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Ethnohistoric Notes on the Ancient Tibetan Kingdom of sPo bo and Its Influence on the Eastern Himalayas
Author Santiago Lazcano
Source Revue d'Etudes Tibétaines
Volumen.7
Date2005.04
Pages41 - 63
PublisherCentre national de la recherche scientifique
Publisher Url http://www.cnrs.fr/
LocationParis, France [巴黎, 法國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English; 藏文=Tibetan
NoteTranslated from Spanish by Rita Granda.
Abstract…In late 1910 the Pome people killed a senior Chinese official. The Chinese replied with a punitive expedition which provoked open rebellion. In early 1911 Chung Ying, who had been in command of the flying column which entered Lhasa in February 1910, was sent to Pome with some 300 men in the hope that he could pacify the district. He met with scant success, and was soon recalled and replaced by Lo Ch´ing-ch´i, the Amban Lien Yü´s private secretary, who had recently returned from an abortive mission to Darjeeling to persuade the Dalai Lama to come home to Tibet. Lo Ch´ing-ch´i had with him perhaps 1000 of the best troops in the Lhasa garrison, and he was soon reinforced by a contingent of Chao Erh-feng´s men of the Marches, and by most of the garrison in Zayul. This force achieved some initial successes, but it was quite unable to subdue the Pome tribesmen, who took to guerrilla campaigning in the hills. The Chinese supply and medical services were not up to the strain imposed upon them. Lo Ch´ing-ch´i´s army diminished rapidly in size and its morale deteriorated drastically. When Amban Lien Yü recalled the survivors2 back to Lhasa in late 1911 they were already on the verge of mutiny. As soon as they learned of the Revolution, which had just broken out in China they refused any longer to obey their officers and they put their commander to death. The Chinese were in control of Pome and Zayul for a very short time. By late 1911 the Pome venture had ended in disaster…(Lamb, Alastair. The McMahon Line. A Study in the Relations Between India, China and Tibet, 1904 to 1914. Volume II: Hardinge, McMahon and the Simla Conference. London:
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1966. : 277).
Table of contentsIntroduction 41
Origins of the sPo ba Monarchy 42
The Emergence and Consolidation of the Institution of the Ka gnam sde pa 44
The Search for the Promised Land, and the Splendour of the sPo ba Dynasty 46
The Beginnings of the Kingdom’s Decline 49
The Political and Social Situation in sPo bo at the Beginning of the 20th Century 51
Political and Cultural Expansion Southward 53
Invasions and the End of Independence 56
Conclusion 60
ISSN17682959 (E)
Hits233
Created date2013.02.21
Modified date2020.06.02



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