(Redirected from Trisong Deutson)'Trisong Detsän' was the 38th
King of Tibet, ruling from
755 until
797. He is important to
Tibetan Buddhists as one of the three 'Dharma Kings' who brought
Buddhism to
Tibet. According to tradition, Trisong Detsen invited the great Indian
gurus,
Shantarakshita and
Padmasambhava, to Tibet to teach the
dharma, thereby first initiating what would later be recognized as Tibetan Buddhism.
Trisong Detsän inherited an empire which had declined somewhat from its greatest extent under
King Songtsen Gampo. In
694 Tibet lost control of several cities in
Turkestan and in
703 Nepal broke into rebellion.
Arab
forces vied for influence in along the western border lands.
Trisong became emperor in
755 and in post imperial sources is claimed to have invited
Padmasambhava,
Shantarakshita,
Vimalamitra, and various other
Indian teachers to come to Tibet to spread the latest understanding of the teaching. The two pandits began by establishing
Samye Monastery as the first Buddhist monastery in Tibet. Several Tibetans were eventually initiated as monks and a vast translation project was undertaken translating the Buddhist scriptures from
Sanskrit into
Tibetan.
In a famous two year debate later in his reign (792-794), Trisong Detsen pitted the Chinese Buddhist monk
Mo-ho-yen against
Kamalashila, who was a student of
Shantarakshita. The Hoshang school (which much later would generate the Japanese
Zen school) held that enlightenment could be attained instantly. Kamalashila argued that while the actual attainment of enlightenment occurs in an instant, the process leading up to this point is a gradual one, insisting that only after extensive moral and mental training under a master could enlightenment be attained. Kamalashila's role was to ordain Tibetans as Buddhist monks and propagate Buddhist philosophy as it had flourished in India. Ultimately the King sided with Kamalashila and afterwards established the Indian view of Buddhism, as initially put fourth by
Shantarakshita, as the correct interpretation of Buddhist philosophical texts.
Trisong Detsän is also traditionally associated with the construction of the famous
Boudhanath Stupa in the
Kathmandu Valley in
Nepal.
[1]
The role of
Padmasambhava on the other hand was to establish the teaching of Buddhist Tantra in Tibet. During the reign of Trisong Detsän the conbined efforts of
Padmasambhava,
Shantarakshita and
Kamalashila established both the Indian Buddhist philosophical interpretation and Buddhist tantra in Tibet.
In
763 Trisong Detsän responded to Chinese pressure from the north by sending an army of 200,000 men to the border, defeating the forces there and then continuing on to take
Chang'an, the Chinese capital, forcing the Emperor to flee the capital. In
783 a peace treaty was negotiated between
China and Tibet giving Tibet all lands in the
Kokonor region.
The King also formed an alliance with King
Imobsun of
Siam in
778, joining forces to attack the Chinese in
Sichuan.
Trisong Detsän next sought to expand westward, reaching the
Oxus River and threatening the Arab
Caliph,
Harun al-Rashid. The Caliph was concerned enough to establish an alliance with the Chinese emperor, and perhaps this alone prevented Tibet from taking control of the
Middle East and points beyond. Through the remainder of his reign the King would be preoccupied with Arab wars in the west, taking pressure off his Chinese opponents to the east and north, until his rule ended in
797.
References
1. ''The Legend of the Great Stupa and The Life Story of the Lotus Born Guru'', pp. 21-29. Keith Dowman (1973). Tibetan Nyingma Meditation Center. Dharma Books. Berkeley, California.