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Town in Tibet, People's Republic of China From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Namling or Namlingxoi (Tibetan: རྣམ་གླིང་; Chinese: 南木林镇; pinyin: Nánmùlín Zhèn) is a town and seat of Namling County in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, about 72 kilometres (45 mi) by road northeast of Shigatse (the second largest town in Tibet), north of Dobjoi.
Namling
རྣམ་གླིང་ · 南木林镇 | |
---|---|
Coordinates (Namling Town government): 29°41′06″N 89°06′04″E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Autonomous region | Tibet |
Prefecture-level city | Shigatse |
County | Namling |
Population | |
• Major Nationalities | Tibetan |
• Regional dialect | Tibetan language |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
The town is located at an altitude of 4683 metres (15,367 feet), at a bend in the Tsangpo River.[1] The township of Namling covers an area of 391 square kilometres (151 sq mi) and has a population of about 7000 people.[2] Several forts can be seen along the hills above the river valley and one fort is the Namling Dzong.[1] Vegetation in the area is sparse today, almost devoid of any vegetation looks like a desert country. Fossils (assessed to be of 15 million years age) unearthed here reveal that leaves, willows, alders, maples, rhododendrons and conifers existed here.[3] The village is situated on a cone-shaped hill.[4]
Namling has developed in recent times into a regional educational centre, overlooked by the Bureau of Education.[5] In 1993, the Namling County Schools Project received funding from the US-based Boulder-Lhasa Sister City Project. The schools of this project achieved the best results in 1994, in Tibet.[6]
Namling Dzong is a prominent fortress in the area, which has been likened to European castles along the Rhine.[1] In the early 17th century, the 5th Dalai Lama founded the Ganden Chökhor monastery in Namling, reached via a chain bridge; it was the first of thirteen monasteries of his era.[7] There were 300 monks at the monastery in 1908.[4] It was the seat of the Teshu Lamas.[8]
The township contains the following villages:[2]
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