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The earliest surviving records of Bhutan s history show that Tibetan influence already existed from the 6th century AD. King Songtsen Gampo who ruled Tibet from AD 627-649 was responsible for the construction of Bhutan s oldest surviving Buddhist temples, the Kyichhu Lhakhang in Paro and the Jambay Lhakhang in Bumthang. Settlement in Bhutan by people of Tibetan origin had happened by this time. The first reports of people of Nepalese origin in Bhutan was around 1620, when Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal commissioned Newar craftsmen from the Kathmandu valley in Nepal to make a silver stupa to contain…mehr

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The earliest surviving records of Bhutan s history show that Tibetan influence already existed from the 6th century AD. King Songtsen Gampo who ruled Tibet from AD 627-649 was responsible for the construction of Bhutan s oldest surviving Buddhist temples, the Kyichhu Lhakhang in Paro and the Jambay Lhakhang in Bumthang. Settlement in Bhutan by people of Tibetan origin had happened by this time. The first reports of people of Nepalese origin in Bhutan was around 1620, when Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal commissioned Newar craftsmen from the Kathmandu valley in Nepal to make a silver stupa to contain the ashes of his father Tempa Nima.There are no citable references of any further movement of people from Nepal to Bhutan until the beginning of the 20th century.