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Lobsang Yeshe ( ; also written
Lobsang
Yeshi) (1663 – 1737) was the 5th
Panchen Lama of
Tibet.
He was born of a well-known and noble family in the province of
Tsang. His father's name was De-chhen-gyalpo
and his mother's Serab-Drolma.
He was soon recognised as the true
incarnation of Lobsang
Chökyi Gyaltsen, (1570–1662), the Fourth Panchen Lama of Tibet,
and was installed with great ceremony at Tashilhunpo
Monastery
.
He
received novice vows when he was 8 (9 by Western reckoning) in
Lhasa
from Lozang Gyatso,
the Great Fifth Dalai Lama (1617 – 1682), when he was given the
name of Lobsang Yeshe. At the age of twenty [21] he was
ordained by Kon-chhog Gyal-tsan.
When he was thirty-two (in 1696 or 1697), he sent a congratulatory
deputation to
Beijing. Emperor
Kangxi (1662-1723) invited him to Beijing, but he
asked to be excused for fear of
smallpox.
The
Regent, Sangye Gyatso (Sangs-rgyas
rgya-mtsho), invited the Fifth Panchen Lama, Lobsang Yeshi to
administer the vows of a novice monk on the 6th Dalai Lama, at the
town of Nangartse on Lake Yamdrok
Yamtso, and
named him Tsang Gyatso. In October 1697,
Tsangyang Gyatso was enthroned as the Sixth
Dalai Lama.
In 1701 Lhasang Khan, a Mongol king and ally of the Chinese, had
the Regent, Sangye Gyatso, killed. This greatly upset the young
Dalai Lama who left his studies who even visited Lobsang Yeshe, the
5th Panchen Lama in Shigatse and renounced his novice monk
vows.
In 1713 he received a letter written in three different languages,
Tibetan, Mongol and Manchu in gold from the Emperor
Kangxi, who sent him a large
tangka with his title on it.
The 7th Dalai Lama was enthroned in the Potala Palace in 1720. He
took the novice vows of monk-hood from the 5th Panchen Lama Lobsang
Yeshi, who gave him the name
Kelzang
Gyatso. He took the Gelong vows (full ordination) from Lobsang
Yeshi in 1726.
In 1728 Emperor
Yongzheng (1723-1736) sent
Aliha Ampan to settle the border between the provinces of U and
Tsang. There was a civil war at this time, and the Chinese asked
the Panchen Lama if he would rule all the territories between
Khambala and Mount
Kailash.
The Panchen Lama refused a few times on the
grounds of old age but was finally convinced to take control of the
whole of Tibet lying to the west of Panam, and
relinquished possession of Phari
, Gyantse
, and
Yardosho and other places to the government
in Lhasa
.
He wrote eighteen volumes of hymns and precepts and died at the age
of 75 (74 by Western reckoning), in 1737.
A gilt copper domed tomb, like that of his predecessor, only larger
was built for him.
Unfortunately, all the tombs from the Fifth
to the Ninth Panchen Lamas were destroyed during the Cultural
Revolution and have been replaced by the 10th Panchen Lama with a
huge tomb at Tashilhunpo Monastery
in Shigatse
, known as
the Tashi Langyar.
Footnotes