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Güshi Khan

Güshi Khan (1582 – 14 January 1655; Chinese: 固始汗) was a Khoshut prince and founder of the Khoshut Khanate, who supplanted the Tumed[1] descendants of Altan Khan as the main benefactor of the Dalai Lama and the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism. In 1637, Güshi Khan defeated a rival Mongol prince Choghtu Khong Tayiji, a Kagyu follower, near Qinghai Lake and established his khanate in Tibet over the next years. His military assistance to the Gelug school enabled the 5th Dalai Lama to establish political control over Tibet.

Güshi Khan, founder of the Khoshut Khanate

Name edit

It is also spelt Gushri Khan[2][3] and Gushihan.[4] In other languages it is:

Early years edit

Güshi Khan was born Torobaikhu, the third son of Akhai Khatun and Khanai Noyan Khonggor, chief of the Khoshuts. He was descended from a younger brother of Genghis Khan, Qasar. At the age of 12, Torobaikhu had already won renown in battle against the Turkistanis.[5] In 1625 a conflict erupted between the Khoshot chief Chöükür and his uterine brother Baibaghas over inheritance issues. Baibaghas was killed in the fight. However, his younger brothers Güshi and Köndölön Ubashi took up the fight and pursued Chöükür from the Ishim River to the Tobol River, attacking and killing his tribal followers in 1630. The infighting among the Oirats inspired one sub-group, the Torgut Oirat, to migrate westwards and eventually settle by the Volga River. Now Güshi succeeded to the position of Baibaghas as chief of the Khoshut.[6]

Intervention on behalf of the Dalai Lama edit

In 1615, when the Oirats were still under the suzerainty of the Khalkha leader Ubasi Khong Tayiji,[7] the elite had largely converted to Tibetan Buddhism. However, the period saw a rise in internal religious rivalries within Tibet, in particular between the Gelug and Karma Kagyu schools. The main Gelug religious figure church was the Dalai Lama while the Karma Kagyu was supported by the dynasty of the Tsangpa based in Samdrubtse (modern Shigatse). They, in turn, found support from groups of Khalkhas and Chahars.

Sonam Rapten was the chief attendant during the youth of the 5th Dalai Lama (1617-1682). He drew up plans to end the persecution of the Gelug and unify Tibet with the help of Güshi. The Gelug monasteries appealed for help against the Karmapa and Bon partisans such as the Khalkha prince Choghtu Khong Tayiji, who had recently settled in Amdo.[8] This was a very bold move since the Mongols had a reputation for ruthlessness against military foes and civilians alike.[9] Güshi was known for his devotion to the Gelugpa and responded positively. He was joined in a pro-Gelugpa league by the other Oirat princes: his nephews Uchirtu Sechen and Ablai Tayiji in the Zaysan and Ertis areas; furthermore Erdeni Batur, whose Dzungar and Dörbet Oirat subjects lived by the Ulungur, Irtysh and Emil Rivers, and even the Torghut chief Kho Orluk, who was in the process of subduing areas to the north of the Aral and Caspian Seas.[10] As it turned out, it would nevertheless take several years to install the "Great Fifth" as the head of a unified Tibetan state.

In the company of the Dzungar prince Erdeni Batur, Güshi marched into Qinghai with 10,000 Oirat troops in 1636. In the next year, he confronted the Khalkha forces of Choghtu Khung Tayiji, which were 30,000 strong and were opposed to the Gelugpa sect. The contest took place in the Kokonor Gorge and is known as the Battle of the Bloody Hill. The Choghtu troops were defeated and scattered, and the survivors had to surrender. Choghtu himself hid in a marmot hole but was found and killed on the spot.[11] In that way the Khalkhas were suppressed in Tibet a short time after they were subjugated in Mongolia by the invading Manchu people.[12]

