03-23-2008, 07:15 PM
<b>Tibet wasnât ours, says Chinese scholar</b>
Link
<b>HONG KONG: A leading Chinese historian and a veteran of the committee that advises on official Chinese history textbooks has broken step with the official Chinese line on historical sovereignty over Tibet and said that to claim that the ancient Buddhist kingdom âhas always been a part of Chinaâ would be a âdefiance of historyâ.
In an article in the China Review magazine, Professor Ge Jianxiong, 62, director of the Institute of Chinese Historical Geography and the Research Centre for Historical Geographic Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, states that while considering how big China was during the Tang Dynasty (7th to 10th century), âwe cannot include the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, which was ruled by Tubo/Tufanâ¦â
Tubo/Tufan, notes Ge, âwas a sovereignty independent of the Tang Dynasty. At least it was not administered by the Tang Dynasty.â If it were not, he argues, there would have been no need for the Tang emperor of the day to offer Princess Wen Cheng in a âmarriage of stateâ to the Tibetan king, Songtsen Gampo.
âIt would be a defiance of history,â asserts Ge, âto claim that Tibet has always been a part of China since the Tang Dynasty; the fact that the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau subsequently became a part of the Chinese dynasties does not substantiate such a claim.â</b>
Geâs article is an exploration of a larger theme of Chinese identity in history â and precisely when it evolved. And his comments on Tibet conform to scholarly accounts that acknowledge that the takeover of Tibet during the Qing Dynasty (17th to early 20th century) was the starting point for âChinese sovereigntyâ over the region.
Yet, Geâs comments are controversial insofar as they deviate from the official Communist Party line that Tibet has always been an inalienable part of China; in the past China has regarded as any weakening of that theory as âanti-nationalâ and âsplit-istâ. It will be interesting to see how the authorities respond to Geâs scholarly article.
Geâs major research fields include historical population geography, population and migration history, and cultural history. He has written and edited numerous books, and over 100 articles on historical population geography, population and migration history, and cultural history.
In his latest article, Ge notes that prior to 1912, when the Republic of China was officially founded, the idea of China (in Chinese, Zhongguo) wasnât clearly conceptualised. Even during the late Qing period, he writes, the term âChinaâ would on occasion be used to refer to the âQing State, including all the territory that fell within the boundaries of the Qing empireâ; but at other times, it would be taken to refer only to the â18 interior provincesâ, excluding Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Tibet and Xinjiang. Therefore, he argues, âif we want to understand the extent of ancient Chinaâs territory, we can only speak of how large the actual territory controlled by a particular dynasty was at a particular moment.â
Noting that notions of a âGreater Chinaâ were based entirely on the âone-sided views of Qing court records that were⦠written for the courtâs self-aggrandisementâ, Ge criticises those who feel that âthe more they exaggerate the territory of historical âChinaâ or Chinaâs successive dynasties and kingdoms, the more patriotic they are.â
In fact, he says, the opposite is true. âIf China really wishes to rise peacefully and be on a solid footing to face the future, we must understand the sum of our history and learn from our experiences.â
Link
<b>HONG KONG: A leading Chinese historian and a veteran of the committee that advises on official Chinese history textbooks has broken step with the official Chinese line on historical sovereignty over Tibet and said that to claim that the ancient Buddhist kingdom âhas always been a part of Chinaâ would be a âdefiance of historyâ.
In an article in the China Review magazine, Professor Ge Jianxiong, 62, director of the Institute of Chinese Historical Geography and the Research Centre for Historical Geographic Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, states that while considering how big China was during the Tang Dynasty (7th to 10th century), âwe cannot include the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, which was ruled by Tubo/Tufanâ¦â
Tubo/Tufan, notes Ge, âwas a sovereignty independent of the Tang Dynasty. At least it was not administered by the Tang Dynasty.â If it were not, he argues, there would have been no need for the Tang emperor of the day to offer Princess Wen Cheng in a âmarriage of stateâ to the Tibetan king, Songtsen Gampo.
âIt would be a defiance of history,â asserts Ge, âto claim that Tibet has always been a part of China since the Tang Dynasty; the fact that the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau subsequently became a part of the Chinese dynasties does not substantiate such a claim.â</b>
Geâs article is an exploration of a larger theme of Chinese identity in history â and precisely when it evolved. And his comments on Tibet conform to scholarly accounts that acknowledge that the takeover of Tibet during the Qing Dynasty (17th to early 20th century) was the starting point for âChinese sovereigntyâ over the region.
Yet, Geâs comments are controversial insofar as they deviate from the official Communist Party line that Tibet has always been an inalienable part of China; in the past China has regarded as any weakening of that theory as âanti-nationalâ and âsplit-istâ. It will be interesting to see how the authorities respond to Geâs scholarly article.
Geâs major research fields include historical population geography, population and migration history, and cultural history. He has written and edited numerous books, and over 100 articles on historical population geography, population and migration history, and cultural history.
In his latest article, Ge notes that prior to 1912, when the Republic of China was officially founded, the idea of China (in Chinese, Zhongguo) wasnât clearly conceptualised. Even during the late Qing period, he writes, the term âChinaâ would on occasion be used to refer to the âQing State, including all the territory that fell within the boundaries of the Qing empireâ; but at other times, it would be taken to refer only to the â18 interior provincesâ, excluding Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Tibet and Xinjiang. Therefore, he argues, âif we want to understand the extent of ancient Chinaâs territory, we can only speak of how large the actual territory controlled by a particular dynasty was at a particular moment.â
Noting that notions of a âGreater Chinaâ were based entirely on the âone-sided views of Qing court records that were⦠written for the courtâs self-aggrandisementâ, Ge criticises those who feel that âthe more they exaggerate the territory of historical âChinaâ or Chinaâs successive dynasties and kingdoms, the more patriotic they are.â
In fact, he says, the opposite is true. âIf China really wishes to rise peacefully and be on a solid footing to face the future, we must understand the sum of our history and learn from our experiences.â