Kandze Monastery | |
Pushpin Map: | China Sichuan |
Coordinates: | 31.6344°N 99.9853°W |
Location: | Garzê Town, Garzê County, Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture (Kham region), Sichuan Province, China |
Founded By: | Qosot Mongols |
Founded: | c. 1642 CE |
No. Of Monks: | c. 700 |
Kandze Monastery (also Ganzi or Garze Monastery or Gompa;) is situated 2 km north of Garzê Town on a hilltop overlooking the town,[1] in Tibet.[2]
The monastery was built c. 1642 CE by the Khoshut or Qosot Mongols overlooking their castles known as Mazur and Khangsar. It once housed 1,500 monks making it, with Chamdo, the largest in Kham. The pilgrimage circuit around the monastery was almost eight kilometres long. In the 1909-1918 war the castles were occupied by Chinese troops and are now in ruins.
It has been extensively renovated since 1981 and now houses about 700 monks, including three tulkus - one of whom, Lamdark Rinpoche, returned from Switzerland and established a girls' school.[3] [4]
Inside three sets of images are displayed high up in glass cabinets representing the founders of the Nyingmapa, Kadampa and Gelugpa lineages. There are also a number of fine tangkas representing the meditational deities, Guhyasamaja, Cakrasamvara, and Yamantaka.[5]
To the northeast of the monastery on a hill is a reconstructed white chorten (stupa).[6]