Showing posts with label HISTORY OF BHUTAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HISTORY OF BHUTAN. Show all posts

HAAP NOBU WAS FIRST NATIONAL DRIVER IN BHUTAN

 

Haap Tshering Nob as a young boy
 

Agay Tshering Nob

Agay Tshering Tenzi

 

  

Haap Tshering Nob- from Talung.

~One of the earliest driver to drive a car in Bhutan.

During the time when our country was busy engaged in the construction of first national highway from Phuntsholing-Thimphu (1960s), most of our grandparents served in this project with sweat and tears. There were limited use of morden equipments that time. Agay Tshering Tenzi, from Sephu, Wangdue was mongst those who contributed selflessly in such nation building project.  He mostly works between Ganglakha-Jumja. 

Here, he confirms that the first driver to drive a motor car from the country was Haap Nobu who used to drive a Tata truck that time. Sadly he passed away last year.

**if you have more informations to share about agay Haap Tshering, you can write it in the comment box. 


Picture 1&2 contributed by: Karma Kaka

Ministers of Bhutan, 2024

 


བློན་ཆེན་དང་ བློན་པོ་གསརཔ་ཚུ།

༡་ བློན་ཆེན་ཚེ་རིང་སྟོབས་རྒྱས་- གསང་སྦས་ཁ་འདེམས་ཁོངས། ཧཱ།

༢་ སོ་ནམ་དང་སྒོ་ནོར་བློན་པོ་- ཡོན་ཏན་ཕུན་ཚོགས་་་ ཇོ་མོ་གཙང་ཁ་- མར་ཚ་ལ་འདེམས་ཁོངས། བསམ་གྲུབ་ལྗོངས་མཁར།

༣་ ཤེས་རིག་དང་ རིག་རྩལ་གོང་འཕེལ་བློན་པོ་ - ཌིམ་པཱལ་ ཐ་པ། ཨོ་རྒྱན་རྩེ་- འོད་གསལ་རྩེ་འདེམས་ཁོངས། བསམ་རྩེ།

༤་ རང་བཞིན་དང་ནུས་ཤུགས་བློན་པོ་-   མགོནམ་ཚེ་རིང་། རྡོ་དཀར་- ཤར་པ་འདེམས་ཁོངས། སྤ་རོ།

༥་ ཕྱི་འབྲེལ་དང་ཕྱིར་ཚོང་བློན་པོ་-   ཌི་ཨེན་ དུང་གེལ། ཕུན་ཚོགས་དཔལ་རི་འདེམས་ཁོངས་ བསམ་རྩེ།

༦་ དངུལ་རྩིས་བློན་པོ་- ལས་སྐྱིད་རྡོ་རྗེ། བར་རྡོ་- ཀྲོང་འདེམས་ཁོངས། གཞལམ་སྒང་།

༧་ གསོ་བ་བློན་པོ་- རྟ་མགྲིན་དབང་ཕྱུག། ཨ་ཐང་-ཐེ་ཚོ་འདེམས་ཁོངས། དབང་འདུས་ཕོ་བྲང་།

༨་ ནང་སྲིད་བློན་པོ་- ཚེ་རིང་། བྱང་ཐིམ་ཕུག་འདེམས་ཁོངས། ཐིམ་ཕུག།

༩་ བཟོ་གྲྭ་དང་ ཚོང་ ལཱ་གཡོག་བློན་པོ་- རྣམ་རྒྱལ་རྡོ་རྗེ། དཀར་སྦྱིས་- རྟ་ལོག་འདེམས་ཁོངས། སྤུ་ན་ཁ།

༡༠་ གཞི་རྟེན་མཁོ་ཆས་དང་སྐྱེལ་འདྲེན་བློན་པོ་-   ཅཱན་ད་ར་ བྷ་དུར་ གུ་རུང་། ལྷ་མོའི་རྫིང་ཁ་- བཀྲིས་སྡིང་འདེམས་ཁོངས། དར་དཀར་ནང།



JAGAR TRASHI

 



The Hands that Built Bhutan

Jaga Tarshi (Mail Runner)

Jaga Tarshi, widely known as Jaga Darshi (Flagpole) because of his height (7 Feet 2 inches) is known for being the fastest and most famous messenger in Bhutan. He was capable of covering a distance of over 200 km in a single day with just a pair of ‘tebtem’ or cowhide sandals in those days.

