Bhutan and Tibet War
Bhutan and Tibet War
Bhutan and Tibet War
Introduction∗
∗
This article is reprinted, with minor corrections, from the
Proceedings of the 7th Seminar of the International Association for
Tibetan Studies, Graz 1995, Volume I: Tibetan Studies,
Oesterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien 1997.
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complicated events of this civil war than with the outcome for
future relations between Bhutan and Tibet20.
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The Rapprochement Between Bhutan and Tibet
In 1744, while the above events were under way, the 13th
sDe-srid Shes-rab-dbang-phyug was installed in Bhutan. His
19-year reign may fairly be called the high point in the history
of secular rule during this era. Shes-rab-dbang-phyug was an
energetic, creative diplomat who, even more than his near-
contemporary Pho-lha-nas, was a master politician and
initiator on many fronts 36. Youngest of eight children from an
obscure family of western Bhutan, he spent his early career
in the state monastery. During the civil war years, however,
he was recruited out of the monastery by sDe-srid Mi-pham-
dbang-po to serve as mgron-gnyer (chief steward) at several
government dzongs. His success in this role got him
appointed as the governor of Paro dzong, a commission in
which he brilliantly lead the military campaign against the
secessionists who had taken that district, but then, unlike
most earlier sDe-srid, treated the rebels with sensitivity and
leniency during their repatriation. During his second term in
this post, at the war’s conclusion, he continued to nurture
local support for the central Bhutan government by
sponsoring extensive restorations at Paro, a gilt dome for its
central keep, and the construction of many new images. For
sDe-srid Mi-pham-dbang-po’s funeral ceremonies in 1739,
Shes-rab-dbang-phyug personally paid for a mass
distribution of coins (mang ’gyed) to the more than 300
attending monks, an act of personal charity he was to repeat
seven more times during his career37.
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Conclusion
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Notes
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(1979): 259-260.
28SDE-SRID 10: 52b-53b.
29 SDE-SRID 10: 66a; L7DL: 439b-440a.
30 SDE-SRID 10: 68b; RJE MKHAN-PO 9, part Ja: 18a.
31 On the life of ’Brug-pa Kun-legs see Stein (1972); also a
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39 RJE MKHAN-PO 10: 78a. See also M. Aris (1994), From the Land of
the Thunder Dragon, Peabody-Essex Museum, p. 38-39.
40 RJE MKHAN-PO 9, part Ja: 12a; L7DL: 329b.
41 Petech (1972): 122, 158.
42 RJE MKHAN-PO 13: 49a-b; L7DL: 439b-440a, 513a.
43 L7DL: 402a-b, 435a, 513a, 545a-546a.
44 Charles Bell (1906), Report on the Government of Tibet. Calcutta
Bibliography
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