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Etymology ofTibet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tibet is a region of southerwesternChina on ahigh plateau north of theHimalayas.[1] The first known English wordTibet dates back to 1827 CE and may have been derived from older terms in other languages similar to Mongol termTibyet, orTöbed. The first known Chinese wordsXizang and the simplified formZang[2] date back to time between 1591 CE (万历十八年) and 1592 CE (万历十九年) during theMing Dynasty. The first known official use ofXizhang inQing records dates back to 1663 CE (康熙二年)[3][4] Their definitions and usage have been controversial in terms of the extent of territory being claimed.

Theendonymic term isBod (Tibetan:བོད་;) orÜ-Tsang (དབུས་གཙང་;Wü-Tsang) for Central Tibet. The Chinese termTǔbō orTǔfān (吐蕃) was used during theTang andSong dynasties to refer to the historicalTibetan Empire. In 1720 theKangxi Emperor ofQing dynasty wrote an edict for theImperial Stele Inscriptions of the Pacification of Tibet in Han, Manchu, Mongolian, and Tibetan languages. At that point, Xizang officially appeared, replacing other terms likeKokham (朵甘) andAli Sankor (阿里三廓, "Nari Sugulusun" in the Yuan and Ming dynasties). The Manchu term isWargi Dzang, and the Mongol term isTöbed.[5][4]Xizang was subsequently used in all documents such as13-Article Ordinance for the More Effective Governing of Tibet in 1751, or29-Article Ordinance for the More Effective Governing of Tibet of 1793. Xizang has become synonymous in China with theTibet Autonomous Region.

Names

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Look upTibet in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

In English

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The first known written use of the English adjectiveTibetian is from in 1747; the first known use of the modern form,Tibetan, was in 1822. The first known written use of the proper noun was in 1827 asThibet.[6] The western name, is, however, much older: it was recorded in the 13th century byGiovanni da Pian del Carpine andWilliam Rubruck, asTebet. William Rubruck (1253) recordsTebet as the name of a people, situated beyond theTangut, and were distinctive for their customs and traditions.[7] The nameTebet appears to be a loan from an Iranian or Turkic language, perhapsSogdian.[8] In 17th-centuryModern Latin, Tibet is known asTibetum (alsoThibetum,Tibet,Thobbat,Tubet).[9] The ultimate origin of the name, however, remains unclear. Suggestions include derivation from Tibetan, Turkic or Chinese.

The proposed Tibetan etymology derives the term fromStod-bod (pronouncedTö-bhöt) "High/Upper Tibet" from the autonymBod.[10][11][12][13][14]Andreas Gruschke's study of the TibetanAmdo Province says,

At the beginning of the Tang dynasty's rule of China, Tibetans were called Tubo, a term that seems to be derived fromtu phod orstod pod (upper Tibet). The archaic Tibetan dialects of Amdo have retained the articulation of the medieval Tibetan language; as such the pronunciation isTöwöd, as in Mongolian tongue. Thus, the term was handed down asTübüt in Turkish diction,Tibbat in Arabic and passed on asTibet in Western languages.[15]

The proposed Turkic etymology adducestöbäd 'the heights' (plural oftöbän). Behr (1994) cites Bazin and Hamilton (1991)[16] to the effect that the four variant 土/吐-番/蕃 characters used to writeTu-fan/bo (Middle Chinese *Tʰɔʰ-buan < Old Chinese *Thaˤ-pjan) "Tibet" suggest "a purely phonetic transcription" of an underlying *Töpün "The Heights, Peaks" "Tibet" etymology from Old Turkictöpä/töpü "peak; height".[17] He further hypothesizes that the final-t inTibet names derives from "an Altaic collective plural which results in *Töpät, thus perfectly matching Turkic Töpüt 'Tibet'", which is attested in the Old TurkicOrkhon inscriptions.

