Tsari: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Tsari''' (Tib. ཙཱ་རི།, [[Wyl.]] ''tsA ri ''; Chi. 匝日神山) or 'Pure Crystal Mountain', is a sacred mountain of Tibet which is counted among [[three most holy places of Tibet|its three holiest places]] along with [[Mount Kailash]] and [[Lapchi]]. As such it is a major [[pilgrimage]] destination. The [[Drukpa Kagyü]] and [[Drikung Kagyü]] schools have linked it with the sacred sites of the [[Chakrasamvara Tantra]]. Located in Luntse County of Lhoka Prefecture, in southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, and close to the border with the northern Indian state of Arunchal Pradesh, it culminates at 5,735 meters above sea level.
'''Tsari''' (Tib. ཙཱ་རི།, [[Wyl.]] ''tsA ri ''; Chi. 匝日神山) or 'Pure Crystal Mountain', is a sacred mountain of Tibet and counted among [[three most holy places of Tibet|its three holiest places]] along with [[Mount Kailash]] and [[Lapchi]]. As such it is a major [[pilgrimage]] destination. The [[Drukpa Kagyü]] and [[Drikung Kagyü]] schools have linked it with the sacred sites of the [[Chakrasamvara Tantra]] since [[Tsangpa Gyaré Yeshe Dorje]] 'opened' it as a sacred place in the 12th century.  
 
Located in Luntse County of Lhoka Prefecture, in southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, and close to the border with the northern Indian state of Arunchal Pradesh, it culminates at 5,735 meters above sea level.


==Further Reading==
==Further Reading==

Revision as of 09:40, 1 February 2019

Tsari (Tib. ཙཱ་རི།, Wyl. tsA ri ; Chi. 匝日神山) or 'Pure Crystal Mountain', is a sacred mountain of Tibet and counted among its three holiest places along with Mount Kailash and Lapchi. As such it is a major pilgrimage destination. The Drukpa Kagyü and Drikung Kagyü schools have linked it with the sacred sites of the Chakrasamvara Tantra since Tsangpa Gyaré Yeshe Dorje 'opened' it as a sacred place in the 12th century.

Located in Luntse County of Lhoka Prefecture, in southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, and close to the border with the northern Indian state of Arunchal Pradesh, it culminates at 5,735 meters above sea level.

Further Reading

  • Matthieu Ricard,The Life of Shabkar (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1994), chapter 10, "The Ravines of Tsari"
  • Toni Huber, The Cult Of Pure Crystal Mountain (New York: OUP USA, 1999)