Güshi proceeded to Ü-Tsang in 1638 as a pilgrim. There he received religious instructions from the 5th Dalai Lama. During a ceremony in Lhasa, he was placed on a throne and proclaimed "Holder of the Doctrine Chogyal" (Wylie: bstan 'dzin chos kyi rgyal po, THL: Tendzin Chö kyi Gyelpo, Mongolian: Данзан Чойгии Жалбуу). By this time he was also known by the title of khagan, adopted in defiance of the Borjigid (the direct descendants of Genghis Khan).[13]

Güshi invited the Dalai Lama to visit his territories, but the Great Fifth was unable to do so due to the unstable circumstances in Ü-Tsang. He did, however, send a permanent representative to the Khoshut to maintain good relations. Güshi Khan returned to his newly conquered realm in Qinghai, where the Khoshuts resolved to settle down.[14]

Invasion in Kham edit

New trouble soon followed. The king of Beri in Kham, Donyo Dorje, was a practitioner of the Bön religion and enemy of the Gelugpa. He allied with the Tsangpa ruler Karma Tenkyong and sent a message, suggesting that the troops of Kham and Tsang would attack the Gelugpa stronghold in Ü in concert. The aim was to eradicate the Gelugpa and allow freedom of worship for the other sects. The message was intercepted and forwarded to Güshi Khan, who used it as a pretext for a new invasion. The Dalai Lama is said to have been opposed to creating more bloodshed, but Sonam Rapten went behind his back and encouraged Güshi to destroy the Beri ruler.[15] The campaign was prepared in 1639, assisted by some Tibetans. In June of that year, Güshi moved against Beri and subjugated most of Donyo Dorje's subjects. On 6 January 1641, according to the chronicles of the 5th Dalai Lama, "the ruler of Beri and others fled to a well-defended frontier, but as by the sharp iron of a person's virtue, the phenomenon of magnet and iron-filings takes place, so they were all captured and placed in a large prison-yard. All the root causes of unhappiness were removed from their places. The lamas and rulers of the Sakyapa, Gelugpa, Karmapa, Drukpa and Taklungpa were brought out of the prison dungeons where they had been placed and sent back to their own. The people up to the king of Jang paid taxes in money and earnestly sought to bow to him respectfully."[16] The Beri ruler was executed and all the Dalai Lama's enemies in Kham were crushed.

Conquest of Central Tibet edit

 
Statues of the Fifth Dalai Lama and (apparently) Güshi Khan seen by Johann Grueber in the lobby of the Dalai Lama's palace in 1661

Having subdued Kham entirely by 1641, Güshi proceeded to invade the domain of Karma Tenkyong in Tsang. His reputation as an invincible warrior rendered resistance weak. Meanwhile, Sonam Rapten was busy taking over districts in Ü which paid allegiance to the Tsangpa. The Khoshut troops besieged Shigatse, the stronghold of Karma Tenkyong. An eyewitness described the horrors of the siege: "[the place] had turned into a big cremation ground covered with heaps of corpses deprived of their lives as one had given a flock of sheep to a pack of wolves".[17] All attempts of mediation failed, and the monastic settlement and the suburbs fell on the 8th day of the 1st month of the Water-Horse year 1642. This was followed by the surrender of the castle on the 25th day of the 2nd month (25 March). Karma Tenkyong's life was spared for the moment and he was imprisoned in Neu, south-east of Lhasa. As for Güshi Khan, according to the 5th Dalai Lama's chronicles, "When the crystal lord [the moon] of the month of Chaitra was full [14 April 1642], from that day of the first season of the year according to the Kalachakra, he became king of the three parts of Tibet and set up the white umbrella of his laws on the peak of the world".[18] On the 5th day of the 4th month in 1642, the Dalai Lama was led in state to the palace of Shigatse and seated on the throne of the deposed king. With this act, he replaced the rival dominant school of the Karmapas. Güshi Khan then declared that he bestowed the supreme authority of Tibet on Dalai Lama, from Tachienlu in the east to the Ladakh border in the west.[19] The 5th Dalai Lama in his turn confirmed the position of Güshi Khan as the Dharma king (or chogyal) of Tibet.[20]

