Lista nin mga Tibetanong Monasteryo
Ini lista nin mga Tibetanong Monasteryo na nabibilang igdi an mga historikal asin kontemporaryong mga monasteryo nin Tibetanong Budhismo sakop kan etno-kultural Tibet sa laog man asin sa luwas kaini. Sinasabi na an mga monasteryong tibetano mga obrang napapalaen sa ngaran nin arkitektura, bilang dekorasyon asin mga tanawon na magagayon sa paghiling.[1]
Pangaran | Namumugtakan | Tradisyon | Natugdas | Narugba | Nota |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alchi | Ladakh | Gelug | 11th century | ||
Badekar Monastery | Bugat, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region | Gelug | 1749 | ||
Chagri Monastery | Bhutan | Kagyu | 1620 | ||
Chaksam Cho Ri | Chushul, U-Tsang | Ika-14ng siglo | Narugba kan 1959 | sinapi sa Chaksam Bridge diagram made in 1878 | |
Dorje Drak | Lhoka | Nyingma | mga 1400, 1720, 1960 sa Indya | 1717, 1960s | Saro sa anom na "Nyingmapa monasteryong mayor." |
Drepung | Lhasa | Gelug | 1416 | Monasteryong harong kan Dalai Lama asin tinugdas ni Jamyang Choje. An Drepung historikalmente iyo an pinakadakula sa Tibet asin pinakamahiwas sa bilog na kinaban asta kan isaro an Tibet kan Republika Popular nin Tsina sa teritoryo kaini. | |
Drigung | Lhasa Prefecture | Kagyu | 1179, 1980s | 1960s | |
Drongtse Monastery | Tsang | ||||
Dzogchen | Kham | Nyingma | 1684 | Saro sa anom na "Nyingmapa monasteryong mayor." | |
Ganden | Lhasa Prefecture | Gelug | 1409 | 1959, 1966 | Harong kan Ganden Tripa. Tinugdas ni Tsongkhapa kan 1409. |
Gonchen Monastery | Kham | Sakya | 1729 | ||
Gongkar Chöde | Lhokha | Sakya | 1464 | ||
Gyumay and Gyuto Lower and Upper Tantric Colleges | Tsang | Gelug | 1433 and 1475 | [2] | |
Hemis | Ladakh | Drukpa | 1672 | ||
Templong Jokhang | Lhasa | Gelug | 652 | Labi-labing naraot asin nagaba kan People's Liberation Army kan Marso, 1959 | Lhasa'ng mayor na templo. Sinasabing itinugdok ni Hadeng Songtsen Gampo kan 647; mayor na lugar na pilgrimahe. |
Monasteryong Jonang Phuntsokling | Tsang | Jonang | Ika-14ng siglo | ||
Kardang | Lahaul | Drukpa | Ika-12ng siglo | Mayor na monasteryo sa Lahaul. | |
Monasteryong Karma Gön | Kham | Kagyu | 1147 | Harong kan pinqkaenot sundo sa ika-7ng Tai Situpa | |
Katok | Garze | Nyingma | 1159 | Saro sa anom na "Nyingmapa monasteryong mayor". | |
Templo Keru | Ü | Nyingma | tanga' kan ika=8 siglo | ||
Key Monastery | Lahaul asin Spiti na distrito, Himachal Pradesh | Gelugpa | Ika-11ng siglo | ||
Monasteryong Kharchu | Lhokha | Nyingma | Ika-16 na siglo | ||
Monasteryong Khomthing | Lhokha | ||||
Templong Khorshak | Sulnopan na Tibet | ||||
Kirti Gompa | Amdo | Gelug | 1472 | ||
Monasteryong Kumbum | Amdo | Gelug | 1583 | ||
Monasteryong Labrang | Amdo | Gelug | 1709 | Natugdas kan 1709 kan pinakaenot na Jamyang Zhaypa, Ngawang Tsondru. | |
Lhuntse Dzong | Bhutan | Nyingma | 1654 | An ika-14 Dalai Lama nagdatong sa Lhuntse Dzong kan 26 Marso 1959, sa ruta niya pagdulag sa tuyong pag'ili sa Indya. | |
Magur Namgyal Ling | Amdo | Gelug | 1646[3] | ||
Menri | Ü | Bön | 1405 | 1386, 1966 | |
Monasteryong Menri | Tsang | ||||
Mindrolling | Lhokha | Nyingma | Saro sa anom na "Nyingmapa monasteryong mayor." | ||
Monasteryong Nalendra | Penpo | [4] | |||
Namdzong Nunnery | Amdo | ||||
Namgyal Monastery | Lhasa | ||||
Nangshi Monastery | Ngaba, Amdo | ||||
Narthang Monastery | Tsang | ||||
Nechung Temple | Lhasa | ||||
Ngor Temple | Ü | Sakya | 1429 | 1959[5] | |
Nyethang Drolma Lhakhang Temple | Ü | ||||
Pabonka Hermitage | Lhasa | Gelug | 7th century | Independent before 1959, has belonged to Sera since 1980. | |
Gyantse Palkor Chöde Monastery (Palcho Monastery) | Tsang | Gelug, Sakya, Kadam | 1428 | ||
Palpung | Derge | Kagyu | 1727 | Founded by the 8th Situ Panchen, Seat of the Tai Situpa and Jamgon Kongtrul. | |
