Kham: Difference between revisions

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'''Kham''' (Tib. [[ཁམས་]], [[Wyl.]] ''khams''), often translated as '''Eastern Tibet''', is one of the three main provinces of Tibet (the others being [[Ü-Tsang]] and [[Amdo]]). Traditionally, it is said to cover the area known as the 'four rivers and six ranges' (Tib. ཆུ་བཞི་སྒང་དྲུག་, ''chushyi gang druk'').  
'''Kham''' (Tib. [[ཁམས་]], [[Wyl.]] ''khams''), often translated as '''Eastern Tibet''', is one of the three main provinces of Tibet (the others being [[Ü-Tsang]] and [[Amdo]]).


==Four Rivers & Six Ranges==
Traditionally, Kham is said to cover the area known as the 'four rivers and six ranges' (Tib. ཆུ་བཞི་སྒང་དྲུག་, ''chushyi gang druk'').
The 'four rivers' are the  
The 'four rivers' are the  
*Manchu,  
*Manchu,  

Revision as of 09:22, 17 September 2011

Kham (Tib. ཁམས་, Wyl. khams), often translated as Eastern Tibet, is one of the three main provinces of Tibet (the others being Ü-Tsang and Amdo).

Four Rivers & Six Ranges

Traditionally, Kham is said to cover the area known as the 'four rivers and six ranges' (Tib. ཆུ་བཞི་སྒང་དྲུག་, chushyi gang druk). The 'four rivers' are the

  • Manchu,
  • Dzachu,
  • Drichu, and
  • Ngulchu.
This section contains Tibetan script. Without proper Tibetan rendering support configured, you may see other symbols instead of Tibetan script.

The 'six ranges' are the

  • Zalmo Range (Tib. ཟལ་མོ་སྒང་, Wyl. zal mo sgang),
  • Tsawa Range (Tib. ཚ་བ་སྒང་, Wyl. tsha ba sgang),
  • Markham Range (Tib. སྨར་ཁམས་སྒང་, Wyl. smar khams sgang),
  • Minyak-rab Range (Tib. མི་ཉག་རབ་སྒང་, Wyl. mi nyag rab sgang),
  • Pobor Range (Tib. སྤོ་འབོར་སྒང་, Wyl. spo 'bor sgang), and
  • Mardza Range (Tib. དམར་རྫ་སྒང་, Wyl. dmar rdza sgang).

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