The upheavals of the Mongol conquest led to famine and hardship. There was moreover still opposition against the Güshi Khan-Dalai Lama ruling constellation. The Karmapa hierarch Chöying Dorje was requested by the Dalai Lama to sign a formal agreement that he would not cause any further trouble. The Karmapa refused, arguing that he had not fomented trouble in the past. Mongol and Tibetan soldiers then surrounded his large movable encampment (gar). Chöying Dorje managed to sneak out at the last minute, but the troops broke in, ravaged the camp and killed anyone who resisted. The Karmapa hierarch fled to the mountains in the south. The surviving supporters of the Tsangpa and Karma Kagyü took up resistance in the Kongpo region in the southeast. The incensed Güshi Khan gave orders to execute his royal prisoner Karma Tenkyong, while his army ravaged Kongpo and killed 7,000 rebels. The remainder gave up. Many Karma Kagyü monasteries in the country were forcibly converted to Gelugpa, while Nyingma monks who had performed Mongol-repelling exorcism were imprisoned.[21]

After unification edit

The new political system renewed the old concept of chö-yön (patron and priest relationship) which had roots back to the relation between the Sakya lamas and the Mongol great khans during the Yuan dynasty.[22] While the Dalai Lama was the highest figure in spiritual authority, the Khoshut ruler maintained control over the armed forces; however, he did not significantly interfere in the affairs of Central Tibet. He tended to spend the summers in the pastureland of Dam by the Tengri-nor Lake, some 80 miles to the north of Lhasa which he visited in wintertime. The bulk of the semi-nomadic Khoshots stayed with their herds around the Tsongön Lake (Qinghai Lake). Sonam Rapten acted as regent (desi) and was formally appointed by the Khoshut king.[23] Shortly after unification, a conflict broke out with Bhutan, recently unified under the Tibetan lama Ngawang Namgyal. Güshi Khan and the regent sent several hundred Mongol and Tibetan troops into Bhutan in 1644. However, the Mongol warriors were unused to the climate and the expedition suffered a major defeat. This broke some of the Mongol reputation for invincibility. A peace was concluded in 1646 but was soon violated. Fresh fighting in the following year led to another defeat for the Dalai Lama state.[24]

Gushi Khan died in January 1655, leaving ten sons:

  • Dayan Khan
  • Bonpo Sechen Daiching
  • Dalantai
  • Bayan Abugai
  • Elduchi
  • Dorje Dalai Batur
  • Hurimashi
  • Sanggaerzha Yiledeng
  • Gunbu Chahun
  • Tashi Batur

