Tibet History - helps you learn about the truth
China is a unified country with 56 nationalities. As a major member
of this big family, the Tibetans are found in large numbers throughout
the Tibet Autonomous Region, most parts of Qinghai Province, southern
Gansu Province, northwest Sichuan Province and northwest Yunnan Province.
The Audience, painted by Yan Liben of the Tang Dynasty,
illustrated the historical fact that Tang Dynasty Emperor Taizong
gave an audience to Gar Tongsen
At the time of the unification of the Tibetan race, its various tribes
maintained close ties with the Han and several other nationalities
in western and northwestern China. During the first part of the 7th
century, Tubo King Songtsan Gambo unified the various Tibetan tribes
on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and formed the Tubo Kingdom, which later
maintained frequent contact with the Central Government of the Tang
Dynasty (618-907). The marriages of Songtsan Gambo to Princess Wen
Cheng and Tride Zhotsan to Princess Jin Cheng indicate that the Tibetan
and the Han nationalities had gradually formed close political, economic
and cultural ties. In the mid-9th century, the unified Tubo Kingdom
collapsed. This was followed by the rise of many local warring factions
in the Tibetan areas of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. When the Song Dynasty
(960-1279) was founded in the Han-dominated areas of China, some of
these local Tibetan forces (Tibetan tribes formerly subject to rule
by the Tubo Kingdom) pledged allegiance to the Song court. The relations
between the Tibetans and the Han became even closer during this period.
When the Mongolians founded the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), a dynasty
that featured unprecedented national unity, Tibet was officially incorporated
into the Chinese nation. Kublai Khan, the founding emperor of the
Yuan Dynasty, granted the Sagya regime the power to administer Tibet
under the rule of the Yuan government, and introduced many rules and
regulations to be applied to Tibet. The Mongolian, Han, Tibetan and
various other nationalities joined hands to form a political entity
featuring economic and cultural prosperity. The Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
basically followed various systems introduced during the Yuan Dynasty
for rule over Tibet. In carrying out a policy of pacification, the
Ming Dynasty granted the title"Prince of Dharma" or"Prince"
to eight government and religious leaders in the Tibetan areas. During
this period of time, the Tibetan areas and the Central Plains maintained
frequent economic and cultural exchanges; the relations between the
Tibetan race and the other nationalities in the Chinese family developed
further. After the 17th century, the Manchurians unified China and
founded the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). The Qing government granted
the honorary title"Dalai Lama" to the Dalai and the honorary
title"Panchen Erdeni" to the Panchen; it also appointed
local government officials, dispatched high commissioners to Tibet,
and enacted laws concerning the Tibetan government system and regulations
for the more effective governing of Tibet. This helped strengthen
Qing government administration over Tibet and led to closer ties between
Tibet and the motherland. In the 19th century, when the Qing entered
its late period, the British coupled its invasion of China's coastal
areas with an invasion of Tibet. The British sowed bad blood between
the Tibetan and the Han and other nationalities. The Qing court, corrupt
and impotent as it was, adopted many domestic and foreign policies
that proved the undoing of the Qing Dynasty. The relations between
the Tibetan local government and the Central Government worsened.
Nonetheless, no change took place to the Chinese nation, the unified
political entity composed of the Han, Manchurian, Mongolian, Hui,
Tibetan and various other nationalities. Soldiers and civilians of
the Han and the Tibetan, Manchurian and Mongolian ethnic groups jointly
fought against imperialist invasions, writing a brilliant page in
the history of defending the motherland. In the late years of the
Qing and the early days of the Republic of China (1912-49), the British
left no stone unturned in their attempts to cultivate pro-British
elements in the upper echelon of the ruling class in Tibet, and masterminded
the Simla Conference aimed at tearing Tibet away from the motherland.
All these failed to become true in the face of a boycott staged by
the patriotic forces in Tibet and the resolute opposition of people
throughout China. During this period, Tibet maintained ties with the
central government of China. China continued to exercise sovereignty
over Tibet, as it had since the Yuan Dynasty.
The 10th Bainqen Erdeni presents
a hada (auspicous silk scarf) to Chairman Mao |
In 1949, the liberation struggle waged by the Chinese people under
the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC) was crowned with
a sweeping victory. At the time of the founding of the People'sRepublic
of China (PRC) in 1949, foreign imperialist and expansionist forces
incited Tibetan separatists to speed up efforts towards bringing about"Tibetan
independence" in an attempt to make impossible the liberation
of Tibet. The CPC Central Committee and Chairman Mao Zedong decided
to send the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) into Tibet"early
rather than late," and worked out principles and policies for
the peaceful liberation of Tibet. The PLA troops and working team
members, sent into Tibet, followed the principles and policies of
the CPC Central Committee and Chairman Mao Zedong to the letter and
with great success. Tibet was peacefully liberated in 1951. Foreign
imperialist and expansionist forces, who had been riding roughshod
over the Tibetan people for more than half a century, were driven
out of Tibet. The Central People'sgovernment followed a new policy
for minority affairs. Various ethnic groups in Tibet began, for the
first time in history, to enjoy political, economic, and social equality.
