begin quote from google ai and Internet:
Introduction and First Diffusion (7th-9th Centuries)
- Imperial Patronage:Buddhism arrived in Tibet during the 7th century, supported by the imperial government.
Decline and Second Diffusion (9th-11th Centuries)
- Collapse of the Empire:The collapse of the Tibetan Empire in the mid-9th century led to a disruption of Buddhist transmission and a period of fragmentation.
- Revival:Buddhism resurfaced in the 11th century, marking a "second diffusion" (phyi dar) and the establishment of new, distinct traditions or "schools".
Development of Tibetan Schools (11th Century Onwards)
Rise of the Gelug School and Modern Era
- Je Tsongkhapa founded the Gelug school in the late 14th century, which would rise to prominence.
Early Kings:
King
Songtsen Gampo facilitated the first transmission, while King Trisong
Detsen, in the 8th century, made Buddhism the official state religion
and invited Indian masters like Padmasambhava and Shantarakshita to establish the Nyingma tradition.
Cultural Integration:
This
period also saw the translation of Buddhist scriptures into Tibetan and
the creation of a written language, integrating Buddhist philosophy
with the indigenous Bon religion.
First Monastery:
The
construction of Samye Monastery, the first gompa (monastery) in Tibet,
marked a significant milestone in the religion's institutional
development.
Mongol Patronage:
The
Mongol invasion in the 13th century and the subsequent Yuan dynasty led
to the spread of Tibetan Buddhism to Mongolia and China, where it
received imperial patronage.
The 5th Dalai Lama, Ngawang Lobsang Gyatso, established the dominance of the Gelugpa school in the 17th century, merging spiritual and temporal authority.
In
the 19th century, the Rimé movement emerged as a response to the Gelug
dominance, aiming to preserve the teachings of other schools like
Nyingma, Kagyu, and Sakya.
Buddhism in Tibet - Oxford Bibliographies
Introduction.
Buddhism reached Tibet relatively late, around the 7th century, and
within a few centuries it became the dominant re...
Oxford Bibliographies
Tibetan Buddhism - BBC
Jan
14, 2004 — History. Buddhism became a major presence in Tibet towards
the end of the 8th century CE. It was brought from India at...
BBC
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