Qing dynasty Tibet came under the rule of the
Qing dynasty of China in 1720 after the Qing
expelled the forces of the
Dzungar Khanate from Tibet.
Emperor Kangxi then wrote an edict for the Imperial Stele Inscriptions of the Pacification of Tibet. His successor
Emperor Yongzheng went on to establish new boundaries between what are now the
Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR),
Qinghai,
Sichuan and
Yunnan.
Republic of China and de facto independence Central Tibet remained under Qing
suzerainty until the
1911 revolution. The succeeding
Republic of China claimed inheritance of all Qing territories, including Tibet, described in the
Imperial Edict of the Abdication of the Qing Emperor as an integral republic comprising different ethnic groups. This is also reflected in the
Provisional Constitution of the Republic of China adopted in 1912, though
ethnic clashes occurred in
Lhasa following the
Wuchang Uprising. By 1917 however the area comprising the present-day TAR eventually became
a de facto independent polity. Some border areas with high ethnic Tibetan populations (
Amdo and Eastern
Kham) remained under the
Chinese Nationalist Party (
Kuomintang) or local warlord control. The TAR region is also known as "Political Tibet", while all areas with a high ethnic Tibetan population are collectively known as "Ethnic Tibet". Political Tibet refers to the polity ruled continuously by Tibetan governments since earliest times until 1951, whereas ethnic Tibet refers to regions north and east where Tibetans historically predominated but where, down to modern times, Tibetan jurisdiction was irregular and limited to just certain areas. At the time Political Tibet obtained
de facto independence, its socio-economic and political systems resembled
Medieval Europe. Attempts by the
13th Dalai Lama between 1913 and 1933 to enlarge and modernize the Tibetan military had eventually failed, largely due to opposition from powerful
aristocrats and
monks. On 12 August 1927, the Republic of China mandated that before the publication of new laws, all laws in history regarding Tibetan Buddhism should continue unless there were conflicts with new doctrine or new laws of the Central Government. The Tibetan government had little contact with other governments of the world during its period of
de facto independence, This left Tibet diplomatically isolated and cut off to the point where it could not make its positions on issues well known to the international community.
People's Republic of China In July 1949, in order to prevent
Chinese Communist Party-sponsored agitation from spreading to Central Tibet, the Tibetan government expelled the Nationalist delegation in Lhasa. The (Nationalist) Chinese approved a request to exempt Lhamo Dhondup from lot-drawing process using
Golden Urn to become the 14th Dalai Lama on 31 January 1940. In November 1949, Tibetan government sent a letter to the
U.S. State Department and a copy to
Mao Zedong, and a separate letter to the British government, declaring its intent to defend itself "by all possible means" against PRC troop incursions into Tibet. In the preceding three decades, the conservative Tibetan government had consciously de-emphasized its military and refrained from modernizing. Hasty attempts at modernization and enlarging the military began in 1949, but proved mostly unsuccessful on both counts. By then, it was too late to raise and train an effective army. India provided some
small arms aid and military training. However, the
People's Liberation Army (PLA) was much larger, better led, trained, equipped and more experienced than the
Tibetan Army. In 1950, the
14th Dalai Lama was 15 years old and had not attained his
majority, so
Regent Taktra was the acting
head of the Tibetan Government. The period of the Dalai Lama's
minority is traditionally one of instability and division, exacerbated by the recent
Reting conspiracy and a 1947 regency dispute. Both the PRC and their rival predecessors the Kuomintang (
ROC) had always maintained that Tibet was a part of China. In September 1949, shortly before the proclamation of the People's Republic of China, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) made it a top priority to incorporate Tibet,
Taiwan Island,
Hainan Island, and the
Penghu Islands into the PRC, peacefully or by force. China viewed incorporating Tibet as important to consolidate its frontiers and address national defense concerns in the southwest. Because Tibet was unlikely to voluntarily give up its de facto independence, Mao in December 1949 ordered that preparations be made to march into Tibet at
Qamdo (Chamdo), in order to induce the Tibetan Government to negotiate. The PRC had over a million men under arms and had extensive combat experience from the recently concluded
Chinese Civil War. == Negotiations between Tibet and the PRC ==