Furthermore, Güshi's daughter Amin Dara married Erdeni Batur, the founder of the Dzungar Khanate. Güshi's eldest son Dayan succeeded him in his dignity as Dharma king of Tibet and protector of the faith. However, eight sons with their tribal followers, led by Dorje Dalai Batur, settled in the strategically important Tsongön Lake region in Amdo after 1648.[25] They were known as the Eight Khoshuts and quarreled constantly over territory. The 5th Dalai Lama sent several governors in 1656 and 1659. The Mongols were gradually Tibetanised and played an important role in extending the Gelug school's influence in Amdo.[26] The system with a Khoshut protector ruler over Tibet lasted for four generations, up to 1717.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The New Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th Edition (1977), Vol. 18, p. 380h.
  2. ^ Powers, John (2016). The Buddha party : how the people's Republic of China works to define and control Tibetan Buddhism. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. Appendix B, page 6. ISBN 9780199358151. OCLC 947145370.
  3. ^ "gu shrI rgyal po - The Treasury of Lives: A Biographical Encyclopedia of Tibet, Inner Asia and the Himalayan Region". The Treasury of Lives. Retrieved 1 March 2018. QUOTE: "This person is mentioned in 4 biographies. In 1639, as Gushri Khan (1582-1654), the ruler of the Khoshut Mongol, attacked the Bon King of Beri, Donyo Dorje (be ri rgyal po don yod rdo rje, d.1640) on his way to destroy the King of Tsang, Karma Tenkyong Wangpo (karma bstan skyong dbang po, 1606-1642), and conquer central Tibet ..."
  4. ^ "By the end of the Ming dynasty and the beginning of the Qing, the Emperor sent Gushi Han [Gushri Khan] to Tibet and overthrew Zangbajiebao and restored the throne to the Fifth Dalai Lama. http://www.columbia.edu/itc/ealac/barnett/pdfs/link2b-ngapo.pdf
  5. ^ Atwood, Christopher P. (2004). Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. New York: Facts on File, p.211
  6. ^ Haines, R Spencer (2018). "Charismatic Authority in Context: An Explanation of Guushi Khan's Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century". Mongolica: An International Journal of Mongolian Studies. 52. International Association of Mongolists: 24–31.
  7. ^ Known under the title Altan Khan, but not to be confused with the more famous Altan Khan of the Tümed (d. 1583).
  8. ^ Grousset, René. (1970). The Empire of the Steppes. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, p. 523.
  9. ^ Schaik, Sam Van. (2011). Tibet: A history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 120.
  10. ^ Grousset, René. (1970). The Empire of the Steppes. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, p. 523.
  11. ^ Shakabpa, Tsepon W.D. (1967). Tibet: A political history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 104.
  12. ^ Laird, Thomas. (2006). The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama. Grove Press, New York, pp. 158-61. ISBN 978-0-8021-1827-1.
  13. ^ Adle, Chahryar, and Habib, Irfan. (2003). History of civilizations of Central Asia, Volume V. Paris: Unesco, p. 146.
  14. ^ Shakabpa, Tsepon W.D. (1967). Tibet: A political history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 105.
  15. ^ Shakabpa, Tsepon W.D. (1967). Tibet: A political history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 105-6.
  16. ^ Fifth Dalai Lama (1995) A history of Tibet. Bloomington: Indiana University, pp. 195-6.
  17. ^ Olaf Czaja (2013). Medieval rule in Tibet, Wien: ÖAW, p. 325.
  18. ^ Fifth Dalai Lama (1995) A history of Tibet. Bloomington: Indiana University, pp. 197.
  19. ^ Shakabpa, Tsepon W.D. (1967). Tibet: A political history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 111.
  20. ^ Laird, Thomas. (2006). The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama, pp. 158-161. Grove Press, New York. ISBN 978-0-8021-1827-1.
  21. ^ Schaik, Sam Van. (2011). Tibet: A history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 122.
  22. ^ Seyfort Ruegg, D. (2003), 'Mchod yon, yon mchod and mchod gnas/yon gnas: On the historiography and semantics of a Tibetan religio-social and religio-political concept', in McKay, Alex (ed.), The history of Tibet, Vol. II. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 362-72.
  23. ^ Haines, R Spencer (2018). "Charismatic Authority in Context: An Explanation of Guushi Khan's Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century". Mongolica: An International Journal of Mongolian Studies. 52. International Association of Mongolists: 24–31.
  24. ^ Shakabpa, Tsepon W.D. (1967). Tibet: A political history. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, p. 112-3.
  25. ^ Zahiruddin Ahmad, Sino-Tibetan relations in the seventeenth century. Rome 1970, p. 66-7.
  26. ^ Karmay, Samten C. (2005). "The Great Fifth", p. 2. Downloaded as a pdf file on 16 December 2007 from: [1] 15 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

    Further references edit

    • Haines, R Spencer (2018). "Charismatic Authority in Context: An Explanation of Guushi Khan's Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century". Mongolica: An International Journal of Mongolian Studies. 52. International Association of Mongolists: 24–31.
    • Matthew Kapstein, The Tibetans. Oxford: Blackwell 2006.
    • Tsepon W. D. Shakabpa, One hundred thousand moons, Vols. I-II. Leiden: Brill 2010.
    • Wang Furen and Suo Wenqing, Highlights of Tibetan history. Beijing: New World Press 1984.
    • Ya Hanzhang, Biographies of the Tibetan Spiritual Leaders Panchen Erdenis. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press 1994.
    Preceded by Khan of the Khoshut Khanate
    Protector-ruler of Tibet

