Zhwa'i lhakhang monastery

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2001.59.15.33.2 (Print)

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Key Information

Photographer

Hugh E. Richardson

Collection

Hugh Richardson

Date of Photo

1948

Region

East Kyichu Valley Region > Zhwa'i lhakhang monastery

Accession number

2001.59.15.33.2

Image Dimensions

60 x 60 mm

Zhwa'i lhakhang monastery with the main temple in the centre and the white reliquary monument (mchod-rten) containing the founder's, Myang Tingnedzin, hat on the left. There are cultivated fields in the background and mounds of dung patties used for fuel in the foreground.

Further Information

Photographic Process

Print silver

Date Acquired

Donated August 2001

Donated by

The executors of the estate of Hugh E. Richardson

Expedition

Richardson's 1948 tour of the East Kyichu Valley

Other Information

Notes on print - 'Sha Lhakhang' (in pencil) and Zhwa'i (in black ink) is written on the reverse of print in Richardson's hand and '585' and 'Velox' in an oval is stamped in black. [KC 12/6/2006]

Manual Catalogues -


Manual Catalogues - Notes in negative index - Folio 33. 'Zhwa'i Lhakhang' [KC 15/5/2006]

'

Manual Catalogues -

Manual Catalogues - Richardson's Handlist, Negative book '9' 'Drikhung, Chongye etc.' [nos] 33-41, 'Xhwa'i Lha-khang is in a side valley on the left bank of the Skyid-chu a short way downstream from Rdzong-gsar. There is a chapel founded in the 9th century and two inscribed pillars of that date. See my article in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (JRAS) 1952 and 1953' [KC 17/5/2006]

Manual Catalogues -


Manual Catalogues - [Hugh Richardson in conversation with Paddy Booz; see PRM Related Documents File] "Zhwai (shwai) Lha-khang, 8th century; (also spelled Zva-hi), village chapel. Founded by Myang Bundi Tung nye'dzin po (tsang po?)."

Research publication - High Peaks, Pure Earth , H. E. Richardson, London, Serindia Publications, 1998, plate 45.

Other Information - Setting


Other Information - Setting: Richardson visited this site in 1948 and 1949 and describes it in High Peaks, Pure Earth , H. E. Richardson, London, Serindia Publications, 1998, p. 307. " ... in the open valley of the Mang-ra-chu, facing the point where the Skyid-chu, flowing from the north, turns sharply westwards, is the little Zhwa'i Lha-khang (1949, 1949), the 'Temple of the Hat'. It is approached through a courtyards where the three resident monks kept their cattle. At either side of the entrance to the temple is a stone pillar, now damaged, bearing inscriptions by Khri Lde-srong-brtsan in honour of the founder, the famous monk-minister Myang Ting-nge-'dzin bzang-po, whose waard and pupil he had benn in his minority. A door opens onto a little enclosure with a white mcho-rten in the centre, beyond which could be seen through th eopen door of the temple the image of Rnam-par snang-mdzad (Vairocana) on the alter with the Eight Disciples of the Buddha on either side. ... the basic structure of the temple appeared to have survived unchanged since the early years of the ninth century. A little way from the building is a white mchod-rten containing the miraculous hat of Myang Ting-nge-'dzin. The legend tells how he had been promised as much grain as would fill his hat: putting his hat , which had a hole in it, over the granary, the grain poured through to provide he wherewithall to build his temple."

Other Information - Location: Richardson describes his visit to Zhwa'i lhakhang in 1948 in 'The Chapel of the Hat', chapter 61 of
High Peaks, Pure Earth , London, Serindia Publications, 1998, pp. 722-726.

Other Information - Dates


Other Information - Dates: The contact print of this image is part of a group made from 6x6 negatives that share the same batch development number [585 printed in black ink]. All of the contact prints processed in this batch seem to have been taken during or around the time of a trip to Drigung Monastery and Zhwai (Sha) Lhakhang, including Tsa Pobrag, Yeregang and Khyer. Photographs from this trip can be dated to 1948. In A Corpus of Early Tibetan Inscriptions [ Hertford: Stephen Austin and Son, Royal Asiatic Society, James G. Forlong Series, No. XXIX, 1985, p.45] Richardson states of the Zhwai inscriptions translated in the book that “The texts, which were first published in JRAS in 1952 and 1954, are based on copies and photographs made by me in 1948 and checked on a second visit in the following year”.


For Citation use:
The Tibet Album. "Zhwa'i lhakhang monastery" 05 Dec. 2006. The Pitt Rivers Museum. <http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/photo_2001.59.15.33.2.html>.

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