Hailing from Wang Debsi, nine kilometers from Thimphu, Jaga Tarshi was a descendent of Pila Goenpa Wangyel of the brothers, Pala and Pila fame. Pala and Pila were “nyagoe” or strongmen known for their size, strength and bravery. They served various Zhabdrung reincarnates and Penlops as warriors and bodyguards in the late 18th and early 19th century.

At the age of 20, Jagar Tarshi was taken to Bumthang to serve the Second King, His Majesty Jigme Wangchuk by Gongzim Sonam Tobgay Dorji. He served as a Zhinghap and among his many duties he was an attendant and personal bodyguard to the Second King.

His other important job was to deliver the Kings personal message from Bumthang to Thimphu and Paro in a single day. His journey would start at the crack of dawn when he would be handed the confidential Kasho. He would take various shortcuts such as crossing over the Hele La pass to Thimphu from Wangdue. He would reach Tashichhodzong just before the main gates of the Dzong were shut for the night.

Jagar Darshi continued his service in the Third King's court and in 1950 was taken to serve as the Dzongsap for Thimphu. He, however begged out of his duty since he had very limited reading and writing ability. He was then sent to Phuentsholing as a ‘Lapon’ or supervisor on the first vehicle road being built from India to Bhutan. Infact, the man who wielded the first hoe into the ground at the Phuentsholing gate to start the Thimphu-Phuentsholing highway was Jagar Tarshi.

An anecdote Jagar Darshi recounted in his later years about his favorite duties was to accompany the King on his many horseback journeys. The King loved horses and had them brought in from places as far away as Kham in eastern Tibet. Dashi’s job was to boost or lower the King from horseback and walk alongside the riding King at all times. While navigating narrow trails on steep cliff sides he held the King and guided the horse through the tough terrain, a job his height and strength allowed him to do with ease.

Another interesting story was that, along with a few friends he initiated and built the first school in Thimphu at Desyphakha where the present day Banquet Hall is located. His son Rinchen Tshering, was enrolled there amongst the first batch of students. The students were taught in Hindi and some English and later, after grade 4, they were sent to India to continue their studies.

Most of the Chhazhumis including Jagar Dashi who have exchanged their swords for prayer beads were not only the last of their generation but the end of an era.

Perfect TMX TMT pays tribute to such outstanding figures in history who have contributed indelibly and uniquely to the noble cause of nation building.

**For more information please feel free to visit Bhutan Postal Museum.


NYALA DUEM LEGEND




Nyala Duem legend- Bhutanese version of ‘Maleficent’ losing its allure

Not very long ago, the day in a Bhutanese home would usually end with children gathered around a fire listening to stories from the elderly. But this tradition is already disappearing along with folklore that kept children interested and occupied. One such lore is the legend of the maleficent demoness, the Nyala Duem, that lived along the Wangdue-Trongsa highway.

As dusk settles, people would rush home fearing the Nyala Duem in the past. It is believed that the demoness lived in the concave mountain, among the dark forest, opposite the Chendibji River taking lives and bringing sickness to the locals and travellers alike.

According to verbal narratives passed down from generations, the demoness would sometimes transform herself into a monk, other times into an attractive woman and occasionally into a man wearing a conical hat.


Among many accounts of the Duem, the most popular is how Garp Lunghi Khorlo lost his soul to her. Elders say that the fastest messenger in the olden days, known as Garp Lunghi Khorlo or the ‘wheels of the wind’ wished the Duem to take his life while crossing the Nyalaluem as he was very tired. He later saw a beautiful woman washing the entrails of an ox in a stream. Ox was his birth sign.

Eighty-three-year-old Rigyem from Nyala Drangla Goenpa says the stories about the demoness was very much alive during her childhood days.

“There wasn’t any paved road here when I was a child. And due to fear of the Nyala Deum, no travellers from Wangdue to Trongsa would dare to halt a night besides designated places like Nubding, Chendibji and Tangsibji. They would not stay anywhere between these places,” she said.

The maleficent demoness was believed to be subdued by Drubthob Druzhida in the 17th century when she tried to harm the saint. It is said that the demoness turned herself into a huge serpent and entered the Nyala Lhakhang. However, the saint prevailed and turned her into one of the protecting local deities. The Phub or dagger used in subduing her is still preserved in the Lhakhang.

