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Agvan Dorzhiev

Agvan Lobsan Dorzhiev[a][b] (1853 – 29 January 1938) was a Russian-born monk of the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism, sometimes referred by his scholarly title as Tsenyi Khempo. He was popularly known as the Sokpo Tsеnshab Ngawang Lobsang (literally Mongolian Tsenshab Ngavang Lobsang) to the Tibetans.[1]

Tsenyi Khempo, Tibetan Buddhist monk, c. 1900

He was a Khory Buryat born in the village of Khara-Shibir, not far from Ulan-Ude, east of Lake Baikal.[2]

He was a study partner and close associate of the 13th Dalai Lama, a minister of his government, and his diplomatic link with the Russian Empire. Among Tibetans he earned a legendary status, while raising the British Empire's significant anxiety of Russian presence in Tibet at the final stage of the Great Game. He is also remembered for building the Buddhist temple of Saint Petersburg in 1909 and signing the Tibet-Mongolia Treaty in 1913.

Buddhist studies in Tibet edit

He left home in 1873 at nineteen to study at the Gomang College of the Gelugpa Drepung monastic university, near Lhasa, the largest monastery in Tibet. Having successfully completed the traditional course of religious studies, he began the academic Buddhist degree of Geshey Lharampa (the highest level of 'Doctorate of Buddhist Philosophy').[3] He continued his studies and, in the mid-1880s, after 15 years of study, he attained the title of a Tsanit Khenpo ("Tsanid-Hambo"), which roughly translates as, "Master of Buddhist Philosophy" or "Professor of Buddhist Metaphysics".[4][5]

 
Agvan Dorzhiev coming out of the Great Palace in Peterhof after his audience with the Tsar, June 23, 1901 (Andrey Terentiev Collection)

He became one of the 13th Dalai Lama's teachers, a 'debating partner', and a spiritual adviser, and retained this role until at least the late 1910s. He was probably also instrumental in saving the young Dalai Lama's life from the intrigues at the court in Lhasa, and over the years they developed a very close and lasting relationship.[6][7]

"One man in particular was to play an important role in building communications between Lhasa and the Russian Czar. This was Tsanzhab Ngawang Lobzang, a Mongolian monk who had graduated with high honors from the Gomang Departments of Drepung Monastery, and who was one of the seven dialectical instructors or Tsanzhabs to the Dalai Lama. Popularly known to the Tibetans as Tsennyi Khenpo, or "Master of Dialectics," he became famed to both the British and the Russians by the simpler name of Dorjieff (from the Tibetan Dorjey). Born in the Buriyat region of the Mongolian territories that had in recent times been acquired by the Czar, Dorjieff was therefore a Russian citizen."[8]

Envoy for the Dalai Lama edit

In 1896, the Tsar, Nikolai II, gave Agvan Dorzhiev a monogrammed watch for the services he had rendered to Badmayev's Russian agents in Lhasa.[9]

In early 1898 Dorzhiev went to Saint Petersburg "to collect subscriptions for his monastic college"[10] and became friendly with Prince Esper Ukhtomsky, Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the Tsar and orientalist. Dorzhiev was presented to the Tsar. Dorzhiev then went on to Paris and possibly London before returning to Lhasa.[9][11]

By the 1890s Dorzhiev had begun to spread the story that Russia was the mythical land of Shambhala to the north; that its Czar might be the one to save Buddhism and that the White Tsar was an emanation of White Tara, raising hopes that he would support Tibet and its religion. Dorzhiev had suggested to the Tibetans that Russia seemed to be embracing Buddhist ideas since their recent advances into Mongolia and might prove a useful balance to British intrigues. In the spring of 1900 Dorzhiev returned to Russia with six other representatives from Thubten Gyatso (born February 12, 1876; died December 17, 1933), the 13th Dalai Lama of Tibet. They travelled through India and met the Tsar at the Livadia Palace in Crimea.[6] "When they returned they brought to Lhasa a supply of Russian arms and ammunition as well—paradoxically enough—as a magnificent set of Russian Episcopal robes as a personal present for the Dalai Lama."[12]

In 1901, Thubten Chökyi Nyima, the Ninth Panchen Lama (1883–1937), was visited by Agvan Dorzhiev. Although Dorzhiev only stayed for two days at Tashilhunpo, he received some secret teachings from the Panchen Lama, as well as readings of the Prayer of Shambhala, written by Lobsang Palden Yeshe, the Sixth (or Third) Panchen Lama, concerning the Buddhist kingdom of Shambhala, which were of great importance to Dorzhiev's developing understanding of the Kalachakra ('Wheel of Time') tantric teachings. Choekyi Nyima also gave Dorzhiev gifts including some golden statues.[13]

