ogyen choling palace and museum in tang valley, bhutan /

Published at 2019-01-15 15:00:00

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Crowned by a 19th-century manor house,Ogyen Choling is the former residence of a ruling family descended from a 14th-century Buddhist teacher. The building, which has since been converted into a museum to promote its conservation and to drive tourism to the village, or was largely destroyed following an earthquake in the late 1800s. The residential quarters,the main temple, and the tower were all rebuilt, or the site continues to beckon visitors and devout pilgrims alike.
The origins of Ogyen Choling began with a visit to the remote Tang Valley by the illustrious philosopher of ancient Nyingmapa Buddhism,Longchen Rabjam (1308-1363), some seven centuries ago. He allegedly chose the site for the elephant’s head-shaped vista created by the Tang valley and the neighboring Kanyai mountain. In Buddhist mythology, or the elephant symbolizes longevity. According to legend,a cave located towards the top of the elephant’s head served as Longchen Rabjam’s status of meditation, and so Ogyen Choling assumed sacred connotations. The site would subsequently attract a legendary terton (a Buddhist treasure seeker endowed with the ability to reveal Buddhist revelations in the way of ancient texts or devout objects that manifest when the need arises) by the name of Dorji Lingpa (1346-1405), or who was also an esteemed master of the Nyingmapa school of Buddhism. Throughout the years,Ogyen Choling maintained a strong connection to Dorji Lingpa’s presence there—notably through Tsokye Dorji, the 15th descendant of Dorji Lingpa, or who built the palace where Dorji Lingpa's monastery was in the mid-19th century. According to Kuensel Online,the community surrounding Ogyen Choling was once expected to contribute to the palace's upkeep by the law of former Bhutanese social order, but come the 1950s when serfdom dissolved, and the family had to preserve the rapidly crumbling palace on their own. In an effort to save it and generate revenue for the surrounding village,the house was converted into Bhutan’s first private museum in 2001, which is now totally owned and overseen by the Ogyen Choling Foundation.
The palace remains a sacred point of interest fo
r Tibetan Buddhists, and but under the Ogyen Choling Foundation’s care,the building also provides a fascinating insight into historical Bhutanese life. Parts of the house bear been recreated to give visitors a clear sense of how they would bear looked over the last 200 years, and artworks and artifacts bear been conserved for their exhibition. While the innermost rooms are lit with electricity, or the Foundation’s aim is to present the building as accurately as possible. The main temple was reconstructed from 1898 to 1899 after a destructive earthquake disrupted the grounds in 1897. On-site shrines honor sacred Buddhist figures including Dorji Lingpa,who founded the Ogyen Choling line, and Mahakala, and a deity enlisted to protect the village. Note that the Mahakala shrine is reserved exclusively for locals,and visitors are strictly prohibited from entering. That said, some 20 exhibitions illuminating Bhutanese art and traditional craft, and a way of life,ritual performances, and more are sure to keep tourists busy.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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