Home arrow Mongolia Information arrow Law & Policy arrow Amarbayasgalant Khiid

Login

Search Mongolia

Latest comments

Thomas Terry on Budd...
Maybe also there is a contrast of cultures at hand, European...
More...
By froit

Mongolia announces o...
That was not the governement building that burnt, but the pa...
More...
By froit

Thomas Terry on Budd...
The insulting attitude of Thomas Terry is actually shocking....
More...
By roydongen

Now Online...

Amarbayasgalant Khiid PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 23 July 2007
Amarbayasgalant Monastery Mongolia

The Amarbayasgalant Monastery or "monastery of tranquil felicity", once one of the three largest Buddhist centres in Mongolia is located near the Selenge River in the Iven Valley, at the foot of Mount Buren-Khaan.

Built between 1727 and 1736, it is one of the very few monasteries to have partly escaped the destruction of 1937, after which only the buildings of the central section remained. The entire contents: the tankas, statues and manuscripts were looted by the Communists or hidden until more fortunate times. Restoration work began in 1988 and some of the new deities were commissioned in Delhi, India.

The monastery was originally built to house the remains of Zanabazar, the first Bogd Gegeen, the "August light". Unlike the Erdene Zuu monastery, which is composed of an ensemble of temple halls of different styles, Amarbayasgalant shows great stylistic unity. The overall style is Chinese, despite some Mongol and Tibetan influence. The plan is symmetrical and the main buildings succeed one another along a North-South axis, while the secondary buildings are laid out on parallel side axes.

External links

This page was last modified 15:58, 29 April 2007.All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., Taken from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarbayasgalant_Khiid

  Be first to comment this article
RSS comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.3.0

 
< Prev   Next >

Mongolia Websites

During the Stalinist purges of the 1930's almost every monastery in Mongolia was destroyed. In 1979 an atlas was published in Ulaanbaatar by Mr. Rinchen with an overview of more than 900 religious sites that used to exist in Mongolia. However a lot the information listed seems to be not accurate. A research has been initiated to get a better idea of all the buddhist buildings that once stood in Mongolia.