Lhalu family
The Lhalu family is a Tibetan noble family who are known in Tibet for producing the 8th Dalai Lama.[1][2][3][4]
See also
- Patrick French, Tibet, Tibet, une histoire personnelle d'un pays perdu, translated from English by William Oliver Desmond, Albin Michel, 2005
References
- "Tibetan Consultative Body Member Says Dalai Lama "Stooge of the Westerners"". Xinhua News Agency. 6 March 1996.
- "Governmental Organization of Old Tibet".
From the seventh Dalai Lama to the 14th, seven families had been formed, such as the Lhangdun and Lhalu families
- Strong, Anna Louise (1960). "VIII: Lhalu's Serfs Accuse". When Serfs Stood Up in Tibet. Beijing: New World Press.
Lhalu's family was not of the "old nobility" in Tibet; it did not, like Apei's (Ngabo Ngawang Jigme), trace lineage back a thousand years to ancient kings. It had produced the eighth and twelfth incarnations of the Dalai Lama and thus attained nobility
- 次仁央宗 (2006). 西藏贵族世家: 1900-1951 [The aristocratic families in Tibetan history: 1900-1951]. 五洲传播出版社. p. 18. ISBN 7508509374.
The Lhalu family has produced two Dalai Lamas - the 8th and the 12th Dalai Lama – as well as numerous reincarnated soul boys.
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