Srong-brtsan-sgam-po

king of Tibet
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Also known as: Srong-btsan- sgam-po
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Srong-btsan-sgam-po
Born:
c. 617, Rgya ma, Tibet
Died:
650
Also Known As:
Srong-btsan- sgam-po
Title / Office:
king (629-650), Tibet
Notable Family Members:
father Gnam-ri-srong-brtsan

Srong-brtsan-sgam-po (born c. 617, Rgya ma, Tibet—died 650) was a Tibetan king (crowned 629) who extended his dominion to include Nepal and parts of India and China and whose reign marked the beginning of recorded history in Tibet. He commissioned a court scholar to create the Tibetan written language using an Indo-European model for the script. Because two of his wives, a Nepalese and a Chinese princess, were Buddhists, he is credited by lama historians with introducing Buddhism into Tibet.

To house the famous image of the Gautama Buddha taken to Tibet by his Nepalese bride, he built in Lhasa, the capital, the Tsuglagkhang, or Gtsug-lag-khang (Jokhang), Temple, which remains Tibetan Buddhism’s most sacred place.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.