Tibet is located in southwest China. The ancestors of the
Tibetan race who lived there struck up links with the Han
in the Central Plains long before the Christian era. Later,
over a long period of years, the numerous tribes scattered
on the Tibet Plateau became unified to form the present
Tibetan race. By the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the Tibetans
and Hans had, through marriage between royal families and
meetings leading to alliances, cemented political and kinship
ties of unity and political friendship and formed close
economic and cultural relations, laying a solid foundation
for the ultimate founding of a unified nation. In Lhasa,
the capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, the statue of
the Tang Princess Wen Cheng, who married the Tubo tsampo,
king of Tibet, in 641, is still enshrined and worshiped
in the Potala Palace. The Tang-Tubo Alliance Monument marking
the meeting for this purpose between Tang and Tubo erected
in 823 still stands in the square in front of the Jokhang
Monastery. The monument inscription reads in part, "The
two sovereigns, uncle and nephew, having come to agreement
that their territories be united as one, have signed this
alliance of great peace to last for eternity! May God and
humanity bear witness thereto so that it may be praised
from generation to generation."
In the mid-13th century, Tibet was officially incorporated
into the territory of China's Yuan Dynasty. Since then,
although China experienced several dynastic changes, Tibet
has remained under the jurisdiction of the central government
of China.
Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368)
In the early 13th century, Genghis Khan, leader of the
Mongols, established the Mongol Khanate in north China.
In 1247 Sagya Pandit Gonggar Gyamcan, religious leader of
Tibet, met the Mongol Prince Gotan at Liangzhou (present-day
Wuwei of Gansu, China) and decided on terms for Tibetan
submission to the Mongols, including presentation of map
and census books, payment of tributes, and the acceptance
of rule by appointed officials. The Tibetan work Sagya Genealogy
written in 1629 includes Sagya Pandit's letter to the religious
and secular leaders in the various parts of Tibet that they
must pledge allegiance to the Mongols and accept the regional
administrative system prescribed for Tibet. The regime of
the Mongol Khanate changed its title to Yuan in 1271 and
unified the whole of China in 1279, establishing a central
government, which, following the Han (206 BC-220) and Tang
dynasties, achieved great unification of various regions
and races within the domain of China. Tibet became an administrative
region directly under the administration of the central
government of China's Yuan Dynasty.
The Yuan emperor established the Xuanzheng Yuan or Ministry
for the Spread of Governance to directly handle important
military and political affairs of the Tibet region. Choice
of its members lay with the emperor and its reports were
submitted directly to the monarch. Yuanshi, the chief minister
having real authority in the Xuanzheng Yuan, was a post
generally held concurrently by the right-hand prime minister
of the central government who was in charge of the whole
nation's governmental affairs.
In the Tibetan region, local military and administrative
organs were set up under the name of the High Pacification
Commissioner's Office, which was under the Xuanzheng Yuan.
Under the jurisdiction of this office were 13 wanhu offices
(myriarchies each in command of 10,000 households) and more
qianhu offices (chiliarchies each in command of 1,000 households)
handling civil administration. The names of these organizations
and official posts were decided by the central government
of the Yuan Dynasty. It also had troops stationed in Tibet.
A royal prince and his descendents were stationed on the
eastern border of Tibet at the head of an army. When Tibet
was enmeshed in trouble, the prince could enter the area
from nearby garrison to perform his duty of guarding the
security of the border region. In 1290, when the head of
a wanhu office rose in rebellion, the central government
of the Yuan Dynasty dispatched the prince into Tibet at
the head of his army to put it down.
The central government of the Yuan Dynasty sent officials
into Tibet to set up post stations, whose size varied according
to the local population, topography and resources. These
post stations were linked up in a communication line extending
from Tibet up to Dadu (present-day Beijing).
The central government of the Yuan Dynasty also dispatched
officials into Tibet to conduct censuses, establish the
number of corvee laborers in areas under various wanhu offices
and decide the number of corvee laborers, provisions and
animal transport the areas along the post route had to supply.
Such censuses were conducted three times in Tibet, in 1268,
1287 and 1334. The Tibetan work History From the Han and
Tibetan Sources records them in detail.
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
In 1368 the Ming Dynasty replaced the Yuan Dynasty in China,
and inherited the right to rule Tibet.
