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Places of Interest |
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Tibet is the best place to
experience the true Buddhism and Culture. It has
taken many years to come to today's shape. When in
Tibet one gets a feeling of being in a different
part of the world. The monasteries built centuries
back, the open grasslands, the unique and unspoiled
lakes, the snow carved mountains are always worth
visiting. Its like being addicted; the more you
visit the more you want to go further and want to
know more about this beautiful land. |
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Lhasa (11,975ft/3,650m) - The
Land of Gods
"Lhasa" in Tibetan means "the land of gods" and is
the capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region is
located between 29o 36'N and 19o 06' E at the north
bank of Kyichu river, a tributary of the Yarlung
Tsangpo River, at an altitude of 3650 meters above
he sea level. Lhasa has history of more than 1300
years and it's been the center of politics, economy,
culture and religion in Tibet since ancient times.
There are numerous scenic spots and historical
attractions, among which Potala Palace, Norbulingka,
Drepung Monastery, Sera Monastery, Jokhang Temple
and Ramoche Temple, being the most famous. |
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Potala Palace
The Potala, one of the most famous architectural
works of our nations, is erected on top of the Red
Hill in Lhasa. The word "Potala" comes from
Sanskrit. In the 7th century, after the Tibetan King
Songtsen Gampo's marriage with Princess Wencheng of
the Tang Court, the Palace was built for meditation.
In the mid-17th century, it was re-built by the 5th
Dalai Lama to its present size, and ever since it
became the Winter Palace of the Dalai Lamas. The
construction took fifty years from its beginning to
completion. The Potala is divided into two sections,
namely, the Red Palace and White Palace. The total
height of the Potala is 117 meters which is built in
thirteen storeys, the length of the Palace from east
to west has 400 meters and the breadth from south to
north has 350 meters. The whole building is a
structure of stone and timber. The top most flat
glistens with golden roofs. It is a majestic
architectural work and the cream Tibetan culture and
complex of Tibetan and Han culture. |
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Jokhang Temple
Jokhang Temple situated in the center of the old
section of Lhasa, and was built in the mid - 7th
century A. D. and later extended by successive
rulers, it has now become a gigantic architecture
complex. Located in the east, facing to the west, it
is a four storeyed Temple with splendid golden
roofs. It has architecture feature of Tang Dynasty
and also assimilated very much features from both
Nepalese and Indian Buddhist Temples. The murals in
the temple mainly depict the life stories of
historic characters. The temple houses many
historical relics since Tang Dynasty and statues of
King Songtsen Gompo, Princess Wencheng, Princess
Bhrikuti Devi (Nepalese). "Princess Willow" (a
tree), and "The Uncle - Nephew Alliance Tablet" can
be seen at the front gate of the temple. Jokhang is
the country' s spiritual center, and the holiest
destination for Tibetan Buddhist pilgrims. It houses
the sitting statue of Sakyamuni when he was 12 years
old. |
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Barkhor Bazaar
The oldest street of ancient Lhasa circles the
Jokhang Temple. |
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Norbulingka
The name means "Jeweled Garden", a fitting title for
this 200 years old park, stretching over 360,000 sq.
m. The 370 rooms summer palace of the Dalai Lama is
located inside the park in Lhasa. |
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Drepung Monastery
Situated five Km's distance to the western suburb of
Lhasa at the foot of Mt. Ganpoi Uze. Drepung
Monastery, was founded in 1416 by Jamyang Choje, a
disciple of Tsongkapa, the founder of Gelugpa Sect.
The monastery, occupying an area of 250,000 squire
meters with a fixed number of 7,700 monks, is the
largest monastery in Tibet. The monastery keeps
plentiful historical relics, Buddhist scriptures,
arts and crafts. |
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Sera Monastery
Sera means "hailstone" in Tibetan. Set at the foot
of the Wudu Hill to the north of Lhasa City, Sera is
comprised of a great sutra chanting hall, a college
and 32 sections. Situated at three Km's distance to
the northern suburb of Lhasa. Jamchen Choje, a
disiple of Tsongkapa, founded sera Monastery in
1419, a disciple of Tsongkapa, the founder of
Gelugpa Sect. The monastery is erected grandly at a
mountain slope with a colourful architecture. Sera
Monastery together with Ganden Monastery and Drepung
Monastery in Lhasa are known as the Three Great
Monasteries of Tibet. |
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Ganden Monastery
Located in Taktse Country, founded in 1409 by
Tsongkapa, the founder of the Gelugpa Sect, it is
the earliest of the Three Great Monasteries of
Tibet. |
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Gyantse(12,959ft/3,950m)
A small agricultural town famous for its wool
carpets and the Phalkor Choide Chorten. Between the
monastery and the fort, this unique structure built
in 1414 consists of five stories representing the
five steps to enlightenment, topped by thirteen
rings which symbolize the stages of advancement
towards Buddhahood. There are 108 halls inside, each
with frescoes and Buddha Shrines, the frescoes
showing a strong Indian influence. Before 1959
traders coming from Kalimpong and Gangtok (India)
used to enter Tibet through Yandong and then to
Gyantse, en route to Lhasa. |
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Palcho Monastery and Kumbum
Stupa
Located in Gyantse town and founded jointly by Kedup
Je of the Gelugpa Sect and Rabten Kunsang of the
Sakyapa Sect in 1418. Palcho Monastery has a special
influence over Tibet's Buddhism owing to its being a
unity of three different sects, the Gelungpa, the
Sakyapa and Bhuton Sect, in one single monastery.
