Tibet:
An Outline History
Tibet’s
earliest origins are shrouded in vivid myth; according to
legend the Tibetan people are the descendants of an unlikely
union between a monkey and a female demon. Less fancifully,
it is considered that their progenitors may be the Qiang
people mentioned in Chinese records around 200BC. It is
not until the C7th however, that Tibetans appear as a distinct
ethnicity and their recorded history begins. At this time
their image in the region was that of the Huns in Europe.
In 607 the 31st king of the Yarlung Empire conquered many
of the surrounding small princedoms, raised an army of 100,000
and became a force to be reckoned with. His son Songtsen
Gampo (620-49) extended the Tibetan empire to the frontiers
of northern India, established diplomatic relations with
the Tang court by marrying a Chinese princess and introduced
the Tibetan script. He also allied himself with the cause
of Buddhism, broaching for the first time the concept of
a temporal king whose authority was divinely sanctioned.
Following his death, relations with China deteriorated to
the point where the Tibetan army sacked the Chinese capital,
Chang’an in 763.
Religious leaders were wary of the usurpation of the divine
mantle by worldly leaders and C9th struggles over succession
to the throne once again divided Tibet. Although political
authority languished, Buddhism flourished. Missionaries
arrived from India, monasteries were founded and Tibetan
lamas allied themselves with local nobility to create a
viable political-religious power complex. Religious power
was so strong that when the Mongols stormed the region in
1240, their leader declared himself ‘patron’
of the lama at Sakya, assuming effective political control
of Tibet, but claiming to be beholden to the lama’s
spiritual authority. During the Yuan dynasty the Sakya lamas
ruled the whole of Tibet as puppets of the Mongol emperor.
When the Ming dynasty overthrew Mongol rule in 1368 a now
united Tibet regained its independence and the development
of Buddhism redoubled its pace as, under the influence of
India and Nepal, monasteries, stupas and the beginnings
of Tibetan Buddhist art appeared across the land.
In the early C15th a saintly scholar known as Tsongkhapa,
disillusioned by the infighting and mysticism that characterized
the Sakyas, founded a new sect, the Gelukpa, which emphasized
scholarly philosophy and monastic discipline. The Gelukpa
posed a real threat to the established authorities as, after
Tsongkhapa’s death, its popularity grew and the still-powerful
Mongol leaders recognized the head of the Gelukpa, the Dalai
Lama, as the ultimate spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism.
With the assistance of Mongol troops the Gelukpa and the
Dalai Lama assumed the religious supremacy they retain to
this day.
In the C18th a series of succession disputes led the Dzungar
Mongols from northern Xinjiang to invade. In 1717 the Qing,
loathe to see any increase in Mongol power, invaded to evict
the Mongols. Welcomed by the Tibetans, the Chinese established
a small garrison, which remained for the next 200 years
representing loose Chinese ‘suzerainty’. Tibetans
were left to deal with their internal affairs, but China
occasionally stepped in to stop civil unrest and to repel
a Gurkha invasion from Nepal.
As the strength of the Qing waned and that of the British
in India grew, sparks began to fly. Tibet, like China, was
closed to western trade. In 1903 Francis Younghusband led
an expedition (invasion), routing the Tibetan army, demanding
indemnities and causing the 13th Dalai Lama to flee to Mongolia.
The British then backtracked, acknowledging Chinese sovereignty.
Emboldened by this declaration and looking desperately for
a victory that would grant them some legitimacy at home,
the dying Qing dynasty brutally ‘pacified’ Tibetan
areas in Sichuan and Qinghai, sending the 13th Dalai Lama
once more into exile, this time to India.
In 1911, following the Chinese Revolution ending Qing rule,
the Tibetans declared complete independence and expelled
all Chinese residents. Over the next 40 years, whilst China
was embroiled in internal turmoil and the West was busy
with its world wars, Tibet enjoyed complete sovereignty,
but not internal harmony. The Panchen Lama refused to pay
taxes to Lhasa and fled to China, a conservative aristocracy
rejected attempts at reform and modernization and the country
remained a pious, but impoverished theocracy.
Following WWII Chiang Kai-Shek declared Tibet a province
of Nationalist China. The victorious allied powers did not
protest. After the Communist victory the PLA routed a small,
poorly equipped Tibetan army. The 14th Dalai Lama’s
appeal to the United Nations was rebuffed. Tibet was forced
to sign a treaty granting Tibet cultural and religious autonomy,
but acknowledging Chinese control over international and
military affairs. While the CCP largely ignored Tibet proper
it went about the business of collectivizing west Sichuan
and Qinghai. Tibetans in these regions chafed against economic
reforms and rebelled in the mid 50s. The rebellion was quickly
squashed by the PLA, but the rebels retreated to Lhasa and
continued a guerilla war in southern Tibet, covertly supplied
by a CIA eager to strike a blow at their communist foes.
In 1959 a gathering of Sichuan Tibetans near the Norbulinka
turned into a mass rebellion resulting in the Dalai Lama’s
flight into India and brutal reprisals by the PLA.
The CCP responded by declaring martial law, and set out
to rule the region with an iron fist. It liquidated the
traditional ruling classes, replacing them with Beijing
appointed officials and communist Tibetans. From 1959 Tibet
was subject to the same turbulent economic reforms and political
movements as the rest of China. After the rise of Deng Xiaoping
in 1979 officials acknowledged past mistakes in Tibet. Monasteries
were rebuilt, religious practice permitted provided it stayed
out of politics and the economy stabilized. Liberalizations
in the 1980s led Tibetans to clamor for even greater political
freedom, culminating in mass demonstrations in Lhasa in
the late 80s and into the 90s, which were harshly suppressed.