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Mongol invasions of Tibet

There were several Mongol invasions of Tibet. The earliest is the alleged plot to invade Tibet by Genghis Khan in 1206,[1] which is considered anachronistic; there is no evidence of Mongol-Tibetan encounters prior to the military campaign in 1240.[2] The first confirmed campaign is the invasion of Tibet by the Mongol general Doorda Darkhan in 1240,[3] a campaign of 30,000 troops[4][5] that resulted in 500 casualties.[6] The campaign was smaller than the full-scale invasions used by the Mongols against large empires. The purpose of this attack is unclear, and is still in debate among Tibetologists.[7] Then in the late 1240s Mongol prince Godan invited Sakya lama Sakya Pandita, who urged other leading Tibetan figures to submit to Mongol authority.[8] This is generally considered to have marked the beginning of Mongol rule over Tibet, as well as the establishment of patron and priest relationship between Mongols and Tibetans. These relations were continued by Kublai Khan, who founded the Mongol Yuan dynasty and granted authority over whole Tibet to Drogon Chogyal Phagpa, nephew of Sakya Pandita. The Sakya-Mongol administrative system and Yuan administrative rule over the region lasted until the mid-14th century, when the Yuan dynasty began to crumble.

Tibet under Mongol rule, 1240-1354

In the early 17th century, the Oirat Mongols again conquered the region and established the Khoshut Khanate. Since then the Mongols had intervened in Tibetan politics until the Qing conquest of Mongolia and Dzungaria.

Invasion

Prior to 1240

According to one traditional Tibetan account, the Mongol emperor Genghis Khan plotted to invade Tibet in 1206, but was dissuaded when the Tibetans promised to pay tribute to the Mongols.[9] Modern scholars consider the account to be anachronistic and factually wrong.[10] Genghis' campaign was targeted at the Tangut kingdom of Western Xia, not Tibet, and there was certainly no tribute being paid to the Mongols prior to 1240.[11] There is no evidence of interaction between the two nations prior to Doorda Darkhan's invasion in 1240.[12]

The earliest real Mongol contact with the ethnic Tibetan people came in 1236, when a Tibetan chief near Wenxian submitted to the Mongols campaigning against the Jin dynasty in Sichuan.

1240-1241 invasion

Doorda Darkhan's Tibetan campaign
Date1240
Location
Result Mongols withdrew. All Mongol generals were called back to Mongolia to appoint a successor to Ogedai Khan.
Belligerents
Mongol Empire Tibet
Commanders and leaders
Doorda Darkhan Leaders of the Rwa-sgreng monastery
Strength
30,000 soldiers Unknown
Casualties and losses
Minimal (or no loss) 500

In 1240, the Mongol Prince Godan, Ögedei's son and Güyük's younger brother, "delegated the command of the Tibetan invasion to the Tangut[13] general, Doorda Darqan (Dor-ta)".[14] The expedition was "the first instance of military conflict between the two nations".[2] The attack consisted of 30,000 men (possibly much smaller than that)[15][16] and resulted in 500 casualties,[6] along with the burning of the Kadampa monasteries of Rwa-sgreṅ and Rgyal-lha-khang.[6] The campaign was smaller than the full-scale invasions used by the Mongols against large empires. According to Turrell V. Wylie, that much is in agreement among Tibetologists. However, the purpose of invasion is disputed among Tibetan scholars, partly because of the abundance of anachronistic and factually erroneous sources.[7]

However, modern studies find that the oldest sources credit the Mongol scouts with burning Rgyal-lha-khang only, while a large number of Rwa-sgreng monks were slain.[17] The bKa’-brgyud-pa monasteries of sTag-lung and ’Bri-gung, with their old link to the Western Xia dynasty, were spared because Doorda himself was a Tangut Buddhist.[18] The ’Bri-gung abbot or, according to Petech, the Rwa-sgreng abbot, suggested the Mongols had invited the Sakya hierarch, Sakya Pandita.[19] After he met Godan, Sakya Pandita died there leaving his two nephews. Sakya Pandita convinced other monasteries in Central Tibet to align with the Mongols. The Mongols kept them as hostages referring symbolic surrender of Tibet.[20]

One view, considered the most traditional, is that the attack was a retaliation on Tibet caused by the Tibetan refusal to pay tribute.[2] Wylie points out that the Tibetans stopped paying tribute in 1227, while Doorda Darkhan's invasion was in 1240, suggesting that the Mongols, not known for their empathy, would not wait over a decade to respond. The text from which this claim is based on also makes other anachronistic mistakes, insisting that Genghis was planning to attack Tibet prior to Doorda Darkhan's invasion, when the real campaign was against the Tangut kingdom of Western Xia.[2]

Another theory, supported by Wylie, is that the military action was a reconnaissance campaign meant to evaluate the political situation in Tibet.[21] The Mongols hoped to find a single monarch with whom they could threaten into submission, but instead found a Tibet that was religiously and politically divided, without a central government.[21]

A third view is that the troops were sent as raids and "looting parties", and that the goal of the campaign was to pillage the "wealth amassed in the Tibetan monasteries".[22] This is disputed, as the Mongols deliberately avoided attacking certain monasteries, a questionable decision if their only goal was profit.[23]

Whatever the purpose of the invasion, the Mongols withdrew in 1241, as all the Mongol princes were recalled back to Mongolia in preparation for the appointment of a successor to Ogedai Khan.[24] In 1244, the Mongols returned to Tibet. They invited Sakya Pandita to Godan's camp, where he agreed to capitulate Tibet, after the Mongols threatened a full-scale invasion of the region.

