Best time to go: Summer
Yumbu Lakang, reputed as the first palace in Tibet
history, is also the oldest extant building in Tibet. Lying 12 kilometers
southwest of Tsedang Town of Lhoka Prefecture in Southwest China's Tibet
Autonomous Region, it sits atop a small hill east of the Yarlong River and faces
west.
"Yumbu" means female deer, describing the resemblance of the mountain shape
around, and "Lakang" means holy palace, so Yumbu Lakang means "the palace on the
back legs of the doe" in Tibetan.
People say the soaring building was built in the 2nd century BC especially
for the first Tibetan king - Nyatri Tsenpo, who was said to have descended from
the heaven.
Legend says that in the fifth century, a Buddhist sutra fell from the sky
onto the roof
of Yambu Lakang. Nobody could read the book. However a sage predicted it would
be interpreted between the 7th and 8th centuries, so the sutra was well kept in
the palace. Legends such as this really fascinate a lot of people from home and
abroad.
Youmpu Lhakang became famous after Songtsan Gambo of the Tubo Kingdom
(629-846) and Princess Wencheng spent their summer holidays here. Hence, the
place became the couple's summer
palace.
After Songtsen Gampo transferred his capital to Lhasa
in the 7th century, Yumbu Lakang became a chapel and was later converted into a
Gulugpa monastery during the reign of the 5th Dalai Lama.
Tibet kings and their ministers are enshrined in a small chapel of the
palace. Upstairs in the chapel is a small chanting hall, which houses statues of
Sakyamuni and Chenrezi. A mural gallery above tells of Nyatri Tsenpo's arrival
from the sky and stories about him as well as of Tibetan
history.