British suspicions edit

 
Agvan Dorjiev

By 1903, both Lord Curzon, the Viceroy of India, and Francis Younghusband became wrongly convinced that Russia and Tibet had signed secret treaties threatening the security of British interests in India and they suspected that Dorzhiev was working for the Russian government.[14][15] Compounded by the closed nature of Tibet at the time, the fear of Russia drawing Tibet into the Great Game to control the routes across Asia was a reason for the British expedition to Tibet during 1903–4.

"Obviously," the [Fourteenth] Dalai Lama said, "the Thirteenth Dalai Lama had a keen desire to establish relations with Russia, and I also think he was a little skeptical toward England at first. Then there was Dorjiev. To the English he was a spy, but in reality he was a good scholar and a sincere Buddhist monk who had great devotion to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama."[16]

In early 1904 Dorzhiev convinced the Dalai Lama to flee to Urga in Mongolia, some 2,500 km north of Lhasa, where the Dalai Lama spent over a year giving teachings to the Mongolians.[17]

During the expedition there were rumours that Dorzhiev was in charge of the arsenal at Lhasa and directing military operations from the Gyantse Dzong (fort).[18] British troops captured several Russian-made Berdan rifles at Nagartse Dzong and breechloaders at Chumik Shenko, which heightened their suspicions of Russian involvement.[19][20] These were never substantiated and there is no evidence that Dorzhiev was ever a Tsarist spy, although he had previously acted as a roving ambassador for the Dalai Lama in Russia, trying to gain support in the upper levels of Russian society.[21]

During the summer of 1912, he met the 13th Dalai Lama at Phari Dzong and then accompanied him to the Samding Monastery, before returning to Lhasa after his exile in India.

The 'White Tsars' as incarnations of White Tara edit

Since the days of Catherine the Great (1729–1796), the Romanov rulers had been considered by Russian lamaists as the incarnation of White Tara, a female bodhisattva typically associated with Buddhist tantric practice and considered an emanation of Chenresig (the bodhisattva who embodies the compassion of all Buddhas), and the protectress of the Tibetan people.[22][23] 1913 saw the great celebrations for the 300th anniversary of the House of Romanov. Dorzhiev made speeches thanking the Tsar for his essential support for the Buddhist community in Saint Petersburg. A lama named Ulyanov published a book that same year attempting to prove that the Romanovs were directly descended from Sucandra, a legendary king of Shambhala.[24][citation needed]

The Japanese monk Ekai Kawaguchi travelled in Tibet from July 4, 1900, to June 15, 1902. He reported in his Three Years in Tibet that Dorzhiev "circulated a pamphlet in which he argued that the Russian Tsar was about to fulfil the old Buddhist messianic myth of Shambhala by founding a great Buddhist empire."[24][citation needed] No second source for this story is known.

Vagindra script edit

Dorzhiev created a script for writing the Buryat language, which he called the Vagindra script after the Sanskrit version of his name.[25]

Saint Petersburg Tibetan Temple edit

In 1909 Dorzhiev got permission from the Tsar to build a large and substantial Buddhist datsan or temple in Saint Petersburg.

The Tibet-Mongolia Treaty of 1913 edit

In early 1913, Agvan Dorzhiev and two other Tibetan representatives signed a treaty in Urga, proclaiming mutual recognition and their independence from China. However, Agvan Dorzhiev's authority to sign such a treaty has always been disputed by some authorities. According to Charles Bell, a British diplomat who had maintained a close relationship with the Dalai Lama, the Dalai Lama had told him that he did not authorise Dorzhiev to sign such a treaty with Mongolia.