1244 invasion under Möngke Khan

 
The Mongol Empire in 1259

Sa-skya Pandita died in 1251 and his master Godan Khan possibly died at the same time (or, according to other sources, after 1253). Möngke Khan became Khagan in the same year. Some sources say there was a Mongolian invasion in 1251, in retribution for a failure to pay tribute, or in 1251-2 'to take formal possession of the country'. In order to strengthen his control over Tibet, Möngke made Qoridai commander of the Mongol and Han troops in Turpan in 1251. Two attacks are mentioned, one led by Dörbetei, the other by Qoridai, and the double campaign struck fear into the Tibetans.[25] Tibetan sources however only mention an attack on a place called Bod kyi-mon-mkhar-mgpon-po-gdong. Wyle is sceptical however of all of these sources, arguing that the lack of substantive evidence for an invasion raises doubts about the extent of Mongol movements in Tibet proper.'[26] He concludes:-

"Excluding the 1252 attack against the unidentified Mon-mkmar-mgon-po-gdong mentioned earlier, there seems to be no evidence to prove the presence of Mongol troops in central Tibet during the two decades that 'Phags-pa Lama was away from Sa-skya (1244-65). During those years, external campaigns of conquest and internal feuds between scions of the sons of Chinggis Khan occupied the attention of the Mongols. Tibet, whose formidable terrain was politically fragmented by local lords and lamas, posed no military threat to the Mongols, and it was all but ignored by them."[27]

In 1252-53 Qoridai invaded Tibet, reaching as far as Damxung. The Central Tibetan monasteries submitted to the Mongols. Möngke divided the lands of Tibet between his relatives as their appanages in accordance with Great Jasag of Genghis Khan. Many Mongol aristocrats including Khagan himself seem to have sought blessings of prominent Tibetan lamas. Möngke Khan patronized Karma Baqshi (1204–83) of the Karma-pa suborder and the ’Bri-gung Monastery, while Hulagu, khan of the Mongols in the Middle East, sent lavish gifts to both ’Bri-gung and the Phag-mo-gru-pa suborder's gDan-sa-thel monastery. Later William Rubruck reports that he saw Chinese, Tibetan, and Indian Buddhist monks at the capital city, Karakorum, of the Mongol Empire.

Although, Karmapa of the Karma Kagyu school politely refused to stay with him, preferring his brother the Khagan, in 1253 Prince Kubilai summoned to his court the Sa-skya-pa hierarch's two nephews, Blo-gros rGyal-mtshan, known as ’Phags-Pa lama (1235–80), and Phyag-na rDo-rje (1239-67) from the late Godan's ordo in Liangzhou. Khubilai Khan first met 'Phags-pa lama in 1253, presumably to bring the Sa-skya lama who resided in Köden's domain, and who was a symbol of Tibetan surrender, to his own camp.[28] At first Kublai remained shamanist, but his chief khatun, Chabui (Chabi), converted to Buddhism and influenced Kublai's religious view. During Kublai's expedition into Yunnan, his number two, Uriyangkhadai, had to station in Tibet in 1254-55 possibly to suppress war-like tribes in Tibet. Hulegu appointed his representative, Kokochu, in Tibet in mid-1250s while marching towards Iran.[29] Since then, the Ilkhans had had possessions in Tibet.

In 1265 Qongridar ravaged the Tufan/mDo-smad area, and from 1264 to 1275 several campaigns pacified the Tibetan and Yi peoples of Xifan around modern Xichang. By 1278 Mongol myriarchies: tumens and postroads reached through Dokham [zh; fr] (Tibetan: མདོ་ཁམས, Wylie: mdo khams, THL: dokham) as far west as Litang.

Aftermath

 
Tibet within the Yuan dynasty under the top-level department known as the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs (Xuanzheng Yuan).

Tibet was subdued to the Mongol Empire under Mongolian administrative rule,[30] but the region was granted with a degree of political autonomy. Kublai Khan would later include Tibet into his Yuan dynasty, and the region remained administratively separate from the conquered provinces of Song dynasty China.

According to the Tibetan traditional view, the khan and the lama established "priest-patron" relations. This meant administrative management and military assistance from the khan and assistance from the lama in spiritual issues. Tibet was conquered by the Mongols before the Mongol invasion of South China.[31] After the conquest of the Song dynasty, Kublai Khan consolidated Tibet into the new Yuan dynasty, but Tibet was administrated under the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs (Xuanzheng Yuan), separate from the Chinese provinces. The Mongols granted the Sakya lama a degree political authority, but retained control over the administration and military of the region.[32] As efforts to rule both territories while preserving Mongol identity, Kublai Khan prohibited Mongols from marrying Chinese, but left both the Chinese and Tibetan legal and administrative systems intact.[33] Though most government institutions established by Kublai Khan in his court resembled the ones in earlier Chinese dynasties,[34] Tibet never adopted the imperial examinations or Neo-Confucian policies.

