Lingtsang Gyalpo: Difference between revisions
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'''Lingtsang Gyalpo Wangchen Tenzin''' (Tib. གླིང་ཚང་རྒྱལ་པོ་དབང་ཆེན་བསྟན་འཛིན་, [[Wyl.]] ''gling tshang rgyal po dbang chen bstan 'dzin''), also known as '''Lingtsang Gyalgenma''' (the 'old king of Ling') ( | '''Lingtsang Gyalpo Wangchen Tenzin''' (Tib. གླིང་ཚང་རྒྱལ་པོ་དབང་ཆེན་བསྟན་འཛིན་, [[Wyl.]] ''gling tshang rgyal po dbang chen bstan 'dzin''), also known as '''Lingtsang Gyalgenma''' (the 'old king of Ling') (1872–1942), was the king of the province of Ling and a [[tertön]] famous for his revelation of the [[long life practice]] focusing on the consort of [[Amitayus]], known as 'Tséyum [[Tsendali]]'. He was a disciple of [[Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo]] and a teacher of [[Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö]]. | ||
He had three sons and one daughter, Dechen Tso, who was the mother of [[Khandro Tsering Chödrön]] and [[Mayum Tsering Wangmo]]. After his death in Dzongri Lingtsang in around 1942 the title of Lingtsang Gyalpo passed to his son Phuntsok Gelek Rabten, a former monk, who later died in Kalimpong. Two of Phuntsok Gelek Rabten's five children are still alive today, a son, Sey Jigme Wangdu, who currently lives in Chengdu and a daughter, Princess Rinzin Wangmo, who lives in Dehra Dun. | He had three sons and one daughter, Dechen Tso, who was the mother of [[Khandro Tsering Chödrön]] and [[Mayum Tsering Wangmo]]. After his death in Dzongri Lingtsang in around 1942 the title of Lingtsang Gyalpo passed to his son Phuntsok Gelek Rabten, a former monk, who later died in Kalimpong. Two of Phuntsok Gelek Rabten's five children are still alive today, a son, Sey Jigme Wangdu, who currently lives in Chengdu and a daughter, Princess Rinzin Wangmo, who lives in Dehra Dun. | ||
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==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
*Tashi Tsering, "History of the Gling-tshang Principality of Khams: A Preliminary Study" in ''Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Narita 1989 (Volume 2)'', Tokyo 1992, pp. 793-821 | *Tashi Tsering, "History of the Gling-tshang Principality of Khams: A Preliminary Study" in ''Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Narita 1989 (Volume 2)'', Tokyo 1992, pp. 793-821 | ||
*Khenpo Gyaltsen Chödrak, ''mDo khams gling tshang chos rgyal rje ’bangs rim byon rnams kyi lo rgyus'', Dehra Dun: Orgyen Mindrolling, 2014 | |||
[[Category:Historical Masters]] | [[Category:Historical Masters]] | ||
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]] | [[Category:Nyingma Masters]] | ||
[[Category:Tertöns]] | [[Category:Tertöns]] |
Revision as of 15:02, 29 March 2019
Lingtsang Gyalpo Wangchen Tenzin (Tib. གླིང་ཚང་རྒྱལ་པོ་དབང་ཆེན་བསྟན་འཛིན་, Wyl. gling tshang rgyal po dbang chen bstan 'dzin), also known as Lingtsang Gyalgenma (the 'old king of Ling') (1872–1942), was the king of the province of Ling and a tertön famous for his revelation of the long life practice focusing on the consort of Amitayus, known as 'Tséyum Tsendali'. He was a disciple of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo and a teacher of Jamyang Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö.
He had three sons and one daughter, Dechen Tso, who was the mother of Khandro Tsering Chödrön and Mayum Tsering Wangmo. After his death in Dzongri Lingtsang in around 1942 the title of Lingtsang Gyalpo passed to his son Phuntsok Gelek Rabten, a former monk, who later died in Kalimpong. Two of Phuntsok Gelek Rabten's five children are still alive today, a son, Sey Jigme Wangdu, who currently lives in Chengdu and a daughter, Princess Rinzin Wangmo, who lives in Dehra Dun.
Lingtsang Gyalpo, who is Sogyal Rinpoche's great grandfather, is also considered to be one of Sogyal Rinpoche's previous incarnations.
Further Reading
- Tashi Tsering, "History of the Gling-tshang Principality of Khams: A Preliminary Study" in Tibetan Studies: Proceedings of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Narita 1989 (Volume 2), Tokyo 1992, pp. 793-821
- Khenpo Gyaltsen Chödrak, mDo khams gling tshang chos rgyal rje ’bangs rim byon rnams kyi lo rgyus, Dehra Dun: Orgyen Mindrolling, 2014