose for many years before he was crowned King in 1907. King Ugyen Wangchuck's last visit to India took place in 1911, when he went to Delhi to meet King George V (1865–1936), who was the Prince of Wales when they met earlier in 1906 in Kolkata, the seat of Viceroy of India.[8] The British Political Officer for Bhutan was Sir John Claude White until 1908 when he was succeeded by Charles Alfred Bell (1870–1945). John Claude White developed a deep respect for King Ugyen Wangchuck, and wrote: "I have never met a native I liked and respected more than I do Sir Ugyen. He was upright, honest, open and straightforward."[8] White also took the photographs at the King's 1907 coronation.[10]

His Majesty King Ugyen Wangchuck was acutely conscious that Bhutan must to be protected through times of regional conflict and rivalries. His Majesty was exquisitely farsighted in updating the treaty of 1865 in 1910, with an additional clause. The new clause was that Bhutan would consult British India in its dealing with third countries. The clause was drawn up in the context of the British suspicion about the influence of the Chinese and Russians in Tibet, and beyond.

Spirituality

King Ugyen Wangchuck had close relationship with many Buddhist spiritual masters such as Lama Serkong Dorji Chang (1856–1918), Tertön Zilnon Namkha Dorji, and the 15th Karmapa Khachyab Dorji (1871–1922). In 1894, aged 33, he undertook the construction of Kurjey temple, one of the landmarks of Vajrayana Buddhism in the world. The middle lhakhang in Kurjey, with its towering Guru statue, was built in 1894 by King Ugyen Wangchuck.[11] His Majesty was a great benefactor to the dratshangs (monastic bodies) throughout the country. As part of his vision for scholarship and education of young Bhutanese, he sent two groups of Bhutanese to study up to geshey level in Tibet. Twice, in 1915 and 1917, he sent batches of young monks to Zhenphen Choki Nangwa (1871–1927) in Dokham. They later returned to Bhutan and became influential geshes (doctorate level) and lamas, serving as radiant sources of Buddhist teachings.[7] One of the iconic pilgrimage centres of Buddhism is the Swayambhunath Temple in Kathmandu, a monastic enclave held by Bhutan. It was renovated mostly with King Ugyen Wangchuck's personal funds. Kagyu Lama Togden Shacha Shri (1853–1919), with whom King Ugyen Wangchuck corresponded a great deal, supervised the renovation on behalf of King Ugyen Wangchuck.[7]

Western schools

King Ugyen's commitment was not only confined to spreading monastic education. Following his visits to Kolkata and Delhi, he began to establish schools. The first were established in Lame Goenpa and Wangducholing, with 14 Bhutanese boys from both eastern and western Bhutan. Later, the number increased to 46. By then, students were being sent to missionary schools in Kalimpong. Those members of the first batch of students became important officials in the 1930s and 1940s. King Ugyen took the initiative to sow the seeds of western education, as well as strengthen the roots of dharma in Bhutan.[7][12]

Death

In 1926, aged 64, King Ugyen died at Thinley Rabten Palace in Phodrang.

