Leh Palace is a former royal palace overlooking the Ladakhi Himalayan town of Leh. Modelled on the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet, the palace was built by King Sengge Namgyal in the 17th century. It is nine storeys high; the upper floors accommodated the royal family, while the lower floors held stables and store rooms.
The palace was abandoned when Dogra forces took control of Ladakh in the mid 19th century, and the royal family moved to Stok Palace.
The ruined palace is being restored by the Archaeological Survey of India. The palace is open to the public and the roof provides panoramic views of Leh and the surrounding areas. The mountain of Stok Kangri in the Zangskar mountain range is visible across the Indus valley to the south, with the Ladakh mountain range rising behind the palace to the north.
The Palace Museum holds a rich collection of jewellery, ornaments, ceremonial dresses and crowns. Chinese thangka or sooth paintings which are more than 450 years old, with intricate designs, retain bright and pleasing colours derived from crushed and powdered gems and stones.
Leh i/leɪ/ (Tibetan alphabet: གླེ་, Wylie: Gle
), was the capital of the Himalayan kingdom of Ladakh, now the Leh district in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. Leh district, with an area of 45,110 km2, is the second largest district in the country, after Kutch, Gujarat (in terms of area). The town is dominated by the ruined Leh Palace, the former mansion of the royal family of Ladakh, built in the same style and about the same time as the Potala Palace-the chief residence of the Dalai Lama until the 14th Dalai Lama fled to Dharamsala, India, during the 1959 Tibetan uprising. Leh is at an altitude of 3524 metres (11,562 ft), and connects via National Highway 1D to Srinagar in the southwest and to Manali in the south via the Leh-Manali Highway.
In 2010, Leh was sorely damaged by the sudden floods caused by a cloud burst.
Leh was an important stopover on trade routes along the Indus Valley between Tibet to the east, Kashmir to the west and also between India and China for centuries. The main goods carried were salt, grain, pashm or cashmere wool, charas or cannabis resin from the Tarim Basin, indigo, silk yarn and Banaras brocade.
LEH or Leh may refer to:
Enemigo de la guerra y su reverso la medalla
No propuse otra batalla que librar al corazón
De ponerse cuerpo a tierra
Bajo el peso de una historia
Que iba a alzar hasta la gloria el poder de la razón
Y ahora que ya no hay trincheras
El combate es la escalera
Y el que trepe a lo mas alto pondrá a salvo su cabeza
Aunque se hunda en el asfalto... la belleza
La belleza... la belleza... la belleza... la belleza.
Míralos como reptiles al acecho de la presa
Negociando en cada mesa maquillajes de ocasión
Siguen todos los raíles que conduzcan a la cumbre
Locos porque nos deslumbre su parásita ambición
Antes iban de profetas y ahora el éxito es su meta
Mercaderes, traficantes, mas que nausea dan tristeza
No rozaron ni un instante... la belleza
La belleza... la belleza... la belleza... la belleza.
Y me hablaron de futuros fraternales, solidarios
Donde todo lo falsario acabaría en el pilón
Y ahora que se cae el muro ya no somos tan iguales
Tanto tienes, tanto vales... viva la revolución!
Reivindico el espejismo de intentar ser uno mismo
Ese viaje hacia la nada que consiste en la certeza
De encontrar en tu mirada... la belleza
La belleza... la belleza... la belleza... la belleza.