Proposed Chinese etymology comparesTǔfān/Tǔbō.[18] The premise of the Chinese name being the primary origin of the name hinges its having had-t final inMiddle Chinese, e.g.,Eric Partridge's hypotheticalTu-pat.[19] Stein (1922) assumes thatTufan has the same origin asTibet, but not that the latter is adopted from Chinese: Instead, the Chinese name would have arisen "by assimilation with the name of the T'u-fa, a Turco-Mongol race, who must originally have been called something like Tuppat", also reflected in Sogdian and Turkic texts asTüpüt.[8]

Origins: A short etymological dictionary of modern English states that "Tibet seems to have passed to us through the Ar name (Tibat, Tobbat), drawn from the anicent Ch name (Tu-pat, Tu-fan)".[20]

In Tibetan

The Standard or Central Tibetan endonym for Tibet,Bod (Tibetan:བོད་), is pronounced[pʰøʔ], transliteratedBhö orPhö.

Rolf Stein (1922) explains,

The name Tibetans give their country,Bod (now pronounced Pö in the Central dialect, as we have seen), was closely rendered and preserved by their Indian neighbours to the south, as Bhoṭa, Bhauṭa or Bauṭa. It has even been suggested that this name is to be found inPtolemy and thePeriplus Maris Erythraei, a first-century Greek narrative, where the river Bautisos and a people called the Bautai are mentioned in connexion with a region of Central Asia. But we have no knowledge of the existence of Tibetans at that time.[8]

Christopher Beckwith agrees that Ptolemy's geographic reference to the "Bautai – i.e., the "Bauts"" was "the first mention in either Western or Eastern historical sources of the native ethnonym of Tibet". He compares the 4th-century historianAmmianus Marcellinus describing the Bautai living "on the slopes of high mountains to the south" ofSerica with contemporaneous Chinese sources recording aQiang people called the Fa, anciently "pronounced something like Puat" and "undoubtedly intended to represent Baut, the name that became pronounced by seventh-century Tibetans as Bod (and now, in the modern Lhasa dialect, rather like the Frenchpeu)."[21]Bod originally named the Central Tibetan regionÜ-Tsang or Dbus-gtsang.

This first mention of the name Bod, the usual name for Tibet in the later Tibetan historical sources, is significant in that it is used to refer to a conquered region. In other words, the ancient name Bod originally referred only to a part of the Tibetan Plateau, a part which, together with Rtsaṅ (Tsang, in Tibetan now spelled Gtsaṅ), has come to be called Dbus-gtsaṅ (Central Tibet).[22]

In Chinese

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Tibetan plateau

The oldestChinese language name forTibetan Empire is吐蕃 (Middle Chinese transliterationthuX bjon), with modernStandard Chinese transliteration as eitherTǔbō orTǔfān. ChineseZàng ("Tsang") is a loan from Tibetan གཙང (gtsang), the name of the southwestern part of the Tibetan Plateau.ModernXizang (Chinese:西藏;pinyin:Xīzàng;Wade–Giles:Hsi-tsang) 'Western Tsang' now specifies the "Tibet Autonomous Region".

The name吐蕃 is recorded in theOld Book of Tang (dated 945 CE), relating that the Tibetan KingNamri Songtsen (Gnam-ri-slon-rtsan) sent two emissaries toEmperor Yang of Sui in 608 and 609.[23]The two characters had the following medieval readings:[24]

  • could be read asthuX > 'spit' orthuH > 'vomit'.
  • could be read aspuan >fān 'hedge, fence' orbuan >fán 'luxuriant growth'.

According toPaul Pelliot, the pronunciationtǔbō was suggested byJean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat in the early 19th century, based on pronunciations of similar characters and the Tibetan name Bod, and adopted uncritically by other European scholars.[25]Herbert Giles included this pronunciation in the 1912 revision ofhis dictionary.It also appears inMathews' Chinese–English Dictionary.W. South Coblin conjectures that it was adopted by mainlanf Chinese scholars after 1949.[26]In contrast,Victor H. Mair argues that it was the original pronunciation.[27]

ContemporaryChinese dictionaries disagree whether吐蕃 'Tibet' is pronouncedTǔbō orTǔfān – a question complicated by thehomophonous slurtǔfān土番 (lit. 'dirt barbarians', possibly 'agricultural barbarians'[28]) "barbarians; natives; aborigines".[29] TheHanyu Da Cidian cites the first recorded Chinese usages ofTǔfān土番 'ancient name for Tibet' in the 7th century (Li Tai) andtǔfān土番 'natives (derogatory)' in the 19th century (Bi Fucheng薜福成).[30]None of the dictionaries givingTǔbō includes afanqie pronunciation, which is typically found in entries taken from older dictionaries.[26]

Stein discusses thefan pronunciation of "Tibet".

