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Amdo province in Tibet


Amdo (Tibetan: ཨ་མདོ་, Wylie: a mdo [ʔam˥˥.to˥˥]; Chinese: 安多; pinyin: Ānduō) is one of the three traditional Tibetan regions, the others being Ü-Tsang (Central Tibet) in the west and Dotoe also known as Kham in the east. The formal name of Amdo is Domey (Tibetan: མདོ་སྨད་) in literatures.[1] Historically, Amdo and Kham together were also called Do Kham on maps and manuscripts.[2] Amdo encompasses a large area from the Machu (Yellow River) to the Drichu (Yangtze).[note 1] Amdo is mostly coterminous with China's present-day Qinghai province, but also includes small portions of Sichuan and Gansu provinces.

Amdo was a part of the Tibetan Empire until the 9th century and was ruled by a local Tibetan theocracy called Tsongkha from the 10th century to the 12th century. In the 13th century Mongol forces started participating in the ruling of the Amdo area. A patron and priest relationship began in 1253 when a Tibetan priest, Phagspa, visited Kublai Khan. Phagspa was made Kublai's spiritual guide and later appointed by him to the rank of priest king of Tibet and constituted ruler of (1) Tibet Proper, comprising the thirteen states of Ü-Tsang; (2) Kham; and (3) Amdo.[3] The Khan first gave Phagspa the title of Tishri and thirteen surrounding regions of Tibet as his offering for the empowerment. At age 33, Phagspa appointed thirteen positions to manage different responsibilities and was offered the rest areas of Tibet, including Amdo, as an offering for empowerments.[4] Sakya leaders continued to serve as administrators of the entire Tibet for nearly 75 years after Phagpa’s death in 1280. From the 14th century to the 16th century, the Great Ming controlled some areas within today's Xining, Xunhua and Hualong. The Emperor Shizong of Qing seized control of Amdo in the 1720s after wars with Khoshut leader Lobdzan Dandzin (Tibetan: བློ་བཟང་བསྟན་འཛིན; Mongolian: Лувсанданзан).

Historically, culturally, and ethnically a part of Tibet, Amdo was from the mid-18th century and after administered by a series of local Tibetan rulers who were associated with the government located in Ü-Tsang through monastery systems, and Dalai Lama's Ganden Podrang had not directly governed the area since that time.[5] Local Tibetan rulers were also often in some kind of alliance with or under the titular authority of a larger, more powerful non-Tibetan regime by such as Mongols and Qing.[6]

From 1917 to 1928, parts of Amdo were occupied intermittently by the Hui Muslim warlords of the Ma Family. In 1928, the autonomous Ma Family joined the Kuomintang, the Chinese Nationalist Party. By 1952, Chinese Communist Party forces had defeated both the Kuomintang and the Tibetan forces and annexed the region, solidifying their hold on the area roughly by 1958.

Amdo is the home of many important Tibetan Buddhism spiritual leaders, lamas, monks, nuns, and scholars, including the 14th Dalai Lama, the 10th Panchen Lama Choekyi Gyaltsen, and the great Gelug school reformer Je Tsongkhapa.

Geography

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Amdo consists of all of northeastern Tibet, including the upper reaches of the Machu or Yellow River and Lake Qinghai. Its southern border is the Bayan Har Mountains.[7] The area is wind-swept and tree-less, with much grass. Animals of the region consist of the wild yak and the kiang. Domesticated animals of the region consist of the domestic yak and dzo, goats, sheep, and the Mongolian horse.[8]

Demographics

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Historical demographics

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In historical times, the people of the region were typically non-Tibetan, such as Mongols or Tibetan speakers of non-Tibetan origin such as the Hor people.[9]

Present demographics

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The inhabitants of Amdo are referred to as Amdowa (Tibetan: ཨ་མདོ་པ།, Wylie: a mdo pa) as a distinction from the Tibetans of Kham (Khampa, Tibetan: ཁམས་པ།, Wylie: khams pa) and Ü-Tsang, however, they are all considered ethnically Tibetan.[citation needed]

Today, ethnic Tibetans predominate in the western and southern parts of Amdo, which are now administered as various Tibetan, Tibetan-Qiang, or Mongol-Tibetan autonomous prefectures. The Han Chinese are majority in the northern part (Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture) and eastern part (Xining city and Haidong city) of Qinghai province. While Xining city and Haidong city are geographically small compared to the rest of Qinghai province, this area has the largest population density, with the result that the Han Chinese outnumber other ethnicities in Qinghai province generally.[citation needed]

