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Thutob Namgyal


FieldValue
nameThutob Namgyal
imageThutob Namgyal.jpg
captionPhotograph of Thutob Namgyal
reign1874 – 11 February 1914
successionChogyal of Sikkim
predecessorSidkeong Namgyal
successorSidkeong Tulku Namgyal
issueTsodrak Namgyal
Sidkeong Tulku Namgyal
Tashi Namgyal
Mayeum Choying Wangmo Dorji
houseNamgyal dynasty
fatherTsugphud Namgyal
motherMaharani Menchi
birth_date1860
death_date(aged 53–54)
religionTibetan Buddhism
spouseYeshay Dolma
module{{infobox military personembed= yes
allegianceKingdom of Sikkim
serviceyears1874 - 1914

Sidkeong Tulku Namgyal Tashi Namgyal Mayeum Choying Wangmo Dorji

Thutob Namgyal (Sikkimese: ; Wylie: mthu-stobs rnam-rgyal) (1860 – 11 February 1914) was the ruling chogyal (monarch) of Sikkim between 1874 and 1914. Thutob ascended to the throne succeeding his half-brother Sidkeong Namgyal who died issueless. Differences between the Nepalese settlers and the indigenous population during his reign led to the direct intervention of the British, who were the de facto rulers of the Himalayan nation. The British ruled in favour of the Nepalese much to the discontent of the chogyal, who then retreated to the Chumbi Valley and allied himself with the Tibetans.

The British sent a military force (Sikkim expedition), and after a series of skirmishes between the Tibetans and the British near Jelep La, the Tibetans were pushed back and the Chogyal was put under the supervision of John Claude White, who had been appointed Political Officer in 1889. In 1894, he shifted the capital from Tumlong to the present location, Gangtok. He was knighted in 1911. Alex McKay states, "The 9th Chogyal of Sikkim, Sir Thutob Namgyal, was increasingly supportive of modernisation. After his death in 1914, Sidkeon Namgyal Tulku, who had been groomed for the post by the British, succeeded him but died after ruling for just 10 months. Sidkeong Tulku’s younger half-brother, Tashi Namgyal, who had been educated at St Paul’s and Mayo College, then became Chogyal in 1915, and ruled Sikkim until his death in 1963."

The Sir Thutob Namgyal Memorial (STNM) Hospital in Gangtok was built in memory of him in 1917.

Honours

British Empire

  • KCIE: Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire, 12 December 1911.
  • Empress of India Gold Medal, 1 January 1877.
  • Delhi Durbar Medal (1903), 1 January 1903.
  • Delhi Durbar Medal (1911), 11 December 1911.

References

Sources

References

  1. McKay, Alex. (2 February 2004). ""The indigenisation of western medicine in Sikkim" in The Bulletin of Tibetology".
Wikipedia Source

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