Some British authors have, based on remarks of a Tibetan diplomat some years later, even disputed the mere existence of the treaty,[26] but scholars of Mongolia generally are very positive it exists. The Mongolian text of the treaty has, for example, been published by the Mongolian Academy of Sciences in 1982.[27] John Snelling says: "Though sometimes doubted, this Tibet-Mongolia Treaty certainly existed. It was signed on 29 December 1912 (OS) [that is, by the Julian Calendar – thus making it 8th January 1913 by the Gregorian Calendar that we use] by Dorzhiev and two Tibetans on behalf of the Dalai Lama, and by two Mongolians for the Jebtsundamba Khutukhtu." He then quotes the full wording of the treaty (in English) from the British Public Records Office: FO [Foreign Office] 371 1609 7144: Sir George Buchanan to Edward Grey, Saint Petersburg, dated February 11, 1913.[28]

Also in 1913, Dorzhiev founded a manba datsan, a medical college, at the monastery of Atsagat. It quickly became an important centre of Tibetan medicine in Buryatia.[29]

After the Russian revolution edit

After the Russian revolution Dorzhiev was arrested and sentenced to death, only to be reprieved due to the intervention of friends in Saint Petersburg. The temple in the city was plundered and his papers destroyed.

As a means of making peace with the dramatically changed politics, Dorzhiev was quick to propose the conversion of monasteries into collective farms. In 1926 the Buddhist monasteries in Buryatia were 'nationalised': "responsibility for the management of the monasteries" was transferred to collectives of laypeople and the clergy was deprived of its power. This led to much hostility, but the monasteries remained active, and the position of the reformist forces was again strengthened.[9]

Dorzhiev tried advocating for Oirat Mongol areas like Tarbagatai, Ili, and Altai to get added to the Outer Mongolian state by the Soviets.[30] Out of concern that China would be provoked, this proposed addition of the Oirat Dzungaria to the new Outer Mongolian state was rejected by the Soviets.[31]

In August 1927, he led and managed a conference of Tibetan doctors in Atsagat. Proposals were made for a central institute to supervise production and standardisation of Tibetan herbal remedies.[32]

Dorzhiev managed to co-exist with the Communists during the 1920s but was again arrested by the NKVD during Joseph Stalin's Great Purge on November 13, 1937, and charged with treason, preparation for an armed uprising, and spying for the Mongolians and Japanese. He died in police custody, though apparently of cardiac arrest, after being transferred from his cell to the prison hospital on January 29, 1938, aged 85.[33][34][citation needed]

He was buried in "a secret traditional burial place in the forest near Chelutai". The location of the cemetery has only been made known in recent years and some estimates say at least 40,000 people were buried there.[35] Dorzhiev was not officially fully rehabilitated, though, until May 14, 1990, when the case was dismissed, 'on grounds of lack of evidence and absence of criminal activity.'[36]

Proposed Gurdjieff connection edit

Rom Landau wrote a book called God is My Adventure dealing with a number of contemporary religious figures and movements, including the Graeco-Armenian mystic George Gurdjieff. In it, he speculates that Gurdjieff, who is known to have spent time in central Asia, and believed to have been engaged in spying, was Agvan Dorzhiev (under the spelling "Aghwan Dordjieff"). The claim has been criticised by some of Gurdjieff's biographers, such as Paul Beekman Taylor and James Moore, who argues that the two men were of different age and appearance.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Russian: Агван Лобсан Доржиев; Buryat: Доржиин Агбан; Standard Tibetan: ངག་དབང་བློ་བཟང་
  2. ^ Also Agvan Dorjiev or Dorjieff and Agvaandorj.

