Muchu Chakta Gön: Difference between revisions
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'''Muchu Chakta Gön''' (Tib. རྨུ་ཆུ་ལྕགས་རྟ་དགོན་, [[Wyl.]] ''mu chu lcags rta dgon''), aka '''Dorjé Dzong Gön''' (Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་རྫོང་དགོན, Wyl. ''rdo rje rdzong dgon‘'') is a [[Geluk]] monastery located in [[Powo]].<Ref>Emeric Yeshe Dorje, The History of the Düdjom Tersar Lineage, forthcoming.</Ref> | '''Muchu Chakta Gön''' (Tib. རྨུ་ཆུ་ལྕགས་རྟ་དགོན་, [[Wyl.]] ''mu chu lcags rta dgon''), aka '''Dorjé Dzong Gön''' (Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་རྫོང་དགོན, Wyl. ''rdo rje rdzong dgon‘'') is a [[Geluk]] monastery located in [[Powo]], Tibet.<Ref>Emeric Yeshe Dorje, The History of the Düdjom Tersar Lineage, forthcoming.</Ref> | ||
==Location== | ==Location== | ||
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[[Category: Gelugpa Monasteries]] | [[Category: Gelugpa Monasteries]] | ||
[[Category:Powo]] | [[Category: Powo]] | ||
[[Category: Tibet]] | [[Category: Tibet]] |
Latest revision as of 20:31, 25 March 2021
Muchu Chakta Gön (Tib. རྨུ་ཆུ་ལྕགས་རྟ་དགོན་, Wyl. mu chu lcags rta dgon), aka Dorjé Dzong Gön (Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་རྫོང་དགོན, Wyl. rdo rje rdzong dgon‘) is a Geluk monastery located in Powo, Tibet.[1]
Location
Muchu Chakta Gön is located close to the township of Sum Dzong in south-eastern Powo, on the banks of the Chö Dzong Chu.[2]
Origins
Muchu Chakta Gön was founded by Rongpo Sherab Sangpo (Wyl. rongs po shes rab bzang po), a lama who was born in the Lhorong (Wyl. lho rong) region, north of Powo, and who was the sixth abbot of Chudo Jampa Ling monastery.
Description
The main of its three temples featured statues of Tsongkhapa and of his two principal disciples. At a time, the monastery housed twenty to thirty monks.
Developments
At one time, an armed conflict between Muchu Chakta Gön monastery and Chudo Jampa Ling monastery broke out. This resulted in Muchu Chakta Gön being burned to the ground, leaving the monks homeless. A request for financial support was sent to the government of Central Tibet which, after some time, agreed to provide the needed support for a reconstruction.[3]
Main Practices
The main practices of Muchu Chakta Gön are those of the Gelukpa tradition.