The majority of Amdo Tibetans live in the larger part of Qinghai province, including the Mtshobyang (མཚོ་བྱང་།; Haibei in Chinese) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture (TAP), Mtsholho (མཚོ་ལྷོ་།; Hainan) TAP, Rmalho (རྨ་ལྷོ་།; Huangnan) TAP, and Mgolog (མགོ་ལོག།; Guoluo) TAP,[10] as well as in the Kanlho (ཀན་ལྷོ།; Gannan) TAP of the southwest Gansu province, and sections of the Rngaba (རྔ་བ།; Aba) Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous prefecture of north-west Sichuan province. Additionally, a great many Amdo Tibetans live within the Haidong (མཚོ་ཤར།; Wylie: mtsho shar) Prefecture of Qinghai which is located to the east of the Qinghai Lake (མཚོ་སྔོན།, Wylie: mtsho sngon) and around Xining (ཟི་ལིང།; zi ling) city, but they constitute only a minority (ca. 8.5%) of the total population there and so the region did not attain TAP status. The vast Haixi (མཚོ་ནུབ།; mtsho nub) Mongolian and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, to the west of the Qinghai Lake, also has a minority Tibetan population (ca. 10%), and only those Tibetans in the eastern parts of this Prefecture are Amdo inhabitants.[11]

Mongols too have been long-term settlers in Amdo, arriving first during the time of Genghis Khan, but particularly in a series of settlement waves during the Ming period. Over the centuries, most of the Amdo Mongols have become highly Tibetanised and, superficially at least, it is now difficult to discern their original non-Tibetan ethnicity.[11] Amdo has been famous in epic story and in history as a land where splendid horses are raised and run wild.[12]

Language

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There are many dialects of the Tibetan language spoken in Amdo due to the geographical isolation of many groups. Written Tibetan is the same throughout Tibetan-speaking regions and is based on Classical Tibetan.

History

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3rd century

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The Ch'iang people were early users of iron and stories abound of them in their iron breast-plates with iron swords.[13]

7th century

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From the seventh through the ninth century, the Tibetan Empire extended as far north as the Turfan, south into India and Nepal, east to Chang'an, and west to Samarkhand.[14] During this period, control of Amdo moved from Songtsen Gampo and his successors to the royal family's ministers, the Gar (Wylie: 'gar).[citation needed] These ministers had their positions inherited from their parents, similar to the emperor. King Tüsong[who?] tried to wrest control of this area from the ministers, unsuccessfully.[15]

9th century

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In 821, a treaty established the borders between the Tibetan Empire and the Tang dynasty, while three stele were built – one at the border, one in Lhasa, and one in Chang'an. The Tibetan army settled within the eastern frontier.[citation needed]

After 838 when Tibet's King Lang darma killed his brother, the Tibetan Empire broke into independent principalities, while Do Kham (Amdo and Kham) maintained culturally and religiously Tibetan. Within Amdo, the historical independent polities of hereditary rulers and kingdoms remained, while Mongol and Chinese populations fluctuated among the indigenous peoples and Tibetans.[16] During this time period, Buddhist monks from Central Tibet exiled to the Amdo region.[17]

There is a historical account of an official from the 9th century sent to collect taxes to Amdo. Instead, he acquires a fief. He then tells of the 10 virtues of the land. Two of the virtues are in the grass, one for meadows near home, one for distant pastures. Two virtues in soil, one to build houses and one for good fields. Two virtues are in the water, one for drinking and one for irrigation. There are two in the stone, one for building and one for milling. The timber has two virtues, one for building and one for firewood.[8] The original inhabitants of the Amdo region were the forest-dwellers (nags-pa), the mountain-dwellers (ri-pa), the plains-dwellers (thang-pa), the grass-men (rtsa-mi), and the woodsmen (shing-mi). The grass men were famous for their horses.[18]

10th century

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Gewasel is a monk that helped resurrect Tibetan Buddhism. He was taught as a child and showed amazing enthusiasm for the religion. When he was ordained he went in search of teachings. After obtaining the Vinaya, he was set to travel to Central Tibet, but for a drought. Instead he chose to travel in solitude to Amdo. Locals had heard of him and his solitude was not to be as he was sought after. In time he established a line of refugee monks in Amdo and with the wealth that he acquired he built temples and stupas also.[19]