References edit

  1. ^ Samten (1910), p. 357.
  2. ^ Red Star Travel Guide December 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Chö-Yang: The Voice of Tibetan Religion and Culture. Year of Tibet Edition, p. 80. 1991. Gangchen Kyishong, Dharamsala, H.P., India.
  4. ^ Ostrovskaya-Junior, Elena A. "Buddhism in Saint Petersburg." July 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Snelling, John. (1990). The Sacred Mountain: The Complete Guide to Tibet's Mount Kailas. (1983). Revised and Enlarged Edition (1990), p. 232. London and The Hague: East-West Publications. ISBN 0-85692-173-4.
  6. ^ a b Hundley, Helen. (1993). "Tibet's part in the 'great game.' (Agvan Dorjiev)." History Today, Vol. 43 (Oct. 1993), pp. 45–50. Downloaded from: http://ccbbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-EPT/helen.htm[permanent dead link].
  7. ^ French (1994), p. 186.
  8. ^ Mullin, Glenn H. (2001). The Fourteen Dalai Lamas: A Sacred Legacy of Reincarnation", p. 400. Clear Light Publishers, Santa Fe, New Mexico. ISBN 1-57416-092-3.
  9. ^ a b c Saxer (2004), p. 35.
  10. ^ Richardson, Hugh E. (1984) Tibet and its History. Second Edition, p. 81. Revised and Updated, p. 106. Shambhala, Boston & London. ISBN 0-87773-376-7.
  11. ^ French (1994), p. 187.
  12. ^ Chapman, Spencer. (1940). Lhasa: The Holy City, p. 131. Readers Union Ltd., London.
  13. ^ Snelling, John. (1993). Buddhism in Russia: The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev : Lhasa's Emissary to the Tsar, p. 77. Element Books. ISBN 1-85230-332-8.
  14. ^ French (1994), p. 188
  15. ^ Saxer (2004), p. 37
  16. ^ Laird, Thomas (2006). The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama, p. 221. Grove Press, N.Y. ISBN 978-0-8021-1827-1.
  17. ^ French (1994), p. 258.
  18. ^ French (1994), p. 233.
  19. ^ Royal Fusiliers Regimental History, Tower of London
  20. ^ Charles Allen, "The myth of Chumik Shenko", History Today, April 2004 p. 10.
  21. ^ French (1994), p. 241.
  22. ^ Snellgrove, David. (1987). Indo-Tibetan Buddhism: Indian Buddhists & their Tibetan successors, Vol. I, p. 151. Shambhala, Boston. ISBN 0-87773-311-2.
  23. ^ Mayhew, Bradley and Kohn, Michael. Tibet, p. 64. 6th Edition. (2005). Lonely Planet. ISBN 1-74059-523-8.
  24. ^ a b Andreev (1991), p. 216.
  25. ^ Yeshen-Khorlo Dugarova-Montgomery and Robert Montgomery, "The Buriat Alphabet of Agvan Dorzhiev", in: Mongolia in the 20th Century: Landlocked Cosmopolitan ed. Stephen Kotkin and Bruce A. Elleman, Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe, 1999, ISBN 9780765605351, pp. 79–98.
  26. ^ Quoted by Sir Charles Bell, "Tibet and Her Neighbours", Pacific Affairs(Dec 1937), pp. 435–6, a high Tibetan official pointed out years later that there was "no need for a treaty; we would always help each other if we could."
  27. ^ Udo B. Barkmann, Geschichte der Mongolei, Bonn 1999, pp. 380–81.
  28. ^ Snelling, John. (1993). Buddhism in Russia: The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev, Lhasa's Emissary to the Tsar. (1993) Element Inc., pp. 150–151; 292. ISBN 1-85230-332-8
  29. ^ Saxer (2004), p. 50
  30. ^ Andreyev 2014, p. 274.
  31. ^ Andreyev 2014, p. 275.
  32. ^ Saxer (2004), p. 50.
  33. ^ French (1994), pp. 259–260.
  34. ^ Andreev (1991), p. 221.
  35. ^ Andreev (1991), p. 221
  36. ^ Snelling (1993), p. 252.
  37. ^ Taylor, P. B., Inventors of Gurdjieff

Further reading edit

  • Andreyev, Alexandre (1996). "Soviet Russia and Tibet: A Debacle of Secret Diplomacy." The Tibet Journal. Vol. XXI, No. 3. Autumn 1996, pp. 4–34.
  • Andreyev, Alexandre (2014). The Myth of the Masters Revived: The Occult Lives of Nikolai and Elena Roerich. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004270435. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  • Bernstein, Anya (2006). "Pilgrims, Fieldworkers, and Secret Agents: Buryat Buddhologists and Eurasian Imaginary." [1][permanent dead link].
  • Bray, John (1996). Book Review of: Snelling, John. (1993). Buddhism in Russia: The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev : Lhasa's Emissary to the Tsar. Element Books. ISBN 978-1-85230-332-7. The Tibet Journal. Vol. XXI, No. 3. Autumn 1996, pp. 71–73.
  • French, Patrick. Younghusband: The Last Great Imperial Adventurer (1994). Reprint: Flamingo, London. ISBN 978-0-00-637601-9.
  • Kuleshov, Nikolai S. Russia's Tibet File, the unknown pages in the history of Tibet's independence, (first edition 1996), edited by Alexander Berzin and John Bray, LTWA, ISBN 81-86470-05-0.
  • Samten, Jampa. (2010). "Notes on the Thirteenth Dalai Lama's Confidential Letter to the Tsar of Russia." In: The Tibet Journal, Special issue. Autumn 2009 vol XXXIV n. 3-Summer 2010 vol XXXV n. 2. "The Earth Ox Papers", edited by Roberto Vitali, pp. 357–370.
  • Saxer, Martin (2004). Journeys with Tibetan Medicine: How Tibetan Medicine came to the West: The Story of the Badmayev Family. Masters Thesis, University of Zurich.
  • Snelling, John. (1993). Buddhism in Russia: The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev : Lhasa's Emissary to the Tsar. Element Books. ISBN 978-1-85230-332-7.
  • Znamenski, Andrei. (2011). Red Shambhala: Magic, Prophecy, and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia. Quest Books. ISBN 978-0-8356-0891-6.

