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Namgyal Monastery (Tibetan: རྣམ་རྒྱལ།, Wylie: rnam rgyal) (also often referred to as "Dalai Lama's Temple") is in Mcleod Ganj, Dharamsala, India. It is the personal monastery of the 14th Dalai Lama. Another name for this temple-complex is Namgyal Tantric College. The monastery's key role is to assist with rituals involving the ...
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Namgyal Tsemo Monastery or Namgyal Tsemo Gompa is a Buddhist monastery in Leh city of Leh district, Ladakh, northern India. [1] Founded by King Tashi Namgyal (1555-1575) of Ladakh, it has a three-story high gold statue of Maitreya Buddha and ancient manuscripts and frescoes. [1] It is situated near the Tsemo Castle.
Namgyal Monastery (Ithaca) is a branch of the personal monastery of the Dalai Lama, also called Namgyal Monastery.It therefore belongs to the Gelugpa monastic order. . Traditionally located within the Potala Palace, and charged with various ritual tasks connected with the Dalai Lama, the parent monastery in 1959 relocated to Dharamsala along with the Tibetan exile gov
Monks from Namgyal Monastery Institute of Buddhist Studies, a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Ithaca, will construct a mandala out of different colors of sand on Ithaca College’s campus this month.
Simtokha Dzong. The Simtoka Dzong, built in 1629 by Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal, functions as a monastic and administrative centre and is the oldest dzong which has survived in its original form; [2] Namgyal brought into vogue, for the first time in Bhutan, this concept of the "dzong" as castle monastery. [4]
Magur Namgyal Ling Amdo Gelug 1646 [3] Menri: Ü Bön 1405 1386, 1966 Menri Monastery: Tsang Mindrolling: Lhokha Nyingma: One of the six "Nyingmapa mother monasteries." Nalendra Monastery Penpo [4] Namdzong Nunnery Amdo Namgyal Monastery: Lhasa Nangshi Monastery Ngaba, Amdo Narthang Monastery: Tsang Nechung Temple: Lhasa Ngor Temple: Ü Sakya ...
Namgyal Institute of Tibetology (NIT) is a Tibet museum in Gangtok, Sikkim, India, named after the 11th Chogyal of Sikkim, Sir Tashi Namgyal. [2] The institute employs researchers and one of its new research programs is a project which seeks to document the social history of Sikkim's approximated 60 monasteries and record this on a computer.