The famous Kumbum pagoda stands nine storeys with
its 108 doors and 77 chapels containing clay
sculptures and various murals. The pagoda is said to
have 100,000 images, either sculptured or painted,
this also earns its name to "100,000 - Image
Pagoda". |
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Shigatse (Xigatse) -
(12,795ft/3,900m)
"Shigatse" in Tibetan means " the Estate that
fulfills one's Wishes". There is a bustling 'free'
market at the foot of the ruins of the Xigatse
Fortress where one can buy local handicrafts
embedded with coral and turquoise, Tibetan daggers,
Chinese porcelain and yak butter.
It is situated between 29o 02'N and 88o 08'E in the
south - west of the Tibet Autonomous Region where
Nyangchu River joins the Yarlung Tsangpo River.
Shigatse is the second biggest town in Tibet and it
is the center of transportation and the distributing
center of agriculture and husbandry products of
south eastern part of Tibet. It is famous for the
great Monastery. |
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Tashilungpo Monastery
It is the biggest Gelugpa monastery in the Tsang
region of Tibet. It is located in the town of
Sigatse and was founded by Gedun Drup, a disciple of
Tsongkapa, the founder of the Gelungpa Sect. Gedun
Drup was later recognized as the first Dalai Lama.
It was formerly built in 1447 and continuously
expanded by the successive Panchen Lamas. The Ngagpa
College (Tantric College), one of its four monastic
colleges, was the residence of the Panchen lamas.
The most amazing image in this monastery is the
statue of the giant Maitreya (Future Buddha) erected
by the 9th Panchen Lama in 1914, and took four years
for its establishment. This giant statue stands
twenty six meters in height and 275 Kg. of solid
gold, great quantity of precious things such as
pearls, turquoises, corals and ambers have absolved
for its construction. The 4th Panchen Lama's funeral
stupa was built in 1662 and it stands eleven meters
high and it covered with solid gold and silver. |
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Samye Monastery
It is the first monastery ever built in Tibet. It
was founded by the Tibetan King Trisiong Detsen and
belongs to the Nyingmapa and Sakyapa sects. The
construction consists of three styles, namely, the
Han, the Tibetan and the Indian. It is said that the
monastery was destroyed by fire and was rebuilt
three hundred years as the residence of the 6th
Dalai Lama. Finally, it was completed by Rating
Rimpoche. To visit this monastery a ferry across the
Yarlung Zangpo river has to be taken from the road
to Tsetang. |
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Yumbu Lagang - the oldest
building in Tibet
Yumbu Lagang, situated in Nedong country of Lhoka
Prefecture, Yumbu Langang is said to be the first
palace in Tibetan history and built in the second
century B.C. The palace, facing west, stands lofty
on top of the hill. Statues of the Three Periods of
Buddha, Tibetan king Nyatri Tsenpo, Lha Tho - Tho -
Ri Nyantsen, Tri Ralpachen, Songtsen Gampo and
Trisong Detsen are enshrined in the palace. |
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Tumuli of Ancient Kings
Situated in Chongye country, Lhoka Preference, the
tumuli are referred to a group of tombs of kings in
Tubo Kingdom. The tombs are massive knolls of earth
with flat tops like platforms. There are eight or
mine tombs can be obviously seen among which the
tombs of King Songtsen Gampo, Tride Tsukten and
Trissong Detsen can be well identified. |
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Shalu Monastery
Shalu monastery, located within the Salu village
near Shigatse. Shalu Monastery was built in the year
1000 by Jetsun Sherab Jungne. The architecture of
the monastery with a feature of completely Chinese
Yuan Dynasty's temple, it is a rare and unique work
of art, mixed feature of Tibetan and Han. The
monastery enshrines various relics such as religious
objects, Buddhist scriptures written on "pattra"
leaves, and an important decree of Pagpa, the Sakya
abbot. |
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Sakya Monastery
Located in Sakya Country, about 30 kms off the
Shigatse-Xegar highway. The monastery stood in two
parts on either side of Dongchu River. This
monastery is the center of the Sakyapa Sect (White
Earth Order). The northern part of the monastery was
built in the year 1079 and the southern founded in
1268 by a famous abbot of Sakya named Pagpa who once
had ruled the whole of Tibet under the Yuan
Dynasty's supervision. The monastery has great
influence over the Tibetan history and cultural
development. The State Council of PRC has classified
it the national level protected monuments. Owing to
its valuable and voluminous amount of Buddhist
sutras and cultural remains, the monastery is often
considered as the "Tunhuang the Second". |
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Xegar (Shegar) (13,800
ft/4200m)
A new Chinese commune built at the foot of the ruins
of Xegar Dzong, 7 kms. from the main road. With a
population of 3000, it is the centre of this large
and remote area and a base from which expeditions to
Mt. Everest and other peaks are launched. |
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Zhangmu (7,545ft/2,300m)
Better known by it's Tibetan name, Khasa. A small
settlement clinging to a hillside 10Kms. from the
Friendship Bridge across the Bhote Koshi river.