agvan, dorzhiev, agvan, lobsan, dorzhiev, 1853, january, 1938, russian, born, monk, gelug, school, tibetan, buddhism, sometimes, referred, scholarly, title, tsenyi, khempo, popularly, known, sokpo, tsеnshab, ngawang, lobsang, literally, mongolian, tsenshab, ng. Agvan Lobsan Dorzhiev a b 1853 29 January 1938 was a Russian born monk of the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism sometimes referred by his scholarly title as Tsenyi Khempo He was popularly known as the Sokpo Tsenshab Ngawang Lobsang literally Mongolian Tsenshab Ngavang Lobsang to the Tibetans 1 Tsenyi Khempo Tibetan Buddhist monk c 1900He was a Khory Buryat born in the village of Khara Shibir not far from Ulan Ude east of Lake Baikal 2 He was a study partner and close associate of the 13th Dalai Lama a minister of his government and his diplomatic link with the Russian Empire Among Tibetans he earned a legendary status while raising the British Empire s significant anxiety of Russian presence in Tibet at the final stage of the Great Game He is also remembered for building the Buddhist temple of Saint Petersburg in 1909 and signing the Tibet Mongolia Treaty in 1913 Contents 1 Buddhist studies in Tibet 2 Envoy for the Dalai Lama 3 British suspicions 4 The White Tsars as incarnations of White Tara 5 Vagindra script 6 Saint Petersburg Tibetan Temple 7 The Tibet Mongolia Treaty of 1913 8 After the Russian revolution 9 Proposed Gurdjieff connection 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further readingBuddhist studies in Tibet editHe left home in 1873 at nineteen to study at the Gomang College of the Gelugpa Drepung monastic university near Lhasa the largest monastery in Tibet Having successfully completed the traditional course of religious studies he began the academic Buddhist degree of Geshey Lharampa the highest level of Doctorate of Buddhist Philosophy 3 He continued his studies and in the mid 1880s after 15 years of study he attained the title of a Tsanit Khenpo Tsanid Hambo which roughly translates as Master of Buddhist Philosophy or Professor of Buddhist Metaphysics 4 5 nbsp Agvan Dorzhiev coming out of the Great Palace in Peterhof after his audience with the Tsar June 23 1901 Andrey Terentiev Collection He became one of the 13th Dalai Lama s teachers a debating partner and a spiritual adviser and retained this role until at least the late 1910s He was probably also instrumental in saving the young Dalai Lama s life from the intrigues at the court in Lhasa and over the years they developed a very close and lasting relationship 6 7 One man in particular was to play an important role in building communications between Lhasa and the Russian Czar This was Tsanzhab Ngawang Lobzang a Mongolian monk who had graduated with high honors from the Gomang Departments of Drepung Monastery and who was one of the seven dialectical instructors or Tsanzhabs to the Dalai Lama Popularly known to the Tibetans as Tsennyi Khenpo or Master of Dialectics he became famed to both the British and the Russians by the simpler name of Dorjieff from the Tibetan Dorjey Born in the Buriyat region of the Mongolian territories that had in recent times been acquired by the Czar Dorjieff was therefore a Russian citizen 8 Envoy for the Dalai Lama editIn 1896 the Tsar Nikolai II gave Agvan Dorzhiev a monogrammed watch for the services he had rendered to Badmayev s Russian agents in Lhasa 9 In early 1898 Dorzhiev went to Saint Petersburg to collect subscriptions for his monastic college 10 and became friendly with Prince Esper Ukhtomsky Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the Tsar and orientalist Dorzhiev was presented to the Tsar Dorzhiev then went on to Paris and possibly London before returning to Lhasa 9 11 By the 1890s Dorzhiev had begun to spread the story that Russia was the mythical land of Shambhala to the north that its Czar might be the one to save Buddhism and that the White Tsar was an emanation of White Tara raising hopes that he would support Tibet and its religion Dorzhiev had suggested to the Tibetans that Russia seemed to be embracing Buddhist ideas since their recent advances into Mongolia and might prove a useful balance to British intrigues In the spring of 1900 Dorzhiev returned to Russia with six other representatives from Thubten Gyatso born February 12 1876 died December 17 1933 the 