China Cultural Chronicles January 15, 2013
- Rugao Puppet Arts Troupe #15
chooyutshing has added a photo to the pool:
Performed by the Rugao Arts Troupe from, Jiangsu, China at the Raffles City Shopping Centre during the Chinese New Year Festive for Spring in the City.
- Rugao Puppet Arts Troupe #14
chooyutshing has added a photo to the pool:
Performed by the Rugao Arts Troupe from, Jiangsu, China at the Raffles City Shopping Centre during the Chinese New Year Festive for Spring in the City.
- Rugao Puppet Arts Troupe #13
chooyutshing has added a photo to the pool:
Performed by the Rugao Arts Troupe from, Jiangsu, China at the Raffles City Shopping Centre during the Chinese New Year Festive for Spring in the City.
- Rugao Puppet Arts Troupe #12
chooyutshing has added a photo to the pool:
Performed by the Rugao Arts Troupe from, Jiangsu, China at the Raffles City Shopping Centre during the Chinese New Year Festive for Spring in the City.
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- Guru Dragpo
- Guru Dragpo Tsal
Rangzen Cafe has added a photo to the pool:
- Guru Drakpo mural
Rangzen Cafe has added a photo to the pool:
- A discussion with counsciousness
$ALEH has added a photo to the pool:
- Landscape behind Taktsang Lhamo Monastery, Tibet 2012
reurinkjan has added a photo to the pool:
Like to see the pictures as LARGE as your screen? Just click on this Slideshow : www.flickr.com/photos/reurinkjan/sets/72157630983897338/s...
Founding (1402-1424 (probable)) > Monk: 834 (1995; 1958) > Geluk
ཀི་རྟི་དགོན་པ། > Kirti Gönpa > ki rti dgon pa
Taktsang Lhamo Monastery (stag tshang lha mo dgon pa) by Gray Tuttle (July 8, 2011)
Taktsang Lhamo (stag tshang lha mo)/Kirti Monastery (ki rti dgon pa) was a monastic polity exercising joint political and religious rule of a wide area before 1949, based mainly in Dzörgé (mdzod dge; Dzögé in Standard Tibetan pronunciation) but extending into Ngawa (rnga ba) and Markham (smar khams) counties in Ngawa Prefecture and Sangchu (bsang chu), Luchu (klu chu), and Tewo (the bo) counties in Kanlho (kan lho) Prefecture.[1] Taktsang Lhamo seems to be the mother monastery of the Kirti Monastery in the same valley, as well as many other monasteries in Tewo. The two have not always cooperated though, as is clear from Ekvall's account of his time there, in which he calls Kirti: Gurdi Monastery. What the extent of the monasteries control over the plains of Dzögé remains to be determined, though some sense of this might be extracted from Ekvall's work.
Read more: places.thlib.org/features/24125/descriptions/1268#ixzz24e... - Landscape behind Taktsang Lhamo Monastery, Tibet 2012
reurinkjan has added a photo to the pool:
Like to see the pictures as LARGE as your screen? Just click on this Slideshow : www.flickr.com/photos/reurinkjan/sets/72157630983897338/s...
Founding (1402-1424 (probable)) > Monk: 834 (1995; 1958) > Geluk
ཀི་རྟི་དགོན་པ། > Kirti Gönpa > ki rti dgon pa
Taktsang Lhamo Monastery (stag tshang lha mo dgon pa) by Gray Tuttle (July 8, 2011)
Taktsang Lhamo (stag tshang lha mo)/Kirti Monastery (ki rti dgon pa) was a monastic polity exercising joint political and religious rule of a wide area before 1949, based mainly in Dzörgé (mdzod dge; Dzögé in Standard Tibetan pronunciation) but extending into Ngawa (rnga ba) and Markham (smar khams) counties in Ngawa Prefecture and Sangchu (bsang chu), Luchu (klu chu), and Tewo (the bo) counties in Kanlho (kan lho) Prefecture.[1] Taktsang Lhamo seems to be the mother monastery of the Kirti Monastery in the same valley, as well as many other monasteries in Tewo. The two have not always cooperated though, as is clear from Ekvall's account of his time there, in which he calls Kirti: Gurdi Monastery. What the extent of the monasteries control over the plains of Dzögé remains to be determined, though some sense of this might be extracted from Ekvall's work.
Read more: places.thlib.org/features/24125/descriptions/1268#ixzz24e...
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