fbpx
Wikipedia

Polhané Sönam Topgyé

Polhané Sönam Topgyé (Tibetan: ཕོ་ལྷ་ནས་བསོད་ནམས་སྟོབས་རྒྱས, Wylie: Pho lha nas bsod nams stobs rgyas; Chinese: 頗羅鼐) (1689 – 12 March 1747) was one of the most important political personalities of Tibet in the first half of the 18th century. Between 1728 and 1747 he was effectively the ruling prince of Tibet and carried royal titles during the period of Qing rule of Tibet. He is known as an excellent administrator, a fearsome warrior and a grand strategist. After the troubled years under the reign of Lhazang Khan, the bloody invasion of Tsering Dhondup and the civil war, his government ushered in a relatively long period of stability and internal and external peace for Tibet.

Polhané
Prince Xizang of the Second Rank
Seal of the Tibetan ruler Polhané Sönam Topgyé, granted by the Yongzheng Emperor of the Qing dynasty
Prince Xizang of the Second Rank
Reign1727 – 1747
PredecessorKhangchenné Sonam Gyalpo
SuccessorGyurme Namgyal
Kalön of Tibet
In office1727 – 1747
Monarch7th Dalai Lama
Born1689 (1689)
Died1747 (aged 57–58)
Lhasa
Names
Polhané Sönam Topgyé (ཕོ་ལྷ་ནས་བསོད་ནམས་སྟོབས་རྒྱས)
Regnal name
Prince Xizang of the Second Rank (西藏郡王)

Family edit

Polhané Sönam Topgyé was born in 1689 in Polha (Pho-lha) as the son of the general Pema Gyalpo and his wife Drolma Butri. His father was an experienced warrior who took part in the war against Ladakh in 1679-1684. He later participated in campaigns against Bhutan and Nepal. His forefathers were local officials in Tsang in the 17th century; his grandfather Asum was endowed with the estate Polha, south of Gyangtse, by the Khoshut king Tenzin Dalai Khan for his services.[1] It was here that Sönam Topgyé grew up. In his young years he received teachings in the Mindroling Monastery which belonged to the Nyingma school, and also by the Panchen Lama.[2] While his given name was Sönam Topgyé, he is usually known by the cognomen Polhané (the one from Polha).

Career under Lhabzang Khan edit

Shortly after his marriage in 1707, Polhané traveled to Lhasa where he was presented to the ruler Lhabzang Khan. The ruler confirmed him in his possession of the estate that he had inherited from his deceased father. Now he began a typical official career and was educated in the Ministry of Finance (rTsis khang) in Lhasa. After some years he was appointed district judge in Gyangtse.[3] In 1714 he received his first military command. He successfully led an entire detachment against Bhutan, although the war as such was lost by the Tibetans.[4] After the invasion of Tibet by the Dzungars he took part in the organization of the Tibetan defense lines. He was present during the final defense of Lhasa.

Resistance against the Dzungars 1717 to 1720 edit

Lhasa fell in the hands of the Dzungars because of treason from some defenders, and Lhabzang Khan was killed in the melée.[5] Pholhané managed to take refuge in the Drepung Monastery. In the following months, the Dzungars tried to eliminate followers of Lhabzang Khan. Pholhané was captured and brought naked through the streets of Lhasa. After having been whipped with 15 lashes he was cast in prison. He managed to survive since old friends brought him food. Finally, he was released through the intervention of Tagtsepa, leader of the Tibetan government that was formed under the Dzungars. Pholhané then returned to Tsang. Here he began to collaborate with Khangchenné Sönam Gyalpo who had been appointed governor of Ngari by Lhabzang Khan and continued to rule there in spite of the Dzungars. They organized resistance against the invaders until the grand Chinese army sent by the Kangxi Emperor marched into Lhasa in September 1720.

