The years around 1500 saw the summit of Rinpungpa authority in the central parts of Tibet. The leader of the family was
Donyo Dorje, a nephew of the ex-regent Tsokye Dorje. His allegiance to the
Karmapa hierarch
Chödrak Gyatso led him to harass the monks of the
Gelugpa sect (the Yellow Hats) in the Lhasa area. The Karmapa and Shamarpa hierarchs nevertheless strove to consolidate the authority of the young Ngawang Tashi Drakpa. In 1510, just after the death of the ex-regent Tsokye Dorje, a conflict escalated between Donyo Dorje and Ngawang Tashi Namgyal. After the demise of Donyo Dorje in 1512, the fortunes of the Rinpungpa eventually began to wane. In a long series of petty wars over the next years, the
gongma and his allies pushed back the Rinpungpa positions. In 1517 the latter lost control over Lhasa. The
gongma now resolved to increase his religious network by lifting the restrictions of the Gelugpa, without antagonizing the Karmapa. In the next year the
Monlam (prayer) festival could be celebrated in Lhasa by the Gelugpa monks, for the first time in twenty years. They had previously been impeded from participating by the Rinpungpa troops. Queen Sangye Pal Dzomma was a main sponsor of the festival, and had close contacts with the
Second Dalai Lama, the leading Gelugpa figure. The power of the Rinpungpa was henceforth mainly restricted to Tsang. The historical sources give a generally favourable image of Ngawang Tashi Drakpa and his queen, as being successful in warfare and great patrons of all the major religious sites in the Lhasa area. In his chronicle
The Song of the Spring Queen, the
Fifth Dalai Lama calls him King of Tibet, although this epithet must be qualified. The outlying areas
Ngari,
Amdo and
Kham seem to have been outside his political network, and Tsang did not generally obey his authority. ==Relationship with China==