“When Drubzhida was subduing the Nyla Duem, the Deum confessed to the saint that she was pregnant with a son. She requested the saint to raise her son. The son was named Norlha Peza Drugay, and until today, he is worshipped as our main local deity here,” said Angay Rigyem.

Some elders in the village also say they would be reminded of the demoness right upon sighting the Jarong Khashor Choeten at Chendebji in Tangsibji Gewog during their childhood days but not anymore. They say developmental works along the sites are eventually impacting the folklore to disappear.

“Moreover, there is no one to narrate the story. And then there are no listeners as well. So this is how the folklore is vanishing,” said Padey, from Tshangkha in Trongsa.

“We just heard a little from here and there. We don’t exactly know the details, and that’s one of the reasons why it is not popular among the youth now,” added Gyembo Dorji, from Tangsibji Gewog.

They fear there won’t be anyone to narrate these rich folklores in the future.

However, they can put to rest this fear, since some ten monks undergoing Buddhist studies in Nyala Lhakhang are conducting research to document and write a book on it.

“The one or two who knows about the story does not have a concrete base. So it’s high time we research and preserve the story,” said Chimmi Nidup, from the Nyala Ugyen Dargay Choeling Lobdra in Tangsibji Gewog.

The legend of Nyala Duem will live thanks to this undertaking by the monks but there are many folklores that are slowly losing their place in Bhutanese history.

SOURCES @ BBS



AMA JOMO




This Statue Of Ama Jomo riding on a horse was gifted to the people of Merak by The Fifth King during the Royal visit to eastern Bhutan. 

The people of merak relate this anecdote such as so many auspicious signs and omens displayed during His Majesty's visit to the Merak.

This awesome statue is placed inside the merak Lhakhang...

Ama Jomo whose name is heard by almost entirely Bhutanese is one of the popular deities in Bhutan. 

The people of Merak & Sakteng including the people from the vicinity of Geog such as Radhi & Phongmey Worship Ama Jomo as their main protective deity.

Zhongar Dzong






The ruin of Zhongar Dzong is a familiar sight on the Thimphu-Trashigang highway between Lingmithang and Thidangbi village in Mongar. The ruin of this magnificent monument opposite the highway still imposes its presence even a few centuries after it was abandoned. In the absence of any written record, a story about the dzong and history surrounding it can be reconstructed only through oral sources which are also scanty. The local people believe that Gyalpo Karpodhung invited its chief architect Bala from Paro. Evidence of his journey to Zhongar can be found in several places between Ura and Zhongar.


On reaching Saleng, Bala made a visual survey of the place. He reportedly saw a white stone bowl on a small hill and decided to build a new dzong on it. He named it Zhongkar (gzhong dkar), meaning white bowl (gzhong=bowl, dkar=white). But down the centuries, the place came to be known as Zhongar. Another source claims that when Bala neared Lingmithang, he had a vision of a hill marked by a natural rock similar to a gzhong, a wooden bowl used as an eating utensil. The Utse of the Dzong is still intact 


Fearing that the new dzong might intrude into his territory; the tsen of Golongdrak sent two junior tsen to kill Bala before reaching the place. The two tsen hid in the jungle and waited for Bala. But Bala never came. They instead saw a 'wooden-cross' moving along the road. It was later found out that the 'wooden-cross' was Bala's lopen (carpenter's measuring scale). Even today it is believed that a carpenter should always carry his lopen to avoid any harm. 


After arriving in Zhongar, Bala surprisingly disappeared for seven days. Later he was found in Jangdhung where he had made a model of his new dzong from artemesia stems. Bala built the dzong based on this model. It was said that there were no rough edges in the structure and not a single rock that was out of place. The Dzong consisted of four main structures:

• Dratuel Dzong (dgra btul rdzong) to the east 

• Chhudzong Tsenkhar (chu rdzong btsan khar) to the south 

• Bjachung Ta Dzong (bya chung ta rdzong) to the west 

• Dhumrey Sipki Dzong (ldum ras rtsig pa kyi rdzong) to the north


The Dzong's courtyard was so long that it was used as an archery range. But the king began to worry that Bala might build another dzong of greater wonder. So on the eve of Bala's journey back to Paro, the king cut off his right hand during chelchang (departure drink) arranged at Zhugthri. The legend of the Dzong In agonizing pain Bala prayed that the king must also die in pain, and that when he (Bala) was dead, he should be born as a demon (bdud) of the Dzong and surrounding lands. Local people believe that Bala was born as a giant snake which still guards the ruin of the Dzong. Later a snake started killing the king's horses. One version narrates that it was the Golongdrak tsen which killed one horse every night. The king then invited the Peseling Trulku Tenpai Gyaltshen from Bumthang to perform a religious ceremony. The trulku stopped above Saleng and started to blow his conch, the sound of which was said to have cured one of the king's dying horses.