Participation in the cabinet 1721 to 1727 edit

Immediately after their arrival to Lhasa, the representatives of the Manchu-led Qing dynasty organized a provisional military government under the general Yansin. After the return of the imperial army, a garrison of 3,000 men stayed in Lhasa. This troop was replaced in 1723. Two officials called zongli and two other termed xieli were placed as representatives of the emperor and advisers to the Tibetan government. The provisional military government was replaced in 1721 by a cabinet under the leadership of Khangchenné, who retained the jurisdiction over Ngari. The other two ministers were Ngaphöpa Dorje Gyalpo (d. 1728) and Lumpané Tashi Gyalpo (d. 1728). Khangchenné appointed Polhané as personal adjutant, and he received the jurisdiction over the Tsang province. He submitted a proposal that the hundreds of Nyingma monasteries and temples which had been ruined by the Dzungars should be restored with government assistance. This was taken up badly by many, especially by the Seventh Dalai Lama and his father who viewed the Nyimgma as heretic.[6]

In 1723 he and Charaba Lotro Gyalpo were appointed regular members of the cabinet, which from now on consisted of five members. The basic principle of this new administrative structure of Tibet was, that the members of the cabinet acted as ruling princes over the regions standing under them (Ü, Kongpo, Tsang, and Ngari), having their particular military resources and means of income. This certainly weakened the position of Tibet vis-à-vis its neighbours, but also raised the danger of inner dissent, if the leading politicians could not agree. In fact, there was great disharmony between the cabinet members from the start. The tension eventually exploded in 1727 when Khangchenné died under the knives of his peers. Polhané was luckily absent from Lhasa at the time, since his wife was ill and he had hastened to her sickbed at his estate.[7]

The civil war of 1727-1728 edit

Immediately after Khangchenné's assassination, Ngaphöpa, Lumpané and Charaba took over power in Lhasa, supported by the father of the Dalai Lama, Sönam Dargye. They mobilized the troops in their respective territories, in particular from Kongpo and Ü. 300 men were sent to catch Polhané but failed to do so. The latter boded up troops from Tsang. He allied with Khangchenné's brother Gashiba Tseten Tashi who had taken over governance in Ngari in 1725.[8] Meanwhile, he sent an express envoy to inform the court in China. After a half year of fighting at Gyangtse, Ngaphöpa was defeated. Polhané marched towards Lhasa with 9,000 troops, occupied the city and laid siege to the Potala Palace where his opponents and the ambans had taken refuge. Dalai Lama was allowed to take sanctuary in the Drepung Monastery, but Polhané's adversaries were taken prisoners on 5 July 1728. Polhané immediately communicated his victory to the Yongzheng Emperor of the Qing dynasty. As the imperial troops arrived on 4 September 1728 the civil war had already been concluded. One of the main tasks of the arriving Chinese was to find the main culprits behind the eruption of the war. Ngaphöpa and Lumpané were publicly executed by slow slicing, two clerics were hanged, and 13 others were beheaded. In addition, the close kin of the culprits were executed as well, including small children.[9]

On 1 November 1728, after the Qing reconquest of Lhasa in Tibet, several Tibetan rebels were sliced to death by Qing Manchu officers and officials. The Qing Manchu President of the Board of Civil Office, Jalangga, Mongol sub-chancellor Sen-ge and brigadier-general Manchu Mala ordered the Tibetan rebels Lum-pa-nas and Na-p'od-pa to be sliced to death. They ordered gZims-dpon C'os-ac'ad (Hsi-mu-pen ch'ui-cha-t'e), son of Lum-pa-nas and rNog Tarqan bsKal-bzajn-c'os-adar and dKon-mc'og-lha-sgrub (Kun-ch'u-k'o-la-ku-pu) and dGa'-ldan-p'un-ts'ogs (K'a-erh-tan-p'en-ch'u-k'o), sons of Na-p'od-pa to be beheaded.[10][11] Byams-pa (Cha-mu-pa) and his brother Lhag-gsan (La-k'o-sang) and their brothers, daughters, wives and mother were exiled after their father sByar-ra-nas was beheaded. The Manchus wrote that they "set an example" by forcing the Tibetans to publicly watch the executions of Tibetan rebels of slicing like Na-p'od-pa since they said it was the Tibetan's nature to be cruel. The exiled Tibetans were enslaved and given as slaves to soldiers in Ching-chou (Jingzhou), K'ang-zhou (Kangzhou) and Chiang-ning (Jiangning) in the marshall-residences there. The Tibetan rNam-rgyal-grva-ts'an college administrator (gner-adsin) and sKyor'lun Lama were tied together with Lum-pa-nas and Na-p'od-pa on 4 scaffolds (k'rims-sin) to be sliced. The Manchus used muskets to fire 3 salvoes and then the Manchus strangled the 2 Lamas while slicing Lum-pa-nas and Na-p'od-pa to death while they beheaded the 13 other rebel leaders. The Tibetan population was depressed by the scene and the writer continued to feel sad as he described it 5 years later. All relatives of the Tibetan rebels including little children were executed by the Qing Manchus except the exiled and deported family of sByar-ra-ba which was condemned to be slaves. The public executions spectacle worked on the Tibetans since they were "cowed into submission" by the Qing. Polhané, who was a collaborator with the Qing, himself also felt sad at his fellow Tibetans being executed in this manner and he prayed for them. All of this was included in a report by General Yue Zhongqi and sent to the Qing emperor at the time, the Yongzheng Emperor.[12][13][14]