Buddhist monks from Tibet were popular and well respected in Mongol-ruled Iran (the Ilkhanate),[29] Mongolia, China (the Yuan) and Central Asia (the Chagatai Khanate).[35] Towards the end of the Yuan dynasty in the mid-14th century, Tibet regained its independence from the Mongols.[citation needed]

Post imperial expedition

The Ligdan Khan and prince Choghtu's campaign
Date1634-1637
Location
Result Victory of Oirat's Khoshut Khanate increased power of Gelug-Buddhism and fall Karma Kagyu and fall of the campaign prince Choghtu force.
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Güshi Khan
Strength
unknown 50 000
Casualties and losses
minimally heavy

The Oirats converted to Tibetan Buddhism around 1615, and it was not long before they became involved in the conflict between the Gelug and Karma Kagyu schools. At the request of the Gelug school, in 1637, Güshi Khan, the leader of the Khoshuts in Koko Nor, defeated Choghtu Khong Tayiji (1581-1637), the Khalkha prince who supported the Karma Kagyu school.

Tsogtu Khuntaiji had established a base on the Tuul river. Known as an intellectual, he embraced the Karma sect and built monasteries and castles. He submitted himself to Ligdan Khan, last grand khan of the Mongols. He took part in Ligdan's campaign to Tibet to help the Karma sect although Ligdan Khan died in 1634 before they joined. But Tsogtu pursued the campaign. In the same year he conquered the Tümed around Kokonor (Qinghai Lake) and moved his base there. By request from Shamar Rabjampa he sent an army under his son Arslan to central Tibet in 1635. However, Arslan attacked his ally, the Tsang army. He met the fifth Dalai Lama and paid homage to Gelukpa monasteries instead of destroying them. Arslan was eventually assassinated by Choghtu's order.

The Geluk sect asked for help Törü Bayikhu (Güshi Khan), the leader of the Khoshut tribe of the Oirat confederation. In 1636 Törö Bayikhu led the Khoshuts and the Dzungars to Tibet. In the next year a decisive war between Tsogtu Khuntaiji and Törü Bayikhu ended in the latter's victory and Tsoghtu was killed.

He has traditionally been portrayed as evil by the Geluk sect. On the other hand, the Mongolian movie "Tsogt taij" (1945) treated him as a national hero. It reflected the communist regime's attitude toward Tibetan Buddhism.[clarification needed]

With his crushing victory over Tsogtu, Güshi Khan conquered Amdo (present-day Qinghai). The unification of Tibet followed in 1641–42, when Güshi Khan invaded Central Tibet and defeated the indigenous Tsangpa Dynasty. After his victory he was proclaimed (chogyal), i.e. the King of Dharma, or Teaching, by the Fifth Dalai Lama. With these events the establishment of a Khoshut Khanate was confirmed. Gushi khan granted to the Dalai Lama authority over Tibet from Dartsedo to Ladakh. The title "Dalai Lama" itself had previously been bestowed upon the third lama of the Gelug tulku lineage by Altan Khan (not to be confused with the Altan Khans of the Khalkha), and means, in Mongolian, "Ocean of Wisdom."

Resurfacing of the struggle between Dzungar Khanate and Qing dynasty

Mongol invasions of Tibet
Date1688-1755
Location
Result Victory of the Qing empire.
Belligerents
Qing empire
Commanders and leaders

Intervention in Tibet

 
The Dzungar and Kalmyk states (a fragment of the map of the Russian Empire of Peter the Great, created by a Swedish soldier in c. 1725).

Amdo, meanwhile, became home to the Khoshuts. The descendants of Güshi Khan continued to rule as Dharma kings (chogyals) of Tibet, although they were eclipsed by the Dalai Lama and his regent for long periods. In 1717, however, the Dzungars, led by Tsewang Rabtan's brother Tsering Dondup, invaded Tibet. The invaders defeated and killed Lha-bzang Khan (the last khan of the Khoshut Khanate), a great-grandson of Güshi Khan and the fifth Dharma king of Tibet. The Dzungars deposed a pretender to the position of the Dalai Lama who had previously been promoted by Lha-bzang Khan. The 5th Dalai Lama had encouraged Mongolian lamas to prevent any non-dGe-lugs-pa teaching among the Mongols. The Dzungars soon began to loot Lhasa, thus losing initial Tibetan goodwill towards them. Many Nyingmapa and Bonpos were executed and Tibetans visiting Dzungar officials were forced to stick their tongues out so the Dzungars could tell if the person recited constant mantras (which was said to make the tongue black or brown). This allowed them to pick the Nyingmapa and Bonpos, who recited many magic-mantras.[36] This habit of sticking one's tongue out as a mark of respect on greeting someone has remained a Tibetan custom until recent times.