    1642–1655
    Succeeded by

    güshi, khan, 1582, january, 1655, chinese, 固始汗, khoshut, prince, founder, khoshut, khanate, supplanted, tumed, descendants, altan, khan, main, benefactor, dalai, lama, gelug, school, tibetan, buddhism, 1637, defeated, rival, mongol, prince, choghtu, khong, tay. Gushi Khan 1582 14 January 1655 Chinese 固始汗 was a Khoshut prince and founder of the Khoshut Khanate who supplanted the Tumed 1 descendants of Altan Khan as the main benefactor of the Dalai Lama and the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism In 1637 Gushi Khan defeated a rival Mongol prince Choghtu Khong Tayiji a Kagyu follower near Qinghai Lake and established his khanate in Tibet over the next years His military assistance to the Gelug school enabled the 5th Dalai Lama to establish political control over Tibet Gushi Khan founder of the Khoshut Khanate Contents 1 Name 2 Early years 3 Intervention on behalf of the Dalai Lama 4 Invasion in Kham 5 Conquest of Central Tibet 6 After unification 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 10 Further referencesName editIt is also spelt Gushri Khan 2 3 and Gushihan 4 In other languages it is Chinese 固始汗 Mongolian ᠭᠦᠦᠱᠢ ᠬᠠᠭᠠᠨ Gүsh haan Standard Tibetan ག ཤ བས ན འཛ ནEarly years editGushi Khan was born Torobaikhu the third son of Akhai Khatun and Khanai Noyan Khonggor chief of the Khoshuts He was descended from a younger brother of Genghis Khan Qasar At the age of 12 Torobaikhu had already won renown in battle against the Turkistanis 5 In 1625 a conflict erupted between the Khoshot chief Choukur and his uterine brother Baibaghas over inheritance issues Baibaghas was killed in the fight However his younger brothers Gushi and Kondolon Ubashi took up the fight and pursued Choukur from the Ishim River to the Tobol River attacking and killing his tribal followers in 1630 The infighting among the Oirats inspired one sub group the Torgut Oirat to migrate westwards and eventually settle by the Volga River Now Gushi succeeded to the position of Baibaghas as chief of the Khoshut 6 Intervention on behalf of the Dalai Lama editIn 1615 when the Oirats were still under the suzerainty of the Khalkha leader Ubasi Khong Tayiji 7 the elite had largely converted to Tibetan Buddhism However the period saw a rise in internal religious rivalries within Tibet in particular between the Gelug and Karma Kagyu schools The main Gelug religious figure church was the Dalai Lama while the Karma Kagyu was supported by the dynasty of the Tsangpa based in Samdrubtse modern Shigatse They in turn found support from groups of Khalkhas and Chahars Sonam Rapten was the chief attendant during the youth of the 5th Dalai Lama 1617 1682 He drew up plans to end the persecution of the Gelug and unify Tibet with the help of Gushi The Gelug monasteries appealed for help against the Karmapa and Bon partisans such as the Khalkha prince Choghtu Khong Tayiji who had recently settled in Amdo 8 This was a very bold move since the Mongols had a reputation for ruthlessness against military foes and civilians alike 9 Gushi was known for his devotion to the Gelugpa and responded positively He was joined in a pro Gelugpa league by the other Oirat princes his nephews Uchirtu Sechen and Ablai Tayiji in the Zaysan and Ertis areas furthermore Erdeni Batur whose Dzungar and Dorbet Oirat subjects lived by the Ulungur Irtysh and Emil Rivers and even the Torghut chief Kho Orluk who was in the process of subduing areas to the north of the Aral and Caspian Seas 10 As it turned out it would nevertheless take several years to install the Great Fifth as the head of a unified Tibetan state In the company of the Dzungar prince Erdeni Batur Gushi marched into Qinghai with 10 000 Oirat troops in 1636 In the next year he confronted the Khalkha forces of Choghtu Khung Tayiji which were 30 000 strong and were opposed to the Gelugpa sect The contest took place in the Kokonor Gorge and is known as the Battle of the Bloody Hill The Choghtu troops were defeated and scattered and the survivors had to surrender Choghtu himself hid in a marmot hole but was found and killed on the spot 11 