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HISTORY - TIBET (18) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   005923


Anguish of Tibet / Kelly, Petra K (ed.); Bastian, Gert (ed.); Aiello, Pat (ed.) 1991  Book
Bastian, Gert Book
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Publication Berkeley, Parallax Press, 1991.
Description xix, 382p.pbk
Standard Number 0938077473
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036942951.5/KEL 036942MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   003713


China and the Tibet in the early xviiith century: history of the establishment of Chinese protectorate in Tibet / Petech, Luciano 1972  Book
Petech, Luciano Book
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Publication Leiden, E J Brill, 1972.
Description xv, 309p.
Series Monographies Du T'oung pao; vol.1
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010998355.020951/PET 010998MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   001664


Dragon in the land of snows: a history of modern Tibet since 1947 / Tsering Shakya 1999  Book
Shakya Tsering Book
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Publication London, Pimlico, 1999.
Description xxii,574p.
Standard Number 0-7126-6533-1
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041143951.5/SHA 041143MainWithdrawnGeneral 
4
ID:   064318


Enigmatic Tibet / Gulati, M N 2005  Book
Gulati, M N Book
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Publication New Delhi, Manas Publications, 2005.
Description 312p.: ill.hbk
Standard Number 8170492351
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049826951.515/GUL 049826MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   006588


Making of modern Tibet / Grunfeld, A Tom 1996  Book
Grunfeld, A Tom Book
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Edition Rev. ed.
Publication New York, M E Sharpe, 1996.
Description xvi, 352p.hbk
Standard Number 1563247143
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038307951.5/GRU 038307MainOn ShelfGeneral 
6
ID:   001187


Portrait of lost Tibet / Tung, Rosemary Jones 1996  Book
Tung B Rosemary Jones Book
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Publication Berkeley, Univ. of California Pr., 1996.
Description xvi, 224p.pbk
Standard Number 0520204611
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040687951.5/TUN 040687MainOn ShelfGeneral 
7
ID:   132080


Preparing for the future: reassessing the possibility of violence emanating from Tibetan exile communities in India / Owen, Mark   Journal Article
Owen, Mark Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In his 1997 analysis of the history of Tibetan and Chinese relations (The Snow Lion and the Dragon), Melvyn Goldstein advised in his concluding chapter that Tibetans were unlikely to indefinitely put up with the Chinese occupation of Tibet without resorting to violence. However, despite continuing speculation, more widespread or sustained campaigns of violence have largely failed to materialize. The principle objectives of this study are to establish why the scale of violence that Goldstein warned about has so far failed to emerge; and to assess whether existing evidence supports or undermines claims that violence may in the future emanate from Tibetan exile communities in India. It will be argued that previous analyses have been premised on a relatively narrow assessment of the situation and context, and that a more informed and nuanced evaluation of the potential for future violence requires comprehensive analysis of a much wider range of factors.
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8
ID:   129255


Research on the Dalai group and Tibetans overseas: chapter ii, the Dalai clique in exile in India, / Jiawei, Tad   Journal Article
Jiawei, Tad Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The Dalai Lama's scheme to leave China was engineered long ago by the imperialists and Tibetan secessionists. Back in the winter of 1950, when there was a scheme for the Dalai Lama to visit Yadong County [on the border with India, tr.], "the U.S. policy was to induce him cross the Indian border . . . in the hope of persuading him to flee to the United States"1orfor him to "seek refuge" in such Buddhist countries as Burma, Thailand, or Sri Lanka. In 1956, taking advantage of the Indian government's invitation for the Dalai Lama to visit India to participate in the 2,500th anniversary of the birth of Sakyamuni, anti-China elements abroad and Tibetan secessionists collaborated in trying to get the Dalai to stay in India, and stated that "the Dalai Lama was welcome to go to the United States." After the armed insurrection in Lhasa in March, 1959, the secessionist clique succeeded in spiriting the Dalai out of China. On March 24, when they arrived at Qiongduojiang in Shannan, the head of the secessionist clique and the Dalai met with the chieftain Kampot Tashi of the "Four Rivers and Six Ranges Defenders of the Faith" and others. It was then that the Dalai andhis entourage started to maintain direct wireless communication with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency via Wangdu, a special agent trained bythe United States.
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9
ID:   129256


Research on the Dalai group and Tibetans overseas: chapter iii: the Dalai Lama and his family / Jiawei, Tad   Journal Article
Jiawei, Tad Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The Dalai's father, Choekyong Tsering, was of peasant extraction. Afterthe Dalai mounted the Lion Throne in 1940, his father all at once rose tothe position of a senior aristocrat in Tibet and was poisoned to death in1947 because of his close association with the patriotic Reting Rinpoche.The Dalai's mother Dekyi Tsering was "of a gentle disposition" and"kind-hearted," and in 1959 fled with the Dalai to India, where she diedof an illness in 1981. The Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, has six brothersand sisters, namely his eldest brother Taktser Thubten Norbu, his secondelder brother Gyalo Thondup, his third elder brother Losang Samten,his elder sister Tsering Dolma, his younger sister Jetsun Pema, and hisyounger brother Ngari Rinpoche Tenzin Cheogyal
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10
ID:   129257