The central government of the Ming Dynasty retained most
of the titles and ranks of official positions instituted
during the Yuan Dynasty. In the central and eastern parts
of present-day Tibet, the Dbus-Gtsang Itinerant High Commandery
and the Mdo-khams Itinerant High Commandery were set up
respectively. Equivalent to provincial-level military organs,
they operated under the Shaanxi Itinerant High Commandery
and, at the same time, handled civil administration. In
Ngari in west Tibet, the E-Li-Si Army-Civilian Marshal Office
was instituted. Leading officials of these organs were all
appointed by the central government.
The third emperor of the Ming Dynasty, Chengzu (reigned
1403-1424) saw the advantage of combined Buddhist religious
and political power in Tibet and rivalry between sects occupying
different areas. So he conferred honorific titles on religious
leaders in various parts of Tibet such as the "prince
of Dharma," "prince" and "national master
in Tantrism." Succession to such princeship needed
the approval of the emperor, who would send an envoy to
confer the official title on each new prince. Only then
could the new prince assume his role. According to the stipulations
of the Ming court, the prince had to dispatch his envoy
or come in person to the capital to participate in the New
Year's Day celebration each year and present his memorial
of congratulation and tribute. The Ming court had detailed
stipulations that limited the dates for presenting tributes,
the number of personnel allowed in the capital, the route
to be taken, and also provisions to be supplied by local
authorities along the route. The tablets wishing longevity
to the emperors before which the prayers had to prostrate
themselves are still kept in some of the monasteries in
Tibet.
The Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Lama are the two leading
incarnation hierarchies of the Gelug Sect of Tibetan Buddhism.
The Gelug Sect rose during the Ming Dynasty, and the 3rd
Dalai Lama was the abbot of one of the sect's monasteries.
The central government of the Ming Dynasty showed him special
favor by allowing him to pay tribute. In 1587 he was granted
the title of Dorjichang or Vajradhara Dalai Lama.
Any official of the Tibetan local government who offended
the law was punished by the central government.
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)
When the Qing Dynasty replaced the Ming Dynasty in 1644,
it further strengthened administration over Tibet. In 1653
and 1713, the Qing emperors granted honorific titles to
the 5th Dalai Lama and the 5th Bainqen Lama, henceforth
officially establishing the titles of the Dalai Lama and
the Bainqen Erdeni and their political and religious status
in Tibet. The Dalai Lama ruled the bulk of areas from Lhasa
while the Bainqen Erdeni ruled the remaining area of Tibet
from Xigaze. In 1719, Qing government troops were sent into
Tibet to dispel the Zungar forces which had been entrenched
in Lhasa for three years, and set out to reform Tibet's
administrative system. The Qing emperor made a young Living
Buddha of the Xikang area the 7th Dalai Lama and had him
escorted into Tibet, and appointed four Tibetan officials
renowned for meritorious service "Galoins" to
handle Tibet's political affairs. From 1727, High commissioners
were stationed in Tibet to supervise local administration
on behalf of the central authorities. Officials were also
assigned about this time to survey and delimit the borders
between Tibet (i.e. Xizang) and Sichuan, Yunnan and Qinghai.
In order to perfect Tibet's administrative organizations,
the Qing Dynasty on many occasions enacted "regulations"
to rectify and reform old systems and establish new ones.
The Authorized Regulations for the Better Governing of Tibet,
promulgated in 1793, had 29 articles. Their major purport
was:
The Qing government holds the power to confirm the reincarnation
of all deceased high Living Buddhas of Tibet including the
Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni. When the reincarnate
boy has been found, his name will be written on a lot, which
shall be put into a gold urn bestowed by the central government.
The high commissioners will bring together appropriate high-ranking
Living buddhas to determine the authenticity of the reincarnate
boy by drawing lots from the gold urn. (Both the gold urn
and lots are still preserved in Lhasa.) The tonsure of the
incarnate Living Buddha, his religious name, the choice
of the master to initiate him into monkhood and his sutra
instructor all have to be reported by the high commissioners
to the imperial court for examination and approval. The
central government will send high officials to supervise
in person the installation ceremony for the new Dalai Lama
and the new Bainqen Erdeni and also the ceremony for their
taking over reins of government at coming of age.
The high commissioners will supervise the handling of Tibetan
affairs on behalf of the central government, enjoying the
equal standing with the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni.
All the Galoins and those below them are subordinates.
The ranks and numbers of Tibetan civil and military officials,
and procedures for their promotion and replacement are stipulated.
The highest-Ranking Tibetan officials including four Galoins
and six Deboins are to be appointed by the central government.
The annual salaries of the Galoins and Deboins will be paid
by the central government.