In that way the Khalkhas were suppressed in Tibet a short time after they were subjugated in Mongolia by the invading Manchu people 12 Gushi proceeded to U Tsang in 1638 as a pilgrim There he received religious instructions from the 5th Dalai Lama During a ceremony in Lhasa he was placed on a throne and proclaimed Holder of the Doctrine Chogyal Wylie bstan dzin chos kyi rgyal po THL Tendzin Cho kyi Gyelpo Mongolian Danzan Chojgii Zhalbuu By this time he was also known by the title of khagan adopted in defiance of the Borjigid the direct descendants of Genghis Khan 13 Gushi invited the Dalai Lama to visit his territories but the Great Fifth was unable to do so due to the unstable circumstances in U Tsang He did however send a permanent representative to the Khoshut to maintain good relations Gushi Khan returned to his newly conquered realm in Qinghai where the Khoshuts resolved to settle down 14 Invasion in Kham editNew trouble soon followed The king of Beri in Kham Donyo Dorje was a practitioner of the Bon religion and enemy of the Gelugpa He allied with the Tsangpa ruler Karma Tenkyong and sent a message suggesting that the troops of Kham and Tsang would attack the Gelugpa stronghold in U in concert The aim was to eradicate the Gelugpa and allow freedom of worship for the other sects The message was intercepted and forwarded to Gushi Khan who used it as a pretext for a new invasion The Dalai Lama is said to have been opposed to creating more bloodshed but Sonam Rapten went behind his back and encouraged Gushi to destroy the Beri ruler 15 The campaign was prepared in 1639 assisted by some Tibetans In June of that year Gushi moved against Beri and subjugated most of Donyo Dorje s subjects On 6 January 1641 according to the chronicles of the 5th Dalai Lama the ruler of Beri and others fled to a well defended frontier but as by the sharp iron of a person s virtue the phenomenon of magnet and iron filings takes place so they were all captured and placed in a large prison yard All the root causes of unhappiness were removed from their places The lamas and rulers of the Sakyapa Gelugpa Karmapa Drukpa and Taklungpa were brought out of the prison dungeons where they had been placed and sent back to their own The people up to the king of Jang paid taxes in money and earnestly sought to bow to him respectfully 16 The Beri ruler was executed and all the Dalai Lama s enemies in Kham were crushed Conquest of Central Tibet edit nbsp Statues of the Fifth Dalai Lama and apparently Gushi Khan seen by Johann Grueber in the lobby of the Dalai Lama s palace in 1661 Having subdued Kham entirely by 1641 Gushi proceeded to invade the domain of Karma Tenkyong in Tsang His reputation as an invincible warrior rendered resistance weak Meanwhile Sonam Rapten was busy taking over districts in U which paid allegiance to the Tsangpa The Khoshut troops besieged Shigatse the stronghold of Karma Tenkyong An eyewitness described the horrors of the siege the place had turned into a big cremation ground covered with heaps of corpses deprived of their lives as one had given a flock of sheep to a pack of wolves 17 All attempts of mediation failed and the monastic settlement and the suburbs fell on the 8th day of the 1st month of the Water Horse year 1642 This was followed by the surrender of the castle on the 25th day of the 2nd month 25 March Karma Tenkyong s life was spared for the moment and he was imprisoned in Neu south east of Lhasa As for Gushi Khan according to the 5th Dalai Lama s chronicles When the crystal lord the moon of the month of Chaitra was full 14 April 1642 from that day of the first season of the year according to the Kalachakra he became king of the three parts of Tibet and set up the white umbrella of his laws on the peak of the world 18 On the 5th day of the 4th month in 1642 the Dalai Lama was led in state to the palace of Shigatse and seated on the throne of the deposed king With this act he replaced the rival dominant school of the Karmapas Gushi Khan then declared that he bestowed the supreme authority of Tibet on Dalai Lama from Tachienlu in the east to the Ladakh border