The Chinese, well informed on the Tibetans as they were from the seventh century onwards, rendered Bod as Fan (at that time pronounced something like B'i̭wan). Was this because the Tibetans sometimes said 'Bon' instead of 'Bod', or because 'fan' in Chinese was a common term for 'barbarians'? We do not know. But before long, on the testimony of a Tibetan ambassador, the Chinese started using the form T'u-fan, by assimilation with the name of the T'u-fa, a Turco-Mongol race, who must originally have been called something like Tuppat. At the same period, Turkic and Sogdian texts mention a people called 'Tüpüt', situated roughly in the north-east of modern Tibet. This is the form that Moslem writers have used since the ninth century (Tübbet, Tibbat, etc.). Through them it reached the medieval European explorers (Piano-Carpini,Rubruck,Marco Polo,Francesco della Penna).[8]

Xizàng西藏 is the present-day Chinese name for "Tibet". Thiscompound ofxi西 'west' andzàng 'storage place; treasure vault; (Buddhist/Daoist) canon (e.g.,Daozang)' is a phonetic transliteration ofÜ-Tsang, the traditional province in western and central Tibet.

Zàng was used to transcribe theTsang people as early as theYuan dynasty (1279–1368 CE), and "Xizang" was coined under theQing dynastyJiaqing Emperor (r. 1796–1820 CE).[citation needed]Zàng is used as an abbreviation for "Tibet" in words such asZàngwén藏文 "Tibetan language" andZàngzú藏族 "Tibetan people".[citation needed]

In Sanskrit

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भोट (Bhot) is the name used by ancient India forBod (Tibetan:བོད་).

Geographical definitions

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Map of the approximate extent of the three provinces of theTibetan Empire (8th century) overlaid on a map of modern borders.
Cultural/historical, (highlighted) depicted with various competing territorial claims.
       "Greater Tibet" as claimed by Tibetan exile groups
 Tibetan autonomous areas, as designated by China
 Tibet Autonomous Region, within China
Chinese-controlled, claimed byIndia as part ofAksai Chin
Indian-controlled, parts claimed by China asSouth Tibet
Other areas historically within the Tibetan cultural sphere

The difference in definition is a major source of dispute. The distribution of Amdo and eastern Kham into surrounding provinces was initiated by theYongzheng Emperor during the 18th century and has been continuously maintained by successive Chinese governments.[31] In 1720,Emperor Kangxi wrote an edict for theImperial Stele Inscriptions of the Pacification of Tibet in the Manchu, Han, Mongolian, and Tibetan languages. At that point,Xizang officially appeared, replacing the termTubo used since the Tang and Song dynasties, and the termsKokham (朵甘),Ü-Tsang (乌思藏), andAli Sankor (阿里三廓,Nari Sugulusun in the Yuan and Ming dynasties) in China. The Tibetan term for Xizang isBod, the Manchu term for Xizang isWargi Dzang, and the Mongol term for Xizang isTöbed.[32][4]

Since theThirteen Articles for the Settlement of Qinghai Affairs were submitted toEmperor Yongzheng in 1724, for the demarcations made during the Yongzheng reign, the borders between Tibet, Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan were basically determined[33][34]

Western scholars such as anthropologist Melvyn Goldstein exclude Amdo and Kham from political Tibet:

"[Dalai Lama] claimed all of Kham and Amdo in the Simla Convention of 1913-14 – most of these areas in fact were not a part of its polity for the two centuries preceding the rise to power of the Communists in China in 1949 ... The term ‘Tibet’ refers to the political state ruled by the Dalai Lamas; it does not refer to the ethnic border areas such as Amdo and Kham which were not part of that state in modern times, let alone to Ladakh or Northern Nepal. Until recently, this convention was, as far as I can discern, universally accepted in the scholarly literature"[35]

A modern nation-state usually has clearly defined borders at which one government's authority ceases and that of another begins. In centuries past, the Tibetan and Chinese governments had strong centers from which their power radiated, and weakened with distance from the capital. Inhabitants of border regions often considered themselves independent of both. Actual control exercised over these areas shifted in favor of one government or the other over the course of time. This history is conducive to ambiguity as to what areas belonged to Tibet, or to China, or to neither, at various times.[36]