The Dzungar invasion was a challenge to the imperial policy of the Kangxi Emperor, since Lha-bzang Khan had been allied to the Qing dynasty. The Emperor retaliated in 1718, but his military expedition suffered inadequate logistics and was annihilated by the Dzungars at the Battle of the Salween River not far from Lhasa.[37] A second and larger expedition was dispatched by the Emperor and met with rapid success. The Manchus expelled Tsewang Rabtan's force from Tibet in 1720 and the troops were hailed as liberators. They brought Kälzang Gyatso with them from Kumbum to Lhasa and he was installed as the 7th Dalai Lama in 1721.[38] In 1723 Lobzang Danjin, another descendant of Güshi Khan, defended Amdo against Qing dynasty's attempts to extend its rule into Tibet, but was crushed in the following year. Thus, Amdo fell under Chinese domination.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Wylie. p.105
  2. ^ a b c d Wylie. p.106
  3. ^ Wylie. p.110, 'delegated the command of the Tibetan invasion to an otherwise unknown general, Doorda Darkhan'.
  4. ^ Shakabpa. p.61: 'thirty thousand troops, under the command of Leje and Dorta, reached Phanpo, north of Lhasa.'
  5. ^ Sanders. p. 309, his grandson Godan Khan invaded Tibet with 30000 men and destroyed several Buddhist monasteries north of Lhasa
  6. ^ a b c Wylie. p.104
  7. ^ a b Wylie. p.103
  8. ^ Authenticating Tibet: Answers to China's 100 Questions, by Anne-Marie Blondeau and Katia Buffetrille, p13
  9. ^ Wylie. p.105: 'Why would Chinggis plan an invasion of Tibet as soon as he became Khan of the Mongols in 1206.'
  10. ^ Wylie. p.107, 'the statement that the 1240 expedition was a punitive raid for failure to pay tribute is without foundation.'
  11. ^ Wylie. p.106, '...erred in identifying Tibet as the country against Chinggis launched that early campaign. His military objective was the Tangut kingdom of Hsi-hsia.'
  12. ^ Wylie. p.106, 'the first instance of military conflict between the two nations'
  13. ^ C. P. Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and Mongol Empire, p.538
  14. ^ Wylie. p.110.
  15. ^ Shakabpa. p.61: 'thirty thousand troops, under the command of Leje and Dorta, reached Phanpo, north of Lhasa.'
  16. ^ Sanders. p. 309, his grandson Godan Khan invaded Tibet with 30,000 men and destroyed several Buddhist monasteries north of Lhasa
  17. ^ Turrel J. Wylie The First Mongol Conquest of Tibet Reinterpreted, pp.110; Tucci, Giuseppe (1949) Tibetan Painted Scrolls, 2 Volumes, Rome: La Libreria dello Stato, Vol. II, p. 652.
  18. ^ C. P. Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p.538
  19. ^ Petech, Luciano (1990) Central Tibet and the Mongols. Rome: IsIMEO, p. 8.
  20. ^ Wylie. p.112
  21. ^ a b Wylie. p.110
  22. ^ Kwanten, Luc, Imperial Nomads: A History of Central Asia, 500–1500 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1979) p.74.
  23. ^ Wylie. p.107
  24. ^ Wylie. p.111
  25. ^ Petech 2003 p.342.
  26. ^ Wylie, ibid.p.323: 'it is suggested here that references in Chinese sources pertain to campaigns in peripheral areas and that there was no Mongol invasion of central Tibet at that time.'
  27. ^ Wylie, ibid. p.326.
  28. ^ Wylie p.323-324.
  29. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2013-10-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ Wylie. p.104: 'To counterbalance the political power of the lama, Khubilai appointed civil administrators at the Sa-skya to supervise the Mongol regency.'
  31. ^ Laird 2006, pp. 114-117
  32. ^ Dawa Norbu. China's Tibet Policy, pp. 139. Psychology Press.
  33. ^ Schirokauer, Conrad. A Brief History of Chinese Civilization. Thomson Wadsworth, (c)2006, p 174
  34. ^ Rossabi, M. Khubilai Khan: His Life and Times, p56
  35. ^ Dai Matsui - A Mongolian Decree from the Chaghataid Khanate
  36. ^ Norbu, Namkhai. (1980). "Bon and Bonpos". Tibetan Review, December, 1980, p. 8.
  37. ^ Richardson, Hugh E. (1984). Tibet and its History. Second Edition, Revised and Updated, pp. 48-9. Shambhala. Boston & London. ISBN 0-87773-376-7 (pbk)
  38. ^ Richardson, Hugh E. (1984). Tibet and its History. Second Edition, Revised and Updated, pp. 48-9. Shambhala. Boston & London. ISBN 0-87773-376-7 (pbk)

Sources

  • 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. International Association of Mongolists. 52: 24–31.
  • Laird, Thomas. The Story of Tibet: Conversations with the Dalai Lama (2006) Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-1827-5
  • Rossabi, Morris. China Among Equals: The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors, 10th-14th Centuries (1983) Univ. of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04383-9
  • Sanders, Alan J. K. Historical dictionary of Mongolia (2003) Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4434-6
  • Saunders, John Joseph. The history of the Mongol conquests. (2001) University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1766-7
  • Shakabpa, W.D. Tibet: A Political History. (1967) Yale University Press. ISBN 0-9611474-1-5
  • Smith, Warren W., Jr. Tibetan Nation: A History Of Tibetan Nationalism And Sino-tibetan Relations (1997) Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3280-2
  • Wylie, Turrell V. The First Mongol Conquest of Tibet Reinterpreted Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, vol. 37, no. 1, 1977, pp. 103–133.