A regular army of 3,000 will be organized in Tibet. The
regulations stipulate ranks and numbers of military officials,
the source of troop pay and provisions, plus weaponry and
places where troops are to be stationed. In addition, some
1,400 troops will be transferred from the interior to stations
in various localities of Tibet. Both Tibetan and Han troops
are put under the command of officers sent by the central
government.
A mint will be set up in Tibet along the lines established
by those in the interior to make official money for circulation.
On the two sides of the silver coinage the words "Qianlong
Treasure" will be cast in the Han Chinese and Tibetan.
The annual financial receipts and expenditures of the Dalai
Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni will be subject to checking
by the high commissioners.
Tibet's taxation and corvee labor will be born by the whole
society on an equal footing. Only those nobles and large
monasteries who have made real contributions will enjoy
preferential treatment and exemptions, but these must be
examined and approved by the high commissioners and the
Dalai Lama, who will issue them licences for this purpose.
Merchants from Nepal and Kashmir wanting to do business
in Tibet must register. The registration book must be filed
with the high commissioners for record. The appropriate
officials will issue laissez-passers to them. Any foreigner
applying to enter Lhasa must be examined for approval by
the High Commissioner's Office. The high commissioners will
issue laissez-passers to Tibetans who apply to go to Nepal
or other places, and set the leaving and returning dates
for them.
National boundary markers will be erected in a number of
places where southwest Tibet borders on countries like India
and Nepal. The high commissioners will make an annual tour
in Tibet to inspect the defense arrangements of the troops
stationed there and matters concerning border markers.
All foreign affairs involving Tibet will be left completely
in the hands of the high commissioners. No Galoin is allowed
to maintain correspondence with the outside, and all letters
and alms received by the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni
from the outside must be submitted to the high commissioners
for censorship and decision concerning a reply.
Criminal punishment will be reported to the high commissioners
for examination and approval.
Between 1727, when the high commissionership was first
established, and 1911, the year the Qing Dynasty was overthrown,
the central government of the Qing Dynasty stationed more
than 100 high commissioners in Tibet.
Republic of China (1912-49)
In the autumn of 1911, revolution took place in China's
interior, overthrowing the 270-year-old rule of the Qing
Dynasty and establishing the Republic of China.
Upon its founding, the Republic of China declared itself
a unified republic of the Han, Manchu, Mongol, Hui, Tibetan
and other races. In his inauguration statement on January
1, 1912, Sun Yat-sen, the provisional first president of
the Republic of China, declared to the whole world: "The
foundation of the country lies in the people, and the unification
of lands inhabited by the Han, Manchu, Mongol, Hui and Tibetan
people into one country means the unification of the Han,
Manchu, Mongol, Hui and Tibetan races. It is called national
unification." The five-color flag used as the national
flag at that time represented the unification of the five
main races. In March the Nanjing-based provisional senate
of the Republic of China promulgated the republic's first
constitution, the Provisional Constitution of the Republic
of China, in which it was clearly stipulated that Tibet
was a part of the territory of the Republic of China.
In order to form the first parliament of the Republic of
China, the Beijing government promulgated on August 10,
1912 the Organic Law of the Parliament of the Republic of
China and the law on elections for members of parliament.
These statutes specified the methods for Tibetans to participate
in elections, and the right of elected parliamentary members
to have a direct say in government affairs. When the Chinese
Kuomintang formed the national government in 1927 in Nanjing
and held the national assembly in 1931, both the 13th Dalai
Lama and the 9th Bainqen Erdeni sent representatives to
participate. Article I of the General Outline of the Constitution
for the Political Tutelage Period of the Republic of China,
formulated during the assembly, stipulated that Tibet belonged
to the territories of the Republic of China. The Tibetan
local government and the Bainqen's administrative body,
Kampus Assembly, also sent representatives to the national
assembly in 1946 called by the Nanjing national government.
As in the previous Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, the central
government of the Republic of China exercised jurisdiction
over Tibet. The Bureau of Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs
(renamed Mongolian and Tibetan Council in May 1914) was
established by the central government in 1912 to replace
the Qing Dynasty's Department in Charge of Mongolian and
Tibetan Affairs. The bureau was responsible for Tibetan
local affairs. The central government also appointed a representative
to Tibet to carry out the responsibilities of the high commissioners
stationed in Tibet by the Qing Dynasty. After the Nanjing
national government was set up, a Commission for Mongolian
and Tibetan Affairs was established in 1929 to handle the
administrative affairs of the Tibetans, Mongolians and other
ethnic minorities. In April 1940 the Commission for Mongolian
and Tibetan Affairs opened an office in Lhasa as the permanent
mission of the central government in Tibet.