Palyul | Palyul | Nyingma | One of the six "Nyingmapa mother monasteries". Other branch "Namdroling Monastery" established by Penor Rinpoche in India, in 1963 | ||
Pemayangtse Monastery | Sikkim | Nyingma | 1705 | ||
Pomda Monastery | Baxoi | ||||
Punakha Dzong | Bhutan | Drukpa | Winter home of the Central Monk Body | ||
Ralung Monastery | Tsang | ||||
Ralung | Drukpa | Seat of the Gyalwang Drukpa | |||
Ramoche Temple | Lhasa | ||||
Rato Dratsang | Karnataka | Gelug | Formerly on the outskirts of Lhasa, but now re-established in south India. | ||
Ratö Monastery | Ü | ||||
Reting | Ü | Gelug | |||
Riwoche | Kham | Kagyu | Seat of the Taklung Kagyu lineage. | ||
Rongbuk | Basum Township | Nyingma | 1902 | ||
Rongwo Gönchen Monastery | Amdo | ||||
Rumtek Monastery | Sikkim | Kagyu | 18th century | ||
Sakya Monastery | Tsang | Sakya | Seat of the Sakya Trizin. | ||
Samye Monastery | Ü | 775 - 779 | |||
Samye | Nyingma | First monastery in Tibet, established by Padmasambhava and Shantarakshita. Heinrich Harrer in 1982 flew over "Samye; it was totally destroyed. One can still make out the outer wall, but none of the temples or stupas survives."[6] | |||
Sekhar Guthok Monastery | Lhokha | [7]
1950 photo of Sekhar Gutog (sras mkhar dgu thog) monastery in Lhodrag by Hugh Richardson. Founded by Milarepa in the 11th century[8] | |||
Sanga Monastery | Lhokha | ||||
Sera | Lhasa | Gelug | One of the largest monasteries in Tibet, containing numerous colleges. Founded by Chöje Shakya Yeshe. [[:|Photo of smashed statues pieces at Lhasa's Sera Monastery destroyed by the Communist Chinese after 1959 flight of the 14th Dalai Lama to exile in India.]] | ||
Shalu | Tsang | Sakya | |||
Shechen | Kham | Nyingma | One of the six "Nyingmapa mother monasteries". | ||
Simbiling Monastery | ... | ||||
Spituk | Ladakh | Gelug | |||
Surmang Monastery | Kham | 1988 | |||
Surmang | Kagyu | Seat of the Trungpa tülkus. | |||
Tabo | Spiti | Gelug | Largest monastery in Spiti. | ||
Taklung Monastery | Ü | ||||
Taktsang Monastery | Dzoge, Amdo | ||||
Tamzhing Monastery | Bhutan | Nyingma | 1501 | ||
Tashichho Dzong | Thimphu | Drukpa | Houses the Central Monk Body in summer. | ||
Tashilhünpo | Tsang | Gelug | Seat of the Panchen Lama. Founded by Gyalwa Gendün Drup. | ||
Tawang Monastery | Tawang District, Arunachal Pradesh | Gelug | 1681 | The monastery is the second-largest in Asia.[9] | |
Thikse Monastery | Ladakh | Gelug | 15th century | ||
Tholing Monastery | West Tibet | ||||
Tibet Institute Rikon | Rikon, Switzerland | Nyingma | Since 2007, the monastery comprises representatives of all four great traditions : Nyingma, Kagyu, Sakya and Gelug. | ||
Tingri Monastery | Tsang | ||||
Tradruk Temple | Lhokha | Gelug | The largest, oldest and most important monastery in the Yarlung Valley. Said to have been built by King Songtsen Gampo. | ||
Trathang Monastery | Lhokha | ||||
Tsandan Monastery | Nagchu | ||||
Tsaparang Monastery & Palace Complex | Western Tibet | ||||
Tsethang Monastery | Lhokha | ||||
Tsö Monastery | Amdo | ||||
Tsozong Gongba | Nyingma | ||||
Tsuglagkhang Temple | Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh | Current residence of the 14th Dalai Lama. | |||
Tsurphu | Ü | Kagyu | Seat of the Gyalwa Karmapa. | ||
Yama Tashikyil | Rebkong, Amdo | ||||
Yarchen Gar | Nyingma | 1985 | Largest monastery in the world +10000 monks. | ||
Yarlung Sheldrak | U-tsang | Gelug | 18th century | "Yarlung Sheldrak is a monastic community that first developed around a Padmasambhava meditation cave, possibly as early as the eighth century. It was converted to the Geluk tradition in the nineteenth century."[10] | |
Yemar Temple | Tsang | ||||
