Ngamring County

Ngamring County (Tibetan: ངམ་རིང་རྫོང་།; Chinese: 昂仁县) is a county of Xigazê in the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. "Ngamring County, sometimes referred to as the gateway to Mount Kailash and Far West Tibet, is the barren area which divides the Raga Tsangpo and the Brahmaputra."[2]

Ngamring County
昂仁县ངམ་རིང་རྫོང་།
Jucang Village along the G219 highway
Jucang Village along the G219 highway
Location of Ngamring County (red) within Xigazê City (yellow) and Tibet
Location of Ngamring County (red) within Xigazê City (yellow) and Tibet
Ngamring is located in Tibet
Ngamring
Ngamring
Location of the seat in Tibet
Ngamring is located in China
Ngamring
Ngamring
Ngamring (China)
Coordinates: 29°16′22″N 87°10′57″E / 29.27278°N 87.18250°E / 29.27278; 87.18250
CountryChina
Autonomous regionTibet
Prefecture-level cityXigazê
County seatKagar
Area
 • Total28,205.88 km2 (10,890.35 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[1]
 • Total55,108
 • Density2.0/km2 (5.1/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard)
Websitewww.arx.gov.cn
Ngamring County
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese昂仁县
Traditional Chinese昂仁縣
Tibetan name
Tibetanངམ་རིང་རྫོང་།

The office place of the county is located in Kagar, population 1,700, at an elevation of 4,380 m (14,370 ft).[3][4]

Administration divisions

Ngamring County is divided into 2 towns and 15 townships.

NameChineseHanyu PinyinTibetanWylie
Towns
Gegang Town
(Kagar, Kaika)
卡嘎镇Kǎgā zhènགད་སྒང་གྲོང་རྡལ།gad sgang grong rdal
Sangsang Town桑桑镇Sāngsāng zhènབཟང་བཟང་གྲོང་རྡལ།bzang bzang grong rdal
Townships
Darog Township达若乡Dáruò xiāngརྟ་རོག་ཤང་།rtag rog shang
Goin'gyibug Township贡久布乡Gòngjiǔbù xiāngདགོན་སྐྱིད་སྦུག་ཤང་།dgon skyid sbug shang
Comë Township措迈乡Cuòmài xiāngཚོ་སྨད་ཤང་།mtsho smad shang
Xungba Township雄巴乡Xióngbā xiāngགཞུང་བ་ཤང་།gzhung ba shang
Cazê Township查孜乡Cházī xiāngཚྭ་རྩེ་ཤང་།tswa rtse shang
Amxung Township阿木雄乡Āmùxióng xiāngཨམ་གཞུང་ཤང་།am gzhung shang
Rusar Township如萨乡Rúsà xiāngརུ་གསར་ཤང་།ru gsar shang
Kunglung Township孔隆乡Lǒnglóng xiāngགུང་ལུང་ཤང་།gung lung shang
Nyigo Township尼果乡Níguǒ xiāngཉི་སྒོ་ཤང་།nyi sgo shang
Riwoqê Township日吾其乡Rìwúqí xiāngརི་བོ་ཆེ་ཤང་།ri bo che shang
Dobê Township多白乡Duōbái xiāngམདོ་སྤེ་ཤང་།mdo spe shang
Kairag Township切热乡Qiērè xiāngགད་རགས་ཤང་།gad rags shang
Qu'og Township秋窝乡Qiūwō xiāngཆུ་འོག་ཤང་།chu 'og shang
Dagyu Township达居乡Dájū xiāngརྟ་རྒྱུད་ཤང་།stag rgyud shang
Yagmo Township亚木乡Yàmù xiāngཡག་མོ་ཤང་།yag mo shang

Landmarks and monasteries

The Chung Riwoche Stupa is located on the north bank of the Brahmaputra. "A narrow iron bridge spans the river here, alongside an original iron-chain footbridge attributed to Tangtong Gyelpo,"[2] the founder of Tibetan opera, who was born in Ngamring County. "Legend has it that the iron chain bridge over the Xiongqoi River ... was built with funds collected by Tongdong Gyaibo through performances."[5][6]

Another point of interest is the Ralung Chutse hot spring, which has camping and a guest house.[2]

Zangzang Lhadrak Cave in Ngamring County was where Padmasambhava hid the "Northern Treasures," which consisted of "a number of texts and various sacred objects in a maroon leather casket." These texts and objects were removed in 1366 by Vidyadhara Gödem, and became known as the Dzö Nga (mdzod lnga) or Five Treasuries. The "Northern Treasures" were taught at the Dorje Drak Monastery, and include the Künzang Gongpa Zangtha teachings, a collection of Dzogchen instructions.[7]

Ngamring Monastery[8] or Ngamring Chöde (Wylie: ngam ring chos sde[9] ) produced many important scholars.[10] It was founded in 1225 as a Sakya monastery when "the Ngamring ruler Drakpa Dar (Grags pa dar), also known as Yöntsun (Yon btsun), invited the Sakya master Shākya Sengé (Shākya seng ge) to Ngamring and founded the monastery there."[11]

It was later expanded by the governor Tai En Namkha Tenpa (Ta'i dben Nam mkha' brtan pa, b. 1316) with the assistance of his teacher, the Omniscient Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen (Dol po pa Shes rab rgyal mtshan, 1292-1361).[11]

The monastery also followed the Jonang and Bodongpa traditions. It became a Gelugpa monastery at the time of the 5th Dalai Lama. "Tangtong Gyalpo's teacher Ka Ngapa Paljor Sherab (Bka' lnga pa Dpal 'byor shes rab) was the ninth abbot."[11]

Transport

Notable persons

  • Thang Tong Gyalpo (1385–1464 or 1361–1485), builder of iron bridges and father of Tibetan opera

Gallery

References

External links