Traditionally, the Dalai Lama, the Bainqen Erdeni and other
high Living Buddhas had to be recognized and appointed by
the central government in order to secure their political
and religious legal status in Tibet. Despite the fact that
incessant foreign aggression and civil wars weakened the
central government of the Republic of China, it continued
to grant honorific titles to the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen
Erdeni. On many occasions the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen
Erdeni expressed their support for national unification
and for the central government. In 1919, the 13th Dalai
Lama told a delegation sent by the Beijing central government,
"It is not my true intention to be on intimate terms
with the British.... I swear to be loyal to our own country
and jointly work for the happiness of the five races."
In his later years (in 1930), he said, "My greatest
wish is for the real peace and unification of China."
"Since it is all Chinese territory, why distinguish
between you and us?" He further elaborated, "The
British truly intend to tempt me, but I know that our sovereignty
must not be lost." He also publicly expressed his determination
"not to affiliate with the British nor forsake the
central government" (Liu Manqing: A Mission to Xikang
and Tibet). The 9th Bainqen noted in his will, "The
great plan I have promoted all my life is the support of
the central government, the spread of Buddhism, the promotion
of the unity of the five nationalities and the guarantee
of national prosperity."
The death of the 13th Dalai Lama in December 1933 was reported
to the central government by the Tibetan local government
in the traditional manner. The national government sent
a special envoy to Tibet for the memorial ceremony. It also
approved the Living Buddha Razheng as the regent to assume
the duties and power of the Dalai Lama. The Tibetan local
government also followed the age-old system in reporting
to the central government all the procedures that should
be followed in search for the reincarnation of the late
13th Dalai Lama. The present 14th Dalai Lama was born in
Qinghai Province. Originally named Lhamo Toinzhub, he was
selected as one of the incarnate boys at the age of 2. After
receiving a report submitted by the Tibetan local government
in 1939, the central government ordered the Qinghai authorities
to send troops to escort him to Lhasa. After an inspection
tour in Lhasa by Wu Zhongxin, chief of the Commission for
Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs, in 1940, Chiang Kai-shek,
then head of the central government, approved Tibetan Regent
Razheng's request to waive the lot-drawing convention, and
the chairman of the national government issued an official
decree conferring the title of the 14th Dalai Lama on Lhamo
Toinzhub.
People's Republic of China
The People's Republic of China was founded in 1949 after
decisive victories in the Chinese People's War of Liberation.
Beiping, Hunan and the provinces bordering on Tibet--Yunnan,
Xinjiang and Xikang--were all liberated peacefully from
the rule of the former Kuomintang government. In light of
the history and reality of Tibet, the central people's government
decided to do the same for Tibet. In January 1950, the central
government formally notified the local authorities of Tibet
to "send delegates to Beijing to negotiate the peaceful
liberation of Tibet." However, the then Tibetan Regent
Dagzhag Ngawang Sungrab and others who were in control of
the Tibetan local government, supported by some foreign
forces and disregarding the interests of the country and
the Tibetans, rejected the central government's call for
negotiation on the peaceful liberation of Tibet. They deployed
the main body of the Tibetan army in the Qamdo area in east
Tibet for armed resistance. Under such circumstances, the
central government was left with no choice and had to order
the People's Liberation Army (PLA) to cross the Jinsha River
in October 1950, and Qamdo was liberated.
Following this event, the central government once again
urged the Tibetan local government to send delegates to
Beijing for negotiations. The central government's adherence
to the policy of peaceful negotiations greatly supported
and inspired the patriotic forces in Tibet. The upper-class
patriotics, represented by Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme, stood for
peaceful negotiation, winning the endorsement and support
of the majority. The 14th Dalai Lama who had assumed power
ahead of time accepted the proposal. In his letter to the
central people's government in January 1951, he said, "I
have come to govern at the warm and earnest request of all
Tibetans"; "I have decided to fulfill the people's
desire through peaceful means"; and delegates would
be sent "to seek a solution to the Tibetan issue with
the central people's government." In February 1951,
the Dalai Lama appointed Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme as his chief
plenipotentiary and Kemai Soinam Wangdui, Tubdain Daindar,
Tubdain Legmoin and Sampo Dainzin Toinzhub as delegates
and sent them to Beijing to handle with full power the negotiations
with the central people's government.
