Tsechen Monastery and Dzong

Tsechen Monastery
Tibetan transcription(s)
Tibetan: བརྩེ་ཆེན་ཆོས་སྡེ
Chinese transcription(s)
Simplified: 紫金寺
Pinyin: zǐjīn sì
Tsechen Monastery and Dzong in Gyantse, Tibet in 1904
Religion
AffiliationTibetan Buddhism
SectSakya
DeityButon Rinchenpa
LeadershipKunga Lodru (incarnation of Buton Rinchenpa
Location
LocationTsang, Tibet, China
CountryChina
Location within Tibet
Geographic coordinates28°56′25″N 89°33′26″E / 28.9402°N 89.5572°E / 28.9402; 89.5572
Architecture
FounderPrince Phakpa Pelzangpo (1318-1370)

Tsechen Monastery (also known as the Tsechen Dzong or the Shambu Tsegu) was a Tibetan monastery located approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) northwest of Gyantse. It was one of the largest of the fortified monasteries constructed in Tibet, and was located above a village also known as Tsechen. Constructed "on another precipitous hill about 600 feet high, about one mile long, and rising abruptly out of the plain", the monastery was similar to the Gyantse Dzong in terms of the strength of its fortifications. During the 1904 British expedition to Tibet by Colonel Francis Younghusband, the monastery was occupied by Tibetan troops, which used it to resist the expedition's advance. Younghusband's forces captured the monastery and sacked and burnt it; some of the hilltop walls are all that remain of the structure.