3rd Taktra Rinpoche
Ngawang Sungrab Thutob | |
|---|---|
སྟག་བྲག་ནག་དབང་གསུང་རབ | |
| 3rd Taktra Rinpoche | |
| In office 1874–1952 | |
| Preceded by | Lobsang Khyenrab Wangchug |
| Succeeded by | Tenzin Geleg |
| Regent of Tibet | |
| In office 1941–1950 | |
| Dalai Lama | Tenzin Gyatso |
| Preceded by | 5th Reting Rinpoche |
| Succeeded by | title abolished |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1874 |
| Died | 1952 (aged 77–78) |
Ngawang Sungrab Thutob (Standard Tibetan: སྟག་བྲག་ནག་དབང་གསུང་རབ།; Chinese: 达扎·阿旺松绕) (1874–1952) was the third Taktra Rinpoche, (Wylie transliteration: sTag-brag, also Takdrak, Tagdrag, etc.) who assumed the regency of Tibet's de facto state in 1941, after succeeding the fifth Reting Rinpoche, Jamphel Yeshe Gyaltsen. After an alleged attempt to rise a rebellion, Gyaltsen was imprisoned in the Potala Palace, where he died under mysterious circumstances.
State-controlled media in China claims that Thutob was responsible for the death of Jamphel Yeshe Gyaltsen. The 5th Reting Rinpoche was praised as a patriot and devout Buddhist, whereas Ngawang Sungrab Thutob was called a "pro-Britain, pro-slavery separatist." Gyaltsen was responsible for discovering Tenzin Gyatso and enthroning him as the 14th Dalai Lama, and had been the first appointed teacher of 14th Dalai Lama. Following the 5th Reting Rimpoche's regency, the third Taktra Rinpoche became responsible for the raising and education of the 14th Dalai Lama.