Research on the Dalai group and Tibetans overseas: chapter iv: the military organizations of the Dalai clique / Jiawei, Tad   Journal Article
Jiawei, Tad Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In 1956, after the defeat of the armed insurrection launched by the reactionary upper stratum in the Sichuan Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, a number of armed rebels who escaped destruction crossedthe Jinsha River toward the West and fled to various areas in Tibet. Someof them, headed by Andruk-tsang Gonpo Tashi, mustered some remnant bandits from Sichuan, Qinghai, Gansu, and Yunnan provinces and setup an army called Four Rivers and Six Ranges Defenders of the Faith(hereafter, Defenders of the Faith), which was supported and supplied with arms and equipment by anti-China forces in the United States andIndia. In March 1959, the reactionary Tibetan upper stratum launched their all-out counterrevolutionary armed insurrection in Lhasa. The reactionary elements then fled to India, taking along the Dalai by force, together with about 20,000 armed rebels. These, plus about 40,000 Tibetan masses whowere strong-armed into following the Dalai, fled to such places as India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Sikkim. Most of these later assembled in India. For thesake of controlling the armed personnel and stabilizing the social order, the Indian government at the time took over their weapons, detained and screened them, and emplaced them in groups.
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11
ID:   129258


Research on the Dalai group and Tibetans overseas: chapter v: factional organizations within the Dalai clique / Jiawei, Tad   Journal Article
Jiawei, Tad Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The Tibetans are fairly widely distributed in China. Some exist in separate communities, while others live intermixed or in staggered communities with other ethnic groups. As in the past, the Tibetan regions have customarily been divided into three major districts: U-Tsang, Khampa, and Amdo. The historical evolutions of these districts are dissimilar, their levels of development vary, and their languages and customs also differ to varying extents. There are also many sects in Tibetan Buddhism. Where there are differences, there are conflicts. Regional and religious conflicts have existed in the past, and the Tibetans who have fled abroad have set up organizations of varying descriptions to protect the interests of each region and religious sect. This has resulted in the emergence of a vast number of factional organizations. Some of these are of a regional nature; others are social organizations of various types set up with refer- emcee to, or in imitation of, organizations in China and abroad. In this chapter, descriptions will be given only of a few organizations that are relatively influential in the Dalai Clique.
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12
ID:   006069


Taming of Tibet: a historical account of compromise and confrontation in Nepal - Tibet relations (1900-1930) / Mishra, Tirtha Prasad 1991  Book
Mishra, Tirtha Prasad Book
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Publication Jaipur, Nirala Publications, 1991.
Description 322p.
Series Nirala Series;16
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037763327.54960515/MIS 037763MainOn ShelfGeneral 
13
ID:   069289


Tibet : past and present, a select bibliography with chronology of historical events 1660-1981 / Chand, Attar 1982  Book
Chand, Attar Book
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Publication New Delhi, Sterling Publishers Private Limited, 1982.
Description xxiii, 257p.hbk
Key Words Tibet  Tibet - History  History - Tibet 
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021844951.5/CHA 021844MainOn ShelfGeneral 
14
ID:   004112


Tibet and its history / Richardson, H E 1962  Book
Richardson H E Book
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Publication London, Oxford Univ. Pr., 1962.
Description viii, 308p.: ill., mapshbk
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001787951.5/RIC 001787MainOn ShelfGeneral 
15
ID:   005548


Tibet: a political history / Tsepon W D Shakabpa 1984  Book
Shakabpa Tsepon W D Book
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Publication New York, Potala Pub., 1984.
Description xii,369p.
Standard Number 0-9611474-1-5
Key Words Tibet - History  History - Tibet 
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036939951.5/SHA 036939MainWithdrawnGeneral 
16
ID:   005821


Tibet: the facts: a report prepared by the scientific Buddhist association for the United Nations Commission on human rights / Tibetan Young Buddhist Association 1990  Book
Tibetan Young Buddhist Association Book
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Edition 2nd Rev ed.
Publication Dharamsala, Tibetan Young Buddhist Association, 1990.
Description xv,384p.
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036905355.0209515/TIB 036905MainOn ShelfGeneral 
17
ID:   006916


Tibetan nation: a history of Tibetan nationalism and Sino-Tibetan relations / Smith, Warren W 1996  Book
Smith, Warren W Book
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Publication Boulder, Westview Press, 1996.
Description xxxi, 732p.hbk
Standard Number 0813331552
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038723951.5/SMI 038723MainOn ShelfGeneral 
18
ID:   046322


Tibetan wars throuth Sikkim, Bhutan and Nepal / Gulati, M N 2003  Book
Gulati, M. N. Book
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Publication New Delhi, Manas Publications, 2003.
Description 406p.hbk
Standard Number 817049155X
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046228951.5/GUL 046228MainOn ShelfGeneral