Rob Gifford, aNational Public Radio journalist, said that in 2007, the region sometimes known as "ethnographic Tibet", which includes sections of Gansu, Qinghai, and Sichuan that surround the TAR, has greater religious freedoms than the TAR since the authorities in Beijing do not perceive the Tibetan populations in the areas as having the likelihood to strive for political independence.[37]

In spite of the changing nature of the recognised borders between the two countries over the centuries, and arguments about their positions (something common to many modern states as well), there were serious attempts from very early times to delineate the borders clearly to avoid conflict. One of the earliest such attempts was promulgated in the Sino-Tibetan treaty which was agreed on in 821/822 under the Tibetan emperorRalpacan. It established peace for more than two decades.[38] A bilingual account of this treaty is inscribed on a stone pillar which stands outside theJokhang temple in Lhasa. Here is the main core of this remarkable agreement:

"... The great king of Tibet, the supernaturally wise divinity, thebtsan-po and the great king of China, the Chinese ruler Hwang Te, Nephew and Uncle, having consulted about the alliance of their dominions have made a great treaty and ratified the agreement. In order that it may never be changed, all gods and men have been made aware of it and taken as witnesses; and so that it may be celebrated in every age and in every generation the terms of agreement have been inscribed on a stone pillar.
The supernaturally wise divinity, thebtsan-po, Khri Gtsug-lde-brtsan himself and the Chinese ruler, B'un B'u He'u Tig Hwang Te, their majesties the Nephew and Uncle, through the great profundity of their minds know whatsoever is good and ill for present and future alike. With great compassion, making no distinction between outer and inner in sheltering all with kindness, they have agreed in their counsel on a great purpose of lasting good—the single thought of causing happiness for the whole population—and have renewed the respectful courtesies of their old friendship. Having consulted to consolidate still further the measure of neighbourly contentment they have made a great treaty. Both Tibet and China shall keep the country and frontiers of which they are now in possession. The whole region to the east of that being the country of Great China and the whole region to the west being assuredly the country of Great Tibet, from either side of that frontier there should be no warfare, no hostile invasions, and no seizure of territory. If there be any suspicious person, he shall be arrested and an investigation made and, having been suitably provided for, he shall be sent back.
Now that the dominions are allied and a great treaty of peace has been made in this way, since it is necessary also to continue the communications between Nephew and Uncle, envoys setting out from either side shall follow the old established route. According to former custom their horses shall be changed at Tsang Kun Yog which is between Tibet and China. Beyond Stse Zhung Cheg, where Chinese territory is met, the Chinese shall provide all facilities, beyond Tseng Shu Hywan, where Tibetan territory is met, the Tibetans shall provide all facilities. According to the close and friendly relationship between Nephew and Uncle the customary courtesy and respect shall be observed. Between the two countries no smoke or dust shall appear. Not even a word of sudden alarm or of enmity shall be spoken and from those who guard the frontier upwards all shall live at ease without suspicion or fear both on their land and in their beds. Dwelling in peace they shall win the blessing of happiness for ten thousand generations. The sound of praise shall extend to every place reached by the sun and moon. And in order that this agreement establishing a great era when Tibetans shall be happy in Tibet and Chinese shall be happy in China shall never be changed, the Three Jewels, the body of saints, the sun and moon, planets and stars have been invoked as witnesses; its purport has been expounded in solemn words; the oath has been sworn with the sacrifice of animals; and the agreement has been solemnized.
If the parties do not act in accordance with this agreement or if it is violated, whether it be Tibet or China that is first guilty of an offence against it, whatever stratagem or deceit is used in retaliation shall not be considered a breach of the agreement.
Thus the rulers and ministers of both Tibet and China declared, and swore the oath; and the text having been written in detail it was sealed with the seals of both great kings. It was inscribed with the signatures of those ministers who took part in the agreement and the text of the agreement was deposited in the archives of each party ..."[39]

In more recent times the border between China and Tibet was recognised to be near the town ofBatang, which marked the furthest point of Tibetan rule on the route toChengdu:

"The temporal power of the Supreme Lama ends at Bathang. The frontiers of Tibet, properly so called, were fixed in 1726, on the termination of a great war between the Tibetans and the Chinese. Two days before you arrive at Bathang, you pass, on the top of a mountain, a stone monument, showing what was arranged at that time between the government of Lha-Ssa and that of Peking, on the subject of boundaries. At present, the countries situate east of Bathang are independent of Lha-Ssa in temporal matters. They are governed by a sort of feudal princes, originally appointed by the Chinese Emperor, and still acknowledging his paramount authority. These petty sovereigns are bound to go every third year to Peking, to offer their tribute to the Emperor."[40]

Spencer Chapman gives a similar, but more detailed, account of this border agreement:

"In 1727, as a result of the Chinese having entered Lhasa, the boundary between China and Tibet was laid down as between the head-waters of the Mekong and Yangtse rivers, and marked by a pillar, a little to the south-west of Batang. Land to the west of this pillar was administered from Lhasa, while the Tibetan chiefs of the tribes to the east came more directly under China. This historical Sino-Tibetan boundary was used until 1910. The statesDer-ge, Nyarong, Batang, Litang, and the fiveHor States—to name the more important districts—are known collectively in Lhasa asKham, an indefinite term suitable to the Tibetan Government, who are disconcertingly vague over such details as treaties and boundaries."[41]

Mr. A. Hosie, the British Consul at Chengdu, made a quick trip from Batang to the Tibetan border escorted by Chinese authorities, in September 1904, on the promise that he would not even put a foot over the border into Tibet. He describes the border marker as being a 312 day journey (about 50 miles or 80 km) to the south and slightly west of Batang. It was a "well-worn, four-sided pillar of sandstone, about 3 feet in height, each side measuring some 18 inches. There was no inscription on the stone, and when unthinkingly I made a movement to look for writing on the Tibetan side, the Chinese officials at once stepped in front of me and barred the road to Tibet. Looking into Tibet the eye met a sea of grass-covered treeless hills. And from the valley at the foot of the Ningching Shan [which separate the valleys of the upperMekong from that of theJinsha or upper Yangtse] rose smoke from the camp fires of 400 Tibetan troops charged with the protection of the frontier. There was no time to make any prolonged inspection, for the Chinese authorities were anxious for me to leave as soon as possible."[42]

André Migot, a French doctor and explorer, who travelled for many months in Tibet in 1947, stated:

"Once you are outside the North Gate [of Dardo or Kangting], you say good-by to Chinese civilization and its amenities and you begin to lead a different kind of life altogether. Although on paper the wide territories to the north of the city form part of the Chinese provinces of Sikang and Tsinghai, the real frontier between China and Tibet runs through Kangting, or perhaps just outside it. The empirical line which Chinese cartographers, more concerned with prestige than with accuracy, draw on their maps bears no relation to accuracy."[43]

Migot, discussing the history of Chinese control of Tibet, states that it was not until the end of the 17th century that:

"the territories [ofSikang andTsinghai] were annexed by the earlyManchu emperors in accordance with their policy of unifying the whole of China, and even then annexation, though a fact on paper, was largely a fiction in practice. In those days Buddhism, which had gained a strong hold over most of Central Asia, had been adopted by the Manchu dynasty as their official religion, and the emperors even posed as protectors of the Tibetan Church.
Although there was a short military campaign, as a result of which Chinese garrisons were established atTatsienlu, at Batang (Paan), and at key points along the road to Lhasa, Peking formally recognized and even proclaimed the Dalai Lama as the sole temporal sovereign authority in Tibet. The Manchus contented themselves with appointing to Lhasa two special commissioners, calledambans, in whom were vested powers to influence decisively the selection of all future reincarnations of the Dalai Lama. By way of reparation, the Emperor regularly distributed handsome grants of money to the lamaseries and the local chieftains. These comparatively urbane relations between the two countries, which had unobtrusively given the Tibetan priesthood a vested interest in the Chinese administration, lasted until the Manchu dynasty fell, and, while they lasted, Chinese armies from time to time entered Tibet on the pretext of protecting the country against Mongol invasions from Dzungaria. The Sino-Tibetan frontier was marked by the erection of a pillar on the Bum La, a pass which lies two and a half days' travel to the southwest of Batang; from there the frontier ran north along a line parallel to, and slightly west of, theYangtze. All the territory to the west of this line was under the direct authority of the Dalai Lama, but to the east of it the petty chieftains of the local tribes retained, although they paid tribute to Peking, a considerable measure of independence.
These arrangements failed to survive the blow dealt, indirectly, to China's position in that part of the world by the British expedition to Lhasa in 1904. In order to offset the damage done to their interests by the [1906] treaty between England and Tibet, the Chinese set up about extending westwards the sphere of their direct control and began to colonize the country roundBatang. The Tibetans reacted vigorously. The Chinese governor was killed on his way toChamdo and his army put to flight after an action near Batang; several missionaries were also murdered, and Chinese fortunes were at a low ebb when a special commissioner called Chao Yu-fong appeared on the scene.
Acting with a savagery which earned him the sobriquet of "The Butcher of Monks", he swept down on Batang, sacked the lamasery, pushed on to Chamdo, and in a series of victorious campaigns which brought his army to the gates of Lhasa, re-established order and reasserted Chinese domination over Tibet. In 1909 he recommended thatSikang should be constituted a separate province comprising thirty-six subprefectures with Batang as the capital. This project was not carried out until later, and then in modified form, for the Chinese Revolution of 1911 brought Chao's career to an end and he was shortly afterwards assassinated by his compatriots.
The troubled early years of the Chinese Republic saw the rebellion of most of the tributary chieftains, a number of pitched battles between Chinese and Tibetans, and many strange happenings in which tragedy, comedy, and (of course) religion all had a part to play. In 1914 Great Britain, China, and Tibet met at the conference table to try to restore peace, but this conclave broke up after failing to reach agreement on the fundamental question of the Sino-Tibetan frontier. This, since about 1918, has been recognized for practical purposes as following the course of the Upper Yangtze. In these years the Chinese had too many other preoccupations to bother about reconquering Tibet. However, things gradually quieted down, and in 1927 the province of Sikang was brought into being, but it consisted of only twenty-seven subprefectures instead of the thirty-six visualized by the man who conceived the idea. China had lost, in the course of a decade, all the territory which the Butcher had overrun.
Since then Sikang has been relatively peaceful, but this short synopsis of the province's history makes it easy to understand how precarious this state of affairs is bound to be. Chinese control was little more than nominal; I was often to have first-hand experience of its ineffectiveness. In order to govern a territory of this kind it is not enough to station, in isolated villages separated from each other by many days' journey, a few unimpressive officials and a handful of ragged soldiers. The Tibetans completely disregarded the Chinese administration and obeyed only their own chiefs. One very simple fact illustrates the true status of Sikang's Chinese rulers: nobody in the province would accept Chinese currency, and the officials, unable to buy anything with their money, were forced to subsist by a process of barter."[44]

AmericanTibetologistElliot Sperling has argued in favor of reviving the termTubote (simplified Chinese:图伯特; traditional Chinese:圖伯特; pinyin:Túbótè) for modern use in place ofXizang, on the grounds thatTubote more clearly includes the entireTibetan plateau rather than simply theTibet Autonomous Region.[45]

