Lhamo

 

Masked dancers (hero and leaping dog) at the Wangdue Phodrang tshechu, Bhutan, 2007.
Dance of the Lord of Death and his Consort, Paro, Bhutan, at a tsechu festival in 2006.
Lhamo during Qing dynasty
Ache Lhamo in front of Gongkar Dzong, 1939

Lhamo, bee Ache Lhamo, e la Tibet kɔɔ naŋ ŋmaa gili neŋ yiele aneŋ seɛre naŋ bibe yuoŋ gyamaa, ka o zie naŋ peɛle o samuni sɛŋ ka ba boɔla ka opera. A deɛne ŋa maŋ taa la yeli mannoo aneŋ dɛmo kyɛ ka seɛ aneŋ yieli meŋ maŋ la bibe, a deɛŋ deɛneba maŋ pɔge la nimipɔgere parɛɛ parɛɛ. A sensellɛ ŋa yi la a Indian Buddhist deme sensellɛ poɔ, a maŋ te kyaare nentegra mine aneŋ a Tibetan dabaŋkroŋ yɛlɛ. Kyɛ a tigiri diibo, a seɛre aneŋ ba ŋmenpuori yɛlɛ na maŋ te kyaarɛɛ a Tibetan Royal Dynastic saŋa.

A saaŋkonoŋ ŋa mine taaba maŋ be la a Bhutan aneŋ zizaane mine poore poɔ bonso a Tibetan Buddhism aneŋ Tibetan yipɔge maŋ ka ba zanne a yi. Lhamo taa la noba teɛroo ata mine ka neɛ zaa sage a di, ka ana la ama: Kyimulunga, Gyangara, and Chungba.[1]

  1. https://www.jstor.org/stable/4137092

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy