Showing posts with label Bhutan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bhutan. Show all posts

March 21, 2013

Yesterday was the first International Day of Happiness.

Did you notice?
The initiative for Happiness Day came from the Kingdom of Bhutan, the small landlocked Himalayan state, which adopted a Gross National Happiness Index as a better measure of its people’s prosperity than its income.
Anyway, it was yesterday. Resume your grim existence.

January 21, 2013

In 1616, Ngawang Namgyal, became shabdrung — At Whose Feet One Submits — the leader of Bhutan.



"Considered the first great historical figure of Bhutan" today's "History of" country.
He promulgated a code of law and built a network of impregnable dzong, a system that helped bring local lords under centralized control and strengthened the country against Tibetan invasions....

Circa 1627, during the first war with Tibet, Portuguese Jesuits Estêvão Cacella and João Cabral were the first recorded Europeans to visit Bhutan on their way to Tibet. They met with Ngawang Namgyal, presented him with firearms, gunpowder and a telescope, and offered him their services in the war against Tibet, but the shabdrung declined the offer....
The legal code, called Tsa Yig, was based on "duties and virtues inherent in the Buddhist dharma" and "remained in force until the 1960s."