Government 1729-1735 edit

Now Beijing interfered strongly in the organization of the civil and military administration of Tibet. Polhané was once again given the jurisdiction over Tsang. Two other ministers, namely Sicho Tseten and Tsering Wanggyal, were appointed to govern Lhasa and Ü. However, they stood entirely under the direction of Pholhané. Two Manchu representatives or ambans watched over the government of Polhané. The Panchen Lama, Lobsang Yeshe (d. 1737), was given great authority which de facto made him the ruler of western Tsang. The borders in East Tibet (1724, Amdo, 1727, Kham) were much altered, and Lhasa was permanently occupied by imperial troops, plus 2,000 men who supported the ambans. Under the pretext of going on a tour to Beijing, the Seventh Dalai Lama was sent in exile to Garthar near Lithang for six years (1728-1735).[15] The actual reason was that his father had played a dubious role during the civil war and had to be kept far away from the government. Another reason was supposedly that the Dalai Lama was to be kept safe from the Dzungars.

Pholhané as administrator and ruling prince 1735-1747 edit

As time passed Polhané became ever more independent and posed as a king or ruling prince of sorts (honorary royal titles bestowed by the emperor in 1731 and 1739). The Tibetans usually knew him by the title miwang, "ruler of men". The protector status of the Manchu rulers was handled more as a formality. Still, he took care to orient his politics so as to take the powers of the imperial court into account.[16] Since his trustworthiness and loyalty to the imperial dynasty could not be questioned, the troops stationed in Lhasa were reduced to 500 men in 1733. At the same time, Polhané built up a professional army consisting of 15,000 infantry and 10,000 cavalry. He ordered the borders to be guarded and secured and built military barracks all over the land. In 1729 he organized a postal system that secured the transmission of messages from Ngari to Lhasa and from Lhasa to East Tibet. This postal system was inspired by Chinese model and replaced the system instigated by the Chinese in 1720, especially in East Tibet. In the time of Polhané even the Chinese officials in Lhasa used this postal system for the communications with the imperial court. In the sphere of culture Polhané sponsored the first printed edition of the Buddhist canon.[17]

In sum, Polhané's tenure is remembered as being peaceful, stable and welfare oriented.

Succession edit

After Polhané's death in 1747, the imperial government confirmed his second son Gyurme Namgyal as his successor. Gyurme Namgyal was murdered in 1750 by the two ambans. The deed provoked some unrest among the population under the leadership of the chief groom of the murdered leader, Lobsang Tashi. Imperial troops intervened anew, after which the government was handed over to the Seventh Dalai Lama.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ McKay, Vol. II 2003, p. 593.
  2. ^ Van Schaik 2001, p. 140.
  3. ^ McKay, Vol. II 2003, p. 593.
  4. ^ Shakabpa 1967, p. 134.
  5. ^ Shakabpa 1967, p. 136.
  6. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 141.
  7. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 142.
  8. ^ Shakabpa 1967, p. 142.
  9. ^ Shakabpa 1967, p. 144.
  10. ^ Petech, Luciano (1972). China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet. Vol. 1 of T'oung pao, archives concernant l'histoire, les langues, la géographie, l'ethnographie et les arts de l'Asie orientale. Monographie (illustrated ed.). BRILL. p. 250. ISBN 9004034420.
  11. ^ Petech, Luciano (1972). China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet. Vol. 1 of T'oung pao, archives concernant l'histoire, les langues, la géographie, l'ethnographie et les arts de l'Asie orientale. Monographie (illustrated ed.). BRILL. p. 269. ISBN 9004034420.
  12. ^ Petech, Luciano (1972). China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet. Vol. 1 of T'oung pao, archives concernant l'histoire, les langues, la géographie, l'ethnographie et les arts de l'Asie orientale. Monographie (illustrated ed.). BRILL. pp. 133–134. ISBN 9004034420.
  13. ^ Petech, Luciano (1972). China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet. Vol. 1 of T'oung pao, archives concernant l'histoire, les langues, la géographie, l'ethnographie et les arts de l'Asie orientale. Monographie (illustrated ed.). BRILL. pp. 268, 269. ISBN 9004034420.
  14. ^ Petech, Luciano (1972). China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet. Vol. 1 of T'oung pao, archives concernant l'histoire, les langues, la géographie, l'ethnographie et les arts de l'Asie orientale. Monographie (illustrated ed.). BRILL. p. 249. ISBN 9004034420.
  15. ^ Richardson 1984, p. 52.
  16. ^ Richardson 1984, p. 53.
  17. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 143.
  18. ^ Van Schaik 2011, p. 144.

