Mongar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description

File:View of Mongar town.jpg
View of Mongar town
File:Regional Referral Hospital Mongar Bhutan.jpg
Regional Referral Hospital, Mongar
File:Paradise at Losel Yangchenling Nunnery.jpg
rainbow at Losel Yangchenling Nunnery

Mongar (Dzongkha: མོང་སྒར) is a town and the seat of Mongar District in eastern Bhutan.[1] The population of Mongar Dzongkhag in 2022 was estimated at 36,383, comprising 17,498 males and 18,886 females. It included 10,084 residing in urban centres of Mongar, Gyalpoizhing, Lingmithang, Kidheykhar, Drametse and Yadi towns. The rural population across 17 Gewogs was of 26,299.[2] Mongar is on the road from Thimphu to Trashigang. It is one of the oldest educational hubs of the country. It has a regional hospital and a good standard hotel, among other facilities. The important Yagang Lhakhang monastery is on the outskirts of the town.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The post code for Mongar post office is 43001.[3] The ruins of Zhongar Dzong are located on the outskirts of Mongar.[4] The Dzong has been in ruins since 1889.[4]

Pilgrimage གནས་སྐོར།

Entering Mongar district is a door to a multi-destination pilgrimage sites brimming for Buddhist devotees. Thousands of devotees across the country comes here for the purpose of pilgrimage and sigh-seeing holy places.

Sacred Aja Ney and Aja-Ugyen Draphu-Sheridzong Trail

The renowned Aja Ney་(ཨ་རྒྱ་གནས།) is located at an altitude of more than 3,500 meters under Sherimuhung Gewog. The most sacred are the 100 imprints of the sacred syllable “Ah” on the rock-cave left by Guru Rinpoche besides numerous other sacred sites. The Nye also has a medicinal spring which the locals believe can cure 18 diseases besides a nearby pool called Awa Chhu (now known as Uma Chuu). It is said to remove defilements in a person. It takes a minimum of three days to complete a pilgrimage to all the sacred sites.[5]

File:AJA NEY.jpg
Mesmerizing Aja Ney
File:Winter in Mongar.jpg
First snowfall at Losel Yangchenling Nunnery in 2022.

Losel Yangchenling Nunnery

Losel Yangchenling Nunnery (བློ་གསལ་དབྱངས་ཅན་གླིང་བཙུན་མའི་བཤད་གྲྭ།) started construction in 2011, costing Nu 65 million, with the nuns taking up residence in 2016. It's new three-storey hostel houses more than 90 nuns.[6]

More than 40 nuns from Losel Yangchenling Nunnery went to Thimphu in order to recite Droelma Bum at the National Memorial Chorten. It took 10 days and was concluded on 10th day of the lunar calendar, the Saga Dawa which is considered significant according to Buddhism. It was held mainly to pay tribute to His Majesty the Fifth King for his benevolent dedication to the Bhutanese people during Covid 19 Pandemic.[7]

Climate

Mongar features a dry-winter humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa).

Script error: No such module "weather box".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

References

Template:Sister project

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Bhutan Post post codes list http://www.bhutanpost.bt/documents/postcodes.pdf Template:Webarchive
  4. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

External links

Template:Authority control


Template:Asbox