Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Wangdue Phodrang

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Country
  
Bhutan

Elevation
  
1,310 m

Gewog
  
Thedtsho Gewog

Population
  
7,507 (2012)

Time zone
  
BTT (UTC+6)

Dzongkhag
  
Wangdue Phodrang District

Local time
  
Monday 2:16 AM

Climate
  
Cwa

Wangdue Phodrang httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

Weather
  
15°C, Wind N at 2 km/h, 57% Humidity

Terrace farming in wangdue phodrang bhutan


Wangdue Phodrang (Tibetan: དབང་འདུས་ཕོ་བྲང་, Dzongkha 'Wangdi Phodr'a) is a town and capital (dzongkhag thromde) of Wangdue Phodrang District in central Bhutan. It is located in Thedtsho Gewog.

Contents

Map of Wangdue Phodrang, Bhutan

History

The town shares its name with the dzong built in 1638 that dominates the district. The name is said to have been given by Ngawang Namgyal, the Zhabdrung Rinpoche, who was searching for the best location for a dzong to prevent incursions from the south. At the chosen spot, the Zhabdrung encountered a boy named Wangdi playing beside the river and hence named the dzong "Wangdi's Palace".

Wangdi Phodrang Dzong burnt down in the afternoon of 24 June 2012. However, the dzong was being renovated at the time, so most of the historical relics had already been put into storage and were saved from destruction. Shortly after the fire, more than 1000 Japanese sympathizers donated an equivalent of over US$134,500 to the Wangdue Phodrang Reconstruction Fund. Other donations have also arrived, but reconstruction is still underway as of 2014.

Topology

There are three paved roads in Wangdi Phodrang. The Lateral Road enters from the west at Dochu Pass, crosses the Sankosh River (Dzongkha: Puna Tsang Chhu) at Wangdi Phodrang Dzong, and continues east to Tongsa. One spur road heads north from Wangdi Phodrang to Punakha Dzong and slightly beyond. This becomes the footpath to Gasa.

A second spur departs the Lateral Road near the Pele Pass halfway between Wangdi and Tongsa, traveling south a short distance to Gangteng Monastery and the Phobjikha Valley, where rare black-necked cranes may be found.


Home of the cheeky sloid

References

Wangdue Phodrang Wikipedia


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