Drak Yerpa
Drak Yerpa is a place that has deep meaning in Tibetan
spiritual culture. There is a saying goes like this: "Lhasa is the shrine
of Tibet, Drak Yerpa is the shrine of Lhasa. Not seeing Drak Yerpa in Lhasa is
just like making a dress without the collar." The entrance to the Yerpa Valley is about 16 km
northeast of Lhasa on the northern bank of Kyichu River. From there, it is
another 10 km to the famous ancient meditation caves.
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Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Tibet Tours
Yumbu Lhakhang Palace
It is located on the Tashi Tsere Hill, about 5 km to the southeast of
Nedong County of Lhoka. Yumbu means female deer, because the Tashi Tsere Hill
appears like a female deer, and Lhakang means holy palace. The Yumbu Lhakang is
the first palace in Tibet and was built by Nyechi Tsanpu, the first Tibetan
King in 2 century B.C. according to the legend. Enshrined inside the Palace are
statues of the Three Periods of Buddhas, statues of successive kings such as
Nyechi Tsanpu, Lha Thothori Nyantsen, Rebajian, Songtsen Gampo and Trisong
Detsan. About 400m to the northeast of the Tashi Tsere Hill, there is a famous
spring named the Gar Spring which flows in a ceaseless stream for the whole
year.
As the ancient palace of the Tibetan kings prominenting on a rocky hill, it
is a narrow rectangular building with a slender white tower topped by a gilded
rgya-phibs canopy. According to Tibetan legend, during the reign of the 28th
king Lha Thothori Nyantsen in the 5th century, the first Buddhist Sutra to
enter Tibet fell from the sky onto the roof of Yumbu Lhakhang together with a
small golden stupa and a jewel.By tradition it was founded by the mythical king
Nya-khri Btsan-po and it is associated, rather more possibly, with king
Tho-tho-ri who may be placed tentatively in the middle of the fifth century.
The story gives sanctity to the building which, which is approached by a narrow
path up a steep hill and entered through a low door beyond which a steep ladder
leads to the first floor.
The Yumbu Lhakhang palace may have been the oldest structure in Tibet
before being mostly destroyed during the Cultural Revolution. In the 1960s, the
Yumbu Lhakhang was rebuilt and beautifully redecorated. The Yumbu Lkakhang is
revered by pilgrims as the location of the first appearance of Buddhism in
Tibet.
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