mongol, invasions, tibet, there, were, several, earliest, alleged, plot, invade, tibet, genghis, khan, 1206, which, considered, anachronistic, there, evidence, mongol, tibetan, encounters, prior, military, campaign, 1240, first, confirmed, campaign, invasion, . There were several Mongol invasions of Tibet The earliest is the alleged plot to invade Tibet by Genghis Khan in 1206 1 which is considered anachronistic there is no evidence of Mongol Tibetan encounters prior to the military campaign in 1240 2 The first confirmed campaign is the invasion of Tibet by the Mongol general Doorda Darkhan in 1240 3 a campaign of 30 000 troops 4 5 that resulted in 500 casualties 6 The campaign was smaller than the full scale invasions used by the Mongols against large empires The purpose of this attack is unclear and is still in debate among Tibetologists 7 Then in the late 1240s Mongol prince Godan invited Sakya lama Sakya Pandita who urged other leading Tibetan figures to submit to Mongol authority 8 This is generally considered to have marked the beginning of Mongol rule over Tibet as well as the establishment of patron and priest relationship between Mongols and Tibetans These relations were continued by Kublai Khan who founded the Mongol Yuan dynasty and granted authority over whole Tibet to Drogon Chogyal Phagpa nephew of Sakya Pandita The Sakya Mongol administrative system and Yuan administrative rule over the region lasted until the mid 14th century when the Yuan dynasty began to crumble Tibet under Mongol rule 1240 1354 In the early 17th century the Oirat Mongols again conquered the region and established the Khoshut Khanate Since then the Mongols had intervened in Tibetan politics until the Qing conquest of Mongolia and Dzungaria Contents 1 Invasion 1 1 Prior to 1240 1 2 1240 1241 invasion 1 3 1244 invasion under Mongke Khan 2 Aftermath 3 Post imperial expedition 4 Resurfacing of the struggle between Dzungar Khanate and Qing dynasty 4 1 Intervention in Tibet 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesInvasion EditPrior to 1240 Edit According to one traditional Tibetan account the Mongol emperor Genghis Khan plotted to invade Tibet in 1206 but was dissuaded when the Tibetans promised to pay tribute to the Mongols 9 Modern scholars consider the account to be anachronistic and factually wrong 10 Genghis campaign was targeted at the Tangut kingdom of Western Xia not Tibet and there was certainly no tribute being paid to the Mongols prior to 1240 11 There is no evidence of interaction between the two nations prior to Doorda Darkhan s invasion in 1240 12 The earliest real Mongol contact with the ethnic Tibetan people came in 1236 when a Tibetan chief near Wenxian submitted to the Mongols campaigning against the Jin dynasty in Sichuan 1240 1241 invasion Edit Doorda Darkhan s Tibetan campaignDate1240LocationTibetResultMongols withdrew All Mongol generals were called back to Mongolia to appoint a successor to Ogedai Khan BelligerentsMongol EmpireTibetCommanders and leadersDoorda DarkhanLeaders of the Rwa sgreng monasteryStrength30 000 soldiersUnknownCasualties and lossesMinimal or no loss 500In 1240 the Mongol Prince Godan Ogedei s son and Guyuk s younger brother delegated the command of the Tibetan invasion to the Tangut 13 general Doorda Darqan Dor ta 14 The expedition was the first instance of military conflict between the two nations 2 The attack consisted of 30 000 men possibly much smaller than that 15 16 and resulted in 500 casualties 6 along with the burning of the Kadampa monasteries of Rwa sgreṅ and Rgyal lha khang 6 The campaign was smaller than the full scale invasions used by the Mongols against large empires According to Turrell V Wylie that much is in agreement among Tibetologists However the purpose of invasion is disputed among Tibetan scholars partly because of the abundance of anachronistic and factually erroneous sources 7 However modern studies find that the oldest sources credit the Mongol scouts with burning Rgyal lha khang only while a large number of Rwa sgreng monks were slain 17 The bKa brgyud pa monasteries of sTag lung and Bri gung with their old link to the Western Xia dynasty were spared because Doorda himself was a Tangut Buddhist 18 The Bri gung abbot or according to Petech the Rwa sgreng abbot suggested the Mongols had invited the Sakya hierarch Sakya Pandita 19 After he met Godan Sakya Pandita died there leaving his two nephews Sakya Pandita convinced other monasteries in Central Tibet to align with the Mongols The Mongols kept them as hostages referring symbolic surrender of Tibet 20 One view considered the most traditional is that the attack was a retaliation on Tibet caused by the Tibetan refusal to pay tribute 2 Wylie points out that the Tibetans stopped paying tribute in 1227 while Doorda Darkhan s invasion was in 1240 suggesting that the Mongols not known for their empathy would not wait over a decade to respond The text from which this claim is based on also makes other anachronistic mistakes insisting that Genghis was planning to attack Tibet prior to Doorda Darkhan s invasion when the real campaign was against the Tangut kingdom of Western Xia 2 Another theory supported by Wylie is that the military action was a reconnaissance campaign