Zhang Zhung Culture

Discussion of the fifth religious tradition of Tibet.
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kalden yungdrung
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Re: Zhang Zhung Culture

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IN ADDITION:


Ancient Zhang Zhung
By: Bön Gyalo :namaste:

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kalden yungdrung
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Re: Zhang Zhung Culture

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Tashi delek,

Before the entering of Buddhism in Tibet , there was already a script available, the Zhang Zhung script, which shares many similarities with the later Tibetan script.

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By Raven Cypress Wood


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kalden yungdrung
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Re: Zhang Zhung Culture

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Tashi delek,

The ancient 18 Bön Kingdoms, were situated not far away from their holy mountain Kailash,
They shared this mountain with the Shiva followers and later on, with those converted Tibetans, who became Buddhists.

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kalden yungdrung
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Re: Zhang Zhung Culture

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Tashi delek,



At one time, Khyunglung Ngülkhar was likely an impressive palace, mythologized as being founded on gold, walled in silver, with its pinnacle reaching up through the "13 levels of the sky" (Ramble 1999, p. 10).

It was the residence of all forms of deities, who functionally cohabitated with earthly beings, the capital of the Zhang Zhung empire, and the stomping grounds of Drenpa Namkha (dran pa nam mkha’), one of Bön's most famous personalities (Karmay et al. 2003, p. 240).

Charles Ramble (1995) calls it "something between an architectural wonder and a sacred mountain" . It has been variously identified as being south-west of Mt. Kailash (external link: http://www.yungdrung-bon.net/page/angla ... 2_BON.html), possibly somewhere in the Khyunglung Township of Tsamda (rtsa mda’) County (Bellezza 2005), and most specifically as "…the land of outer Zhang-zhung, in the midst of g.Yung-drung mu-le, in the enclosure of the snow mountains [possibly Welso (dbal so), the snow mountains that allegedly encircle Ölmo Lungring ('ol mo lung ring, Karmay 1972, p. 17)], in a corner of Ma-pang g.yu-mtsho" (Ramble 1999, p. 9).

Today, Khyunglung Ngülkhar has become a religious site, a place of holy pilgrimage, and the "-mkhar" ("castle") of its name can be found only in scattered ruins, as described by Giuseppe Tucci in his 1937 Santi e briganti nel Tibet ignoto, though some claim that the palace became Gugé Shartsé (gu ge shar rtse), and still exists in altered form (external link: http://www.tibet.cn/english/zt/Tibetolo ... 161527.htm), while others talk about the region in broad enough terms that it can include the Guru Gyam (gu ru gyam) monastery of Möntser (mon mtsher), Gardzong (sgar rdzong) (Karmay et al. 2003, p. 240).

In The Treasury of Good Sayings (Karmay 1972) and elsewhere, Khyunglung Ngülkhar is often used as a bearing, for example (p. xxx) when describing the boundaries of Zhang Zhung, "…extending from Khyung-lung dngul-mkhar to Dang-ra khyung rdzong in the East, to gTsang in the South, and to Kashmir in the West."

In this case, it is not geographically central as it appears in other sources, though centrality is probably being ascribed in terms of importance, not geography. Another orientation example is in Karmay et al. 2003, pg. 73, describing the reknown of an individual as spreading “…[in Tibet] from Khyung lung dngul mkhar in the west to mTsho sngon in Amdo in the east.” These two together triangulate Khyunglung Ngülkhar fairly well, and engender insights into the culturo-national boundaries of Tibet and Zhang Zhung, with Khyunglung Ngülkhar at opposite extremes of each. It is hard not to imagine that this strategic position played an important role in its rise to prominence.

Though it is hard to know much about Khyunglung Ngülkhar historically, most sources agree that it was the capital of Zhang Zhung, that the kingdom's last king, Likmigya (lig my rgya), was the last to reside in the palace, and that it was destroyed by Trisong Detsen (khri srong lde btsan) in his conquest of Zhang Zhung (one such example is Norbu 1995, p. 220).

Over the years, it was further mythologized as the birthplace of Shenrab Miwo (Karmay 1972, p. 19), the dwelling place of powerful deities, and so on. In modern times, it has become a place of great intrigue and religious power, promising to confer supernatural powers or spiritual triumphs upon those who go and meditate there (Ramble 1999, p. 11).

It was also the site of the 1936 founding of the monastery of Dongak Drakgyeling (mdo sngags grags rgyas gling, founded by 'jig med nam mkha'i rdo rje, Karmay 1972, p. 19). One source (Martin 2001, p. 268) also suggests that Khyunglung was a language spoken in "Gateway [Zhang Zhung", perhaps a dialect of the Khyung clan from that area.

This indication of Khyunglung Ngülkhar as a "gateway," and its use as a point of reference for either far east or west, can only mean that it was a pivotal, and possibly contentious, borderland between groups of people and likely between politically and/or militarily distinct cultures. Whether there was any meaningful history to the location, aside from its later retroactive mythologizations, is difficult to say, and may never be fully determined.

https://collab.its.virginia.edu/wiki/re ... mkhar.html


See also :
https://alchetron.com/Kyunglung
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http://balkhandshambhala.blogspot.com/2 ... glung.html
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kalden yungdrung
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Re: Zhang Zhung Culture

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Tashi delek,

The seal of the last king of Zhang Zhung has been carefully kept in the Menri Tashi Ling monastery for many centuries.

King Ligmincha was the last king of the legendary Zhang Zhung Kingdom, the cradle of Tibetan civilization.

In Zhang Zhung language ligmi (lig mi) means existence and cha (rkya) means noble or God. Until the 7th century Zhang Zhung was an independent state that comprised the territory of the whole Western Tibet around the Kailash Mountain. The dynasty had ruled here up to the 8th century, when the
Tibetan king killed Ligmincha and annexed Zhang Zhung to Tibet.

The inscription on the seal of the last king of Zhang Zhung says: ‘‘King of existence, which has authority over the three worlds’’.

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