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Tibet Area (administrative division)
Province claimed by China, 1912–1965
Province claimed by China, 1912–1965
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| native_name | 西藏地方 | |
| conventional_long_name | Tibet Area | |
| common_name | Tibet | |
| nation | Republic of China | |
| status_text | Area of the Republic of China (1912–1951) | |
| Area of the People's Republic of China (1951–1965) | ||
| <!-- General information --> | life_span | 1912–1965 |
| capital | Lhasa | |
| today | China | |
| ∟ Tibet Autonomous Region | ||
| <!-- Only fill in the start/end event entry if a specific article exists. Don't just say "abolition" or "declaration". --> | date_pre | 1 January 1912 |
| event_pre | Tibet Area claimed by the ROC Provisional Government | |
| year_start | 1951 | |
| year_end | 1965 | |
| event_start | ||
| date_start | ||
| event2 | Seventeen Point | |
| Agreement | ||
| date_event2 | 23 May 1951 | |
| event3 | Replacement of Kashag with the Preparatory Committee for the Tibet Autonomous Region | |
| after the 1959 Tibetan rebellion | ||
| date_event3 | 1959 | |
| event4 | Sino-Indian War | |
| date_event4 | 20 October 1962 | |
| event_end | Establishment of the | |
| Tibet Autonomous Region | ||
| date_end | 22 April | |
| image_map | Republic of China edcp location map (disputed territories) Tibet Area.svg | |
| image_map_caption | Map of the de jure Tibet Area within the ROC | |
| <!-- Flag navigation: Preceding and succeeding entities "p1" to "p5" and "s1" to "s8" --> | p1 | Tibet under Qing rule |
| flag_p1 | Flag of China (1889–1912).svg | |
| p2 | Tibet (1912–1951)Tibet | |
| s1 | Tibet Autonomous Region | |
| stat_year1 | 1953 | |
| stat_area1 | 1221600 | |
| stat_pop1 | 1,274,969 | |
| flag_p2 | Flag of Tibet (1916-1951).svg | |
| flag_s1 | Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg |
Area of the People's Republic of China (1951–1965) ∟ Tibet Autonomous Region Agreement](seventeen-point-agreement-for-the-peaceful-liberation-of-tibet) after the 1959 Tibetan rebellion Tibet Autonomous Region
The Tibet Area (, also translated as Tibet Region in the 1954 Sino-Indian Agreement) was a province-level administrative division of China in the 20th century. It was de jure created after the establishment of the Republic of China in 1912, and nominally includes the Ü-Tsang (central Tibet) and Ngari (western Tibet) areas, but not the Amdo and Kham areas. The territories were merely claimed by the ROC, but actually controlled by an independent Tibet with a government headed by the Dalai Lama in Lhasa. At this time, the scope of de facto independent Tibet included the "Tibet area" and the Chamdo area west of the Jinsha River, which claimed by China. The ROC retreated to Taiwan and lost control of mainland China to the People's Republic of China (PRC) in 1949; afterwards, the ROC continued to claim Tibet.
The PRC annexed Tibet in 1951 and continued to call it Tibet Area. It merged with the Chamdo Region and was transformed to Tibet Autonomous Region in 1965 after the 1959 Tibetan uprising.
Background
Early-Republican China
Tibet became a protectorate of Qing China in the 18th century; imperial authority was symbolized by a Qing resident called amban in Lhasa. After the Chinese 1911 Revolution and the end of the Qing Empire, Tibet expelled the Chinese delegation and became independent. The ROC claimed Tibet as a province. It considered Tibet be part of the "Five Races under One Union" and held that "Tibet was placed under the sovereignty of China" following the Sino-Nepalese War (1788–1792). The Nationalist government's Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission (MTAC) was established in 1928 to nominally govern those regions. In 1934, diplomatic relations between Tibet and China resumed. ROC proposed that Tibet recognize Chinese sovereignty. Tibet rejected the proposal but agreed to host a Chinese mission in Lhasa; a MTAC mission was established in 1939. It was expelled in July 1949 to make it more difficult for the Chinese Communists to establish an official presence.
Relations with the People's Republic of China
Main article: Annexation of Tibet by the People's Republic of China
The PRC received early insight into the politics of Tibet by recruiting from MTAC members after the Kuomintang was defeated during the Chinese Civil War. In 1949, Tibet opened negotiations with the Chinese Communists, who were expected to win the civil war, and through them, with the future PRC. As with the ROC, Tibet refused to accept Communist demands that Tibet recognize Chinese sovereignty. Following some border skirmishes, the PRC invaded Tibet in October 1950; the Chinese defeated the Tibetans at the Battle of Chamdo, Chamdo being part of Xikang rather than Tibet Area from the Chinese point of view. They stopped to allow further negotiations. Tibet was unable to secure international support, and military resistance was hopeless. In 1951, the PRC formally annexed Tibet through the Seventeen Point Agreement. In the first few years, the Chinese focused on creating an administration independent of the Tibetan government; the latter was unable to cope with the work demanded by the Chinese and became increasingly redundant. Social reform was not emphasized due to the difference in culture and the dependence of PRC institutions on local resources. Basic services, trade, and technology were introduced to win over the population and the ruling elite. Tibetan opposition built around the two prime ministers of the Tibetan government, and was strengthened by the Chinese criticism of those officers.