11th century

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The historical Qiang came into contact with the Sumpa, then with the Tuyuhun.[20] Then around 1032, the Tangut people, possibly of Qiang descent, formed the Western Xia, which lasted into the 13th century.[citation needed]

13th century

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The Mongols had conquered eastern Amdo by 1240 and would manage it under the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs, separately from the other territories administered by the Yuan dynasty.[21][22][23] A patron and priest relationship began in 1253 when a Tibetan priest, Phagspa, visited Kublai Khan he became so popular that he was made Kublai's spiritual guide and later appointed by him to the rank of priest king of Tibet and constituted ruler of (1) Tibet Proper, comprising the thirteen states of Ü-Tsang; (2) Kham, and (3) Amdo.[3] He spent his later years at Sakya Monastery in Ü-Tsang, which required that he travel through Amdo regularly. On one of these trips, he encountered armed resistance in Amdo and required escorts from Mongol Princes to travel through Amdo.[24] While the concept of Tibet's Three Regions can be dated back to Tibetan Empire, Dunhuang manuscripts referring to the eastern parts of its territory as mdo-gams (Tibetan: མདོ་གམས) and mdo-smad (Tibetan: མདོ་སྨད),[25][26] Yuan confirmed the division, and Do Kham as two well defined commanderies, along with Ü-Tsang, were collectively referred to as the three commanderies of Tibet since then. Tibet regained its independence from the Mongols before native Chinese overthrew the Yuan dynasty in 1368, although it avoided directly resisting the Yuan court until the latter's fall.[27] By 1343, Mongol authority in Amdo had weakened considerably: Köden’s fiefdom had been leaderless for some time, and the Tibetans were harassing the Mongols near Liangzhou (byang ngos). In 1347, a general rebellion erupted in some two hundred places in eastern Tibet, and though troops were sent to suppress them, by 1355 eastern Tibet was no longer mentioned in the dynastic history of the Mongols.[6]

14th century through the 16th century

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Although the following Ming Dynasty nominally maintained the Mongol divisions of Tibet with some sub-division, its power is weaker and influenced Amdo mostly at their borders.[6] The Mongols again seized political control in Amdo areas from the middle of the 16th century.[28] However, the Ming Dynasty continued to retain control in Hezhou and Xining wei.[citation needed]

17th century

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Upper (Kokonor) Mongols from northern Xinjiang and Khalkha came there in 16th and 17th centuries.[29] Power struggles among various Mongol factions in Tibet and Amdo led to a period alternating between the supremacy of the Dalai Lama (nominally) and Mongol overlords. In 1642, Tibet was reunified under the 5th Dalai Lama, by gaining spiritual and temporal authority through the efforts of the Mongol king, Güshi Khan. This allowed the Gelug school and its incarnated spiritual leaders, the Dalai Lamas, to gain enough support to last through the present day.[30] Gushi Khan also returned portions of Eastern Tiber (Kham) to Tibet, but his base in the Kokonor region of Amdo remained under Mongol control.[30]

18th century

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In 1705, with the approval of the Kangxi Emperor of the Qing dynasty, Lha-bzang Khan of the Khoshud deposed the regent and killed the 6th Dalai Lama. The Dzungar Mongols invaded Tibet during the chaos, and held the entire region until their final defeat by an expedition of the Qing imperial army in 1720.[31][32]

When the Manchu Qing dynasty rose to power in the early 18th century it established Xining, a town to the north of Amdo, as the administrative base for the area. Amdo was placed within the Qinghai Region.[33] During this period they were ruled by the Amban, who allowed near total autonomy by the monasteries and the other local leaders.[34]

The 18th century saw the Qing Empire continue to expand further and further into Tibet as it engulfed Eastern Tibet including Amdo and even assumed control over Central Tibet.[35]

Shadzong Ritro near Taktser in Amdo

The Yongzheng Emperor seized full control of Qinghai (Amdo) in the 1720s. The boundaries of Xining Prefecture, which contains most of Amdo, with Sichuan and Tibet-proper was established following this. The boundary of Xining Prefecture and Xizang, or Central Tibet, was the Dangla Mountains. This roughly corresponds with the modern boundary of Qinghai with the Tibet Autonomous Region. The boundary of Xining Prefecture with Sichuan was also set at this time, dividing the Ngaba area of the former Amdo into Sichuan. This boundary also roughly corresponds with the modern boundary of Qinghai with Sichuan. A new boundary, following the Ning-ching mountain range, was established between Sichuan and Tibet. East of these mountains, local chieftains ruled under the nominal authority of the Sichuan provincial government; Lhasa administered the area to the west. The 1720s thus saw Tibet's first major reduction in area in centuries.[36] The Gansu region bordering Tibet was administered by an imperial viceroy. Portions of the country were placed under Chinese law while the Tibetans enjoyed almost complete independence, ruled by Tibetan chiefs that held grants or commissions from the Imperial Government.[37]