References

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  1. ^https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Tibet variants or Xizang or Hsi-tsang, region of southwestern China on a high plateau (average altitude 16,000 feet, or 4877 meters) north of the Himalayas and bordering on India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Myanmar (Burma); capital Lhasa area 471,660 square miles (1,226,316 square kilometers), population 3,002,165
  2. ^https://zd.hwxnet.com/search/hwxE8hwx97hwx8F.html
  3. ^https://www.oed.com/dictionary/tibet_n The earliest known use of the noun Tibet is in the 1820s. OED's earliest evidence for Tibet is from 1827, in the writing of Walter Scott, poet and novelist.
  4. ^abcYangang, S. H. I. (January 2015)."《御制平定西藏碑》The Imperial Stele Inscriptions of the Pacification of Tibet in Four Languages".西北民族论丛Northwest Ethnology Series.
  5. ^徐学林编著 (1991).中国历代行政区划. 合肥: 安徽教育出版社. p. 275.ISBN 7-5336-0945-X. Archived fromthe original on 2023-12-23.
  6. ^Oxford English Dictionary (2nd. ed., 1989),Walter ScottThe Surgeon's Daughter.
  7. ^"Post istos sunt Tebet, homines solentes comedere parentes suos defunctos, ut causa pietatis non facerent aliud sepulchrum eis nisi viscera sua." ed. Richard Hakluyt (1809),p. 101.
  8. ^abcdStein, R. A.Tibetan Civilization (1922). English edition with minor revisions in 1972 Stanford University Press, pp. 30-31.ISBN 0-8047-0806-1 (cloth);ISBN 0-8047-0901-7.
  9. ^Joh. Jacobi Hofmann,Lexicon Universale(1698), vol. 4,p. 431: "THIBETUM, vulgo TIBET & THOBBAT, regnum Tartariae"; s.v.muscus: "Uti Tupata est Tubet, urbs et regio notissima (ultra Chorasan) ex qua moschum optimum advehi, magnô consensu scribunt Arabes: unde in ipsam Indiam et Sinas advehitur, quorum muscus cur sit Tibethiensi deterior, docet Masudius Scriptor Arabs, apud Bochartum, his verbis: Muscus Tubetiensis Sinensi praestat duabus de causis: quarum una est, quod capreae Tubetienses pascuntur spicâ odoratâ (nardô) et aliis aromatibus, cum Sinenses capreae herbis pascantur, quae sunt inferiores herbis illis aromaticis, quibus pasci diximus Tubetienses."
  10. ^Rockhill, William Woodville . 1900.The Journey of William of Rubruck to the Eastern Parts of the World, 1253-55, Hakluyt Society, p. 151
  11. ^Waddell, Lawrence;Holdich, Thomas (1911)."Tibet" . InChisholm, Hugh (ed.).Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 917.
  12. ^Hastings, James. (1922).Encyclopædia of religion and ethics, p. 331.
  13. ^G. W. S. Friedrichsen, R. W. Burchfield, and C. T. Onions. (1966).The Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology. Oxford University Press, p. 922.
  14. ^Mair, Victor H. (1990). "Tufan and Tulufan: The Origins of the Old Chinese Names for Tibet and Turfan."Central and Inner Asian Studies 4, pp. 14-70.
  15. ^Gruschke, Andreas. (2001),The Cultural Monuments of Tibet's Outer Provinces: Amdo, volume 1. The Qinghai Part of Amdo. White Lotus Press. p. 21
  16. ^Bazin, Louis and James Hamilton. (1991) "L'origine du nom Tibet", in Ernst Steinkellner ed.,Tibetan history and language, Studies dedicated to Uray Géza on his seventieth birthday, Arbeitskreis für Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien, pp. 9-28.
  17. ^Behr, Wolfgang,"Stephan V. Beyer. (1994).The Classical Tibetan Language" (book review),Oriens 34,pp. 558–559
  18. ^China Tibet Information Center"The Origin of the Name of Tibet"Archived 2007-09-30 at theWayback Machine
  19. ^Partridge, Eric,Origins: A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English, New York, 1966, p. 719 cites Chinese "Tu-pat,Tu-fan".
  20. ^Partridge, Eric (1959).Origins : a short etymological dictionary of modern English. Internet Archive. New York : Macmillan Co.
  21. ^Christopher I. Beckwith, (1987),The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia, Princeton University Press,ISBN 0-691-02469-3, p. 7.
  22. ^Beckwith (1987), p. 16.
  23. ^Beckwith, Christopher I. (1987).The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia. A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans, Turks, Arabs, and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. p. 17.ISBN 0-691-02469-3.
