Charang Temple
Just past Charang is a sanctuary of the eleventh century known as Rangrik Tungma complex. The sanctuary takes its name from the goddess Rangrik Tungma and her little metal picture, with on leg on each side of a steed is the most seasoned at the sanctuary. More then likely Rangrik Tungma probably been a pre-Buddhist divinity, consumed into the pantheon of the later religion. Two other bronze statues seem, by all accounts, to be of significant quality; a Maitreya situated with legs pendant, in bhadrasana and a Buddha in bhumisparsha mudra. The dividers of the fundamental lobby are connected with dirt symbols, in the same style as the mandala in the dukhang at Tabo. The divider sketches underneath are old despite the fact that the wheel of life outside the entryway has been revamped of late. There is additionally an intriguing crowd of ivory and bonehandled blades and knifes at the sanctuary. Numerous hundreds of years prior, it is said a looter group from over the Tibetan fringe attacked the sanctuary. The dirt pictures of defensive gods at the passage set up a dynamite commotion, looking like the thundering hooves of running stallions. The fabulous criminals droped their weapons and took off, running up valley to vanish in the precipices of the colossal ice sheets gushing down from the high tops above.



