Chote Chaba

Chote Chaba (also written Tsultrim Dakpa; Chinese: 出稱札巴; pinyin: Chūchēng Zhábā) (died 1934) was a Tibetan lama, the 12th incarnation of the , and the 18th king of Muli. At the time, Muli was a small princely state on the border between Tibetan and Han Chinese civilisation; it now forms the Muli Tibetan Autonomous County in southwestern Sichuan province. Joseph Rock, an Austrian-American botanist, travelled to Muli in the 1930s and befriended Chote Chamba. Rock stated in his diary, which is now collected in the Harvard University library, Chote Chamba was murdered in September, 1934.

Chote Chaba

Chote Chaba (also written Tsultrim Dakpa; Chinese: 出稱札巴; pinyin: Chūchēng Zhábā) (died 1934) was a Tibetan lama, the 12th incarnation of the , and the 18th king of Muli. At the time, Muli was a small princely state on the border between Tibetan and Han Chinese civilisation; it now forms the Muli Tibetan Autonomous County in southwestern Sichuan province. Joseph Rock, an Austrian-American botanist, travelled to Muli in the 1930s and befriended Chote Chamba. Rock stated in his diary, which is now collected in the Harvard University library, Chote Chamba was murdered in September, 1934.