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  1. Tri Songdetsen ( Tibetan: ཁྲོ་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བརྩན། ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བཙན, Wylie: khri srong lde brtsan/btsan, ZYPY: Chisong Dêzän, Lhasa dialect: [ʈʂʰisoŋ tetsɛ̃]) was the son of Me Agtsom, the 38th emperor of Tibet. He ruled from AD 755 until 797 or 804.

  2. Trisong Detsen (T. ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བཙན khri srong lde btsan) was the 38th king of the Yarlung dynasty, who ruled the Tibetan Empire from AD 755 until 797 or 804. Trisong Detsen was the second of the "Three Dharma Kings" of Tibet; the other two were Songtsen Gampo and Ralpacan.

  3. The Sons of Tri Songdetsen. There is some confusion in the various histories regarding the number and the names of Tri Songdetsen's sons. According to Erik Haarh [2], he had four sons: Mutri Tsenpo (མུ་ཁྲི་བཙན་པོ་, mu khri btsan po ), Mune Tsenpo (མུ་ནེ་བཙན་པོ་, mu ne btsan po ),

  4. Apr 24, 2019 · King Trisong Detsen, the 38 th Yarlung King, ruled over Tibet from 754 CE to 799 CE. 1 Known as the second of Tibet’s Three Dharma Kings, he was the monarch responsible for the official adoption of Buddhism as the state religion of Tibet and for putting it under royal patronage.

  5. King Trisong Detsen (Tib. ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེ་བཙན་, Wyl. khri srong lde btsan) or Trisong Deutsen [Déu tsen] (ཁྲི་སྲོང་ལྡེའུ་བཙན་, khri srong lde'u btsan) (742-c.800/755-797 according to the Chinese sources) – the thirty-eighth king of Tibet, second of the three great religious ...

  6. Learn about the life and legacy of King Trisong Detsen, the Dharma King who invited Guru Padmasambhava and established Buddhism in Tibet. Discover his previous lives, his sons and daughters, and his transmissions of the profound teachings.

  7. In 761 C.E., Tri Songdetsen reached adulthood and, upon ascending the throne, officially proclaimed himself a Buddhist. He then sent a delegation to the recently founded Pala Empire (750 - end of the twelfth century) in northern India.