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Potala Palace

The Potala Palace is a dzong fortress in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region in China. It was the winter palace of the Dalai Lamas from 1649 to 1959, has been a museum since then, and a World Heritage Site since 1994.

པོ་ཏ་ལ་ཕོ་བྲང​​
Potala Palace

1649

Historic Ensemble of the Potala Palace, Lhasa

Cultural

i, iv, vi

1994 (18th session)

707

2000; 2001

The palace is named after Mount Potalaka, the mythical abode of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara.[1] The 5th Dalai Lama started its construction in 1645[2] after one of his spiritual advisers, Konchog Chophel (died 1646), pointed out that the site was ideal as a seat of government, situated as it is between Drepung and Sera monasteries and the old city of Lhasa.[3] It may overlie the remains of an earlier fortress called the White or Red Palace on the site,[4] built by Songtsen Gampo in 637.[5]


The building measures 400 metres (1,300 ft) east-west and 350 metres (1,150 ft) north-south, with sloping stone walls averaging 3 metres (9.8 ft) thick, and 5 metres (16 ft) thick at the base, and with copper poured into the foundations to help proof it against earthquakes.[6] Thirteen storeys of buildings, containing over 1,000 rooms, 10,000 shrines and about 200,000 statues, soar 117 metres (384 ft) on top of Marpo Ri, the "Red Hill", rising more than 300 metres (980 ft) in total above the valley floor.[7]


Tradition has it that the three main hills of Lhasa represent the "Three Protectors of Tibet". Chokpori, just to the south of the Potala, is the soul-mountain (Wylie: bla ri) of Vajrapani, Pongwari that of Manjusri, and Marpori, the hill on which the Potala stands, represents Avalokiteśvara.[8]

Potala Palace

པོ་ཏ་ལ་ཕོ་བྲང​

po ta la pho brang

po ta la pho brang

ᠪᠦᠲᠠᠯᠠ ᠥᠷᠳᠥᠨ

View showing recent Western Gate shops, highway, 2015

View showing recent Western Gate shops, highway, 2015

View of the Potala from behind, seen from Ching Drol Chi Ling

View of the Potala from behind, seen from Ching Drol Chi Ling

Potala Palace with Lhasa in the foreground

The park, pond, and chapel behind the Potala

The park, pond, and chapel behind the Potala

Detail of decoration in Potala

Detail of decoration in Potala

Mendicant monk at base of Potala, 1993

Mendicant monk at base of Potala, 1993

Patala/Potala

Patala

the Dalai Lama's former summer palace

Norbulingka

Jokhang Temple Monastery

Dhvaja

, a 1997 film about the Dalai Lama, chiefly set inside the palace

Kundun

Seven Years in Tibet

Leh Palace

Lhasa Mass Art Museum

Mount Putuo

List of tallest structures built before the 20th century

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the : Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lhasa". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 529–532. (See p. 530.)

public domain

(1987). The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia. Princeton University Press. Princeton, New Jersey. ISBN 0-691-02469-3.

Beckwith, Christopher I.

"Reading the Potala". Peter Bishop. In: Sacred Spaces and Powerful Places in Tibetan Culture: A Collection of Essays. (1999) Edited by Toni Huber, pp. 367–388. The Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, Dharamsala, H.P., India.  81-86470-22-0.

ISBN

Das, Sarat Chandra. Lhasa and Central Tibet. (1902). Edited by W. W. Rockhill. Reprint: Mehra Offset Press, Delhi (1988), pp. 145–146; 166–169; 262–263 and illustration opposite p. 154.

Larsen and Sinding-Larsen (2001). The Lhasa Atlas: Traditional Tibetan Architecture and Landscape, Knud Larsen and Amund Sinding-Larsen. Shambhala Books, Boston.  1-57062-867-X.

ISBN

(1984) Tibet & Its History. 1st edition 1962. Second Edition, Revised and Updated. Shambhala Publications. Boston ISBN 0-87773-376-7.

Richardson, Hugh E.

Richardson, Hugh E. (1985). A Corpus of Early Tibetan Inscriptions. Royal Asiatic Society.  0-94759300-4.

ISBN

Snellgrove, David & Hugh Richardson. (1995). A Cultural History of Tibet. 1st edition 1968. 1995 edition with new material. Shambhala. Boston & London.  1-57062-102-0.

ISBN

von Schroeder, Ulrich. (1981). Indo-Tibetan Bronzes. (608 pages, 1244 illustrations). Hong Kong: Visual Dharma Publications Ltd.  962-7049-01-8

ISBN

von Schroeder, Ulrich. (2001). Buddhist Sculptures in Tibet. Vol. One: India & Nepal; Vol. Two: Tibet & China. (Volume One: 655 pages with 766 illustrations; Volume Two: 675 pages with 987 illustrations). Hong Kong: Visual Dharma Publications, Ltd.  962-7049-07-7

ISBN

von Schroeder, Ulrich. 2008. 108 Buddhist Statues in Tibet. (212 p., 112 colour illustrations) (DVD with 527 digital photographs). Chicago: Serindia Publications.  962-7049-08-5

ISBN

at UNESCO.org

Potala Palace

with related biographies, art, and timelines (The Treasury of Lives)

Potala Palace

(Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library)

Potala

Research work on possible relation with Potala, Malaya Mountains and South India

Research work on Buddhism in India

Google Maps location of Potala Palace

(in English, Spanish, and German)

Three-dimensional rendering of Potala Palace

Geographic data related to at OpenStreetMap

Potala Palace

(archived)

The Potala palace

in Tibet is one of the most prominent attractions to be visited not only by the tourists from all around the world but even to the native Tibetans and the Potala Place had been list in UNESCO's World Heritage in 1994.

Potala Palace Tour