The big Chinese family, composed of Tibetans and members of other
nationalities, was formed on the principle of equality, unity, fraternity
and cooperation. Following the revolution in Tibet, characterized
by the overthrow of feudal serfdom and the emancipation of the serfs
and slaves and their becoming masters of their own fate, Tibet enjoyed
rapid development in the political, economic and cultural fields.
Tibet became an autonomous region established in the People'sRepublic
of China in 1965. Although Tibet also experienced the chaotic"cultural
revolution" (1966-76) and mistakes were made, progress made in
construction has outstripped these setbacks. Tibet experienced unprecedented
development of the productive forces and improvements in living standards.
All the 56 nationalities in the big Chinese family, Tibetans included,
have cemented a politically, economically and culturally united entity
that no outside force can tear apart.
This 1,000-year-long written history between the Tibetans and various
other nationalities in the big Chinese family is an inalterable fact.
Sketch of the Tibetan Areas During the Qing Dynasty
Marco Polo, an Italian who came to China and visited Emperor Kublai
Khan of the Yuan Dynasty in the 13th century, described Tibet as"the
Province of Tibet" in his travelogue. References to Tibet as
a province can be found in the editions of The Travelogue of Marco
Polo by the Macmillan Company in 1927 and also by the John Company
of New York in 1948. Obviously, Marco Polo stated in explicit term
some 700 years ago that Tibet was a province of China. In the 18th
volume of The Encyclopedia Britannica for 1973 and 1974, Webster's
Atlas published in the United States in 1978, and The International
Atlas published in the 1960s, maps are marked with China in larger
letters and Tibet in smaller letters. This is also the case with maps
published by various other countries. All these show that these publications
recognize Tibet as a part of China.
As an overwhelming majority of the Chinese are the Hans, the word"Chinese"
was used in English to mean both the Chinese people and the Han people
in specific. Although it is not a rigorously followed approach to
adopt the name of the majority ethnic group of a nation as the reference
for that nation, other examples do exist in the world today. In India,
for example, the Indianstans make up more than 46 percent of the Indian
population, constituting the country's ethnic majority. But the population
also includes sizable numbers of Bengalis, Tamils, and Sikhs. The
term"Indian" has been used in English to refer to all the
various ethnic groups in India, not only the Indianstan ethnic majority.
(Strictly speaking, however, the term should not encompass those from
other ethnic groups) In the United Kingdom, the English account for
some 80 percent of the national population. Other ethnic groups include
the Scots, Welsh, and Irish. In various countries around the world,
including the United Kingdom itself, the term"Englishmen"
or"Englander" is used to refer to members of all of the
various ethnic groups in the United Kingdom, not only the English,
but also the Scots, Welsh, and Irish. (Again, strictly speaking, it
does not include these peoples) Very few people in the United Kingdom
use the proper term"British" to refer to the citizens of
the United Kingdom, although it correctly means the English, Scots,
Welsh, and Irish and any other ethnic minorities of the nation. This
situation, which has been going on for more than 1,000 years, is one
of the major reasons that many terms in English (and other languages
as well) contain meanings in both broad and narrow senses. For example,"Chinese"
means the"Chinese people" in a broad sense and the"Han
people" in a narrow sense, while"Englander" means the
people of the United Kingdom in a broad sense and the"Englander"
in a narrow sense.
Because of past confusion, the use of the term"Chinese"
in English translations can not correctly reflect the relations between
the various nationalities within the larger Chinese family. Therefore,
the Chinese government, after the founding of New China, stipulated
the use of"Han nationality,""Hans" or"Han
people." Such rigorous use of the English terms has been accepted
by foreign scholars holding just and rigorous approaches. For example,
the New Webster International English Dictionary (third edition) published
in 1961 cites the term"Han" or"Hans," expounding
it as: 1) the ethnic group that moved from Central Asia to the Weishui
River Valley in ancient times, members of this ethnic group expanded
eastward and southward and resided in the bulk areas in eastern China,
becoming the primitive Chinese nation and forming the cultural mass
that holds predominance in China; 2) the people of the Han nationality.
In accordance with the international practice of names being derived
from their masters, terms used to mean a nationality, a place and
a people of that nationality -- written in the country's own language
and foreign languages---should be confirmed by the government and
peoples of that nation. Foreigners should respect the stipulations
of that country. Therefore, from the angle of ethnicity, the Tibetans
are not part of the Han but from the angle of the Chinese population
as a whole, the Tibetans are undoubtedly part of the Chinese. This
fairly and accurately tells the historical reality that has existed
for more than 700 years, since the Yuan Dynasty.
The historical status of China's Tibet is clear as clean water and
the blue sky---a fact known to the world.
To learn more about the hisorical status, please click
here.