Honours

Foreign honours

Ancestry

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b WANGCHUCK DYNASTY. 100 Years of Enlightened Monarchy in Bhutan. Lham Dorji
  2. ^ Queens of Bhutan
  3. ^ Aris, Michael (1994). The Raven Crown: The Origins of Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan. London: Serindia Publications. ISBN 978-193247-62-1-7.
  4. ^ Phuntsho, Karma (2013). The history of Bhutan. London. ISBN 978-1-908323-59-0. OCLC 951434550.
  5. ^ Tshewang, Lama Pema (1973). A Brief History of the First Hereditary King of Bhutan.
  6. ^ Sood, Shubhi (2008). Bhutan: 100 Years of Wangchuck Vision. Noida: SDS Publications.
  7. ^ a b c d dpel ‘brug zhib ‘jug lté ba (CBS) (2008). 'brug brgyd 'zin gyi rgyel mchog dang pa mi dwang au rgyan dwang phyug gi rtogs brjod bzhugs so (The Biography of the Second King of Bhutan Jigme Wangchuck). Thimphu: The Centre for Bhutan Studies. ISBN 978-99936-14-47-0.
  8. ^ a b c d White, J.C (1909). Sikkim and Bhutan, Twenty-One Years on the North-East Frontier 1887–1908. India: Low Price Publications. ISBN 97881-753-61-64-5.
  9. ^ Allen, Charles (2004). Duel in Snows, the True Story of Younghusband Mission to Lhasa. London: John Murray Publishers. ISBN 978-0719554292.
  10. ^ Hannavy, John (2013). Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography. Routledge. p. 1496. ISBN 978-1-135-87327-1.
  11. ^ Sanga, Lama (1983). Brug-tu 'od-gsal lha' I byung-tshul brjod-pa smyos-rabs gsal-ba'I me-long (Discourse on the Coming to Bhutan of a Lineage of the Gods of Clear: The Mirror which Illuminates the Generations the Nyo. Thimphu.
  12. ^ Tobgye, Lyonpo Sonam. Education System in Bhutan – Past, Present and Future – A Reflection.
Ugyen Wangchuck
Born: 11 June 1862 Died: 26 August 1926
Regnal titles
Preceded by
None
(Hereditary Monarchy Created)
King of Bhutan
17 December 1907 – 21 August 1926
Succeeded by

