Trinyen Songtsen (Tibetan: ཁྲི་གཉན་གཟུངས་བཙན; Wylie: Khri-gnyan gZung-btsan, Chinese:赤宁松赞) was the 29th King of Bod according to Tibetan legendary tradition. He was one of the legendary kings and the first of the so-called Pre-Imperial Period (493-630). Before him there were the so-called Five Unifying Kings whose names ended in Tsen.

Trinyen Zungtsen
ཁྲི་གཉན་གཟུངས་བཙན
Tsenpo
29nd King of Tibet
Reignc. 512–537
PredecessorThothori Nyantsen
SuccessorDrongnyen Deu
HouseHouse of Yarlung
FatherThothori Nyantsen
ReligionBon

Life edit

Trinyen Songtsen was the son of Thothori Nyantsen[1]

The Tibetan Annals state that like his father, Trinyen made offerings with Secret Antidotes and that this is why the kingdom grew during his rule.[2]

It is also stated that Trinyen was buried at Donkhorda, the site of the royal tombs, to the right of his father Thothori's tomb.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Drup, Buton Richen (2013). Buton's History of Buddhism in India and Its Spread to Tibet. Shambhala Publications, p. 271. ISBN 9780834829527.
  2. ^ Kerrigan, Michael; Bishop, Clifford; Chambers, James (1998). The Diamond Path. Time-Life Books. ISBN 9780705435635.
  3. ^ Gyaltsen, Sakapa Sonam (1996). The Clear Mirror. Snow Lion Publications, pp. 89-90. ISBN 9781559390484.
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Tibet
512–537
Succeeded by