Damxung County
Damxung is a county of Lhasa City, lying to the north of its main center of Chengguan, in the Tibet Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China. Its administrative seat is Damquka. The terrain is rugged, including the western Nyenchen Tanglha Mountains, with their highest peak rising to 7,111 metres (23,330 ft). As of 2013 the population was 40,000, with most of the people engaged in animal husbandry.
Damxung 当雄县 • འདམ་གཞུང་རྫོང་། | |
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County | |
Location of Damxung County (red) within Lhasa City (yellow) and the Tibet Autonomous Region | |
Coordinates: 30°28′23″N 91°06′04″E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Autonomous region | Tibet |
Prefecture-level city | Lhasa |
Seat | Damquka |
Area | |
• Total | 10,036 km2 (3,875 sq mi) |
Population (1999) | |
• Total | 38,473 |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Website | www |
Damxung County | |||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 当雄县 | ||||||
Traditional Chinese | 當雄縣 | ||||||
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Tibetan name | |||||||
Tibetan | འདམ་གཞུང་རྫོང་། | ||||||
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History
Damxung means "select pasture" in the Tibetan language.[1] The Damxung steppe was gifted by the 5th Dalai Lama to Güshi Khan during the latter's reign. A number of Mongol cavalry soldiers settled down in the area, who became known as Mongol Eight Banners of Dam. After Güshi Khan's death in 1679, the area was possessed by Ngakpa Tratsang of Sera Monastery. From 1715 to 1912, the former Mongol Eight Banners land was directly administered by the Qing Dynasty Amban. Following the Qing's collapse, the area once again came under possession of Sera Monastery, which established Damxung Dzong under Domê Chikyab (zh), predecessor of the modern Chamdo Prefecture. In 1956, the county was transferred to Lhasa City. In 1959, Petsang and Yangbajain merged into Damxung to form the modern Damxung County.[2]
Geography
The county has an area of 10,036 square kilometres (3,875 sq mi), with rugged topography.[3] Damxung is long and narrow, measuring 185 kilometres (115 mi) from the northeast to southwest extremes, and at most 65 km across (40 mi).[1] The county is tectonically active and was the epicenter of a 7.5Mw earthquake in the north in 1952 and a 6.4 Mw earthquake in the south in 2008. In November 2010 a moderate quake in Damxung at 5.2 on the Richter scale shook office windows in Lhasa. There were no casualties, but houses were damaged.[4]
In the extreme northeast of the county, Namtso lake has an area of 1,920 square kilometres (740 sq mi), of which 45% lies in Damxung county. Namtso is one of the great lakes of the Tibetan plateau. The Nyenchen Tanglha (or Nyainqentanglha) mountains extend along the northwest of the county. Mount Nyenchen Tanglha is the highest peak in the region, at 7,111 metres (23,330 ft). The Nyainqêntanglha mountains define the watershed between northern and southern Tibet.[5] A valley with elevation of about 4,200 metres (13,800 ft) runs parallel to the mountains to their southeast, sloping from northwest to southeast. 30% of the county's total area is in the prairie of this valley.[1]
Climate
Damxung is cold and dry in the winter, cool and wet in summer, with very variable weather. The average annual temperature is 1.3 °C (34.3 °F), with only 62 frost-free days. The land is frozen from the start of November to the following March. Pasture has 90–120 days for growth. Average annual precipitation is 481 millimetres (18.9 in).[1]
Administration
Damxung County was established in 1959, and is divided into two towns and six townships. The seat of government is in Dangquka (当曲卡镇).
Name | Tibetan | Wylie | Chinese | Pinyin |
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Damquka Town | འདམ་ཆུ་ཁ། | ’dam chu kha | 当曲卡镇 | Dāngqǔkǎ Zhèn |
Yangbajain Town | ཡངས་པ་ཅན།། | yangs pa can | 羊八井镇 | Yángbājǐng Zhèn |
Gyaidar Township | རྒྱས་དར།། | rgyas dar | 格达乡 | Gédá Xiāng |
Nyingzhung Township | སྙིང་དྲུང། | snying drung | 宁中乡 | Níngzhōng Xiāng |
Gongtang Township | ཀོང་ཐང། | kong thang | 公塘乡 | Gōngtáng Xiāng |
Lungring Township | ལུང་རིང། | lung ring | 龙仁乡 | Lóngrén Xiāng |
Uma Township | དབུ་མ་ཐང། | dbu ma thang | 乌玛塘乡 | Wūmǎtáng Xiāng |
Namco Township | གནམ་མཚོ། | gnam mtsho | 纳木错乡 | Nàmùcuò Xiāng |
Population and economy
As of 2013 the population was 40,000, up from 35,000 in 1997.[5] In 2000 Damxung had a total population of 39,169, of which 19,429 were male and 18,740 were female. Almost all were ethnic Tibetans. The rural population was 36,607 and the urban population 2,562.[2] As of 2009 there were 37 primary and secondary school buildings.[5] There were seven hospitals, including a county hospital, with a total of 40 beds and 161 medical personnel.[2]
Natural grasslands cover 693,171 hectares (1,712,860 acres), of which 68% is considered excellent.[3] Almost all the people are engaged in rearing livestock, including yaks, sheep, goats and horses.[1] In 1999 the herds other than horses included 224,600 sheep (42.55%), 179,600 yak (34.02%), 116,900 goats (22.14%).[2]