ugyen, wangchuck, gongsar, dzongkha, དབང, wylie, rgyan, dbang, phyug, june, 1862, august, 1926, first, druk, gyalpo, king, bhutan, from, 1907, 1926, lifetime, made, efforts, unite, fledgling, country, gain, trust, people, དབང, གdruk, gyalpoking, bhutanreign17,. Gongsar 1 Ugyen Wangchuck Dzongkha ཨ ར ན དབང ཕ ག Wylie o rgyan dbang phyug 11 June 1862 26 August 1926 was the first Druk Gyalpo King of Bhutan from 1907 to 1926 In his lifetime he made efforts to unite the fledgling country and gain the trust of the people Ugyen Wangchuckཨ ར ན དབང ཕ གDruk GyalpoKing of BhutanReign17 December 1907 26 August 1926Coronation17 December 1907 1 PredecessorNone hereditary monarchy established SuccessorJigme WangchuckBorn11 June 1862BumthangDied26 August 1926 aged 64 PhodrangBurialCremated at Kurjey LhakhangSpouseAshi Ludrong DolmaAshi Rinchen PelmoAshi Ngodrup PemoAshi Tsundue Pema Lhamo 2 IssuePrincess Sonam PedronPrincess Chimi YangzomKing Jigme WangchuckPrince Gyurme DorjiPrincess Kencho WangmoPrince Karma Thinley LhundrubHouseWangchuckFatherJigme NamgyalMotherAshi Pema ChokiReligionBuddhismPicture of King Gongsar Ugyen Wangchuck at Paro International Airport Contents 1 Life 1 1 Embattled boyhood and rise to power 1 2 Founding of Buddhist monarchy by unanimous agreement 1 3 Foreign relations and official visits abroad 1 4 Spirituality 1 5 Western schools 1 6 Death 2 Honours 2 1 Foreign honours 3 Ancestry 4 FootnotesLife EditEmbattled boyhood and rise to power Edit Ugyen Wangchuck was born in Wangducholing Palace Bumthang in 1862 His father Jigme Namgyal was the Druk Desi of Bhutan at the time and He was apprenticed at the court of his father in the art of leadership and warfare at a very young age Because he grew up in an embattled period Ugyen Wangchuck was trained as a skilled combatant 3 In 1876 when he was 14 Ugyen joined his father in fighting the rebellious Penlop of Paro Tshewnag Norbu In early 1877 his father left Ugyen in Paro to deal with a rebellion in Punakha Ugyen was kidnapped by one of his father s enemies Damcho Rinchen When Jigme Namgyal threatened to kill twelve members of Rinchen s sister s family Rinchen released Ugyen Soon afterwards in 1878 Jigme Namgyal appointed Ugyen as the Penlop of Paro at the age of 16 Soon after in 1881 Jigme died and Ugyen took on many of his father s responsibilities He tried to reconcile with the enemies of his father offering gifts to monasteries that disliked Jigme Namgyal and showing kindness and forbearance to those that had personally wronged his father Afterwards Ugyen began work to consolidate power and put those he trusted into key positions of government In 1882 after a period of strife and civil war Ugyen assumed the position as the Penlop of Trongsa a post his father had held Ugyen continued to further suppress dissent Two of Ugyen s trusted allies Alu Dorji and Phuntsho Dorji rebelled against him and attempted to instate a monk of their choosing as the 55th Druk Desi This culminated in the battle of Changlimethang in 1886 the last armed civil conflict in Bhutanese history Ugyen now 24 held a decisive victory eliminated all internal strife making him the de facto ruler of Bhutan 4 Founding of Buddhist monarchy by unanimous agreement Edit Bhutan had been ruled under 54 successive Druk Desis for 256 years until Buddhist monarchy was established 5 Ugyen Wangchuck founded the monarchy in 1907 although he had been more or less the actual ruler for more than a decade 6 On 17 December 1907 Ugyen Wangchuck was elected unanimously by the representatives of the people the officials and the clergy and enthroned as the first hereditary King of Bhutan in Punakha Dzong 7 A legal document on the institution of monarchy was attested with signet rings and thumbprints on that day British political officer Sir Claude White 1853 1918 represented the British government at the enthronement ceremony Since that day 17 December is celebrated as the National Day of Bhutan Gyalyong Duechen 8 Foreign relations and official visits abroad Edit Ugyen Wangchuck then 12th Trongsa Penlop joined the Younghusband Expedition to Tibet in 1904 as a mediator between Britain and Tibet 9 His next official visit abroad took place in 1906 when he travelled to Kolkata to meet the Prince of Wales 8 Penlop Ugyen Wangchuck was not yet formally the King but the role he took clearly suggests that he was indeed the ruler for all practical purpose for many years before he was crowned King in 1907 King Ugyen Wangchuck s last visit to India took place in 1911 when he went to Delhi to meet King George V 1865 1936 who was the Prince of Wales when they met earlier in 1906 in Kolkata the seat of Viceroy of India 8 The British Political Officer for Bhutan was Sir John Claude White until 1908 when he was succeeded by Charles Alfred Bell 1870 1945 John Claude White developed a deep respect for King Ugyen Wangchuck and wrote I have never met a native I liked and respected more than I do Sir Ugyen He was upright honest open and straightforward 8 