Shambhala : A MYTH OR A REAL PLACE

Shambhala is a mythical Buddhist kingdom that is said to exist somewhere between the Himalaya Mountains and the Gobi Desert. In Shamb...


Shambhala is a mythical Buddhist kingdom that is said to exist somewhere between the Himalaya Mountains and the Gobi Desert. In Shambhala, all of the citizens have achieved enlightenment, so it is the embodiment of Tibetan Buddhist perfection. That is the reason for one of its other names: The Pure Land.


The name "Shambhala" derives from Sanskrit texts, and is thought to mean "place of tranquility." The myth of Shambhala first appears in early Kalacakra Buddhist texts, which specify that its capital is named Kalapa, and that the rulers are from the Kalki Dynasty. Many scholars believe that the myth derives from folk memories of an actual kingdom, somewhere in the mountains of South or Central Asia.


One aspect of the Shambhala myth is its millenial overtones. According to the Sanskrit texts, the world will descend into darkness and chaos around the year 2400 CE, but the twenty-fifth Kalki king will arise in a messianic fashion to defeat the forces of darkness and lead the world into a period of peace and light.


Interestingly, ancient pre-Buddhist texts that describe the lost kingdom of Zhang Zhung, in western Tibet, have been corroborated by archaeological finds in the the borderlands between Tibet and Pakistan's portion of Kashmir. Those same texts assert that Shambhala, the land of tranquility, was located in what is now the Sutlej Valley in Pakistan.


An amazing number and variety of western observers have drawn upon the myth of Shambhala to inform their own world views, beliefs, or art. These include James Hilton, who likely named his Himalayan paradise "Shangri-La" in the book Lost Horizon as a nod to the Shambhala story. Other westerners ranging from German Nazis to the Russian psychic Madame Blavatsky have shown a real fascination with this lost kingdom.



Source: asianhistory | Image credits: 1 2 3 4 5 6

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