Sources edit

  • Roland Barraux (1995), Die Geschichte der Dalai Lamas - Göttliches Mitleid und irdische Politik. Düsseldorf.
  • Dungkar Lobsang Thrinle, "Tshering Wanggyel and his Pholhane-biography" (Tibetan, in the issue of nationality Sichuan Publishing)
  • K. Kollmar-Paulenz (2006), Kleine Geschichte Tibets. München.
  • Alex McKay (ed.) (2003), The history of Tibet, Vols. I-III. London & New York: Routledge.
  • Dan Martin, Yael Bentor (ed.) (1997), Tibetan Histories: A Bibliography of Tibetan-Language Historical Works. London: Serindia, ISBN 0906026431 (Nos. 270, 271) - ( Addenda et Corrigenda )
  • Luciano Petech (1972), China and Tibet in the Early XVIIIth Century. History of the Establishment of Chinese Protecturate in Tibet. Leiden.
  • Luciano Petech (1973), Aristocracy and Government in Tibet. 1728-1959. Roma.
  • Dieter Schuh (1981). Grundlagen tibetischer Siegelkunde. Eine Untersuchung über tibetische Siegelaufschriften in ´Phags-pa-Schrift. Sankt Augustin: VGH Wissenschaftsverlag.
  • Hugh Richardson (1984). Tibet & its history. Boston & London: Shambhala.
  • Tsepon W. D. Shakabpa (1967), Tibet: A political history. New York.
  • Van Schaik, Sam (2011). Tibet: A History. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0300194104.
Preceded by
Khangchenné cabinet
Ruling prince of Tibet
(Qing overlordship)