The trulku entered into a retreat in the citadel of Golongdrak tsen with instruction that he should not be disturbed for seven days. But the king grew suspicious of the trulku's intent and lost faith. On the sixth day he sent his chamberlain (gdzimdpon) to spy on the trulku. The chamberlain saw a gigantic snake prostrating before the trulku. The trulku came out after the seventh day to inform that the tsen had not been completely subdued because of the king's distrust of him and the chamberlain's disturbance. The king offered a hundred cows and pasturelands around Yundhiridrang in repentance. Even today, Peseling Trulku owns the same pasturelands. The trulku then consecrated the Dzong and Kurizampa. Prominent dzongpons 


The Dzong's nangten were offered by Lama Sherab Jungney of Khengkhar, while Lama Sangay Zangpo of Kilikhar made the altar. Though the two lamas never met, statues fitted exactly into the altar. The kanjur was copied in Fire-Male-Dog-Year of 11th rabjung (sexagenary cycle) in 1646 when Ngawang Penjor was the Dzongpon. It took 108 clerks about six months to copy it. Ngedup Penjor was the master of letters or alphabets (yigdpon), while Ngawang Pekar supervised overall work. 


During the rivalry between Gyalpo Karpodhung and Gyalpo Tongden of Tongfu, the former sought Trongsa Penlop's assistance. The forces of Trongsa Penlop defeated the Tongfu Gyalpo and surprisingly took control of the Zhongar Dzong and other kingdoms. It was at that time that people of neighbouring Ngatshang and Themnagbi villages migrated, fearing the new ruler, to Pema Ked (padma bkod)- a legendary hidden land (sbas yul) in south-east Tibet. Some prominent Zhongar dzongpons after Gyalpo Karpodhung were Chaskarpa, Kologpa, Naamedla (Hap Shaw), Jampel from Dungsam, Darpoen Choki Gyeltshen, Ten Samdrup, Ngawang Penjor, Dorji Penjor, Kinzang Wangdi and Lopen Tashi. Damaged by fire and earthquake 


Centuries later the Dzong was damaged by a disastrous fire. Later it was destroyed by a supernatural earthquake lasting for seven days. The number seven has been considered significant in the dzong's history. First, its builder Bala took seven days to make the dzong's model out of artemesia stems. Second, Peseling Trulku meditated for seven days to subdue the Golongdrak tsen, and finally an earthquake that destroyed it lasted for seven days. 


The earthquake was a blessing in disguise since most people favoured abandoning the place which was believed to be infested with demons and malaria. the zingarp sent by Trongsa Penlop to assess the damage was bribed to report falsely that the Dzong cannot be repaired. Thereafter, it was abandoned, and its functions shifted to present Mongar. Fearing the snake, to local people the place is shrouded in fear. Stories of the presence of certain malevolent spirits and a gigantic snake guarding a treasure of gold and silver are only whispered. To most of us, the ruin is not even worth taking notice. Beyond a pile of stones and mud, it echoes past life to connect us to the future. Embedded inside is a life frozen in time, a wealth of history that can be still recounted orally by those who also heard it from their grandparents. 



Dzongpon Sae Dopola

 


Sae Dopola - The Last Trashigangpa

Dzongpon Dasho Thinley Tobgyel is one of the revered man in the history of Bhutan. Commonly known as Sae Dopola, he was born to Dzongpon Sonam Tshering and Chomo in the year of 1891 at Kurtoe, Sugbee. It is believed that he often suffered from illness during the childhood days and in order to dispel the sickness, he entrusted and worshipped on the big stone at his village and thus got his pet name ‘Dopola’. To these days, we remember this great figure in the name of Sae Dopola. Dasho Thinley Tobgyel was the eldest among the three children. Ugyen Lhamo and Yangchen were the two daughters. 