13th Dalai Lama of Tibet They travelled through India and met the Tsar at the Livadia Palace in Crimea 6 When they returned they brought to Lhasa a supply of Russian arms and ammunition as well paradoxically enough as a magnificent set of Russian Episcopal robes as a personal present for the Dalai Lama 12 In 1901 Thubten Chokyi Nyima the Ninth Panchen Lama 1883 1937 was visited by Agvan Dorzhiev Although Dorzhiev only stayed for two days at Tashilhunpo he received some secret teachings from the Panchen Lama as well as readings of the Prayer of Shambhala written by Lobsang Palden Yeshe the Sixth or Third Panchen Lama concerning the Buddhist kingdom of Shambhala which were of great importance to Dorzhiev s developing understanding of the Kalachakra Wheel of Time tantric teachings Choekyi Nyima also gave Dorzhiev gifts including some golden statues 13 British suspicions edit nbsp Agvan DorjievBy 1903 both Lord Curzon the Viceroy of India and Francis Younghusband became wrongly convinced that Russia and Tibet had signed secret treaties threatening the security of British interests in India and they suspected that Dorzhiev was working for the Russian government 14 15 Compounded by the closed nature of Tibet at the time the fear of Russia drawing Tibet into the Great Game to control the routes across Asia was a reason for the British expedition to Tibet during 1903 4 Obviously the Fourteenth Dalai Lama said the Thirteenth Dalai Lama had a keen desire to establish relations with Russia and I also think he was a little skeptical toward England at first Then there was Dorjiev To the English he was a spy but in reality he was a good scholar and a sincere Buddhist monk who had great devotion to the Thirteenth Dalai Lama 16 In early 1904 Dorzhiev convinced the Dalai Lama to flee to Urga in Mongolia some 2 500 km north of Lhasa where the Dalai Lama spent over a year giving teachings to the Mongolians 17 During the expedition there were rumours that Dorzhiev was in charge of the arsenal at Lhasa and directing military operations from the Gyantse Dzong fort 18 British troops captured several Russian made Berdan rifles at Nagartse Dzong and breechloaders at Chumik Shenko which heightened their suspicions of Russian involvement 19 20 These were never substantiated and there is no evidence that Dorzhiev was ever a Tsarist spy although he had previously acted as a roving ambassador for the Dalai Lama in Russia trying to gain support in the upper levels of Russian society 21 During the summer of 1912 he met the 13th Dalai Lama at Phari Dzong and then accompanied him to the Samding Monastery before returning to Lhasa after his exile in India The White Tsars as incarnations of White Tara editSince the days of Catherine the Great 1729 1796 the Romanov rulers had been considered by Russian lamaists as the incarnation of White Tara a female bodhisattva typically associated with Buddhist tantric practice and considered an emanation of Chenresig the bodhisattva who embodies the compassion of all Buddhas and the protectress of the Tibetan people 22 23 1913 saw the great celebrations for the 300th anniversary of the House of Romanov Dorzhiev made speeches thanking the Tsar for his essential support for the Buddhist community in Saint Petersburg A lama named Ulyanov published a book that same year attempting to prove that the Romanovs were directly descended from Sucandra a legendary king of Shambhala 24 citation needed The Japanese monk Ekai Kawaguchi travelled in Tibet from July 4 1900 to June 15 1902 He reported in his Three Years in Tibet that Dorzhiev circulated a pamphlet in which he argued that the Russian Tsar was about to fulfil the old Buddhist messianic myth of Shambhala by founding a great Buddhist empire 24 citation needed No second source for this story is known Vagindra script editDorzhiev created a script for writing the Buryat language which he called the Vagindra script after the Sanskrit version of his name 25 Saint Petersburg Tibetan Temple editMain article Datsan Gunzechoinei In 1909 Dorzhiev got permission from the Tsar to build a large and substantial Buddhist datsan or temple in Saint Petersburg The Tibet Mongolia Treaty of 1913 editMain article Treaty of friendship and alliance between the Government of Mongolia and Tibet In early 1913 Agvan Dorzhiev and two other Tibetan representatives