White also took the photographs at the King s 1907 coronation 10 His Majesty King Ugyen Wangchuck was acutely conscious that Bhutan must to be protected through times of regional conflict and rivalries His Majesty was exquisitely farsighted in updating the treaty of 1865 in 1910 with an additional clause The new clause was that Bhutan would consult British India in its dealing with third countries The clause was drawn up in the context of the British suspicion about the influence of the Chinese and Russians in Tibet and beyond Spirituality Edit King Ugyen Wangchuck had close relationship with many Buddhist spiritual masters such as Lama Serkong Dorji Chang 1856 1918 Terton Zilnon Namkha Dorji and the 15th Karmapa Khachyab Dorji 1871 1922 In 1894 aged 33 he undertook the construction of Kurjey temple one of the landmarks of Vajrayana Buddhism in the world The middle lhakhang in Kurjey with its towering Guru statue was built in 1894 by King Ugyen Wangchuck 11 His Majesty was a great benefactor to the dratshangs monastic bodies throughout the country As part of his vision for scholarship and education of young Bhutanese he sent two groups of Bhutanese to study up to geshey level in Tibet Twice in 1915 and 1917 he sent batches of young monks to Zhenphen Choki Nangwa 1871 1927 in Dokham They later returned to Bhutan and became influential geshes doctorate level and lamas serving as radiant sources of Buddhist teachings 7 One of the iconic pilgrimage centres of Buddhism is the Swayambhunath Temple in Kathmandu a monastic enclave held by Bhutan It was renovated mostly with King Ugyen Wangchuck s personal funds Kagyu Lama Togden Shacha Shri 1853 1919 with whom King Ugyen Wangchuck corresponded a great deal supervised the renovation on behalf of King Ugyen Wangchuck 7 Western schools Edit King Ugyen s commitment was not only confined to spreading monastic education Following his visits to Kolkata and Delhi he began to establish schools The first were established in Lame Goenpa and Wangducholing with 14 Bhutanese boys from both eastern and western Bhutan Later the number increased to 46 By then students were being sent to missionary schools in Kalimpong Those members of the first batch of students became important officials in the 1930s and 1940s King Ugyen took the initiative to sow the seeds of western education as well as strengthen the roots of dharma in Bhutan 7 12 Death Edit In 1926 aged 64 King Ugyen died at Thinley Rabten Palace in Phodrang Honours EditForeign honours Edit British Raj Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire GCIE 01 01 1921 1921 New Year Honours Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India KCSI 12 12 1911 Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire KCIE 02 01 1905 1905 New Year Honours Recipient of the Delhi Durbar Gold Medal 12 12 1911 Ancestry EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Ugyen Wangchuck16 Rabgyas8 Padma4 Pila Gonpo Wangyal2 Jigme Namgyal 10th Trongsa Penlop and 48th Druk Desi5 Sonam Pedzom1 Ugyen Wangchuck citation needed 6 Ugyen Phuntsho 8th Trongsa Penlop3 Pema Choki14 Sonam Drugyel 5th Trongsa Penlop and 31st Druk Desi7 Rinchen PelmoFootnotes Edit a b WANGCHUCK DYNASTY 100 Years of Enlightened Monarchy in Bhutan Lham Dorji Queens of Bhutan Aris Michael 1994 The Raven Crown The Origins of Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan London Serindia Publications ISBN 978 193247 62 1 7 Phuntsho Karma 2013 The history of Bhutan London ISBN 978 1 908323 59 0 OCLC 951434550 Tshewang Lama Pema 1973 A Brief History of the First Hereditary King of Bhutan Sood Shubhi 2008 Bhutan 100 Years of Wangchuck Vision Noida SDS Publications a b c d dpel brug zhib jug lte ba CBS 2008 brug brgyd zin gyi rgyel mchog dang pa mi dwang au rgyan dwang phyug gi rtogs brjod bzhugs so The Biography of the Second King of Bhutan Jigme Wangchuck Thimphu The Centre for Bhutan Studies ISBN 978 99936 14 47 0 a b c d White J C 1909 Sikkim and Bhutan Twenty One Years on the North East Frontier 1887 1908 India Low Price Publications ISBN 97881 753 61 64 5 Allen Charles 2004 Duel in Snows the True Story of Younghusband Mission to Lhasa London John Murray Publishers ISBN 978 0719554292 Hannavy John 2013 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Routledge p 1496 ISBN 978 1 135 87327 1 Sanga Lama 1983 Brug tu od gsal lha I byung tshul brjod pa smyos rabs gsal ba I me long Discourse on the Coming to Bhutan of a Lineage of the Gods of Clear The Mirror which Illuminates the Generations the Nyo Thimphu Tobgye Lyonpo Sonam Education System in Bhutan Past Present and Future A Reflection Ugyen WangchuckHouse of WangchuckBorn 11 June 1862 Died 26 August 1926Regnal titlesPreceded byNone Hereditary Monarchy Created King of Bhutan17 December 1907 21 August 1926 Succeeded byJigme Wangchuck Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ugyen Wangchuck amp oldid 1137249699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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