Phyang Monastery
{{Short description|Monastery in Ladakh, India}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}
{{Use Indian English|date=March 2018}}
{{Infobox Tibetan Buddhist monastery
|name = Phyang Monastery
|image =Phyang Monastery 03.jpg
|alt =
|caption =
|map_type = India Jammu and Kashmir
|coordinates = {{coord|34|11|11|N|77|29|22|E|type:landmark_region:IN-JK|display=inline,title}}
|map_caption = Location within India
|location=Fiang, Leh district, Ladakh, India
|founded_by = chosje dharma kunga takpa
|date_renovated =
|sect = Drikung Kagyu
|lineage=started from vajradhara tilopa naropa marpa milaraspa gampopa phakmodrupa jigtensumgon
|dedicated_to =
|head_lama = drikung skyabgon chetsang rinpoche (head teacher)
Skyabje Toldan Rinpoche (rein. head lama)
|no._of_monks =121
|architecture =
|festivals= Gang-Sngon Tsedup Festival-
28 and 29 of the fifth month
Sacred dances -2nd -3rd of the 6th month
|footnotes =
}}
Phyang Monastery, Phyang (or Phiyang) Gompa is a Buddhist monastery located in Fiang village, just 15 or 16 kilometres west of Leh in Ladakh, northern India. It was established in 1515.
Name
The local name of Phyang Monastery is "Gangon Tashi Chodzong" ({{small|Ladakhi}}: སྒང་སྔོན་བཀྲ་ཤིས་ཆོས་རྫོང། ; sgang sngon bkra shis chos rdzong).
The name is derived from Gang Ngonpo (སྒང་སྔོན་པོ་) which means blue mountain, referring to the hill behind the monastery.
History
There are a couple of divergent traditions regarding its founding.
"The site where the monastery now stands was once a part of the numerous monastic properties, offered during the time of Dharmaraja Jamyang Namgial to Chosje Damma Kunga. The hill of Phyang served as the venue of a monastery, known as Tashi Chozong, established in the year 1515. A monastic community was introduced to the monastery and with this started, the first establishment of the Digung teachings in Ladakh."{{cite web|url=http://www.buddhist-temples.com/buddhist-monastery/ladakh/phyang.html|title=Phyang Monastery|publisher=Buddhist-temples.com|access-date=October 8, 2009}}
Others say that it was founded by king Tashi Namgyal, whose reign has been established from independent sources to have been in the third quarter of the sixteenth century. There are a number of chronological difficulties in establishing events in Ladakh at this period and it is assumed that some names have been omitted from the Chronicle either from mistakes in memory or tradition, or a deliberate attempt to eradicate some events which were thought better forgotten.Rizvi (1996) p. 64.
The monastery is one of the earliest monasteries in Ladakh belonging to the Drikung Kagyu, Dri-gung-pa or Drigungpa school, one of eight schools derived from the teachings of Phakmadrupa Dorje Gyelpo (1110-1170 CE).Dorje (1999), p. 151.Rizvi (1996) p. 228. There are many Drikung monasteries in Ladakh: three main and more than thirty branch monasteries.
After the monastery was built, it specialised in Drigung teachings. The special protector of monastery is Achi Choki Dolma Aphyi Choskyi Sdrolma.The current reincarnation of Skyabje Toldan Rinpoche is the head lama.
Description
Phyang does not contain several numricoala di portio
contains numerous sacred shrines inside the monastery, {{what|date=December 2022}} frescoes dating from the royal period, and a 900-year-old museum which has an extensive collection of idols including a number of fine Kashmiri bronzes probably dating to the 14th century, thangkas, Chinese, Tibetan and Mongolian firearms and weapons.Rizvi (1996) p. 229.
The Gang-Sngon Tsedup Festival is held annually from 17th day to 19th day of the first month of the Tibetan calendar. On the 2nd and 3rd day of the 6th month of the Tibetan calendar Phyang serves as a venue for sacred dances.
Phyang Monastery 04.jpg|Entrance
Phyang Monastery 09.jpg|Door in the monastery
Phyang Monastery 10.jpg|Interior
Phyang Monastery 11.jpg|Fresco inside the monastery
See also
References
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References
- Rizvi, Janet. 1996. Ladakh: Crossroads of High Asia. Second Edition. Oxford India Paperbacks. 3rd Impression 2001. {{ISBN|0-19-564546-4}}.
{{Buddhist monasteries in Ladakh}}
Category:Buddhist monasteries in Ladakh
Category:Drikung Kagyu monasteries and temples