signed a treaty in Urga proclaiming mutual recognition and their independence from China However Agvan Dorzhiev s authority to sign such a treaty has always been disputed by some authorities According to Charles Bell a British diplomat who had maintained a close relationship with the Dalai Lama the Dalai Lama had told him that he did not authorise Dorzhiev to sign such a treaty with Mongolia Some British authors have based on remarks of a Tibetan diplomat some years later even disputed the mere existence of the treaty 26 but scholars of Mongolia generally are very positive it exists The Mongolian text of the treaty has for example been published by the Mongolian Academy of Sciences in 1982 27 John Snelling says Though sometimes doubted this Tibet Mongolia Treaty certainly existed It was signed on 29 December 1912 OS that is by the Julian Calendar thus making it 8th January 1913 by the Gregorian Calendar that we use by Dorzhiev and two Tibetans on behalf of the Dalai Lama and by two Mongolians for the Jebtsundamba Khutukhtu He then quotes the full wording of the treaty in English from the British Public Records Office FO Foreign Office 371 1609 7144 Sir George Buchanan to Edward Grey Saint Petersburg dated February 11 1913 28 Also in 1913 Dorzhiev founded a manba datsan a medical college at the monastery of Atsagat It quickly became an important centre of Tibetan medicine in Buryatia 29 After the Russian revolution editAfter the Russian revolution Dorzhiev was arrested and sentenced to death only to be reprieved due to the intervention of friends in Saint Petersburg The temple in the city was plundered and his papers destroyed As a means of making peace with the dramatically changed politics Dorzhiev was quick to propose the conversion of monasteries into collective farms In 1926 the Buddhist monasteries in Buryatia were nationalised responsibility for the management of the monasteries was transferred to collectives of laypeople and the clergy was deprived of its power This led to much hostility but the monasteries remained active and the position of the reformist forces was again strengthened 9 Dorzhiev tried advocating for Oirat Mongol areas like Tarbagatai Ili and Altai to get added to the Outer Mongolian state by the Soviets 30 Out of concern that China would be provoked this proposed addition of the Oirat Dzungaria to the new Outer Mongolian state was rejected by the Soviets 31 In August 1927 he led and managed a conference of Tibetan doctors in Atsagat Proposals were made for a central institute to supervise production and standardisation of Tibetan herbal remedies 32 Dorzhiev managed to co exist with the Communists during the 1920s but was again arrested by the NKVD during Joseph Stalin s Great Purge on November 13 1937 and charged with treason preparation for an armed uprising and spying for the Mongolians and Japanese He died in police custody though apparently of cardiac arrest after being transferred from his cell to the prison hospital on January 29 1938 aged 85 33 34 citation needed He was buried in a secret traditional burial place in the forest near Chelutai The location of the cemetery has only been made known in recent years and some estimates say at least 40 000 people were buried there 35 Dorzhiev was not officially fully rehabilitated though until May 14 1990 when the case was dismissed on grounds of lack of evidence and absence of criminal activity 36 Proposed Gurdjieff connection editRom Landau wrote a book called God is My Adventure dealing with a number of contemporary religious figures and movements including the Graeco Armenian mystic George Gurdjieff In it he speculates that Gurdjieff who is known to have spent time in central Asia and believed to have been engaged in spying was Agvan Dorzhiev under the spelling Aghwan Dordjieff The claim has been criticised by some of Gurdjieff s biographers such as Paul Beekman Taylor and James Moore who argues that the two men were of different age and appearance 37 See also editBuddhism in Buryatia Buddhism in RussiaNotes edit Russian Agvan Lobsan Dorzhiev Buryat Dorzhiin Agban Standard Tibetan ངག དབང བ བཟང Also Agvan Dorjiev or Dorjieff and Agvaandorj References edit Samten 1910 p 357 Red Star Travel Guide Archived December 6 2007 at the Wayback Machine Cho Yang The Voice of Tibetan Religion and Culture Year of