Choden converted the <i>utse </i>into Bhutan’s first private museum  in 2001. “We didn’t have a master plan. We just said, One room at a time,” she says. “We opened it to the public and then went on repairing the rooms.” The museum catalogs the history of the manor and feudal Bhutan with items almost exclusively from the ancestral home, including agricultural tools from the Tang Valley, objects from religious rituals, arms and armor, textiles, masks, and manuscripts, as well as restored family rooms. On the tower’s third level, in front of a contemporary artist’s mural, baskets of arrows sit alongside helmets  and devices for making gunpowder. Ogyen Choling’s museum has one of the, if not the, most complete collections of Bhutanese manor life artifacts from the last few centuries.  Photo 6 of 18 in Favorites by cade pruitt from The Remote 14th-Century Bhutanese Fortress Steeped in Buddhist Heritage

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The Remote 14th-Century Bhutanese Fortress Steeped in Buddhist Heritage

The Remote 14th-Century Bhutanese Fortress Steeped in Buddhist Heritage