"Tibet, a vast plateau at an average height of more
than twelve thousand feet altitude in most places, straddles a large chunk of
Asia, bounded by the Himalayan mountain ranges to the south and pierced in
places by high passes like Lanak La, Shipki La, Mana, along the Himachal
Pradesh-Tibet and the Kumaon-Tibet borders respectively, the passes in Nepal,
and Nathu La, and Jelep La in the Sikkim Himalayas. The Karakoram mountain
range stands guard to the southwest of Tibet, the Kuen Lun range on the west,
the Koko-nor area and vast alkaline marshes on the north east and, a rugged
tangle of hills and forests mostly between ten and fifteen thousand feet on the
east bordering Yunnan and Szechuan provinces of China................Over the last thousand years or so, traders from
Kashmir, Bushairis from Himachal Pradesh, Bhutias from Kumaon, and the Nepalese
and Bhutanese traded across the high mountain passes for wool, salt (Tibet
having many saline springs and lakes), gold, borax and so on, while the Chinese
traders via Yunnan brought in great quantities of black tea that the Tibetans
were inordinately fond of. In turn, Tibetan traders came with their wares of
gold, silver, leather, and of course wool, into the marts of India and China (Tibetans were bringing their
goods-laden mule trains to trade into Kalimpong in the Darjeeling hills in
India via Jelep La as late as 1950s).
A view of typical Ladakh landscape
Pangong Lake in Ladakh - scene of recent skirmishes
I had visited Ladakh for sight-seeing in June 2013 and that as well as a chance discussion with a friend set me off to know more about the Sino-Indian border conflict. It took me over 2 years of research and going through about 70 books and several maps to get a grip on the subject. This resulted in my book on the Sino-Indian border conflict that is mentioned above.
Excerpt -- "At the core lay the long-standing Sino-Tibetan
animosities of over a thousand years. And, the persistent attempts of Tibet to assert its
independence with the equally persistent efforts by successive Chinese
administrations to enjoy the fruits of Mongol and Manchu imperialism since the
mid-13th century in Tibet, Sinkiang and Mongolia. Added to this was the
ups and downs of Tibetan and Chinese administration in the respective countries
since the 17th century (including outbreak of civil wars in the two
countries), the advances made by European and British imperialism in both China
and India, the Sino-Russian tussles in Mongolia, and of course, the “Great
Game” between Britain and Russia............... There have been quite a few books on the Sino-Indian
conflict of 1962, such as those by Neville Maxwell, Karunakar Gupta, S.R. Johri
and John Garvin (amongst others, besides those by Dalvi and Kaul) fairly well-known
to the Indian reading public. But, as my studies revealed, there were many,
many others, drawing upon extremely valuable archives and records that, together with
some basic histories of China and Tibet, help provide valuable insights and
perspectives on the whole issue of the “Why?” of it. I have seen those records
through the eyes and pens of renowned scholars such as Dr. Alastair Lamb,
Dorothy Woodman, Margaret Fisher and her co-authors, Parshotam Mehra, and those
of much earlier days, such as Charles Bell, E. Teichman, Robert Reid, T.
Richardson, L. Petech, and many others, whose names have been mentioned in the
Bibliography. Added to those should be the known and unknown surveyors of those
border areas, whose maps with their wealth of details are a joy to behold."
No comments:
Post a Comment