Ramoche Temple | |
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RamocheTemple
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Tibetan transcription(s) | |
Tibetan | ར་མོ་ཆེ་དགོན་པ་ |
Wylie transliteration | Ra-mo-che Dgon-pa |
Chinese transcription(s) | |
Traditional | 小昭寺 |
Pinyin | Xiǎozhāo Sì |
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Coordinates | 29°39′31″N 91°7′49″E / 29.65861°N 91.13028°E |
Monastery information | |
Location | Lhasa, Tibet, China |
Founded | 7th century |
Date renovated | 1474, 1986 - three storeys |
Type | Tibetan Buddhist |
Sect | Gelug |
Architecture | Han and Tibetan |
Ramoche Temple (Tibetan: ར་མོ་ཆེ་དགོན་པ་, Wylie: Ra-mo-che Dgon-pa, Lhasa dialect IPA: [ràmotɕe kø̃̀pa]; Chinese: 小昭寺; pinyin: Xiǎozhāo Sì) is a Buddhist monastery is considered the most important temple in Lhasa after the Jokhang Temple. Situated in the northwest of the Tibetan capital of Lhasa, it is east of the Potala and north of the Jokhang, covering a total area of 4,000 square meters (almost one acre).
Ramoche is considered to be the sister temple to the Jokhang which was completed about the same time. Tradition says that it was built originally to house the much revered Jowo Rinpoche statue, carried to Lhasa via Lhagang in a wooden cart, brought to Tibet when Princess Wencheng came to Lhasa. Unlike, the Jokhang, Ramoche was originally built in Chinese style. During Mangsong Mangtsen's reign (649-676), because of a threat that the Tang Chinese might invade, Princess Wencheng is said to have had the statue of Jowo Rinpoche hidden in a secret chamber in the Jokhang. Princess Jincheng, sometime after 710 CE, had it placed in the central chapel of the Jokhang. It was replaced at Ramoche by a statue of Jowo Mikyo Dorje, a small bronze statue of the Buddha when he was eight years old, crafted by Vishvakarman, and brought to Lhasa by the Nepalese queen, Bhrikuti. It is said to have been badly damaged by the Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution.