La Trobe

The immovable goddess: the long life of Miyo Lang Sangma

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posted on 2024-12-11, 23:30 authored by Ruth GambleRuth Gamble

In the 1850s, Andrew Waugh, head of the Great Trigonometric Survey of India, named the highest peak in the central Himalayas after his mentor, George Everest. As Ruth Gamble describes in this chapter, Waugh’s decision obscured the mountain’s centuries-long association with Chomolungma, also known as Miyo Langsangma, a deity revered by the Tibetans and Sherpas who lived near it. By tracing this goddess’s history back through the centuries, Gamble places the goddess in the wider contexts of Himalayan sacred geography, demonstrating the role she and her sisters, the Tseringma Chenga (Five Sisters of Long Life), played in the region’s cultural history and the life stories of two of the Himalaya’s most famous religious figures, Guru Rinpoche (semi-mythical, eighth century) and Milarepa (eleventh century). By tracing this history, Gamble shows that the British claims that there were no local names for the mountain are incorrect, and the Tibetan and Sherpa communities have continued to venerate the goddess despite commercial imperatives to refer to it as Everest and Chinese and Nepali attempts to recast the mountain as nationalist symbols.

Funding

DE210101348: ARC

History

Publication Date

2024-11-26

Book Title

Other Everests: One Mountain, Many Worlds

Editors

Gilchrist P Hansen P Westaway J

Publisher

Manchester University Press

Place of publication

Mancheseter

Pagination

16p. (p. 25-40)

ISBN-13

9781526179166

Rights Statement

© Ruth Gamble 2024 Available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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