Buddhist Archeology in Mongolia: Zanabazar and the Géluk Diaspora beyond Tibet

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2019
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American English
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University of Hawaii Press
Abstract

This article discusses a Khalkha reincarnate ruler, the First Jebtsundampa Zanabazar, who is commonly believed to be a Géluk protagonist whose alliance with the Dalai and Panchen Lamas was crucial to the dissemination of Buddhism in Khalkha Mongolia. Zanabazar’s Géluk affiliation, however, is a later Qing-Géluk construct to divert the initial Khalkha vision of him as a reincarnation of the Jonang historian Tāranātha (1575–1634). Whereas several scholars have discussed the political significance of Zanabazar’s reincarnation based only on textual sources, this article takes an interdisciplinary approach to discuss, in addition to textual sources, visual records that include Zanabazar’s portraits and current findings from an ongoing excavation of Zanabazar’s Saridag Monastery. Clay sculptures and Zanabazar’s own writings, heretofore little studied, suggest that Zanabazar’s open approach to sectarian affiliations and his vision, akin to Tsongkhapa’s, were inclusive of several traditions rather than being limited to a single one.

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Tsultem, U. (2019). Buddhist Archeology in Mongolia: Zanabazar and the Géluk Diaspora beyond Tibet | Cross-Currents. Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review, (31), 7–32.
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Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review
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