in the west 19 The 5th Dalai Lama in his turn confirmed the position of Gushi Khan as the Dharma king or chogyal of Tibet 20 The upheavals of the Mongol conquest led to famine and hardship There was moreover still opposition against the Gushi Khan Dalai Lama ruling constellation The Karmapa hierarch Choying Dorje was requested by the Dalai Lama to sign a formal agreement that he would not cause any further trouble The Karmapa refused arguing that he had not fomented trouble in the past Mongol and Tibetan soldiers then surrounded his large movable encampment gar Choying Dorje managed to sneak out at the last minute but the troops broke in ravaged the camp and killed anyone who resisted The Karmapa hierarch fled to the mountains in the south The surviving supporters of the Tsangpa and Karma Kagyu took up resistance in the Kongpo region in the southeast The incensed Gushi Khan gave orders to execute his royal prisoner Karma Tenkyong while his army ravaged Kongpo and killed 7 000 rebels The remainder gave up Many Karma Kagyu monasteries in the country were forcibly converted to Gelugpa while Nyingma monks who had performed Mongol repelling exorcism were imprisoned 21 After unification editThe new political system renewed the old concept of cho yon patron and priest relationship which had roots back to the relation between the Sakya lamas and the Mongol great khans during the Yuan dynasty 22 While the Dalai Lama was the highest figure in spiritual authority the Khoshut ruler maintained control over the armed forces however he did not significantly interfere in the affairs of Central Tibet He tended to spend the summers in the pastureland of Dam by the Tengri nor Lake some 80 miles to the north of Lhasa which he visited in wintertime The bulk of the semi nomadic Khoshots stayed with their herds around the Tsongon Lake Qinghai Lake Sonam Rapten acted as regent desi and was formally appointed by the Khoshut king 23 Shortly after unification a conflict broke out with Bhutan recently unified under the Tibetan lama Ngawang Namgyal Gushi Khan and the regent sent several hundred Mongol and Tibetan troops into Bhutan in 1644 However the Mongol warriors were unused to the climate and the expedition suffered a major defeat This broke some of the Mongol reputation for invincibility A peace was concluded in 1646 but was soon violated Fresh fighting in the following year led to another defeat for the Dalai Lama state 24 Gushi Khan died in January 1655 leaving ten sons Dayan Khan Bonpo Sechen Daiching Dalantai Bayan Abugai Elduchi Dorje Dalai Batur Hurimashi Sanggaerzha Yiledeng Gunbu Chahun Tashi Batur Furthermore Gushi s daughter Amin Dara married Erdeni Batur the founder of the Dzungar Khanate Gushi s eldest son Dayan succeeded him in his dignity as Dharma king of Tibet and protector of the faith However eight sons with their tribal followers led by Dorje Dalai Batur settled in the strategically important Tsongon Lake region in Amdo after 1648 25 They were known as the Eight Khoshuts and quarreled constantly over territory The 5th Dalai Lama sent several governors in 1656 and 1659 The Mongols were gradually Tibetanised and played an important role in extending the Gelug school s influence in Amdo 26 The system with a Khoshut protector ruler over Tibet lasted for four generations up to 1717 See also editHistory of Tibet Mongol conquest of Tibet Patron and priest relationshipReferences edit The New Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th Edition 1977 Vol 18 p 380h Powers John 2016 The Buddha party how the people s Republic of China works to define and control Tibetan Buddhism New York Oxford University Press pp Appendix B page 6 ISBN 9780199358151 OCLC 947145370 gu shrI rgyal po The Treasury of Lives A Biographical Encyclopedia of Tibet Inner Asia and the Himalayan Region The Treasury of Lives Retrieved 1 March 2018 QUOTE This person is mentioned in 4 biographies In 1639 as Gushri Khan 1582 1654 the ruler of the Khoshut Mongol attacked the Bon King of Beri Donyo Dorje be ri rgyal po don yod rdo rje d 1640 on his way to destroy the King of Tsang Karma Tenkyong Wangpo