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- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion abstract "The Tibetan rebellion of 1905 in Yunnan province began with a series of attacks on Christian missionaries and converts and ended with the imperial Chinese government re-asserting control of the province.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion combatant "Qing dynasty".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion combatant "Tibetan BuddhistGelugYellow Hat sect".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander Lama.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander Zhao_Erfeng.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion place Sichuan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion place Yunnan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion result "Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion status "Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion strength "Qing military,Green Standard Army,New Army,Eight Banners".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion strength "Tibetan tribesmen, Tibetan defectors from Qing army".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion wikiPageID "32740153".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion wikiPageRevisionID "643030076".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion author "Great Britain. Foreign Office, India. Foreign and Political Dept, India. Governor-General".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion casualties "All Lamas executed".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion casualties "Several Catholic Priests/Missionaries and many Christian converts killed".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion combatant "Qing dynasty".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion combatant "Tibetan Buddhist Gelug Yellow Hat sect".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander "Commandant in Chief Li Chia-jui".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander "General Ma Weiqi".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander "General Wu Yi-chung".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander "Tibetan Lamas".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion commander "Zhao Erfeng".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion conflict "1905".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion date "1905".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion date "July 2011".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion hasPhotoCollection 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion place Sichuan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion place Yunnan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion quote "--04-28".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion quote "Batang is situated at an altitude of 9400 feet, and the little plain being closely invested by mountains grows very hot in summer, though it is not cold in winter. A gentle breeze frequently sweeps down from the high ranges to the north-east and fans the parched earth, but on occasions the valley is swept by fierce gusts blowing up the Yang-tze. The population now comprises between 400 and 500 families, and since the rebellion of 1905 from being almost exclusively Tibetan, with all the power in the hands of the lamas, it has become very largely Chinese, and the power of the lamas is temporarily broken. On the other hand the majority of the Chinese, merchants and soldiers, have married Tibetan wives and adopted at least some of the manners and customs of the country if not the dress. Crops of maize, wheat, and barley are grown, besides buckwheat in the autumn, but the area under cultivation is very small. Many of the houses are built of stone, and there is an air of prosperity about the place, with its streets of shops and hawkers, in spite of the gaunt skeleton walls of the once huge monastery, now utterly destroyed. Since the rebellion, the majority of the lamas have been killed or scattered, and the ragged-looking mendicants who now hang about the streets or loaf round the tiny lamasery which the remnant were allowed to rebuild, are no credit to the profession. I have already referred to Chao Er-feng, Warden of the Marches, and subsequently Viceroy of Ssii-chuan, who was entrusted with the stamping out of the Tibetan revolt of 1905; and however much one may denounce his methods, he met with considerable success. Peace and security now reign in Batang instead of lawlessness, robbery, and murder.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion quote "Just who governs Tibet has been rather a doubtful question for some years. Just before the Chinese Government allowed us to go in, General Chao Er Feng, with a victorious army, had brought the country as far as Chiamdo under Chinese control. His plans were very fine, and he was very efficient. He expected to make that section a part of China, in fact. To-day the Tibetans say that if Chao Er Feng were here, this late trouble would not have happened. He built roads, he established schools, and controlled the country so that travel on any road was comparatively safe. He was just as severe with his own men as with the Tibetans, and when he said, "Don't loot," and looting was done, he lined the guilty ones up, and off came their heads. Sometimes his badly needed soldiers were slain wholesale for disobedience. Thirteen were killed at one time for one offense, but he governed. During the fighting with the Chinese, the Tibetans were trapped in all sorts of ways sometimes by their own countrymen who, to curry favor with the Chinese, brought them in to be beheaded. Heads fell every day, and so many bodies lay in the streets of Batang that at times the dogs feasted. No one dared touch or bury them, for fear they would be considered friends of the dead and in turn suffer the death penalty.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion quote "Some ten days before, the Chinese Colonel commanding in this place had succeeded in capturing some fortyfive or fifty Tibetans. He thought to make himself particularly feared by the Tibetans, so he decided to make an example of these persons. Three of them had one after another been placed in this cauldron in cold water, tied hand and foot, but with their heads propped up, and then a fire built under the cauldron and slowly the water was brought to a boil. The skeletons were lying bare on the stones near by, the flesh having all been eaten by the dogs. Others had had oil poured upon them and been burned alive. Others had their hands cut off and sent back as a warning to those from whom they came. Others had been taken and, with yak hitched to each arm and each leg, had been torn in pieces.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion reason "Well, was he really a king or not?".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion result "Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion source "East India : Papers Relating to Tibet [and Further Papers ...], Issues 2-4, Great Britain. Foreign Office, p. 12.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion source "Pioneering in Tibet: A Personal Record of Life and Experience in Mission Fields, Albert Leroy Shelton, pp. 93-4.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion source "Shelton of Tibet, Flora Beal Shelton, pp. 171-2.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion source "The Land of the Blue Poppy: Travels of a Naturalist in Eastern Tibet, Francis Kingdon Ward, p. 127.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion status "Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion strength "Qing military, Green Standard Army, New Army, Eight Banners".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion strength "Tibetan tribesmen, Tibetan defectors from Qing army".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion title "East India : Papers relating to Tibet [and Further papers ...], Issues 2-4".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion year "1904".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:1905_in_China.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:1906_in_China.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Conflicts_in_1905.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Conflicts_in_1906.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:History_of_Sichuan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:History_of_Yunnan.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Mass_murder_in_1905.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Mass_murder_in_1906.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Military_history_of_Tibet.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion subject Category:Wars_involving_the_Qing_dynasty.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type Event.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type MilitaryConflict.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type SocietalEvent.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type Event.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type Thing.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion type Q1656682.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion comment "The Tibetan rebellion of 1905 in Yunnan province began with a series of attacks on Christian missionaries and converts and ended with the imperial Chinese government re-asserting control of the province.".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion label "1905 Tibetan Rebellion".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion label "Révolte tibétaine de 1905".
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion sameAs Révolte_tibétaine_de_1905.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion sameAs m.0h3sw_b.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion sameAs Q866901.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion sameAs Q866901.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion wasDerivedFrom 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion?oldid=643030076.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion isPrimaryTopicOf 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion.
- 1905_Tibetan_Rebellion name "1905 Tibetan Rebellion".