Wanla Monastery

Wanla Monastery
Wanla Monastery
Location within India
Coordinates 34°14′58″N 76°49′52″E / 34.24944°N 76.83111°E / 34.24944; 76.83111Coordinates: 34°14′58″N 76°49′52″E / 34.24944°N 76.83111°E / 34.24944; 76.83111
Monastery information
Location Wanla, Zanskar, Kargil district, Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir, India
Founded by Rinchen Sangpo (disputed)[1]
Founded 15th Century
Type Tibetan Buddhist
Sect Drigung Kagyu
Number of monks 1

Wanla Gompa (Urdu:وانلا گومپا) is a historic Buddhist monastery on the ridge that crowns Wanla village in Ladakh, part of Indian-controlled Kashmir. Its small but impressively preserved three-storeyed Avalokitesvara temple is one of the earliest known Drigung Kagyu prayer chambers to have survived in Ladakh. Wanla is a sub-monastery of Lamayuru which provides a caretaker monk responsible for daily rituals and for granting access to the temple.[2] The main image features Avalokitesvara in 11-headed ("Chuchigzhel") form.[3]

Along with a 1980s side building the monastery sits within the sparse remnants of a medieval castle whose construction is mentioned in Ladakhi chronicles as being by the Ladakhi King Lhachen Ngaglug (lHa-chen Ngag-lug), i.e. probably in the 12th century. The monastery was added in the heart of the castle in the 14th century. This timing adds to academic interest in Wanla since, as some writers have described, this was "an otherwise completely obscure period of Ladakh's history between the foundation of the Alchi group of monuments, the latest of which are to be attributed to the early 13th century, and the establishment of the Ladakhi kingdom in the early 15th century".[4]

The temple is currently being restored by the Achi Association.[5]

References

Neuwirth, Holger & Auer, Carmen (Hrsg.) „The Three Storied Temple of Wanla“, Buddhist Architecture in the Western Himalayas , Band 2, Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz, 2015, 205 S., ISBN 978-3-85125-391-7

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.