1728–1747
Succeeded by

polhané, sönam, topgyé, tibetan, ནས, བས, ནམས, བས, wylie, bsod, nams, stobs, rgyas, chinese, 頗羅鼐, 1689, march, 1747, most, important, political, personalities, tibet, first, half, 18th, century, between, 1728, 1747, effectively, ruling, prince, tibet, carried, . Polhane Sonam Topgye Tibetan ཕ ལ ནས བས ད ནམས ས བས ར ས Wylie Pho lha nas bsod nams stobs rgyas Chinese 頗羅鼐 1689 12 March 1747 was one of the most important political personalities of Tibet in the first half of the 18th century Between 1728 and 1747 he was effectively the ruling prince of Tibet and carried royal titles during the period of Qing rule of Tibet He is known as an excellent administrator a fearsome warrior and a grand strategist After the troubled years under the reign of Lhazang Khan the bloody invasion of Tsering Dhondup and the civil war his government ushered in a relatively long period of stability and internal and external peace for Tibet PolhanePrince Xizang of the Second RankSeal of the Tibetan ruler Polhane Sonam Topgye granted by the Yongzheng Emperor of the Qing dynastyPrince Xizang of the Second RankReign1727 1747PredecessorKhangchenne Sonam GyalpoSuccessorGyurme NamgyalKalon of TibetIn office1727 1747Monarch7th Dalai LamaBorn1689 1689 Died1747 aged 57 58 LhasaNamesPolhane Sonam Topgye ཕ ལ ནས བས ད ནམས ས བས ར ས Regnal namePrince Xizang of the Second Rank 西藏郡王 Contents 1 Family 2 Career under Lhabzang Khan 3 Resistance against the Dzungars 1717 to 1720 4 Participation in the cabinet 1721 to 1727 5 The civil war of 1727 1728 6 Government 1729 1735 7 Pholhane as administrator and ruling prince 1735 1747 8 Succession 9 See also 10 References 11 SourcesFamily editPolhane Sonam Topgye was born in 1689 in Polha Pho lha as the son of the general Pema Gyalpo and his wife Drolma Butri His father was an experienced warrior who took part in the war against Ladakh in 1679 1684 He later participated in campaigns against Bhutan and Nepal His forefathers were local officials in Tsang in the 17th century his grandfather Asum was endowed with the estate Polha south of Gyangtse by the Khoshut king Tenzin Dalai Khan for his services 1 It was here that Sonam Topgye grew up In his young years he received teachings in the Mindroling Monastery which belonged to the Nyingma school and also by the Panchen Lama 2 While his given name was Sonam Topgye he is usually known by the cognomen Polhane the one from Polha Career under Lhabzang Khan editShortly after his marriage in 1707 Polhane traveled to Lhasa where he was presented to the ruler Lhabzang Khan The ruler confirmed him in his possession of the estate that he had inherited from his deceased father Now he began a typical official career and was educated in the Ministry of Finance rTsis khang in Lhasa After some years he was appointed district judge in Gyangtse 3 In 1714 he received his first military command He successfully led an entire detachment against Bhutan although the war as such was lost by the Tibetans 4 After the invasion of Tibet by the Dzungars he took part in the organization of the Tibetan defense lines He was present during the final defense of Lhasa Resistance against the Dzungars 1717 to 1720 editLhasa fell in the hands of the Dzungars because of treason from some defenders and Lhabzang Khan was killed in the melee 5 Pholhane managed to take refuge in the Drepung Monastery In the following months the Dzungars tried to eliminate followers of Lhabzang Khan Pholhane was captured and brought naked through the streets of Lhasa After having been whipped with 15 lashes he was cast in prison He managed to survive since old friends brought him food Finally he was released through the intervention of Tagtsepa leader of the Tibetan government that was formed under the Dzungars Pholhane then returned to Tsang Here he began to collaborate with Khangchenne Sonam Gyalpo who had been appointed governor of Ngari by Lhabzang Khan and continued to rule there in spite of the Dzungars They organized resistance against the invaders until the grand Chinese army sent by the Kangxi Emperor marched into Lhasa in September 1720 Participation in the cabinet 1721 to 1727 editImmediately after their arrival to Lhasa the representatives of the Manchu led Qing dynasty organized a provisional military government under the general Yansin After the return of the imperial army a garrison of 3 000 men stayed in Lhasa This troop was replaced in 1723 Two officials called zongli and two other termed xieli were placed as representatives of the emperor and advisers to the Tibetan government The provisional military government was replaced in 1721 by a cabinet under the leadership of Khangchenne who retained the jurisdiction over Ngari The other two ministers were Ngaphopa Dorje Gyalpo d 1728 and Lumpane Tashi Gyalpo d 1728 Khangchenne appointed Polhane as personal adjutant and he received the jurisdiction over the Tsang province He submitted a proposal that the hundreds of Nyingma monasteries and temples which had been ruined by the Dzungars should be restored with government assistance This was taken up badly by many especially by the Seventh Dalai Lama and his father