Chögyal Pakpa: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Chogyal Phakpa.jpg|frame| | [[Image:Chogyal Phakpa.jpg|frame|Chögyal Pakpa]] | ||
'''Chögyal Pakpa''' (Tib. ཆོས་རྒྱལ་ཕགས་པ་, [[Wyl.]] ''chos rgyal phags pa'') (1235-1280) — the hierarch of the [[Sakya]] school who was recognized in 1253 as the ruler of Tibet by Kublai Khan (1215-1294) during the Yuan dynasty. He was also the nephew of [[Sakya Pandita]]. | '''Chögyal Pakpa''' (Tib. ཆོས་རྒྱལ་ཕགས་པ་, [[Wyl.]] ''chos rgyal phags pa'') (1235-1280) — the [[Throneholders of the Sakya school|hierarch]] of the [[Sakya]] school who was recognized in 1253 as the ruler of Tibet by Kublai Khan (1215-1294) during the Yuan dynasty. He was also the nephew of [[Sakya Pandita]]. | ||
At the request of Kublai Khan, Chögyal Pakpa designed a new alphabet, the 'phags-pa script, which could be used as a unified script for the written languages within the Yuan Empire. Chögyal Pakpa extended the Tibetan alphabet, to encompass Mongol and Chinese. The actual use of this script was limited to about a hundred years during the Mongol Yuan dynasty, and it fell out of use with the advent of the Ming dynasty. | At the request of Kublai Khan, Chögyal Pakpa designed a new alphabet, the 'phags-pa script, which could be used as a unified script for the written languages within the Yuan Empire. Chögyal Pakpa extended the Tibetan alphabet, to encompass Mongol and Chinese. The actual use of this script was limited to about a hundred years during the Mongol Yuan dynasty, and it fell out of use with the advent of the Ming dynasty. |
Revision as of 06:29, 17 January 2017
Chögyal Pakpa (Tib. ཆོས་རྒྱལ་ཕགས་པ་, Wyl. chos rgyal phags pa) (1235-1280) — the hierarch of the Sakya school who was recognized in 1253 as the ruler of Tibet by Kublai Khan (1215-1294) during the Yuan dynasty. He was also the nephew of Sakya Pandita.
At the request of Kublai Khan, Chögyal Pakpa designed a new alphabet, the 'phags-pa script, which could be used as a unified script for the written languages within the Yuan Empire. Chögyal Pakpa extended the Tibetan alphabet, to encompass Mongol and Chinese. The actual use of this script was limited to about a hundred years during the Mongol Yuan dynasty, and it fell out of use with the advent of the Ming dynasty.
Internal Links
- Five Sakya patriarchs
- Dzongsar Monastery
- Throneholders of the Sakya school
- Thirty-Seven Point Mandala Offering