meant to evaluate the political situation in Tibet 21 The Mongols hoped to find a single monarch with whom they could threaten into submission but instead found a Tibet that was religiously and politically divided without a central government 21 A third view is that the troops were sent as raids and looting parties and that the goal of the campaign was to pillage the wealth amassed in the Tibetan monasteries 22 This is disputed as the Mongols deliberately avoided attacking certain monasteries a questionable decision if their only goal was profit 23 Whatever the purpose of the invasion the Mongols withdrew in 1241 as all the Mongol princes were recalled back to Mongolia in preparation for the appointment of a successor to Ogedai Khan 24 In 1244 the Mongols returned to Tibet They invited Sakya Pandita to Godan s camp where he agreed to capitulate Tibet after the Mongols threatened a full scale invasion of the region 1244 invasion under Mongke Khan Edit The Mongol Empire in 1259 Sa skya Pandita died in 1251 and his master Godan Khan possibly died at the same time or according to other sources after 1253 Mongke Khan became Khagan in the same year Some sources say there was a Mongolian invasion in 1251 in retribution for a failure to pay tribute or in 1251 2 to take formal possession of the country In order to strengthen his control over Tibet Mongke made Qoridai commander of the Mongol and Han troops in Turpan in 1251 Two attacks are mentioned one led by Dorbetei the other by Qoridai and the double campaign struck fear into the Tibetans 25 Tibetan sources however only mention an attack on a place called Bod kyi mon mkhar mgpon po gdong Wyle is sceptical however of all of these sources arguing that the lack of substantive evidence for an invasion raises doubts about the extent of Mongol movements in Tibet proper 26 He concludes Excluding the 1252 attack against the unidentified Mon mkmar mgon po gdong mentioned earlier there seems to be no evidence to prove the presence of Mongol troops in central Tibet during the two decades that Phags pa Lama was away from Sa skya 1244 65 During those years external campaigns of conquest and internal feuds between scions of the sons of Chinggis Khan occupied the attention of the Mongols Tibet whose formidable terrain was politically fragmented by local lords and lamas posed no military threat to the Mongols and it was all but ignored by them 27 In 1252 53 Qoridai invaded Tibet reaching as far as Damxung The Central Tibetan monasteries submitted to the Mongols Mongke divided the lands of Tibet between his relatives as their appanages in accordance with Great Jasag of Genghis Khan Many Mongol aristocrats including Khagan himself seem to have sought blessings of prominent Tibetan lamas Mongke Khan patronized Karma Baqshi 1204 83 of the Karma pa suborder and the Bri gung Monastery while Hulagu khan of the Mongols in the Middle East sent lavish gifts to both Bri gung and the Phag mo gru pa suborder s gDan sa thel monastery Later William Rubruck reports that he saw Chinese Tibetan and Indian Buddhist monks at the capital city Karakorum of the Mongol Empire Although Karmapa of the Karma Kagyu school politely refused to stay with him preferring his brother the Khagan in 1253 Prince Kubilai summoned to his court the Sa skya pa hierarch s two nephews Blo gros rGyal mtshan known as Phags Pa lama 1235 80 and Phyag na rDo rje 1239 67 from the late Godan s ordo in Liangzhou Khubilai Khan first met Phags pa lama in 1253 presumably to bring the Sa skya lama who resided in Koden s domain and who was a symbol of Tibetan surrender to his own camp 28 At first Kublai remained shamanist but his chief khatun Chabui Chabi converted to Buddhism and influenced Kublai s religious view During Kublai s expedition into Yunnan his number two Uriyangkhadai had to station in Tibet in 1254 55 possibly to suppress war like tribes in Tibet Hulegu appointed his representative Kokochu in Tibet in mid 1250s while marching towards Iran 29 Since then the Ilkhans had had possessions in Tibet In 1265 Qongridar ravaged the Tufan mDo smad area and from 1264 to 1275 several campaigns pacified the Tibetan and Yi peoples of Xifan around modern Xichang By 1278 Mongol myriarchies tumens and postroads reached through Dokham zh fr Tibetan མད ཁམས Wylie mdo khams THL dokham as far west as Litang Aftermath EditMain article Tibet under Yuan rule Tibet within the Yuan dynasty under the top level department known as the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs Xuanzheng Yuan Tibet was subdued to the Mongol Empire under Mongolian administrative rule 30 but the region was granted with a degree of political autonomy Kublai Khan would later include Tibet into his Yuan dynasty and the region remained administratively separate from the conquered provinces of Song dynasty China According to the Tibetan traditional view the khan and the lama established priest patron relations This meant administrative management and military assistance from the khan and assistance from the lama in spiritual issues Tibet was conquered by the Mongols before the Mongol invasion of South China 31 After the conquest of the Song dynasty Kublai Khan consolidated Tibet into the new Yuan dynasty but Tibet was administrated