All Ladakh Gonpa Association#Indus

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}

{{Use Indian English|date=March 2018}}

All Ladakh Gonpa Association (ALGA) is the central organisation of the Buddhist monasteries in Ladakh, India. It aims to preserve and strengthen the monastic institutions. It was founded by the 19th Kushok Bakula Rinpoche in 1949 and he acted as its president for 41 years, from 1949 until 1991. In 1949, the first meeting of the great monasteries was held and ten monasteries took part. All Ladakh Gonpa Association was registered in 1959 and is run by a governing body consisting of fifteen lama members belonging to all four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism. There are sixteen major monastic institutions with hundreds of monks in each monastery.{{cite web |url=http://ladakhkalachakra2014.com/all-ladakh-gonpa-association/ |title=All Ladakh Gonpa Association - the 33rd Kalachakra Ladakh |access-date=16 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140921181326/http://ladakhkalachakra2014.com/all-ladakh-gonpa-association/ |archive-date=21 September 2014 |url-status=usurped |df=dmy-all}}

List of monasteries

{{anchor | Monasteries | Monastery}}

These are listed by the river valleys. These monasteries are located on the banks and mountain slopes of various rivers within Indus River system.

{{anchor | Shyok }}

{{anchor | Nubra }}

  • Nubra River valley:
  • Diskit Monastery, {{cvt|115|km}} north of Leh.
  • Hundur Monastery, {{cvt|121|km}} north of Leh, {{cvt|6|km}} west of the Diskit Monastery and {{cvt|19|km}} east of Thoise.{{cite web|url=http://www.buddhist-temples.com/buddhist-monastery/ladakh/diskit-hundur.html|title=Diskit & Hundur|publisher=Buddhist-temples.com|access-date=8 October 2009}}
  • Samstanling Monastery the main monastery in the valley and for viewing tall statue of Maitreya Buddha, {{cvt|30|km}} northeast of Diskit Monastery and {{cvt|145|km}} northwest of Leh.
  • Ensa Monastery, {{cvt|61|km}} north of Diskit and {{cvt|171|km}} north of Leh.
  • Turtuk Monastery, {{cvt|91|km}} west of Diskit and {{cvt|201|km}} north of Leh.

{{anchor | Indus }}

{{anchor | Moriri }}

{{anchor | Markha }}

  • Markha River Valley, on "Nimoo-Chilling-Markha Road", these are also accessible from Leh on 56 km long Leh-Chilling road:
  • Lama Guru Monastery, 35 km southeast of Nimoo, 56 km southwest of Leh on Leh-Chilling-Markha road.
  • Skiu-Kaya, twin villages next to each other.
  • Kaya monastery, 11th century, built by Rinchen Zangpo, couple of km east of Chilling.
  • Skiu monastery, 11th century, built by Rinchen Zangpo, couple of km east of Kaya.
  • Hankar Monastery and Fort, 35–40 km east of Chilling, east of Markha.
  • Techa Monastery is one of the most important monastery in the Markha valley.{{Cite web|url=https://monkeystale.ca/2018/08/31/ladakhs-monasteries-palaces-and-fortresses/|title=Ladakh’s Monasteries, Palaces and Fortresses|last=Maggie and Richard|date=2018-08-31|website=Monkey's Tale|language=en|access-date=2019-03-29}}

{{anchor | Kharnak }}

{{anchor | Zanakar }}

List of edicts

{{anchor | Edict | Edicts | Inscription | Inscriptions }}

These are listed by the river valleys. These edicts are located in or near monasteries on the banks and mountain slopes of various rivers within Indus river system.

  • Shyok River valley:
  • Nubra River valley:
  • Indus River valley:
  • Kargil-Haknis-Leh Road, listed in order of from Kargil direction to Leh.
  • Mulbekh (also spelled "Mulbe") edict of King Bum Ide, 1430 CE, near Mulbekh Monastery and rock cut Buddha statue.Prem Singh Jina, 1998, Tibetan Manuscripts and Inscriptions of Ladakh Himalaya, Page 89-90.Rizvi (1996), p. 238.
  • Leh city: listed in order of north to south.
  • Leh-Upshi Road, listed in order of moving from Leh towards Upshi.
  • Tso Moriri area in Changthang plateau
  • Zanskar River valley:
  • Padum-Shankoo-Kargil Road, listed in order of moving from Padum towards Kargil.
  • Padum-Zangla-Lingshed Road, listed in order of moving from Padum to Lingshed.

See also

References