Sae Dopola married his first wife Lemo who was from Jagetsawa in Trongsa after he took the post of Trashigang Dzongpon. Lemo gave birth to three daughters; Chimmi who was the eldest daughter, Choden the middle one and Karma Yangzom the youngest daughter who is Gyaltsuen Jetsun Pema Wangchuck’s grandmother. The present Gup of Kanglung, Kinzang, is the son of Sae Dopola’s eldest daughter Chimmi.

However, history cites that Sae Dopola married for second time with the three daughters of Dagana Dzongpon. He met Yeshi, Deki and Sangey, the three daughters of Dagana Dzongpon, while on trade in Gudhama (Samdrup Jongkhar) which was a trade hub for people in Eastern Bhutan. It was a love at first sight, however more than considering this, it’s believed that the reason for his second marriage was to have a son. There were no children born from the two younger sisters, Deki and Sangay but the eldest sister Yeshi gave birth to only son Karma Tenzin.

Prior to becoming Trashigang Dzongpon, after Sae Dopola returned from Tibet, he served as Changup to King Ugyen Wangchuk who passed away after serving for three years. Later, he continued to serve the then Trongsa Ponlop, Jigme Wangchuk for two years and when the crown prince was enthroned as the successive reign on March 14, 1927, Sae Dopola, who was 37 years old also succeeded to become the next heir to his father as Tashigang Dzongpon.

In the research article, there are mentions about Sae Dopola from old age people that they described him as ‘a man of dignified character, fair and just towards the general people and his intelligence could understand the adversity of a person even by looking at the face.’ So, normally people referred him as by the title ‘Pon’.  He initiated the system of granting lands to the landless people from the wealthy landlords.

 Sae Dopola had a very high degree of power and earned enormous respects and fidelity from the general subjects. Tashigang was a large province and basically, Sae Dopola exercised power over three Dzongkhags including Tashigang, Pemagatshel and Trashiyangtse.

Sae Dopola has played a big role in renovating the present Trashigang Dzong which was very urgently in need of renovation. Dasho Dopola is said to have requested the second Druk Gyalpo Jigme Wangchuk for the dzong renovation and upon his request, ‘His Majesty issued a strong royal edict ordering the people of Trashigang to render their customary services in carrying out the repair work.’ It was in the year 1937, during the Male Fire Dragon year, with the involvement of Trashigang Dzongkhag’s regional heads and landlords, they organized the labor forces and rebuilt the dzong from the foundation till the roof top within two years. Lama Sonam Zangpo from Kurto, Lama Kota from Trashigang Khalong and Lama Monlam Rabzang were also revered figure who contributed significantly for the Trashigang Dzong. The consecration ceremony of the new dzong was solemnized by the Chabje Dudjom Rinpoche Jigdrel Yeshi Dorji along with Lama Monlam Rabzang, Lama Sonam Zangpo, Lama Kota and Lam Neten in 1939.

Aside the dzongs, Sae Dopola also built several lhakhangs as Yonphula Ugyen Dho Ngag Choeling Goenpa, Lhakhang Samten Choeling Goenpa and his own residence, the Rongthong Phuentshog Norbu Gang Nagtshang. Sae Dopola also instructed Lama Sonam Zangpo to erect the exact replica of Lhasa Jaw in Yonphula Ugyen Dho Ngag Choeling Goenpa and people can see this to these days even in Yonphula Lhakhang. He also initiated the renovation of historical Chazam. Therefore, we see Sae Dopola’s accomplishment today is very significant for the country like ours.

In 1952, Druk Gyalpo Jigme Wangchuk succumbed to death at the Kuenga Rabten Palace in Trongsa. It is said that Sae Dopola made his presence to attend the king’s funeral rites in Bumthang and two days after the demise of the second king, Sae Dopola also passed away in 1952.

Photo courtesy: Sangay Tenzin’s Facebook page

Note: This piece is written with the reference from Mr. Ugyen Wangdi’s story of “Sae Dopola, The Last Trashigangpa” and Lopon Dung Dorji’s work on “THE FORTRESS OF TRASHIGANG (AUSPICIOUS HILL)” and few references from Kuensel.

Dzepa Chunyi: The Twelve Acts of the Buddha in Pelri Park.



