IDNO

P.96997.WIL


Description

On Cech’s list describing prints:
“(58-135 where taken in Lhasa.)
87. “Potala from the E. 5.9.33”.” [printed text]
For more information see Cech’s list.

A view of the Potala Palace taken from the East. A man with long hair and a beard stands in the foreground and a small stream runs along the left of the photograph. Several men with a horse stand beside the stream.


Place

C Asia; Tibet; Lhasa


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Williamson, Frederick


Collector / Expedition


Date

5 September 1933


Collection Name

Williamson Collection


Source

Williamson, Margaret


Format

Print Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

Transcription: The transcription of this album by Mark Turin and Sara Shneiderman was carried out with reference to Krystina Cech’s catalogue list alone. Alex Nadin has since revised their cataloguing by systematically matching their records to the images. Margaret Williamson’s handwritten captions for photographs have now been transcribed into the Inscription field, and Cech’s descriptions appear in the Description field. Correct entries for Place, Named Person and Other Nos. have also been entered by Alex Nadin. [Sudeshna Guha 29/10/2002]

Place: The Potala palace. Construction of the palace began in earnest in 1645 during the reign of the great 5th Dalai Lama. By 1648 the White Palace was completed. To finish the rest of the building, known as the Red palace, the chief adviser, Desi Sangye Gyatso, had to conceal the Dalai Lama’s death and pretend that he was in prolonged retreat. The Red Palace was completed in 1694, 12 years after the Dalai Lama’s death. The building is named after Mt. Potala in South India, one of the holy mountains of the Hindu god Shiva. The Buddhists, however, dedicated this mountain to Avalokiteshvara , the bodhisattva of compassion and gave the name ‘Potala’ to the Pure Land where Avalokiteshvara resides. The Potala has served as the home of successive Dalai Lamas and their monastic staff from the time of the Fifth until the present Dalai Lama, the 14th. From the latter half of the eighteenth century, it has been used as a winter palace, The Norbu lingka being the palace where the rulers would retreat in the summer months. [Source: Cech’s list, CJ 22/08/2008]

This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Caspian James 27/8/2008]


FM:231647

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