Langdarma

Langdarma (Wylie: Glang dar my), last emperor of the Tibet, reigned of 838 with 842. The tradition wants that it followed a policy anti Buddhist and supported the old indigenous religion, the Bön.

In 838, it kills his brother the Buddhist king Tri Ralpachen to reach the throne and by religious opposition. He persecutes the monks then, dismantles the institutions before being in his turn assassinated by a monk who would have hidden an arc under his clothing at the time of a spectacle of dances. Its reign was characterized not only by internal disorders, but also by external disorders, in particular in the north of the kingdom. The death of Langdarma in 842 will mark the end of the empire Tibetan in Central Asia.

Indeed, Langdarma had two wire, Yumten, of his first wife, and Osung of his second wife. They have both asserted the capacity, driving with a parcelling out of the territory conquered by the preceding kings of the Tibet. Yumten will reign on the central kingdom of U-Tsang, and Osung on the territories of the east.

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