Under pressure from foreigners, the Qing Dynasty government allowed Christian missionaries into Tibetan Buddhist areas in Yunnan province. The Tibetan Lamas had long defied the rule of the Qing authorities and officials, and the Qing dynasty fought against a rebellion of the Lamas around 1905. The Tibetan Buddhist Lamas attacked and murdered Chinese officials, French Roman Catholic Priests from Paris Foreign Missions Society such as Jean-André Soulié or Jules Dubernard, and Christian converts in the area, in retaliation for the missionaries' success at converting the natives to Catholicism. The Buddhist Gelug (Yellow) Sect was primarily responsible for the revolt and deaths.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - Under pressure from foreigners, the Qing Dynasty government allowed Christian missionaries into Tibetan Buddhist areas in Yunnan province. The Tibetan Lamas had long defied the rule of the Qing authorities and officials, and the Qing dynasty fought against a rebellion of the Lamas around 1905. The Tibetan Buddhist Lamas attacked and murdered Chinese officials, French Roman Catholic Priests from Paris Foreign Missions Society such as Jean-André Soulié or Jules Dubernard, and Christian converts in the area, in retaliation for the missionaries' success at converting the natives to Catholicism. The Buddhist Gelug (Yellow) Sect was primarily responsible for the revolt and deaths.
|
sameAs
| |
Strength
| - Qing military, New Army, Bannermen
- Tibetan tribesmen, Tibetan defectors from Qing army
|
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
Reason
| - Well, was he really a King or not?
- which rupees? Indian?
|
Date
| - 1905(xsd:integer)
- July 2011
|
Commander
| - Commandant in Chief Li Chia-jui
- General Ma Wei-ch'i
- General Wu Yi-chung
- Tibetan Lamas
- Zhao Erfeng
|
Status
| - Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat
|
Author
| - Great Britain. Foreign Office, India. Foreign and Political Dept, India. Governor-General
|
Title
| - East India : Papers relating to Tibet [and Further papers ...], Issues 2-4
|
Casualties
| - Several Catholic Priests/Missionaries and many Christian converts killed
- All Lamas executed
|
Result
| - Qing Victory, Tibetan Defeat
|
combatant
| - Qing dynasty
- Tibetan Buddhist Gelug Yellow Hat sect
|
Place
| |
Conflict
| |
Year
| |
abstract
| - Under pressure from foreigners, the Qing Dynasty government allowed Christian missionaries into Tibetan Buddhist areas in Yunnan province. The Tibetan Lamas had long defied the rule of the Qing authorities and officials, and the Qing dynasty fought against a rebellion of the Lamas around 1905. The Tibetan Buddhist Lamas attacked and murdered Chinese officials, French Roman Catholic Priests from Paris Foreign Missions Society such as Jean-André Soulié or Jules Dubernard, and Christian converts in the area, in retaliation for the missionaries' success at converting the natives to Catholicism. The Buddhist Gelug (Yellow) Sect was primarily responsible for the revolt and deaths. Scottish Botanist George Forrest was the primary Western witness to the rebellion, having spent most of it trying to escape from Lamas intent on killing him. He wrote an account of the rebellion which was published in botanical related publications. In 1905, the Lamas started a revolt against the peasant converts from the monasteries. Chinese soldiers were sent to crush the revolt. Forrest wrote that the majority of the people in the Mekong valley in Yunnan were Tibetan. The Tibetan Buddhist Yellow Sect was the dominant power in the region, with their Lamas effectively governing the area. Forrest had a negative view of their reign, since they used "force and fraud" to "terrorise the... peasantry". The Lamas completely ignored the Imperial Qing authorities in the region.
|