who viewed the Nyimgma as heretic 6 In 1723 he and Charaba Lotro Gyalpo were appointed regular members of the cabinet which from now on consisted of five members The basic principle of this new administrative structure of Tibet was that the members of the cabinet acted as ruling princes over the regions standing under them U Kongpo Tsang and Ngari having their particular military resources and means of income This certainly weakened the position of Tibet vis a vis its neighbours but also raised the danger of inner dissent if the leading politicians could not agree In fact there was great disharmony between the cabinet members from the start The tension eventually exploded in 1727 when Khangchenne died under the knives of his peers Polhane was luckily absent from Lhasa at the time since his wife was ill and he had hastened to her sickbed at his estate 7 The civil war of 1727 1728 editImmediately after Khangchenne s assassination Ngaphopa Lumpane and Charaba took over power in Lhasa supported by the father of the Dalai Lama Sonam Dargye They mobilized the troops in their respective territories in particular from Kongpo and U 300 men were sent to catch Polhane but failed to do so The latter boded up troops from Tsang He allied with Khangchenne s brother Gashiba Tseten Tashi who had taken over governance in Ngari in 1725 8 Meanwhile he sent an express envoy to inform the court in China After a half year of fighting at Gyangtse Ngaphopa was defeated Polhane marched towards Lhasa with 9 000 troops occupied the city and laid siege to the Potala Palace where his opponents and the ambans had taken refuge Dalai Lama was allowed to take sanctuary in the Drepung Monastery but Polhane s adversaries were taken prisoners on 5 July 1728 Polhane immediately communicated his victory to the Yongzheng Emperor of the Qing dynasty As the imperial troops arrived on 4 September 1728 the civil war had already been concluded One of the main tasks of the arriving Chinese was to find the main culprits behind the eruption of the war Ngaphopa and Lumpane were publicly executed by slow slicing two clerics were hanged and 13 others were beheaded In addition the close kin of the culprits were executed as well including small children 9 On 1 November 1728 after the Qing reconquest of Lhasa in Tibet several Tibetan rebels were sliced to death by Qing Manchu officers and officials The Qing Manchu President of the Board of Civil Office Jalangga Mongol sub chancellor Sen ge and brigadier general Manchu Mala ordered the Tibetan rebels Lum pa nas and Na p od pa to be sliced to death They ordered gZims dpon C os ac ad Hsi mu pen ch ui cha t e son of Lum pa nas and rNog Tarqan bsKal bzajn c os adar and dKon mc og lha sgrub Kun ch u k o la ku pu and dGa ldan p un ts ogs K a erh tan p en ch u k o sons of Na p od pa to be beheaded 10 11 Byams pa Cha mu pa and his brother Lhag gsan La k o sang and their brothers daughters wives and mother were exiled after their father sByar ra nas was beheaded The Manchus wrote that they set an example by forcing the Tibetans to publicly watch the executions of Tibetan rebels of slicing like Na p od pa since they said it was the Tibetan s nature to be cruel The exiled Tibetans were enslaved and given as slaves to soldiers in Ching chou Jingzhou K ang zhou Kangzhou and Chiang ning Jiangning in the marshall residences there The Tibetan rNam rgyal grva ts an college administrator gner adsin and sKyor lun Lama were tied together with Lum pa nas and Na p od pa on 4 scaffolds k rims sin to be sliced The Manchus used muskets to fire 3 salvoes and then the Manchus strangled the 2 Lamas while slicing Lum pa nas and Na p od pa to death while they beheaded the 13 other rebel leaders The Tibetan population was depressed by the scene and the writer continued to feel sad as he described it 5 years later All relatives of the Tibetan rebels including little children were executed by the Qing Manchus except the exiled and deported family of sByar ra ba which was condemned to be slaves The public executions spectacle worked on the Tibetans since they were cowed into submission by the Qing Polhane who was a collaborator with the Qing himself also felt sad at his fellow Tibetans being executed in this manner and he prayed for them All of this was included in a report by General Yue Zhongqi and sent to the Qing emperor at the time the Yongzheng Emperor 12 13 14 Government 1729 1735 editNow Beijing interfered strongly in the organization of the civil and military administration of Tibet Polhane was once again given the jurisdiction over Tsang Two other ministers namely Sicho Tseten and Tsering Wanggyal were appointed to govern Lhasa and U However they stood entirely under the direction of Pholhane Two Manchu representatives or ambans watched over the government of Polhane The Panchen Lama Lobsang Yeshe d 1737 was given great authority which de facto made him the ruler of western Tsang The borders in East Tibet 1724 Amdo 1727 Kham were much altered and Lhasa was permanently occupied by imperial troops plus 2 000 men who supported the ambans Under the pretext of going on a tour to Beijing the Seventh