The 12 deeds of Shakyamuni Buddha

Over 2,500 years ago, the devas prophesied, “In twelve years a great bodhisattva will be born who will become either a universal ruler or a buddha, and will be known as Shakyamuni.” The Bodhisattva Mahasattva who resided in Tushita Pure Land heard this and moved by compassion, resolved to take rebirth in India, on the Jambudvipa continent, as the son of King Shuddhodana and Queen Mayadevi of the Shakya clan.
Buddha Shakyamuni manifested the 12 deeds, as do all buddhas, as implicit teachings for the beings of our world system, in addition to the explicit teachings he gave during his life. Ven. George Churinoff said, “Through the various deeds he showed that that we too, born from a mother’s womb as the Buddha seemed to be, can attain enlightenment. The Buddha’s deeds of leaving his family and palace and his passing away into parinirvana are obvious teachings to his disciples about renunciation and impermanence, for example.”
There are different authentic versions of these 12 deeds which are presented separately according to one list are combined into one according to another. The deeds depicted in the Art of painting follow the order presented in His Holiness the Lam Odzer Pelzang Opening the Eye of New Awareness in Buddha Pelri Park, Mukazor In Bhutan.

1. Descent:
The Buddha, in his previous life, was at the helm of gods in Tusita heaven. When it was time to come down to earth, he passed on the celestial regal duties to his successor, Maitreya, and descended to earth. This is the first act of the Buddha although it should not be confused with the descent from Trāyastrimśa heaven later in his life.

2. Conception:
After checking the appropriate place, race, time, father and mother, the Buddha entered the womb of Queen Māyādevī in the form of a white elephant with six tusks.

3. Birth:
In the third act, the Buddha was born miraculously in Lumbini, allegedly from the right armpit of his mother. He is believed to have taken seven steps right after his birth and declared: “I am the supreme in the world.”

4. Upbringing:
The Buddha, as Prince Siddhārtha, grew up in the palace of Kapilavastu mastering all the arts and skills expected of a prince in his days.

5. Princely Life:
Prince Siddhartha ruled over the kingdom with his father and lived a luxurious life in the palace. He married Yaśodhara and had a son named Rāhula.

6. Renunciation:
Disillusioned with the state of ordinary life after he came in direct contact with illness, old age, death and renunciation, Prince Siddhārtha renounced his palace life in search of solution to the problems of life.
7. Austerity:
As was common in his time, he followed physical penance as a way to liberation. Siddhārtha spent six years undergoing a severe fast and meditation.

8. Adopting Middle Way:
When austere penance, like decadent palace life, did not lead him to inner fulfilment and liberation, he eschewed the two extremes of excessive indulgence and physical austerity and adopted the Middle Way to enlightenment.

9. Overcoming Evil:
After eating the cream he received from Sujātā and sitting on the comfortable mat, Siddhārtha entered a meditative absorption and overcame the evil forces of attachment, aggression and ignorance.

10. Enlightenment:
Having defeated the inner demons, the Buddha attained full enlightenment under the Bodhi tree when he turned 35.
11. Teaching:
Seven weeks after he attained enlightenment, the Buddha gave his first sermon at Deer Park to his five former colleagues. This began 45 years of his teaching and spiritual career.

12.  Passing Away:
The Buddha finally entered the state of Mahāparinirvāna on his 81st birthday. As he did with his life, the Buddha used his final act of dying also to deliver the message of impermanence.

















Unification of Drukgyel Dzong

Drukgyel Dzong and How a Lama Unified Bhutan


Bhutan is a Himalayan kingdom with a rich history and a distinctive Buddhist culture . It has barely been impacted by modernity and globalization, and has managed to largely preserve its ancient culture. Perhaps the best-known historic site in the country is the ruined complex of Drukgyel Dzong.  The Bhutanese government has applied for the site to be recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site .

The History of Drukgyel Dzong

Drukgyel Dzong was built in 1649 to protect the area and also to serve as a religious center when the Dzong area was of great strategic importance. The Drukpa-Kagyud Buddhist School was built by the head, Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal, often known as the Bearded Lama, who had fled from Tibet.
Ngawang Namgyal and his followers built several other Dzongs to control the wild mountainous region of Bhutan and in 1634 he unified what is now the Kingdom of Bhutan after his great victory in the Battle of the Five Lamas. Prior to this time much of the country was in the hands of Buddhist monastic orders and feudal lords .