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'''Langdarma Udumtsen''' (Tib. གླང་དར་མ་འུ་དུམ་བཙན, [[Wyl.]] ''glang dar ma 'u dum btsan'') — the last king of the Tibetan empire, who ruled from 838 to 842 AD. He was assassinated by [[Lhalung Palgyi Dorje]].  
'''Langdarma Udumtsen''' (Tib. གླང་དར་མ་འུ་དུམ་བཙན, [[Wyl.]] ''glang dar ma 'u dum btsan'') — the last king of the Tibetan empire, who ruled from 838 to 842 AD. He was assassinated by [[Lhalung Palgyi Dorje]].  


He is said to have had two sons: [[Tridé Yumten]] (Wyl. ''khri lde yum brtan'') and [[Namdé Ösung]] (Wyl. ''gnam lde 'od srungs''). His grandson, King [[Yeshe Ö]] became pivotal in the revival of Buddhism after the so called dark age after the collapse of the Tibetan empire.     
He is said to have had two sons: Tridé Yumten (Wyl. ''khri lde yum brtan'') and Namdé Ösung (Wyl. ''gnam lde 'od srungs''). His grandson, King [[Yeshe Ö]] became pivotal in the revival of Buddhism after the so called dark age after the collapse of the Tibetan empire.     


[[Category:Historical Figures]]
[[Category:Historical Figures]]
[[Category:Kings]]
[[Category:Kings]]

Latest revision as of 17:35, 2 April 2022

Langdarma Udumtsen (Tib. གླང་དར་མ་འུ་དུམ་བཙན, Wyl. glang dar ma 'u dum btsan) — the last king of the Tibetan empire, who ruled from 838 to 842 AD. He was assassinated by Lhalung Palgyi Dorje.

He is said to have had two sons: Tridé Yumten (Wyl. khri lde yum brtan) and Namdé Ösung (Wyl. gnam lde 'od srungs). His grandson, King Yeshe Ö became pivotal in the revival of Buddhism after the so called dark age after the collapse of the Tibetan empire.