The Qinghai-Tibet Highway (China National Highway 109) runs from east to west across the county. Damxung railway station links the county to the city of Lhasa to the south.[5] There is a large geothermal field at Yangbajain. This is harnessed by generating units that deliver 25,181 kilowatts (33,768 hp), or 100 million kilowatts annually, to the city of Lhasa to the south.[6] The transmission line follows the Duilong River south through Doilungdêqên District.[7] Yangbajain Geothermal Field is currently the largest proven geothermal field of its nature in China. There is a gypsum mine with reserves of 100 million tons in Uma township. Other mineral resources include aluminum, tin, lead, zinc and copper.[6]
Monuments
Kangma Monastery (康玛寺) is in Chonggar Village, Gungtang Township, Damxung County, 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) from the county seat. The monastery belonged to the Gelug sect, and was administered by the Hardongkangcun of the Tantric School of Sera Monastery. As of 2003 it had 62 monks and was the largest monastery in Damxung. It was said to have been built by a monk from Kangma in Garze Prefecture. The meditation room has 1,213 carved stone reliefs of Buddha, mostly about 20 by 30 centimetres (7.9 by 11.8 in). They are about three hundred years old.[8] The temple stands on a barren slope below a mountain, but the meeting room has electric light and heating. The temple operates a tea house and a grocery store. The monks have built a two-story dormitory.[9]
Yangpachen Monastery is a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Yangbajain, historically the seat of the Shamarpas of Karma Kagyu.[10] It is the main monastery of the Red Hat school of the Karma Kagyu sect. It was built in 1490, and through extensive repairs and additions grew into a major architectural complex that contained a large collection of cultural relics. The Red Hat school of Karma Kagyu died out in 1791. The monastery was destroyed during the Cultural Revolution, but later was rebuilt.[11]
The Eight Towers of Northern Tibet (藏北八塔) in Wumatang (Uma) townland are said to be the guardians of the grasslands of northern Tibet. One story of their origin is that eight generals of King Gesar, who unified the grasslands of northern Tibet, were killed at this place and the towers were built to commemorate them. Another says that the eight generals of the Mongol army were killed here. This may be more plausible, since the names seem to have Mongol origins.[12]
Namtso lake is the second-largest salt lake in China. It has vivid turquoise-blue waters and is set in spectacular scenery. The Tashi Dor Monastery is at an elevation of 4,718 metres (15,479 ft) in the southeastern corner of the lake.[13] It is situated on the Tashi Dor promontory. It is more a chapel than a monastery, with two small buildings holding images of local deities.[14]
- Nyainqentanglha rising above Namtso
- Yangpachen valley
- View to the north of Gyaidar
References
- Mei 2008.
- Damxung Tibet Introduction, CCTV.
- Damxung Land Resources.
- Moderate quake jolts Tibet, Hindustan Times.
- Damxung, Baidu Baike.
- Damxung Mineral Resources.
- Zhang & Tong 1982, p. 320.
- Lobsang & Zhang 2003.
- Li 2010, p. 1.
- Dowman 1988, pp. 129–130.
- Yangpachen Monastery, Meiya Travel.
- Yangzheng 2011.
- Chow, Eimer & Heller 2009, p. 928.
- Tashi Dor Monastery, Wind Horse.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Damxung County. |
Sources
- Chow, Chung Wah; Eimer, David; Heller, Carolyn B.; Thomas Huhti (2009). China. Lonely Planet. ISBN 978-1-74220-325-6.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- 当雄县. Baidu Baike (in Chinese). Baidu. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- "Damxung Land Resources" (in Chinese). Land and Resources Information Center of Tibet Autonomous Region. 2010-08-15. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- "Damxung Mineral Resources" (in Chinese). Land and Resources Information Center of Tibet Autonomous Region. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- Wang Yi Lin (2008-10-07). "Damxung Tibet Introduction" (in Chinese). CCTV. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- Dowman, Keith (1988). The Power-places of Central Tibet: The Pilgrim's Guide. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-7102-1370-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Li, Hongwei (2010-04-08). "Lhasa today". Global Times. Retrieved 2015-02-08.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Lobsang, Zhaxi; Zhang, Junyi (2003). "Ancient Stone Relief of Kangma". China Tibet Information Center. Archived from the original on 2015-02-08. Retrieved 2015-02-08.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Mei, Zhimin (2008-10-06). "Lhasa, Tibet Damxung – 6.6 Earthquake" (in Chinese). China News Network. Retrieved 2015-02-08.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- "Moderate quake jolts Tibet; no injuries reported". Hindustan Times. 2010-12-01. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- "Tashi Dor Monastery". Wind Horse Tours. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
- "Yangpachen Monastery". Meiya Travel. Archived from the original on 2015-02-11. Retrieved 2015-02-10.
- Yangzheng, Lin Duanminpeicong (2011-08-17). "Eight Towers of Northern Tibet". China Tibet Network. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-02-08.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Zhang, Ming-tao; Tong, Wei (1982). "The Hydrothermal Activities and Exploitation Potentiality of Geothermal Energy in Southern Xizang (Tibet)". Energy, Resources and Environment: Papers Presented at the First U.S.-China Conference on Energy, Resources and Environment, 7-12 November 1982, Beijing, China. Elsevier Science. ISBN 978-1-4831-3583-0. Retrieved 2015-02-11.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)