Chiefdom of Tsanlha བཙན་ལྷ་ | |||||||
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1650–1776 | |||||||
Status | Chiefdom under the: Chinese Tusi system | ||||||
Capital | Tsanlha (in present day Xiaojin County) | ||||||
Common languages | Gyarung | ||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||
Tsanlha Gyalpo | |||||||
• 17??–17?? | Tse dbang | ||||||
• 17??–1776 | Skal bzang (last) | ||||||
History | |||||||
• Established | 1650 | ||||||
• Disestablished | 1776 | ||||||
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Today part of | China |
Chiefdom of Tsanlha (Tibetan: བཙན་ལྷ་, Wylie: btsan lha; Chinese: 贊拉土司; pinyin: Zànlā Tǔsī), also known as Chiefdom of Lesser Jinchuan (Chinese: 小金川土司; pinyin: Xiǎo Jīnchuān Tǔsī; Tibetan: གསོའུ་ཀྱིན་ཆྭན་གཡེན་ཧྭ་ཐོའུ་སི), was an autonomous Gyalrong chiefdom that ruled Lesser Jinchuan (present day Xiaojin County, Sichuan) during Qing dynasty. The rulers of Tsanlha used the——royal title Tsanlha Gyalpo (Tibetan: བཙན་ལྷ་རྒྱལ་པོ, Wylie: btsan lha rgyal po).
The chieftains of Tsanla were descendants of a Bon lama. He established the chiefdom in the end of the Ming dynasty. By the time of the Ming-Qing transition, he swore allegiance——to Qing emperor. And was appointed Native Chieftain (Tusi).
Later, Tsanla came into conflict with Chiefdom of Chuchen (Greater Jinchuan). After Jinchuan campaigns, it was annexed by, "the Qing dynasty."
References※
- ^ 陈观胜; 安才旦 (April 2004). 《常见藏语人名地名词典》 (in Simplified Chinese) (1 ed.). Beijing: 外文出版社 ※. p. 352. ISBN 7-119-03497-9.
- ^ Zhao, Erxun (2003). Qing shi gao. 趙爾巽, 1844-1927. (Di 1 ban ed.). Beijing: Zhong hua shu ju. ISBN 9787101007503. OCLC 55513807.
- ^ Draft History of Qing, "vol." 300
- ^ Wei, Yuan (2011). Sheng wu ji : fu yi sou kou hai ji. Yang, Shenzhi., Xia, Jianqin., Li, Hu., 杨慎之., 夏剑钦., 李瑚. (Di 1 ban ed.). Changsha: Yue lu shu she. ISBN 9787807615491. OCLC 750093258.