The Preparatory Committee for the Autonomous Region of Tibet (PCART) was formed in 1955 as an interim governing body. It replaced the Chinese Tibet Military Commission, which frequently opposed the Tibetan government and was viewed with hostility by the Tibetans. The PRC hoped that Tibetan integration would be easier with the Chinese–Tibetan PCART. The relevance of the native Tibetan government continued to erode; the Kashag continued to meet but its influence was mainly symbolic.
The Tibet Autonomous Region was created in 1965 after the 1959 Tibetan uprising.
Relations with Taiwan after 1949
After Chinese Civil War, and the ROC retreated to Taiwan. It continued to claim Tibet.
Chiang Kai-shek responded to the 1959 uprising with a Letter to Tibetan Compatriots (), which set the ROC's policy of aiding Tibetan rebels against the PRC. ROC continued to operate MTAC, which undertook propaganda work among the Tibetan diaspora in India. In the following years, 400 Tibetans were recruited to work and study in Taiwan.
The ROC's position on Tibet shifted after the former's democratization in mid-1990s. In 2007, ROC President Chen Shui-bian spoke at the International Symposium on Human Rights in Tibet and stated that his offices no longer treated exiled Tibetans as Chinese mainlanders. In 2017, the Tsai Ing-wen administration announced that MTAC would be dissolved and its remaining functions transferred to the Department of Hong Kong, Macao, Inner Mongolia, and Tibet Affairs of the Mainland Affairs Council as well as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Administrative divisions
1956–1959
- Administrative divisions setup by the Preparatory Committee for the Tibet Autonomous Region
| Division (专区) | Tibetan | Simplified Chinese | Hanyu Pinyin | County (宗) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lhasa Division Office | Lāsà Bànshìchù | 9 counties | ||
| Xigazê Division Office | Rìkāzé Bànshìchù | 12 counties | ||
| Nagqu Division Office | Hēihé Bànshìchù | 4 counties | ||
| Ngari Division Office | Ālǐ Bànshìchù | 8 counties | ||
| Lhoka Division Office | Shānnán Bànshìchù | 10 counties | ||
| Dakong Division Office | Tǎgōng Bànshìchù | 6 counties | ||
| Gyangzê Division Office | Jiāngzī Bànshìchù | 6 counties | ||
| Qamdo Division Office | Chāngdū Bànshìchù | 18 counties |
References
Bibliography
References
- (2006). "Empire to Nation: Historical Perspectives on the Making of the Modern World". Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
- Ma, Rong. (2011). "Population and Society in Contemporary Tibet". Hong Kong University Press.
- [http://worldpopulationreview.com/regions/tibet-population/ Tibet], ''worldpopulationreview.com'', 2018: "Tibet is an autonomous region located in the People's Republic of China. Tibet was established in 1965 and replaced the administrative division known as the Tibet Area."
- Geoffrey Migiro, [https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/is-tibet-a-country.html Is Tibet a Country?], ''worldatlas.com'', September 14, 2018:"Tibet is an autonomous region of People's Republic of China which was established in 1965 to replace an administrative region known as Tibet Area which they inherited from Republic of China."
- (20 December 2019). "Chronology of Major Events With Particular Attention to the Sino-Tibetan Borderlands". HAL open science.
- Ling, Nai-min. (1968). "Tibet, 1950-1967". Union Research Institute.
- (2021-05-28). "China confirms 'peaceful liberation' of Tibet – archive, 1951". The Guardian.
- Sperling (2004) pp.6,7. Goldstein (1989) p.72. Both cite the ROC's position paper at the 1914 Simla Conference.
- "本會沿革". 蒙藏委員會.
- (2021-05-28). "China confirms 'peaceful liberation' of Tibet – archive, 1951". The Guardian.
- Okawa, Kensaku. (2007). "Lessons from Tibetans in Taiwan: Their history, current situation, and relationship with Taiwanese nationalism". [[University of Tokyo]].
- "''The Issue of Tibet in China-US Relations During The Second World War''".
- [http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/buruma11/English ''The last of the Tibetans''] {{Webarchive. link. (2009-12-10 By Ian Buruma)
- (May 2016)
- (2017-08-16). "Taiwan calls time on Mongolia and Tibet affairs commission".
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