Gartok
Gartok (Tibetan: སྒར་ཐོག, Wylie: sGar-thog) is made of twin encampment settlements of Gar Günsa and Gar Yarsa (Tibetan: སྒར་དབྱར་ས, Wylie: sGar-dbyar-sa, Wade–Giles: Ka-erh-ya-sha) in the Gar County in the Ngari Prefecture of Tibet. Gar Gunsa served as the winter encampment and Gar Yarsa as the summer encampment. But in British nomenclature, the name Gartok was applied only to Gar Yarsa and the practice continues to date.
Gartok
Gar Yarsa | |
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Gartok | |
Coordinates: 31.7280°N 80.3371°E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Province | Tibet Autonomous Region |
Prefecture | Ngari Prefecture |
County | Gar County |
Elevation | 4,450 m (14,600 ft) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (CST) |
Gartok was established as Lhasa's administrative headquarters for Western Tibet (Ngari) after it conquered it from Ladakh in 1684. A senior official called Garpön was stationed here. Gartok (Gar Yarsa) also served as Western Tibet's principal trade-market. But the village itself was small and is said to have been quite poor. After the Chinese annexation of Tibet, the headquarters of Western Tibet was moved to Shiquanhe.
Gar Yarsa is situated on the bank of the Gartang River, one of the headwaters of the Indus River, at the base of the Kailash Range, at an elevation of 4,460 metres (14,630 ft).