under the Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs Xuanzheng Yuan separate from the Chinese provinces The Mongols granted the Sakya lama a degree political authority but retained control over the administration and military of the region 32 As efforts to rule both territories while preserving Mongol identity Kublai Khan prohibited Mongols from marrying Chinese but left both the Chinese and Tibetan legal and administrative systems intact 33 Though most government institutions established by Kublai Khan in his court resembled the ones in earlier Chinese dynasties 34 Tibet never adopted the imperial examinations or Neo Confucian policies Buddhist monks from Tibet were popular and well respected in Mongol ruled Iran the Ilkhanate 29 Mongolia China the Yuan and Central Asia the Chagatai Khanate 35 Towards the end of the Yuan dynasty in the mid 14th century Tibet regained its independence from the Mongols citation needed Post imperial expedition EditThe Ligdan Khan and prince Choghtu s campaignDate1634 1637LocationTibetResultVictory of Oirat s Khoshut Khanate increased power of Gelug Buddhism and fall Karma Kagyu and fall of the campaign prince Choghtu force BelligerentsKhoshut Khanate Tibetby support Khoshut KhanateChahar Mongolian Khanate force Northern khalkha s Khanate forceCommanders and leadersGushi KhanLigdan Khan Prince Choghtu Prince Arslang TayjiStrengthunknown50 000Casualties and lossesminimallyheavyThe Oirats converted to Tibetan Buddhism around 1615 and it was not long before they became involved in the conflict between the Gelug and Karma Kagyu schools At the request of the Gelug school in 1637 Gushi Khan the leader of the Khoshuts in Koko Nor defeated Choghtu Khong Tayiji 1581 1637 the Khalkha prince who supported the Karma Kagyu school Tsogtu Khuntaiji had established a base on the Tuul river Known as an intellectual he embraced the Karma sect and built monasteries and castles He submitted himself to Ligdan Khan last grand khan of the Mongols He took part in Ligdan s campaign to Tibet to help the Karma sect although Ligdan Khan died in 1634 before they joined But Tsogtu pursued the campaign In the same year he conquered the Tumed around Kokonor Qinghai Lake and moved his base there By request from Shamar Rabjampa he sent an army under his son Arslan to central Tibet in 1635 However Arslan attacked his ally the Tsang army He met the fifth Dalai Lama and paid homage to Gelukpa monasteries instead of destroying them Arslan was eventually assassinated by Choghtu s order The Geluk sect asked for help Toru Bayikhu Gushi Khan the leader of the Khoshut tribe of the Oirat confederation In 1636 Toro Bayikhu led the Khoshuts and the Dzungars to Tibet In the next year a decisive war between Tsogtu Khuntaiji and Toru Bayikhu ended in the latter s victory and Tsoghtu was killed He has traditionally been portrayed as evil by the Geluk sect On the other hand the Mongolian movie Tsogt taij 1945 treated him as a national hero It reflected the communist regime s attitude toward Tibetan Buddhism clarification needed With his crushing victory over Tsogtu Gushi Khan conquered Amdo present day Qinghai The unification of Tibet followed in 1641 42 when Gushi Khan invaded Central Tibet and defeated the indigenous Tsangpa Dynasty After his victory he was proclaimed chogyal i e the King of Dharma or Teaching by the Fifth Dalai Lama With these events the establishment of a Khoshut Khanate was confirmed Gushi khan granted to the Dalai Lama authority over Tibet from Dartsedo to Ladakh The title Dalai Lama itself had previously been bestowed upon the third lama of the Gelug tulku lineage by Altan Khan not to be confused with the Altan Khans of the Khalkha and means in Mongolian Ocean of Wisdom Resurfacing of the struggle between Dzungar Khanate and Qing dynasty EditMongol invasions of TibetDate1688 1755LocationTibetResultVictory of the Qing empire BelligerentsDzungar Khanate Kokonur rebelsQing empireCommanders and leadersGaldan Boshugtu Khan prince Tsewang Arabtan Galdan Tseren Khan Tsering Dhondup Loupsang DanzanKangxi Yongzheng Qianlong Lha bzang KhanIntervention in Tibet Edit Main article Dzungar Qing Wars The Dzungar and Kalmyk states a fragment of the map of the Russian Empire of Peter the Great created by a Swedish soldier in c 1725 Amdo meanwhile became home to the Khoshuts The descendants of Gushi Khan continued to rule as Dharma kings chogyals of Tibet although they were eclipsed by the Dalai Lama and his regent for long periods In 1717 however the Dzungars led by Tsewang Rabtan s brother Tsering Dondup invaded Tibet The invaders defeated and killed Lha bzang Khan the last khan of the Khoshut Khanate a great grandson of Gushi Khan and the fifth Dharma king of Tibet The Dzungars deposed a pretender to the position of the Dalai Lama who had previously been promoted by Lha bzang Khan The 5th Dalai Lama had encouraged Mongolian lamas to prevent any non dGe lugs pa teaching among the Mongols The Dzungars soon began to loot Lhasa thus losing initial Tibetan goodwill towards them Many Nyingmapa and Bonpos were executed and Tibetans visiting Dzungar officials were forced to stick their tongues out so the Dzungars could tell if the person recited constant mantras which was said to