karma bstan skyong dbang po 1606 1642 and conquer central Tibet By the end of the Ming dynasty and the beginning of the Qing the Emperor sent Gushi Han Gushri Khan to Tibet and overthrew Zangbajiebao and restored the throne to the Fifth Dalai Lama http www columbia edu itc ealac barnett pdfs link2b ngapo pdf Atwood Christopher P 2004 Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire New York Facts on File p 211 Haines R Spencer 2018 Charismatic Authority in Context An Explanation of Guushi Khan s Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century Mongolica An International Journal of Mongolian Studies 52 International Association of Mongolists 24 31 Known under the title Altan Khan but not to be confused with the more famous Altan Khan of the Tumed d 1583 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes New Brunswick Rutgers University Press p 523 Schaik Sam Van 2011 Tibet A history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 120 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes New Brunswick Rutgers University Press p 523 Shakabpa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A political history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 104 Laird Thomas 2006 The Story of Tibet Conversations with the Dalai Lama Grove Press New York pp 158 61 ISBN 978 0 8021 1827 1 Adle Chahryar and Habib Irfan 2003 History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume V Paris Unesco p 146 Shakabpa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A political history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 105 Shakabpa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A political history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 105 6 Fifth Dalai Lama 1995 A history of Tibet Bloomington Indiana University pp 195 6 Olaf Czaja 2013 Medieval rule in Tibet Wien OAW p 325 Fifth Dalai Lama 1995 A history of Tibet Bloomington Indiana University pp 197 Shakabpa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A political history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 111 Laird Thomas 2006 The Story of Tibet Conversations with the Dalai Lama pp 158 161 Grove Press New York ISBN 978 0 8021 1827 1 Schaik Sam Van 2011 Tibet A history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 122 Seyfort Ruegg D 2003 Mchod yon yon mchod and mchod gnas yon gnas On the historiography and semantics of a Tibetan religio social and religio political concept in McKay Alex ed The history of Tibet Vol II Abingdon Routledge pp 362 72 Haines R Spencer 2018 Charismatic Authority in Context An Explanation of Guushi Khan s Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century Mongolica An International Journal of Mongolian Studies 52 International Association of Mongolists 24 31 Shakabpa Tsepon W D 1967 Tibet A political history New Haven amp London Yale University Press p 112 3 Zahiruddin Ahmad Sino Tibetan relations in the seventeenth century Rome 1970 p 66 7 Karmay Samten C 2005 The Great Fifth p 2 Downloaded as a pdf file on 16 December 2007 from 1 Archived 15 September 2013 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gushi Khan Karmay Samten C 2005 The Great Fifth Downloaded as a pdf file on 16 December 2007 Further references editHaines R Spencer 2018 Charismatic Authority in Context An Explanation of Guushi Khan s Swift Rise to Power in the Early 17th Century Mongolica An International Journal of Mongolian Studies 52 International Association of Mongolists 24 31 Matthew Kapstein The Tibetans Oxford Blackwell 2006 Tsepon W D Shakabpa One hundred thousand moons Vols I II Leiden Brill 2010 Wang Furen and Suo Wenqing Highlights of Tibetan history Beijing New World Press 1984 Ya Hanzhang Biographies of the Tibetan Spiritual Leaders Panchen Erdenis Beijing Foreign Languages Press 1994 Preceded byKarma Tenkyong Tsangpa Khan of the Khoshut KhanateProtector ruler of Tibet1642 1655 Succeeded byDayan Khan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gushi Khan amp oldid 1211838852, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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