Gyangtse

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English[edit]

Map including GYANGTSE (AMS, 1954)

Proper noun[edit]

Gyangtse

  1. Alternative form of Gyantse
    • 1984 [1983], Heinrich Harrer, “Return to Gyangtse”, in Wiedersehn mit Tibet [Return to Tibet: Tibet After the Chinese Occupation]‎[1], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 134:
      The market of Gyangtse, once a famous trading-post, has lost much of its former liveliness. Gyangtse used to be the place where the best carpets and textiles were made; a manufactory is again operating at the foot of the ancient fortress, but this now belongs to the commune, and the classical flower-motifs on the carpets have been replaced by dragons and other Chinese symbols.
    • 1997 October 19, Karen Swenson, “Approaches To Tibet”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 23 May 2009, Travel‎[3]:
      Gyangtse, my favorite Tibetan town, half a day's journey farther southeast on this route, has not yet met that fate. A stroll down the main street between Tibetan houses topped by rippling prayer flags takes one to the monastery and the Kumbum, a white wedding-cake structure honeycombed with chapels whose walls are bright with 15th-century murals. It is the Ste.-Chapelle of Asia.
    • 2009, John Strawson, Gentlemen in Khaki and Camouflage: the British Army 1890-2008[4], Pen & Sword, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 77:
      Younghusband and his force stayed put, however, and then in March advanced again with a view to reaching his initial objective, Gyangtse, some 150 miles inside Tibet.[...]Nevertheless Younghusband and his force persevered. They skirmished their way to Gyangtse, and, reinforced by a battalion of the Royal Fusiliers, entered Lhasa at the beginning of August, 1904.
    • 2020 January 5, PATTARAWADEE SAENGMANEE, “Awakening from the quaking”, in Bangkok Post[5], archived from the original on 27 May 2022:
      After sundown, we continued to Boudhanath Stupa in the east of Kathmandu. Built by Tibetan pilgrims, the capital city's largest Buddhist stupa was designated a World Heritage Site in 1979 and took its inspiration from the Gyangtse of Tibet.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Gyangtse.

Translations[edit]