20th century

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In 1906, the 13th Dalai Lama while touring the country, was enticed by a procession of a thousand lamas, to stay at the temple at Kumbum. He spent a year resting and learning among other things Sanskrit and poetry.[38]

In 1912, Qing Dynasty collapsed and relative independence followed with the Dalai Lama ruling Central Tibet. Eastern Tibet, including Amdo and Kham, were ruled by local and regional warlords and chiefs.[39] The Hui Muslims administered the agricultural areas in the north and east of the region.[34] Amdo saw numerous powerful leaders including both secular and non. The monasteries, such as Labrang, Rebkong, and Taktsang Lhamo supervised the choosing of the local leaders or headmen in the areas under their control. These tribes consisted of several thousand nomads.[34] Meanwhile, Sokwo, Ngawa, and Liulin, had secular leaders appointed, with some becoming kings and even creating familial dynasties. This secular form of government went as far as Machu.[40]

The Muslim warlord Ma Qi waged war in the name of the Republic of China against the Labrang monastery and Goloks. After ethnic rioting between Muslims and Tibetans emerged in 1918, Ma Qi defeated the Tibetans, then commenced to tax the town heavily for 8 years. In 1925, a Tibetan rebellion broke out, with thousands of Tibetans driving out the Muslims. Ma Qi responded with 3,000 Chinese Muslim troops, who retook Labrang and machine gunned thousands of Tibetan monks as they tried to flee.[41][42] Ma Qi besieged Labrang numerous times, the Tibetans and Mongols fought against his Muslim forces for control of Labrang, until Ma Qi gave it up in 1927.[43] His forces were praised by foreigners who traveled through Qinghai for their fighting abilities.[44] However, that was not the last Labrang saw of General Ma. The Muslim forces looted and ravaged the monastery again.[43]

In 1928, the Ma Clique formed an alliance with the Kuomintang. In the 1930s, the Muslim warlord Ma Bufang, the son of Ma Qi, seized the northeast corner of Amdo in the name of Chiang Kai-shek's weak central government, effectively incorporating it into the Chinese province of Qinghai.[45] From that point until 1949, much of the rest of Amdo was gradually assimilated into the Kuomintang Chinese provincial system, with the major portion of it becoming nominally part of Qinghai province and a smaller portion becoming part of Gansu province.[46] Due to the lack of a Chinese administrative presence in the region, however, most of the communities of the rural areas of Amdo and Kham remained under their own local, Tibetan lay and monastic leaders into the 1950s. Tibetan region of Lho-Jang and Gyarong in Kham, and Ngapa (Chinese Aba) and Golok in Amdo, were still independent of Chinese hegemony, despite the creation on paper of Qinghai Province in 1927.[47]

The 14th Dalai Lama was born in the Amdo region, in 1935, and when he was announced as a possible candidate, Ma Bufang tried to prevent the boy from travelling to Tibet. He demanded a ransom of 300,000 dollars, which was paid and then he escorted the young boy to Tibet.[48]

In May 1949, Ma Bufang was appointed Military Governor of Northwest China, making him the highest-ranked administrator of the Amdo region. However, by August 1949, the advancing People's Liberation Army (PLA) had annihilated Ma's army, though residual forces took several years to defeat. By 1949, advance units of the PLA had taken much of Amdo from the Nationalists.[49] By 1952, following the annexation of Tibet by the People's Republic of China, the major towns in the region were fully under the control of People's Republic of China, though many of the rural areas continued to enjoy de facto autonomy for several more years.[50] Tibetan guerrilla forces in Amdo emerged in 1956 and continued until the 1970s fighting the People's Liberation Army.[51]

In 1958, Chinese communists assumed official control of Tibetan regions in Kham and Amdo. Many of the nomads of Amdo revolted. Some areas were reported virtually empty of men: They either had been killed or imprisoned or had fled. The largest monastery in Amdo was forced to close. Of its three thousand monks, two thousand were arrested.[52]

