Difference between revisions of "Drigum Tsenpo"
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− | '''[[Drigum Tsenpo]]''' ([[Gri-gum bTsan-po]]) was an [[List of emperors of Tibet|emperor of Tibet]]. According to [[Bön|Tibetan mythology]], he was the first king of [[Tibet]] to lose his [[immortality]] when he angered his stable master, Lo-ngam. Legend states that rulers of Tibet descended from [[heaven]] to [[earth]] on a [[Wikipedia:Rope|cord]], and that they were pulled back up when their time came. Lo-gnam cut the cord, leading to [[Drigum Tsenpo's]] death; he thus became the first Tibetan ruler to be [[Wikipedia:burial|buried]] on earth. | + | '''[[Drigum Tsenpo]]''' ([[Gri-gum bTsan-po]]) was an [[List of emperors of Tibet|emperor of Tibet]]. According to [[Bön|Tibetan mythology]], he was the first [[king]] of [[Tibet]] to lose his [[immortality]] when he angered his {{Wiki|stable}} [[master]], Lo-ngam. Legend states that rulers of [[Tibet]] descended from [[heaven]] to [[earth]] on a [[Wikipedia:Rope|cord]], and that they were pulled back up when their [[time]] came. Lo-gnam cut the cord, leading to [[Drigum Tsenpo's]] [[death]]; he thus became the first [[Tibetan]] [[ruler]] to be [[Wikipedia:burial|buried]] on [[earth]]. |
− | There is a detailed, if rather fabulous, account of his life in the ''[[Old Tibetan Chronicle]]''.<ref>{{Nolinking|Bacot, Thomas and Touissant (1940-1946), pp. 123-128. In French.}}</ref> | + | There is a detailed, if rather fabulous, account of his [[life]] in the ''[[Old Tibetan Chronicle]]''.<ref>{{Nolinking|Bacot, Thomas and Touissant (1940-1946), pp. 123-128. In French.}}</ref> |
{{Reflist|2}} | {{Reflist|2}} |
Latest revision as of 11:44, 8 April 2014
Drigum Tsenpo (Gri-gum bTsan-po) was an emperor of Tibet. According to Tibetan mythology, he was the first king of Tibet to lose his immortality when he angered his stable master, Lo-ngam. Legend states that rulers of Tibet descended from heaven to earth on a cord, and that they were pulled back up when their time came. Lo-gnam cut the cord, leading to Drigum Tsenpo's death; he thus became the first Tibetan ruler to be buried on earth.
There is a detailed, if rather fabulous, account of his life in the Old Tibetan Chronicle.[1]
Footnotes
- ↑ Bacot, Thomas and Touissant (1940-1946), pp. 123-128. In French.
References
- Bacot, Thomas and Toussaint. (1940-1946). Documents de Touen-houang relatifs a l'histoire de Tibet. J. Bacot, F. W. Thomas, Ch. Touissant. Paris. Libraire orientaliste Paul Geunther.