Tingri

Known as Tingri, Old Tingri, Dingri, Ganggazhen, and even Gangkar Town, Tingri is a small town in Tingri Country of Shigatse Prefecture in Tibet Autonomous region. The seat of Tingri Country for eight years, the county government was moved to Shegar Town in 1968, and Tingri is often known now as Old Tingri.
Lying along the G318 National Road, better known as the Sino-Nepal Friendship Highway, Tingri is a small, gritty town that is around a kilometer long, laid out along the sides of the road. Mostly made up of guest houses, restaurants, and repair workshops, this gateway to the Everest Region is rarely visited for its own merits, but more for the closeness to the Mount Everest National Park and the Tingri Plain, popular places for trekking and climbing. Lying at an altitude of around 4,300 meters, the most enchanting thing about the town is the ancient Shekar Dorje Dzong that lies above the town.
The dzong houses the Shekar Chode Monastery, which was destroyed and is still in the process of restoration. Tingri is also notable for the excellent views of four of the highest mountains in the world, Mount Everest, Mount Lhotse, Mount Cho Oyu, and Mount Makalu.
History
Historically, Tingri was an important trading town for the local people, who would trade Tibetan wool, salt, and livestock for grain, rice, and iron from the Nepali Sherpas. To the north lies the upland basin known as the Tingri Plain, which was one of the best pasturelands in the area, at more than 4,500 meters above sea level. Fed by shallow, fast flowing snowmelt rivers that make it a lush grassland, it is ideal for grazing animals, and has long been the home to many nomadic herders. Once covered in gazelles, blue sheep, and antelopes, the plains were a major source of meat in the past, though many of the animals were hunted almost to extinction.
In 1097, Tingri Lankor, or Ding Ri Glang ‘Khor, was founded by the Indian Buddhist adept, Padampa Sangye, and has come to be known as “Padampa’s Residence”. Padampa was an important monk in the restoration and re-establishment of Buddhism in Tibet, and made many visits to Tingri over the years of his life.
Legend says that the Buddha threw a dark stone, known as the “Ding-rdo rMug-po” from the top of a mountain in India, and instructed his disciple, Padampa, to find the stone and build a temple on the spot where it lands. From the top of his mountain, the Buddha heard the stone make a glorious sound as it landed, the “DING” sound reverberating through the region. When Padampa arrived at the spot in Tibet where it landed, which the Buddha had told him would be called Ding-ri, he found the stone surrounded by seven deer, that proceeded to merge into on another, and then when only one was left, it merged into the stone. Fulfilling his master’s prophecy, Padampa stayed in Ding-ri, accomplishing many practices in the first three years, until people came to know who he was.
On his first visits, he would reside in a meditation cave nearby, with his consort, the Tibetan dakini Machik Labdron, and a gompa was later built on the site around the caves. The gompa later became the seat of the Dampapa School of Tibetan Buddhism, and is currently in the process of being restored to its former glory.
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