On May 23, 1951, the Agreement of the Central People's
Government and the Local Government of Tibet on Measures
for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet (i.e., the 17-Article
Agreement) was signed after the delegates of the central
people's government and the Tibetan local government had
reached agreement on a series of questions concerning Tibet's
peaceful liberation. It was stipulated in the agreement
that the Tibetan people should unite and drive out imperialist
aggressive forces from Tibet; the local government of Tibet
should actively assist the PLA in entering Tibet and consolidating
national defense; national regional autonomy would be instituted
in Tibet; the central government would not alter the existing
political system in Tibet or the established status, functions
and powers of the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni, and
officials of various ranks would continue to hold office
as usual; the policy of freedom of religious belief would
be upheld and the religious beliefs, customs and habits
of the Tibetan people would be respected; the spoken and
written language and school education of the Tibetan nationality
would be developed step by step, along with agriculture,
livestock raising, industry and commerce in order to improve
the people's livelihood; foreign affairs involving the Tibet
region would be under the unified management of the central
people's government. The agreement also explicitly stipulated
that in matters relating to reforms in Tibet, there would
be no coercion on the part of the central authorities, and
reform would be carried out by the Tibetan local government
of its own accord.
The agreement for the peaceful liberation of Tibet enjoyed
the approval and support of the people from every ethnic
group in Tibet. A conference of all ecclesiastic and secular
officials and representatives of the three most prominent
monasteries was called by the Tibetan local government between
September 26 and 29, 1951 to specifically discuss the agreement.
A report to the Dalai Lama was approved at the end of the
conference. It stated, "The 17-Article Agreement that
has been signed is of great and unrivaled benefit to the
grand cause of the Dalai and to Buddhism, politics, economy
and other aspects of life in Tibet. Naturally it should
be implemented." The Dalai Lama sent a telegram to
Chairman Mao Zedong on October 24, 1951, in which he wrote,
"On the basis of friendship, delegates of the two sides
signed on May 23, 1951 the Agreement on Measures for the
Peaceful Liberation of Tibet. The Tibetan local government
as well as ecclesiastic and secular people unanimously support
this agreement, and under the leadership of Chairman Mao
and the central people's government, will actively assist
the PLA troops entering Tibet in consolidating national
defense, ousting imperialist influences from Tibet and safeguarding
the unification of the territory and the sovereignty of
the motherland." The Bainqen Lama and the Kampus Assembly
also issued a statement, pointing out that the agreement
"conforms fully to the interests of all ethnic nationalities
of China, particularly those of the Tibetans." On October
26, with the support of the Tibetan people, the PLA entered
Lhasa without a hitch.
After the peaceful liberation of Tibet, the central people's
government and upper-class patriotic forces of Tibet did
a great deal of work to implement the 17-Article Agreement.
In 1954 the Dalai Lama and the Bainqen Erdeni came to Beijing
to attend the First Session of the National People's Congress
(NPC) of the People's Republic of China. In his speech at
the congress, the Dalai Lama fully confirmed the achievements
in the implementation of the 17-Article Agreement over the
preceding three years, and expressed his warm support for
the principles and provisions concerning national regional
autonomy in the draft of New China's first Constitution,
which was under discussion at the congress. Talking about
religious issues, the Dalai Lama said that the Tibetan people
had deeply held religious beliefs, and they were formerly
made anxious by fallacious rumors spread by some people
that "the Communist Party and the people's government
will extinguish religion." However, he added, "the
rumors that aim to sow discord have all been exploded and
the Tibetan people know from our own experience that we
have freedom of religious belief." He expressed the
desire to gradually build Tibet into a land of prosperity
and happiness under the leadership of the central people's
government and with the help of people of other ethnic groups.
On September 20, the Dalai Lama, the Bainqen Erdeni and
the other Tibetan deputies, along with the deputies from
other ethnic groups, approved the Constitution of the People's
Republic of China by casting their ballots. At the session,
the Dalai Lama was elected a vice-chairman of the NPC Standing
Committee, and Bainqen Erdeni a member of the NPC Standing
Committee. In their capacity as state leaders, they exercised
their rights of participating in the management of state
affairs in accordance with the Constitution.
On April 22, 1956, the Dalai Lama became chairman of the
Preparatory Committee for the Tibet Autonomous Region. In
his speech at the inaugural meeting, the Dalai Lama said,
"In 1951, I sent delegates to Beijing to negotiate
with delegates of the central people's government. On the
basis of fraternal unity, the Agreement of the Central People's
Government and the Local Government of Tibet on Measures
for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet was signed. Since then,
the Tibetan people shook off forever the fetters of imperialist
enslavement and trammels and rejoined the large national
family. Like our sibling races throughout the country, the
Tibetan people fully enjoy all rights of national equality,
and are embarking on a bright road of freedom and happiness."