Since the closure of the China/India border from
Gangtok, Zhangmu has become the major trading point
between Tibet and Nepal. The climate is quite
different from the hinterland. The hills around
Zangmu are heavily wooded with many waterfalls in
summer and impressive ice formations it winter. It
has a bank, a post office, a government store, and
is presently undergoing a construction boom to meet
the demands of trade and tourism. |
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Nyalamu (Nayalam)
(12,467ft/3,800m)
Known as 'Kuti' to Nepalese traders, tucked into a
fertile valley, Nyalamu used to be an important
trade centre. Nowadays, barrack style Chinese
communes surround the typical old flat roofed,
mud-brick houses. Although vegetation is sparse, one
can see an abundance of alpine fauna of the hillside
during the summer months. |
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Yamdok Yumtso - The Sacred
Lake:
Yamdok Yumtso, one of the three largest lakes of
Tibet, lies about a hundred kilometer's' distance to
the southwest of Lhasa. The surface of the lake,
with its fathomless depth, covers some six hundred
squire kilometers. To the interior of the lake ten
or so hilly islands stand independently one from the
other which give homes to flocks of wide ducks. Fish
in the lake is plentiful and tasty for diet. |
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The Himalayas
The mighty Himalayas, like a silver screen zigzags
along Tibet's southern horizon. It possesses eleven
peaks over 8000 meters above sea level, among which
five lie along the Sino - Nepalese boundary line,
namely, Mt. Qomolangma (Mt. Everest) (8848m), the
world's highest peak, Mt. Lhotse (8516m), the
world's fourth highest peak, Mt Makalu (8463 m) the
fifth highest, Mt. Cho Oyu (8201m), the sixth
highest and Mt. Shisha Pangma (8012m) the 14th
highest. Some thirty peaks over 7000 meters and many
more are above 6000 meters also in this same
Shigatse region.
The landscape at the northern side of the Himalayas
is as attractive as it is in the south. World's
highest glaciers are found at the northern slope of
the Himalayas, which are mysteriously in wait for
man's exploration. A trip to the Himalayas would
bring one a lot of unforgettable memories! |
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Mt. Everest (Qomolangma)
(29029ft/8848m)
Qomolangma Meaning " Goddess" in Tibetan, is the
highest mountain on earth with an altitude of
8848m/29029ft. Mount Qomolangma, known to the
western world as Mt. Everest, stands a the south of
Tingri in the southern Tibet, on the border land of
the central Himalayas, between China and Nepal,
capped with accumulated eternal snow. The optimum
weather on Mount Qomolangma is from April to June,
an golden period for mountaineers. Each year a great
number brave robust mountaineers come from all over
the world to tour and climb Mount Qomolangma, hoping
to fulfil a life-long wish by climbing and looking
out the world's highest peak. |
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Ruins of Guge Kingdom
Situated in Tsada country of Ngari Prefecture, Guge
Kingdom was originally built in 10th century.
According to historical records some sixteen
hereditary kings had dominated this Kingdom.
The extentive Guge kingdom ruins are found on a
hillside about 300 meters in height. The ruins cover
an area of 180000 squire meters, and includes more
than 300 meters chapels, 300 caves, 3 stups each
about 10 meters in height and five magnificent
temples and palaces. In the temples many lively
murals and clay sculptures can be still seen. |
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