Tibetan and Himalayan Library - THL

THL Title Text

Photographs in Personal Collections

Structure at  Gyamchung Möndur (<i>gyam chung mon dur</i>). Funerary structure FS23. Funerary structure FS26. Funerary structure FS12. Structures of the east complex of the castle. A wall of the east complex of the castle. The upper portion of the east complex of the castle. Note the window opening near the top of the wall. A structure in the east complex of the castle.
A close-up of one of the structures in the west complex of the castle. One of the structures in the east complex of the castle. The largest structure of the west complex of the castle. One of the structures of the west complex of the castle. Vestiges of the west complex of the castle. The upper complex of the castle. Another view of the upper edifice of the castle. The upper edifice. Note the in situ stone member spanning a structure, which is at floor level.
Looking east from the site. What remains of the appended structure is the scattering of stones in the foreground. A double-course block and slab-wall fragment. A double-course slab-wall fragment. Another view of the site. Another view of the site. Looking west from the site. The faint remains of the appended structure are visible behind the rows of standing stones. One of the main tracks in the Tsatsakha (<i>tshwa tshwa kha</i>) Basin is in the background. One of the structures of the interconnected enclosures. The interconnected enclosures.
One of the double-course walls of Naklhé Doring (<i>nag lhas rdo ring</i>) Southwest. The remains of a funerary superstructure. Looking west from the site. Another perspective of the site, highlighting the well-built double-course slab wall of the south side of the enclosure. Looking east from the site. Note the especially well-preserved double-course slab wall of the north side of the enclosure. The site’s tallest pillars. The remains of the west wall paralleling the row of standing stones. The pillar of Naklhé Doring (<i>nag lhas rdo ring</i>) Southwest.

Personal Collections in Topic


Loading...