In July 1958 as the revolutionary fervor of the Great Leap Forward swept across the People's Republic of China, Zeku County in the Amdo region of cultural Tibet erupted in violence against efforts by the Chinese Communist Party to impose rapid collectivization on the pastoral communities of the grasslands. Rebellion also stirred the region at the beginning of the 1950s as “Liberation” first settled on the northeastern Tibetan plateau. The immediate ramifications of each disturbance both for the Amdo Tibetan elites and commoners, and for the Han cadres in their midst, elucidates early PRC nation-building and state-building struggles in minority nationality areas and the influence of this crucial transitional period on relations between Han and Tibetan in Amdo decades later.[53]

As a prelude to the Beijing Olympics, protests broke out in 2008 in Amdo, among other places. Some were violent; however the majority were peaceful.[54]

Monasteries

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Panoramic view of Kumbum Monastery in Amdo
Labrang Monastery in Amdo

Amdo was traditionally a place of great learning and scholarship and contains many great monasteries including Kumbum Monastery near Xining, Rongwo Monastery in Rebgong, Labrang Monastery south of Lanzhou, and the Kirti Gompas of Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture and Taktsang Lhamo in Dzoge County.

From 1958 to 1962, the political climate in Amdo was considered unbearable. In 1958, the arrest and murder of the Tseten Monastery's Khenpo Jigme Rigpai Nyingpo while incarcerated in Xining's Nantan prison marked the beginning of the period.[55]

Traditional pastoral economy

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Amdo Tibetans' traditional lifestyle and economy are centered on agriculture. Depending on the region and environment Amdo Tibetans live in, they are either nomads (Drog pa) or farmers (Sheng pa). The economy of Amdo of has been constant throughout history and has changed little in the modern time. A typical family has two homes or bases: one for when they move up into the mountains with their animals in the summer for better grazing, and another down in the valleys where they weather harsh winters and grow fodder for their livestock in small agricultural fields. The families of some villages may make a shorter seasonal trek as their pasture may be nearby, and they may even migrate between homes each day.[56]

Local government

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As in Amdo and Kham, independent local polities were the traditional governing systems. In Amdo, communities of nomads, farmers, horse traders and monasteries were organized into these polities, which continued from the era of the Tibetan Empire. Varying in size from small to large, some were inherited while others were not, and both women and men were individual leaders of these polities.[57]

Tsowas, consisting of groups of families, are the basic socio-cum-political organization. The Golok peoples, Gomé and Lutsang peoples arranged themselves in tsowas. A larger organisation is the sgar, translated as 'encampment', while larger still is the nangso, translated as 'commissioner'. There were also kingdoms, such as Kingdom of Co ne (Choné).[57] In 1624, for example, the Drotsang Nangso sponsored a monastery which was called the Drotsang Sargön; the monastery at Detsa Nangso was called the Detsa Gompa. Earlier in 1376, a Horse and Tea Trading Station was in Co né.[57]

After the People's Republic of China's (PRC) was founded, communist administrators overlaid a series of larger Tibetan Autonomous Prefectures (TAP) on top of the existing county system, but only where Tibetans formed the majority of the population. This policy towards Tibetans, considered a "minority nationality" within their own country, was set down in the constitution of the PRC.[58]

Notes

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  1. ^ The identically-named, sparsely-populated Amdo County in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) is not part of the historical Amdo province. It was directly administered by the Dalai Lama from Lhasa and is today a part of the Changtang region administered by Nagqu Prefecture in the northern part of the TAR.

