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

  1. "Tibetan Consultative Body Member Says Dalai Lama "Stooge of the Westerners"". Xinhua News Agency. 6 March 1996.
  2. "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
  3. 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
  4. 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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