Yerpa | Gelug | 600–700 | 1959 | Famous meditation site of King Songtsen Gampo and Padmasambhava; 300 monks lived here in 1959. | |
Yonghe Temple | Beijing | Gelug | 1700s | National centre of Lama administration during Qing dynasty | |
Yungdrungling Monastery | Tsang | [11] |
Gallery
baguhon-
Monasteryong Samye sa Dranang
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Monasteryong Ganden sa Lhasa na may mga rugba' naririsa resulta kan panraraot kan mga Tsinong Komunista pakadulag kan Ika-14ng Dalai Lama sa pagpa'ili sa Indya.
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Monasteryong Sera sa Lhasa
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Monasteryong Drepung sa Lhasa
References
baguhon- ↑ "Tibetan Buddhist Art". www.metmuseum.org. Archived from the original on 2018-03-08. Retrieved 2018-10-24. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Berzin, Alexander (1991-09-01). "A Brief History of Gyumay and Gyuto Lower and Upper Tantric Colleges". Study Buddhism. Original version published in "Gelug Monasteries." Chö-Yang, Year of Tibet Edition (Dharamsala, India), (1991). Archived from the original on 2016-06-04. Retrieved 2016-06-06. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ "{title}". Archived from the original on 2017-03-31. Retrieved 2017-03-30. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Berzin, Alexander (1991-09-01). "Gutos na Historya kan Monasteryong Nalendra". Pag'adal sa Buddhismo. Orihinal na bersyon pinublikar sa "Sakya Monasteries." Chö-Yang, Year of Tibet Edition (Dharamsala, India), (1991). Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2016-06-06. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Carnahan, Sumner; Rinpoche, Lama Kunga (1995). In the Presence of My Enemies : Memoirs of Tibetan Nobleman Tsipon Shuguba. Foreword by Lobsang Lhalungpa. Santa Fe, NM: Clear Light Publishers. pp. 18 and 19. ISBN 9781574160444. OCLC 947820220.
(page 18 photo caption)- "Ngor Monastery, 1956, before destruction by Chinese Communists." and (page 19 photo caption)- "Ngor Monastery, 1980. The monastery was destroyed by the Chinese during the 'Cultural Revolution.' "
- ↑ 1912-2006., Harrer, Heinrich (1985) [1984]. Return to Tibet: Tibet After the Chinese Occupation. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140077742. OCLC 13856937.
- ↑ Berzin, Alexander (1991-09-01). "A Brief History of Drug Sang-ngag Choling Monastery". The Berzin Archives. Original version published in "Kagyü Monasteries." Chö-Yang, Year of Tibet Edition (Dharamsala, India), (1991). Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2016-06-06. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Richardson, Hugh (1950), English: Sekhar Gutog (sras mkhar dgu thog) monastery in Lhodrag near the Bhutan border founded by Milarepa in the 11th century. The famous nine-storeyed tower can clearly be seen on the left. Harvested crops may be seen in the field in the foreground., archived from the original on 2015-11-23, retrieved 2018-01-14 Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ "Tawang monastery | Tawang District, Government of Arunachal Pradesh | India".
- ↑ "Yarlung Sheldrak". Treasury of Lives. 20 January 2018. Archived from the original on 2018-01-21. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Berzin, Alexander (1991-09-01). "A Brief History of Yungdrungling Monastery". The Berzin Archives. Original version published in "Bön Monasteries." Chö-Yang, Year of Tibet Edition (Dharamsala, India), (1991). Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2016-06-06. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help)
External links
baguhon- Monastery List for Tibet, Mapping Buddhist Monasteries Wiki
- Monastery list with coordinates