Gönlung Jampa Ling | |
---|---|
Tibetan transcription(s) Tibetan: དགོན་ལུང་བྱམས་པ་གླིང་། Wylie transliteration: dgon lung byams pa gling | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Tibetan Buddhism |
Sect | Gelug |
Location | |
Country | China |
Location within China | |
Geographic coordinates | 36°44′23.22″N 102°10′50.66″E / 36.7397833°N 102.1807389°E |
Architecture | |
Founder | Gyeltse Donyo Chokyi Gyatso |
Date established | 1604 |
Gönlung Jampa Ling; Tibetan: དགོན་ལུང་བྱམས་པ་གླིང་།, Wylie: dgon lung byams pa gling; Chinese: 佑宁寺, pinyin:Yòuníng Sì ) is a Tibetan Buddhist monastery of Gelug sect in the Huzhu Tu Autonomous County of Qinghai province, China. The monastery was founded in 1604 by Gyeltse Donyo Chokyi Gyatso.[1][2] Gönlung Jampa Ling housed the first Geluk seminary in Northeastern Tibet and was the seat if a number of important, high-ranking lamas including the Changkya and Thuken incarnation lineages.
Gonlung is one of four famous Tibetan monasteries (Chuzang, Serkhog, Jakhyung and Gonlung) in north-east Qinghai, earlier considered as a border area between Tibet and China.
In 1724 the monastery was destroyed by the Manchus during the suppression of Lhazang Khan (a Mongol Khoshut ruler, killed by Dzungars in 1717), but rebuilt in 1732.[1]
Gallery
- Front view of Gönlung Jampa Ling main temple
- View of Gönlung Jampa Ling from above
- View of Gönlung Jampa Ling west temple from the east
Sources
- Sullivan, Brenton (2013). The Mother of All Monasteries: Gönlung Jampa Ling and the Rise of Mega Monasteries in Northeastern Tibet (Ph.D.). University of Virginia.
References
- 1 2 Dorje, Gyurme (2004). Footprint Tibet (3 ed.). Bath: Footprint. pp. 581–2. ISBN 1-903471-30-3.
- ↑ "dgon lung dgon pa". Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
External links
- Gonlung Jampaling Monastery
- Gönlung Jampa Ling - THL Place Dictionary