introduce

The Tibet Museum is located across the road to the east of Norbulingka, Lhasa. It is the first museum with modern functions in Tibet. There are many precious cultural relics in the museum, showing the splendid culture and long history of the unique charm of the Tibetan people.

The museum is divided into three floors, the first floor is a tourist souvenir shop, the second floor is an exhibition of Tibetan history, and the third floor is special exhibitions and temporary exhibitions such as Thangka, animals and plants, and jade. The exhibition hall of the museum is composed of four parts: prehistoric culture, indivisible history, culture and art, and folk culture.

Each exhibition hall displays a rich collection of treasures, such as statues of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas in various textures and shapes, Tibetan classics dipped in gold powder, silver powder, coral powder, etc. Jade sticks used during ceremonies, colorful thangkas, various musical instruments and ritual instruments, handicrafts with distinctive ethnic characteristics, pottery with unique styles, etc., from Tibet's history, culture, art, religion, folk customs, etc On the one hand, it intuitively shows the splendid culture and long history of the unique charm of the Tibetan nation to the audience.

Prehistoric Culture Exhibition Hall
It displays the Paleolithic tools such as stone flakes and stone cores unearthed in the early days of daily life in northern Tibet, as well as the stone adzes, stone axes, stone chisels unearthed in Qamdo, and stone clusters, bone cones, bone needles and various stone clusters from the late Neolithic Age. A variety of red pottery, gray pottery, and black pottery utensils completely reproduce the representative ages before Tibet entered a civilized society: the Paleolithic Age, the Neolithic Age, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age. The inseparable history exhibition hall intuitively reveals that Tibet has been an inseparable and important part of China since ancient times through some precious historical materials. The two exhibition halls of culture and art and folk culture vividly display the long history and splendid culture of Tibet to the audience with exquisite Buddha statues, thangkas, pottery, scriptures and other precious cultural relics.

Golden seal of the fifth generation
Not to be missed in all the collections is the Golden Seal of the Fifth Dynasty. whenYearNgawang Lobsang Gyatso

In order to gain the support of the central government of the Qing Dynasty, he went to Beijing for a pilgrimage, Shunzhi

Canonization VNgawang Lobsang Gyatsoposthumous

Of. The golden seal is made of pure gold and weighs 8.5 kilograms. The printed characters are Chinese, Tibetan, Manchu and Mongolian. In addition, there is also a Thangka that is said to be a "Witch Picture" drawn by Princess Wencheng about the topography of Tibetan areas. In the picture, a witch is lying on her back, and there are temples built on twelve important parts of the body, including the joints and the heart, and the Jokhang Temple is located at the heart of the witch, which has a profound meaning.

There are audio guides in the museum, which can be rented free of charge at the gate. Entering the exhibition hall, in front of different exhibits, you can hear explanations of the exhibits in four languages: Tibetan, Chinese, Japanese, and English. For the protection of cultural relics, the museum stipulates that photography is not allowed in the exhibition hall, please follow the regulations.

opening hours

All year round Tuesday to Sunday 10:00-17:30 (last admission 16:30) closed on Monday

must see tips

From December 1, 2016, the Tibet Museum will be closed for expansion, and the specific reopening time is unknown.