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Ogyen Choeling Museum

རི་བོ་ཇིཀྲུ་ཌེཀ
iconmuseum

Ogyen Choeling stands on a hilltop at the end of the rough Tang Valley road. This beautiful manor's origins lie in the sixteenth-century, although the majority of the buildings were rebuilt in the early twentieth century after their predecessors were destroyed by the 1897 earthquake. The family that owns the manor converted the complex to a charming museum in 2001, and it's now possible to explore the tsuglhakhang (main chapel), utse and shagkor (servants' quarters) — and to see for yourself what life here was like in the past. While most of the exhibits are interesting and well-captioned, the displays on trade and ritual objects are of particular interest, and tours may be conducted by family members, lending a personal dimension to a visit here.

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Ogyen Choeling stands on a hilltop at the end of the rough Tang Valley road. This beautiful manor's origins lie in the sixteenth-century, although the majority of the buildings were rebuilt in the early twentieth century after their predecessors were destroyed by the 1897 earthquake. The family that owns the manor converted the complex to a charming museum in 2001, and it's now possible to explore the tsuglhakhang (main chapel), utse and shagkor (servants' quarters) — and to see for yourself what life here was like in the past.