Mangsong Mangtsen
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Mangsong Mangtsen (Tibetan: མང་སྲོང་མང་བཙན), Trimang Löntsen or Khri-mang-slon-rtsan (r. 655–676 CE) succeeded to the Tibetan throne either after the death of his father Gungsong Gungtsen, or of his grandfather the 33rd Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo. He became the 34th king of Tibet's Yarlung Dynasty, and the second king during the Tibetan Empire era (c. 637-848).
Quick Facts Mangsong Mangtsen མང་སྲོང་མང་བཙན, Reign ...
Mangsong Mangtsen མང་སྲོང་མང་བཙན | |||||
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Tsenpo | |||||
3rd Emperor of Tibetan Empire | |||||
Reign | 655 – 676 | ||||
Predecessor | Gungsong Gungtsen or Songtsen Gampo | ||||
Successor | Tridu Songtsen | ||||
Born | mang-slon ? Tibetan Empire | ||||
Died | 676 Tsanggi Barnanggang, Tibet (modern Bainang County) | ||||
Burial | 679 Ngozhé Hrelpo Mausoleum, Valley of the Kings | ||||
Wife | Droza Trimalö | ||||
Children | Tridu Songtsen | ||||
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Lönchen | |||||
Royal House | Yarlung dynasty | ||||
Father | Gungsong Gungtsen | ||||
Mother | Azhaza Mongjé Trikar (from Tuyuhun) | ||||
Religion | Tibetan Buddhism |
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As Songtsen Gampo's only son had died early, he was succeeded by his infant grandson Mangsong Mangsten. Political power was left in the hands of the minister Gar Tongtsen (Mgar-srong-rtsan, or sometimes just mGar).[1][2]