Tibet Edition p 80 1991 Gangchen Kyishong Dharamsala H P India Ostrovskaya Junior Elena A Buddhism in Saint Petersburg Archived July 17 2007 at the Wayback Machine Snelling John 1990 The Sacred Mountain The Complete Guide to Tibet s Mount Kailas 1983 Revised and Enlarged Edition 1990 p 232 London and The Hague East West Publications ISBN 0 85692 173 4 a b Hundley Helen 1993 Tibet s part in the great game Agvan Dorjiev History Today Vol 43 Oct 1993 pp 45 50 Downloaded from http ccbbs ntu edu tw FULLTEXT JR EPT helen htm permanent dead link French 1994 p 186 Mullin Glenn H 2001 The Fourteen Dalai Lamas A Sacred Legacy of Reincarnation p 400 Clear Light Publishers Santa Fe New Mexico ISBN 1 57416 092 3 a b c Saxer 2004 p 35 Richardson Hugh E 1984 Tibet and its History Second Edition p 81 Revised and Updated p 106 Shambhala Boston amp London ISBN 0 87773 376 7 French 1994 p 187 Chapman Spencer 1940 Lhasa The Holy City p 131 Readers Union Ltd London Snelling John 1993 Buddhism in Russia The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev Lhasa s Emissary to the Tsar p 77 Element Books ISBN 1 85230 332 8 French 1994 p 188 Saxer 2004 p 37 Laird Thomas 2006 The Story of Tibet Conversations with the Dalai Lama p 221 Grove Press N Y ISBN 978 0 8021 1827 1 French 1994 p 258 French 1994 p 233 Royal Fusiliers Regimental History Tower of London Charles Allen The myth of Chumik Shenko History Today April 2004 p 10 French 1994 p 241 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists amp their Tibetan successors Vol I p 151 Shambhala Boston ISBN 0 87773 311 2 Mayhew Bradley and Kohn Michael Tibet p 64 6th Edition 2005 Lonely Planet ISBN 1 74059 523 8 a b Andreev 1991 p 216 Yeshen Khorlo Dugarova Montgomery and Robert Montgomery The Buriat Alphabet of Agvan Dorzhiev in Mongolia in the 20th Century Landlocked Cosmopolitan ed Stephen Kotkin and Bruce A Elleman Armonk New York M E Sharpe 1999 ISBN 9780765605351 pp 79 98 Quoted by Sir Charles Bell Tibet and Her Neighbours Pacific Affairs Dec 1937 pp 435 6 a high Tibetan official pointed out years later that there was no need for a treaty we would always help each other if we could Udo B Barkmann Geschichte der Mongolei Bonn 1999 pp 380 81 Snelling John 1993 Buddhism in Russia The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev Lhasa s Emissary to the Tsar 1993 Element Inc pp 150 151 292 ISBN 1 85230 332 8 Saxer 2004 p 50 Andreyev 2014 p 274 Andreyev 2014 p 275 Saxer 2004 p 50 French 1994 pp 259 260 Andreev 1991 p 221 Andreev 1991 p 221 Snelling 1993 p 252 Taylor P B Inventors of GurdjieffFurther reading editAndreyev Alexandre 1996 Soviet Russia and Tibet A Debacle of Secret Diplomacy The Tibet Journal Vol XXI No 3 Autumn 1996 pp 4 34 Andreyev Alexandre 2014 The Myth of the Masters Revived The Occult Lives of Nikolai and Elena Roerich BRILL ISBN 978 9004270435 Retrieved April 24 2014 Bernstein Anya 2006 Pilgrims Fieldworkers and Secret Agents Buryat Buddhologists and Eurasian Imaginary 1 permanent dead link Bray John 1996 Book Review of Snelling John 1993 Buddhism in Russia The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev Lhasa s Emissary to the Tsar Element Books ISBN 978 1 85230 332 7 The Tibet Journal Vol XXI No 3 Autumn 1996 pp 71 73 French Patrick Younghusband The Last Great Imperial Adventurer 1994 Reprint Flamingo London ISBN 978 0 00 637601 9 Kuleshov Nikolai S Russia s Tibet File the unknown pages in the history of Tibet s independence first edition 1996 edited by Alexander Berzin and John Bray LTWA ISBN 81 86470 05 0 Samten Jampa 2010 Notes on the Thirteenth Dalai Lama s Confidential Letter to the Tsar of Russia In The Tibet Journal Special issue Autumn 2009 vol XXXIV n 3 Summer 2010 vol XXXV n 2 The Earth Ox Papers edited by Roberto Vitali pp 357 370 Saxer Martin 2004 Journeys with Tibetan Medicine How Tibetan Medicine came to the West The Story of the Badmayev Family Masters Thesis University of Zurich Snelling John 1993 Buddhism in Russia The Story of Agvan Dorzhiev Lhasa s Emissary to the Tsar Element Books ISBN 978 1 85230 332 7 Znamenski Andrei 2011 Red Shambhala Magic Prophecy and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia Quest Books ISBN 978 0 8356 0891 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Agvan Dorzhiev amp oldid 1218403429, 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