Dalai Lama was sent in exile to Garthar near Lithang for six years 1728 1735 15 The actual reason was that his father had played a dubious role during the civil war and had to be kept far away from the government Another reason was supposedly that the Dalai Lama was to be kept safe from the Dzungars Pholhane as administrator and ruling prince 1735 1747 editAs time passed Polhane became ever more independent and posed as a king or ruling prince of sorts honorary royal titles bestowed by the emperor in 1731 and 1739 The Tibetans usually knew him by the title miwang ruler of men The protector status of the Manchu rulers was handled more as a formality Still he took care to orient his politics so as to take the powers of the imperial court into account 16 Since his trustworthiness and loyalty to the imperial dynasty could not be questioned the troops stationed in Lhasa were reduced to 500 men in 1733 At the same time Polhane built up a professional army consisting of 15 000 infantry and 10 000 cavalry He ordered the borders to be guarded and secured and built military barracks all over the land In 1729 he organized a postal system that secured the transmission of messages from Ngari to Lhasa and from Lhasa to East Tibet This postal system was inspired by Chinese model and replaced the system instigated by the Chinese in 1720 especially in East Tibet In the time of Polhane even the Chinese officials in Lhasa used this postal system for the communications with the imperial court In the sphere of culture Polhane sponsored the first printed edition of the Buddhist canon 17 In sum Polhane s tenure is remembered as being peaceful stable and welfare oriented Succession editAfter Polhane s death in 1747 the imperial government confirmed his second son Gyurme Namgyal as his successor Gyurme Namgyal was murdered in 1750 by the two ambans The deed provoked some unrest among the population under the leadership of the chief groom of the murdered leader Lobsang Tashi Imperial troops intervened anew after which the government was handed over to the Seventh Dalai Lama 18 See also editTibet under Qing rule History of TibetReferences edit McKay Vol II 2003 p 593 Van Schaik 2001 p 140 McKay Vol II 2003 p 593 Shakabpa 1967 p 134 Shakabpa 1967 p 136 Van Schaik 2011 p 141 Van Schaik 2011 p 142 Shakabpa 1967 p 142 Shakabpa 1967 p 144 Petech Luciano 1972 China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet Vol 1 of T oung pao archives concernant l histoire les langues la geographie l ethnographie et les arts de l Asie orientale Monographie illustrated ed BRILL p 250 ISBN 9004034420 Petech Luciano 1972 China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet Vol 1 of T oung pao archives concernant l histoire les langues la geographie l ethnographie et les arts de l Asie orientale Monographie illustrated ed BRILL p 269 ISBN 9004034420 Petech Luciano 1972 China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet Vol 1 of T oung pao archives concernant l histoire les langues la geographie l ethnographie et les arts de l Asie orientale Monographie illustrated ed BRILL pp 133 134 ISBN 9004034420 Petech Luciano 1972 China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet Vol 1 of T oung pao archives concernant l histoire les langues la geographie l ethnographie et les arts de l Asie orientale Monographie illustrated ed BRILL pp 268 269 ISBN 9004034420 Petech Luciano 1972 China and Tibet in the Early Xviiith Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet Vol 1 of T oung pao archives concernant l histoire les langues la geographie l ethnographie et les arts de l Asie orientale Monographie illustrated ed BRILL p 249 ISBN 9004034420 Richardson 1984 p 52 Richardson 1984 p 53 Van Schaik 2011 p 143 Van Schaik 2011 p 144 Sources editRoland Barraux 1995 Die Geschichte der Dalai Lamas Gottliches Mitleid und irdische Politik Dusseldorf Dungkar Lobsang Thrinle Tshering Wanggyel and his Pholhane biography Tibetan in the issue of nationality Sichuan Publishing K Kollmar Paulenz 2006 Kleine Geschichte Tibets Munchen Alex McKay ed 2003 The history of Tibet Vols I III London amp New York Routledge Dan Martin Yael Bentor ed 1997 Tibetan Histories A Bibliography of Tibetan Language Historical Works London Serindia ISBN 0906026431 Nos 270 271 Addenda et Corrigenda Luciano Petech 1972 China and Tibet in the Early XVIIIth Century History of the Establishment of Chinese Protecturate in Tibet Leiden Luciano Petech 1973 Aristocracy and Government in Tibet 1728 1959 Roma Dieter Schuh 1981 Grundlagen tibetischer Siegelkunde Eine Untersuchung uber tibetische Siegelaufschriften in Phags pa Schrift Sankt Augustin VGH Wissenschaftsverlag Hugh Richardson 1984 Tibet amp its history Boston amp London Shambhala Tsepon W D Shakabpa 1967 Tibet A political history New York Van Schaik Sam 2011 Tibet A History New Haven Yale University Press p 152 ISBN 978 0300194104 Preceded byKhangchenne cabinet Ruling prince of Tibet Qing overlordship 1728 1747 Succeeded byGyurme Namgyal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polhane Sonam Topgye amp oldid 1202696764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.