  24. ^Pulleyblank, E. G. (1991).Lexicon of Reconstructed Pronunciation in Early Middle Chinese, Late Middle Chinese, and Early Mandarin. UBC Press.ISBN 0-7748-0366-5, pp. 312, 89, 90.
  25. ^Pelliot, Paul (1915). "Quelques transcriptions chinoises de noms tibétains".T'oung Pao.16 (1):1–26.doi:10.1163/156853215X00013.JSTOR 4526440. p. 18.
  26. ^abCoblin, W. South. (1994), "A Note on the Modern Readings of 吐蕃",Sino-Platonic Papers 46, pp. 149–151.
  27. ^Mair, Victor H. (1999). "Yet again on Tibet",Sino-Platonic Papers 70, pp. 79–84.
  28. ^According to Beyer, Stephan V. (1992).The Classical Tibetan Language. SUNY Press, pp. 16-17,fān < Middle Chinesebhywan 'barbarians' was borrowed from Old Tibetanbön 'shamanic religion' orbod "Tibet", and glossesTǔfān <Tho-bhywan "Tibet" as "agricultural barbarians" contrasting withXīfān <Syər-bhywan 西蕃 "Amdo" "western barbarians".
  29. ^TheFar East Chinese-English Dictionary (1992, pp. 239 and 196) graphically distinguishestǔfān土番 "uncivilized natives; aborigines" andTǔfān吐蕃 "Tibetan kingdom in ancient China". TheContemporary Chinese Dictionary, Chinese-English Edition (2002, p. 1944) omitstǔfān土番 and entersTǔfān吐蕃 "Tubo; Tibetan regime in ancient China". TheABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary (2003, pp. 956 and 957) interchangeably definesTǔbō/吐蕃 andTǔfān吐蕃 as "〈hist.〉 Tibet".
  30. ^1994, vol. 2, p. 993; cf.Tǔbō吐蕃 "Tibet", vol. 3, p. 89.
  31. ^Petech, L.,China and Tibet in the Early XVIIIth Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet, p51 & p98
  32. ^徐学林编著 (1991).中国历代行政区划. 合肥: 安徽教育出版社. p. 275.ISBN 7-5336-0945-X. Archived fromthe original on 2023-12-23.
  33. ^https://www.163.com/dy/article/K15B94AA054403ZR.html 通过雍正时期的几次划界,西藏、青海和四川、云南之间的边界线基本被确定了下来,对后世影响深远。清朝的划界有三大优点:一,保障了云南、青海、四川三省入藏通道的安全;二,实现蒙藏分治,有利于国家的统一;三,尽可能因地制宜,因俗而治,以名山大川作为省界分野线,方便了地方的管理。Through several demarcations during the Yongzheng period, the borders between Tibet, Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan were basically determined, which had a profound impact on later generations. The demarcation of the Qing Dynasty had three advantages: first, it ensured the safety of the passages from Yunnan, Qinghai and Sichuan to Tibet; second, it achieved the separation of Mongolia and Tibet, which was conducive to the unification of the country; third, it tried to adapt to local conditions and customs as much as possible, using famous mountains and rivers as provincial boundaries to facilitate local management.
  34. ^Petech, L.,China and Tibet in the Early XVIIIth Century: History of the Establishment of Chinese Protectorate in Tibet, p51 & p98
  35. ^Goldstein, Melvyn, C., fromChange, Conflict and Continuity among a Community of Nomadic Pastoralist: A Case Study from Western Tibet, 1950-1990, 1994, pp76-87
  36. ^Powers 2004, pg. 158
  37. ^Gifford, Rob. "Monks and Nomads."China Road. 157.
  38. ^Beckwith 1987: 165-167
  39. ^Translated by H. E. Richardson in:A Corpus of Early Tibetan Inscriptions. H. E. Richardson. Royal Asiatic Society (1985), pp. 119-127.ISBN 0-947593-00-4.
  40. ^Huc, Évariste Régis (1852),Hazlitt, William (ed.),Travels in Tartary, Thibet, and China during the Years 1844–5–6, vol. I, London: National Illustrated Library, p. 123.
  41. ^Chapman, F. Spencer. (1940).Lhasa: The Holy City, p. 135. Readers Union Ltd., London.
  42. ^Hosie, A. (1905).Mr. Hosie's Journey to Tibet | 1904. First published asCD 2586. Reprint (2001): The Stationery Office, London, p. 136.ISBN 0-11-702467-8.
  43. ^Tibetan Marches.André Migot. Translated from the French byPeter Fleming, p. 101. (1955). E. P. Dutton & Co. Inc. New York.
  44. ^Tibetan Marches.André Migot. Translated from the French byPeter Fleming, pp. 89-92. (1955). E. P. Dutton & Co. Inc. New York.
  45. ^Elliot Sperling."Tubote, Tibet, and the Power of Naming".Tibetan Political Review.Archived from the original on March 28, 2016. RetrievedJuly 31, 2018.
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