Lha of Tibet

{{Short description|(Disputed) Tibetan King (697-?)}}

{{Infobox King

|name=Lha Balpho

|title=(De facto) Emperor of Tibetan Empire
(Tsenpo)

|succession=(De facto) Emperor of Tibetan Empire

|reign={{Circa}} 704 – 705

|predecessor=Tridu Songtsen

|successor=Me Agtsom

|birth_date={{Circa}} 697

|death_date=Unknown

|spouse=Princess Jincheng (disputed)

|spouse-type=Wife

|house=Yarlung dynasty

|father=Tridu Songtsen

}}

Lha ({{bo|t=ལྷ|w=lha}}, b.697 – ?d. r. 704 – 705) was a (De facto) Tibetan Emperor who ruled briefly in 704 to 705. The circumstances of his reign are not very clear, and he is not counted in most lists of rulers.

Biography

Lha was one of the sons of emperor Tridu Songtsen, who met a hasty end in 704. The Old Book of Tang say that the southern tributaries of the empire revolted and during the imperial military reaction, Tridu Songtsen was killed. Due to squabbling by his sons, his seven-year-old son Lha was enthroned.Paul Pelliot, Histoire ancienne du Tibet. Paris 1964, p. 12.

Tibetan Annals from Dunhuang briefly mention that an older brother of Me Agtsom was deposed in 705. There is no information about the circumstances of his brief enthronement, or the causes of his disgrace. Possibly it had something to do with the disturbances in the southern dependencies of the empire that took place at this time.Ancient Tibet: Research materials from the Yeshe De project. Berkeley 1986, p. 242. On the basis of these materials the historian Christopher Beckwith argues that Me Agtsom did not succeed his father immediately. Rather, the throne was briefly held by Lha, who was also possibly called Lha Balpho. After a short while, his powerful grandmother, the empress dowager Khri ma lod, dethroned him and placed the infant Gyal Tsugru - the future Me Agtsom - on the throne. The coup was accompanied by revolts and executions involving the vassal country Serib at the south-western border of Tibet.

Lha was apparently not killed. It has been suggested that he was the person who actually received the Princess Jincheng as his bride in 710, though this is very unclear.Christopher Beckwith, The Tibetan empire in Central Asia. Princeton 1987, pp. 69-70. The princess is usually regarded as the consort of Me Agtsom.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

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{{s-bef|before=Tridu Songtsen}}

{{s-ttl|title=Emperor of Tibet|years=r. 704-705}}

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{{Emperors of Tibet}}

Category:Emperors of Tibet

Category:Buddhist monarchs

Category:8th-century monarchs in Asia

Category:Tibetan Empire

Category:8th-century Tibetan people