Benchen Monastery: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''Benchen Monastery''' (Wyl. ''ban chen phun tshogs dar gyas gling'') — a Kagyü monastery in Gawa, Kham, which was the monastic seat of the [[Sangyé Nyenpa Incarnation Lin...)
 
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'''Benchen Monastery''' ([[Wyl.]] ''ban chen phun tshogs dar gyas gling'') — a [[Kagyü]] monastery in Gawa, [[Kham]], which was the monastic seat of the [[Sangyé Nyenpa Incarnation Line|Sangyé Nyenpa]] and [[Tenga Incarnation Line|Tenga]] [[tulku]]s. It was founded by the Fourth Sangyé Nyenpa, Gelek Gyamtso, in the seventeenth century. After its destruction during the Cultural Revolution, Benchen Monastery was re-established in [[Swayambhunath]], Nepal; it is also under reconstruction in Tibet.
'''Benchen Monastery''' (Tib. བན་ཆེན་ཕུན་ཚོགས་དར་གྱས་གླིང་, Wyl. ''ban chen phun tshogs dar gyas gling'') — a [[Kagyü]] monastery in Gawa, [[Kham]], which was the monastic seat of the [[Sangyé Nyenpa Incarnation Line|Sangyé Nyenpa]] and [[Tenga Incarnation Line|Tenga]] [[tulku]]s. It was founded by the Fourth Sangyé Nyenpa, Gelek Gyamtso, in the seventeenth century. After its destruction during the Cultural Revolution, Benchen Monastery was re-established in [[Swayambhunath]], Nepal; it is also under reconstruction in Tibet.


==External Links==
==External Links==

Latest revision as of 18:13, 12 March 2017

Benchen Monastery (Tib. བན་ཆེན་ཕུན་ཚོགས་དར་གྱས་གླིང་, Wyl. ban chen phun tshogs dar gyas gling) — a Kagyü monastery in Gawa, Kham, which was the monastic seat of the Sangyé Nyenpa and Tenga tulkus. It was founded by the Fourth Sangyé Nyenpa, Gelek Gyamtso, in the seventeenth century. After its destruction during the Cultural Revolution, Benchen Monastery was re-established in Swayambhunath, Nepal; it is also under reconstruction in Tibet.

External Links