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Tibet History
In ancient times, the Tibetans on the plateau cultivated
a close relationship with the Han and with other ethnic groups
from the Chinese interior. In the 7th century, this relationship
reached its peak when Srong-btsan Sgam-po (Songtsan Gambol,
the king of the Tubo kingdom who ruled the Tibetan Plateau
at that time twice sent envoys to the Tang Dynasty emperor
to propose to Princess Wen Cheng who he later married. The
Tibetans and Hans had through the marriage of their royal
families and various meetings, formed close economic and cultural
relations laying the groundwork for the ultimate foundation
of a unified nation. In Lhasa the capital of the Tibet Autonomous
Region, the statue of Princess Wen Cheng is still enshrined
and worshipped in the Potala Palace. The Monument to the Alliance
between the Tibetans and the Han erected in the 9th century
still stands in the square in front of the Jokhang Temple.
Relations between Tibet and China continued to develop afterwards.
In the 13th century, the ruler of Tibet met a Yuan Dynasty
prince and officially decided on the terms for Tibetan submission
to China including presenting the prince with map and census
books, the payment of tributes and the acceptance of rule
by appointed officials. From then on. Tibet was an official
administrative region of China. This happened 200 years before
Colombus' discovery of the Americas. In the following several
hundred years,though there were shifts in the political power
of the central government and the local Tibetan government
alike, relations between them became more and more close,
and Tibet's position as an administrative region of China
has never changed. Rulers of both the Ming Dynasty, founded
in the 14th century, and the (Qing Dynasty founded in the
17th century were directly responsible for the appointment
of Tibets' local officials, as well as for the selection of
high commissioners stationed in Tibet to supervise local administration
on behalf of the central authorities
The majority of Tibetans believe in Tibetan Buddhism of which
many sects developed during Tibet's long history. After the
establishment of the (Qing Dynasty in the 17th century, the
emperors granted honorific titles to the 5th Dalai Lama and
the 5th Baingen Erdeni of the Gelukpa sect in 1653 and 1713
respectively henceforth officially establishing the titles
of the Dalai Lama and the Baingen Erdeni and their political
and religious status in Tibet. The Dalai Lama in Lhasa ruled
most or Tibet while the Baingen Erdeni ruled the remaining
area from Xigaze. The Chinese emperors also enacted regulations
stipulating that the selection of children said to be the
reincarnations of the Dalai Lama or Baingen Lama should be
reported to the imperial court for approval, and that the
central government would send high officials to supervise
in person. The discovery of the 14th Dalai Lama who is in
exile at present was indeed reported to the central government
by the Tibetan local government in the traditional manner
after the death of the 13th Dalai Lama. In 1940 the Chairman
of the national government issued an official decree conferring
the title of the Dalai Lama.
After the People's Republic of China was founded, the central
government notified local Tibetan authorities to ''send delegates
to Beijing to negotiate the peaceful liberation of Tibet''
On 23rd May 1951 the ''17-Article Agreement'' was signed after
delegates from the central government and the local Tibetan
government reached agreement on a series of questions concerning
Tibet's peaceful liberation. The Dalai Lama sent a telegram
and the Baingen Lama issued a statement both supporting the
''17-Article Agreement'' and expressing their de- sires to
''safeguard the unification of the motherland and her territorial
sovereignty.''
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