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Dkon mchog bstan pa rab rgyas, brag dgon zhabs drung (1982). mdo smad chos 'byung མདོ་སྨད་ཆོས་འབྱུང [The political and religious history of A-mdo] (in Tibetan). Lanzhou, Gansu, China: Kan suʼu mi dmangs dpe skrun khang.
  2. ^ Dorje, Kunger (1988). The Red History 红史 (in Tibetan and Chinese). Translated by Chen, Qingying. Lhasa.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ a b Patterson 1960, pp. 87–88
  4. ^ Tseten, Migmar. Treasures of the Sakya Lineage. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 9781590304884.
  5. ^ Grunfield 1996, p. 245
  6. ^ a b c "An Overview of Amdo (Northeastern Tibet) Historical Polities | Mandala Collections - Texts". texts.mandala.library.virginia.edu.
  7. ^ Stein 1972, p. 20
  8. ^ a b Stein 1972, p. 23
  9. ^ Stein 1972, p. 22.
  10. ^ Shakya, Tsering (1999). The Dragon in the Land of Snows : a History of Modern Tibet Since 1947. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 137. ISBN 9780231118149. OCLC 40783846.
  11. ^ a b Huber 2002, pp. xiii–xv
  12. ^ Stein 1972, p. 24
  13. ^ Stein 1972, p. 62
  14. ^ Hoiberg 2010, p. 1
  15. ^ Stein 1972, p. 63.
  16. ^ Yeh 2003, p. 508
  17. ^ Van Schaik 2011, pp. 49–50
  18. ^ Stein 1972, pp. 23–24
  19. ^ Van Schaik 2011, pp. 50–51
  20. ^ Stein 1972, p. 29.
  21. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 76, "the Mongol court took a direct interest in how Tibet was run ... at the Mongol capital there was a Department for Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs."
  22. ^ Petech 1990, pp. 7–8
  23. ^ Schirokauer 2006, p. 174
  24. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 80
  25. ^ Wang, Yao. Dunhuang manuscripts of Tibetan historical documents 敦煌本吐蕃历史文书. pp. 149–151.
  26. ^ Huang, Bufan (2000). Translation and Annotation of Dunhuang Tibetan Historical Documents of Tibet 敦煌藏文吐蕃史文献译注. Lanzhou: Gansu jiao yu chu ban she. pp. 46–49.
  27. ^ Craig 2000, pp. 33–34
  28. ^ Petech 1990, pp. 136–137
  29. ^ Монгол улсын түүх. УБ: дөтгөөр боть. 2003.
  30. ^ a b Davis 2008, p. 242
  31. ^ Richardson 1986, pp. 48–49
  32. ^ Schirokauer 2006, p. 242
  33. ^ Van Schaik 2011, pp. 140–141
  34. ^ a b c Pirie 2005, p. 85
  35. ^ Davis 2008, p. 243
  36. ^ Kolmas 1967, pp. 41–42 quoted by Goldstein 1994, pp. 80–81
  37. ^ Ekvall 1977, p. 6
  38. ^ Van Schaik 2011, pp. 182–183
  39. ^ Barney 2008, p. 71
  40. ^ Pirie 2005, p. 86
  41. ^ Tyson & Tyson 1995, p. 123
  42. ^ Nietupski 1999, p. 87
  43. ^ a b Nietupski 1999, p. 90
  44. ^ Fletcher 1980, p. 43
  45. ^ Laird 2006, p. 262
  46. ^ Anon 2013
  47. ^ Tibet Environmental Watch 2013
  48. ^ Richardson 1962, pp. 151–153
  49. ^ Craig 2000, p. 44
  50. ^ Jiao 2013
  51. ^ McGranahan, Carole (2006). "The CIA and the Chushi Gangdrug Resistance, 1956–1974" (PDF). Journal of Cold War Studies. 8 (3): 102–130. doi:10.1162/jcws.2006.8.3.102. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  52. ^ Laird 2006, p. 382
  53. ^ Weiner 2012, pp. 398–405, 427
  54. ^ Van Schaik 2011, pp. 265–266
  55. ^ Nicole Willock, Jigme Rigpai Lodro, https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Jigme-Rigpai-Lodro/2948
  56. ^ Stein 1972, pp. 123–124
  57. ^ a b c Gray Tuttle, An Overview of Amdo (Northeastern Tibet) Historical Polities" Aug 29, 2013
  58. ^ Huber 2002, p. xviii

Sources

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Further reading

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  • Dhondup, Yangdon; Diemberger, Hildegard (2002). "Introduction: Mongols and Tibetans". Inner Asia. 4 (2): 171–180. doi:10.1163/146481702793647452.
  • Goldstein, Melvyn C. (2007). A History of Modern Tibet. Vol. 2: The Calm Before the Storm, 1951–1955. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24941-7.
  • Gruschke, Andreas (2001). The Cultural Monuments of Tibet's Outer Provinces: Amdo. Bangkok: White Lotus Press. ISBN 978-9747534597.
  • Kolmas, Josef (1967). "Tibet and Imperial China: A Survey of Sino-Tibetan Relations up to the End of the Manchu Dynasty in 1912". Occasional Paper (7). Canberra, Australia: The Australian National University, Centre of Oriental Studies.
  • Max Oidtmann, Qing Colonial Legal Culture in Amdo Tibet (original title: A Document from the Xunhua Archives Archived 2016-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, International Society for Chinese Law & History — 中國法律与歷史國際學會, vol. 1, No 1, November 2014)