make the tongue black or brown This allowed them to pick the Nyingmapa and Bonpos who recited many magic mantras 36 This habit of sticking one s tongue out as a mark of respect on greeting someone has remained a Tibetan custom until recent times The Dzungar invasion was a challenge to the imperial policy of the Kangxi Emperor since Lha bzang Khan had been allied to the Qing dynasty The Emperor retaliated in 1718 but his military expedition suffered inadequate logistics and was annihilated by the Dzungars at the Battle of the Salween River not far from Lhasa 37 A second and larger expedition was dispatched by the Emperor and met with rapid success The Manchus expelled Tsewang Rabtan s force from Tibet in 1720 and the troops were hailed as liberators They brought Kalzang Gyatso with them from Kumbum to Lhasa and he was installed as the 7th Dalai Lama in 1721 38 In 1723 Lobzang Danjin another descendant of Gushi Khan defended Amdo against Qing dynasty s attempts to extend its rule into Tibet but was crushed in the following year Thus Amdo fell under Chinese domination See also EditTibet under Yuan rule Chinese expedition to Tibet 1720 References EditCitations Edit Wylie p 105 a b c d Wylie p 106 Wylie p 110 delegated the command of the Tibetan invasion to an otherwise unknown general Doorda Darkhan Shakabpa p 61 thirty thousand troops under the command of Leje and Dorta reached Phanpo north of Lhasa Sanders p 309 his grandson Godan Khan invaded Tibet with 30000 men and destroyed several Buddhist monasteries north of Lhasa a b c Wylie p 104 a b Wylie p 103 Authenticating Tibet Answers to China s 100 Questions by Anne Marie Blondeau and Katia Buffetrille p13 Wylie p 105 Why would Chinggis plan an invasion of Tibet as soon as he became Khan of the Mongols in 1206 Wylie p 107 the statement that the 1240 expedition was a punitive raid for failure to pay tribute is without foundation Wylie p 106 erred in identifying Tibet as the country against Chinggis launched that early campaign His military objective was the Tangut kingdom of Hsi hsia Wylie p 106 the first instance of military conflict between the two nations C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and Mongol Empire p 538 Wylie p 110 Shakabpa p 61 thirty thousand troops under the command of Leje and Dorta reached Phanpo north of Lhasa Sanders p 309 his grandson Godan Khan invaded Tibet with 30 000 men and destroyed several Buddhist monasteries north of Lhasa Turrel J Wylie The First Mongol Conquest of Tibet Reinterpreted pp 110 Tucci Giuseppe 1949 Tibetan Painted Scrolls 2 Volumes Rome La Libreria dello Stato Vol II p 652 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 538 Petech Luciano 1990 Central Tibet and the Mongols Rome IsIMEO p 8 Wylie p 112 a b Wylie p 110 Kwanten Luc Imperial Nomads A History of Central Asia 500 1500 University of Pennsylvania Press 1979 p 74 Wylie p 107 Wylie p 111 Petech 2003 p 342 Wylie ibid p 323 it is suggested here that references in Chinese sources pertain to campaigns in peripheral areas and that there was no Mongol invasion of central Tibet at that time Wylie ibid p 326 Wylie p 323 324 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2013 10 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wylie p 104 To counterbalance the political power of the lama Khubilai appointed civil administrators at the Sa skya to supervise the Mongol regency Laird 2006 pp 114 117 Dawa Norbu China s Tibet Policy pp 139 Psychology Press Schirokauer Conrad A Brief History of Chinese Civilization Thomson Wadsworth c 2006 p 174 Rossabi M Khubilai Khan His Life and Times p56 Dai Matsui A Mongolian Decree from the Chaghataid Khanate Norbu Namkhai 1980 Bon and Bonpos Tibetan Review December 1980 p 8 Richardson Hugh E 1984 Tibet and its History Second Edition Revised and Updated pp 48 9 Shambhala Boston amp London ISBN 0 87773 376 7 pbk Richardson Hugh E 1984 Tibet and its History Second Edition Revised and Updated pp 48 9 Shambhala Boston amp London ISBN 0 87773 376 7 pbk Sources 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 International Association of Mongolists 52 24 31 Laird Thomas The Story of Tibet Conversations with the Dalai Lama 2006 Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 1827 5 Rossabi Morris China Among Equals The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors 10th 14th Centuries 1983 Univ of California Press ISBN 0 520 04383 9 Sanders Alan J K Historical dictionary of Mongolia 2003 Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4434 6 Saunders John Joseph The history of the Mongol conquests 2001 University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1766 7 Shakabpa W D Tibet A Political History 1967 Yale University Press ISBN 0 9611474 1 5 Smith Warren W Jr Tibetan Nation A History Of Tibetan Nationalism And Sino tibetan Relations 1997 Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 3280 2 Wylie Turrell V The First Mongol Conquest of Tibet Reinterpreted Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies vol 37 no 1 1977 pp 103 133 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongol invasions of Tibet amp oldid 1125922603, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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