- speech, mind, and body.
Increasingly secular regional lords (penlops and
dzongpons)
competed for
power amid a
backdrop of
civil war over the
Shabdrung and...
- Tibet, and the
Mongol Empire. The
penlops of
Trongsa and Paro, and the
dzongpons of Punakha, Thimphu, and
Wangdue Phodrang were
particularly notable figures...
- speech, mind, and body.
Increasingly secular regional lords (penlops and
dzongpons)
competed for
power amid a
backdrop of
civil war over the
Shabdrung and...
- lords/governors)
while other dzongs were
headed by
dzongpons (fortress lords).
Penlops and
dzongpons gained power as the
increasingly dysfunctional dual...
- needed] Her father,
Dhondup Gyaltshen, is the
grandson of two
Trashigang Dzongpons,
Thinley Top**** and
Ugyen Tshering (governors of Trashigang). Her mother...
-
divided into 53
prefecture districts also
called dzongs.
There were two
dzongpöns for each dzong, a lama and a layman. They were
entrusted with both civil...
-
successive Druk Desi, ponlop, and
dzongpon, and
intense rivalries developed among the
ponlop of
Tongsa and Paro and the
dzongpon of Punakha, Thimphu, and Wangdue...
- dzongchen),
under which were
dzong (rdzong), districts.
These were
headed by
dzongpons who
governed from
fortified cities (also
called dzong) and
combined civil...
- huts[citation needed] but was also the
headquarters of the
District Officer, the
Dzongpön. It was on the main
caravan route coming from Amdo to
Central Tibet. In...
-
Monpa respectively. The
officials who
collected the
taxes were
called Dzongpon. The tax was
carried to
Tawang Monastery and then to
Lhasa via
Tsona city...