History >Regime, Government and Spheres of Influence
Tubo
Tubo was a regime established by ancient Tibetans between the 7th and 9th century. This ancient kingdom is located on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and was the first regime established in Tibetan history. Following the collapse of the Tubo Dynasty, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and local people were renamed "Tubo" or "Xibo" in historical Han records of the Song, Yuan, and early Ming Dynasties.
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Tibetan Empire

Tibetan Empire, from 7th Century to 9th Century, is an ancient empire on Tibet Plateau. It lasted over 200 years, and is the first regime in the history of Tibet. The foundation of Tibetan Empire Potala PalaceIn the Sixth Century, the Yalong Tribe at Zedang in Shannan Prefecture had developed into slavery regime. At the early Seventh Century, Srongtsen Gampo surrendered of the ancient Qiang people – Shupi located at southwest Qinghai and north Tibet, Yangtong at north Tibet. He moved the capital from Yiqian to Luoxie (Lhasa), and officially founded Tibetan Empire (Tibet: Tob, Chinese: Tubo). According to Tradition of Tibetan History, Srongtsen Gampo is the 33th Tubo king, but as the Tibetan language had not created before his enthronement, it is hard to make sure whether the history of the tubo king before him is correct. Peak Stage In 629, the 13 years old Srongtsen Gampo became btsan-po. He quelled rebellions and unified Tibet. He moved the capital to Luoxie, Lhasa today. Luoxie became the political, economical and cultural center of Tibet. He established political and military system from centre to local areas according to the central system and the system of government soldiers of Tang Dynasty. And for developing economy and polity, he began to use calendar, unified weights and measures, created Tibetan characters according Keriya and Indian characters, and also made cruel law. Tibetan Empire After Srongtsen Gampo died, Tubo and Tang Dynasty fought for several times. In 670, Tubo invaded to the western regions. In 675, Tang controlled the western regions, and then 687 to 689, Tubo controlled again. In 692, General of Wuwei Army, Wang Xiaojie conquered Tobo and got the west regions back. And the small and big ward last for about 200 years. Friendly Communications between Tibetan Empire and Tang Dynasty Samye MonasteryIn 641, Wencheng Princess of Tang Dynasty married Srongtsen Gampo In 710, Jincheng Princess of Tang Dynasty married to the King of Tibetan Empire. Along with the increasingly close relationship between Tubo and Tang Dynasty, lots of Han people entered Tibet and some Tubo nobles were sent to Changan to learn Han people’s culture. Weakening of Tibetan Empire Frequent wars weakened the strength of Tibetan Empire. Entering the 9th Century, Tubo became weak and could not expansion its land. In 821, Tubo sent ambassadors to Changan to ask for alliance relationship. The ceremonies of alliance were held both in Changan and Luoxie. In 823, Tang-Tubo Alliance Monument was built in Lhasa, and still stands in front of Jokhang Temple. It is the precious material evidence of the friendship between Han and Tibetan people. During late Eight Century, Tibetan Empire’s internal contradictions of the ruling class had been increasingly intensified. Tubo divided which brought greater disaster to Tibetan people.

Tubo period petroglyphs found in Tibet

LHASA -- Eight stone inscriptions found in Mangkam County in Southwest China's Tibet autonomous region have been confirmed as dating back to the Tibetan Tubo Kingdom more than 1,000 years ago, the county cultural relics bureau said Sunday. The bureau along with the county tourist bureau and Sichuan University institute of Tibetan studies began research work in Mangkam County in the second half of 2016. The eight stone inscriptions are all Buddhist figures whose style of dress is typical of the Tubo's upper classes. "Judging from the costumes of the inscribed figures, we decide these inscriptions were made in the second half of the eighth century or the first half of the ninth," said Zhang Yanqing, an associate professor at the institute. Archaeologists said the inscriptions reflect the communication between eastern and western culture during the Tubo period. They are also evidence of cultural communication and religious transmission between Tibetans and neighboring ethnic groups in ancient times.

Chinese History - Tubo 吐蕃 Tibet

Tubo 吐蕃, often erroneously read Tufan, was the great Tibetan kingdom that flourished from the 7th to the 9th centuries and whose military and diplomatic acitivities had a great impact on the Chinese Tang empire's 唐 (618-907) withdrawal from its colonies in the Western Territories 西域. The Tibetan name of the country was Bod, from which the Chinese name 蕃 is derived. Ancient Chinese sources tell the Tibetans one of the Western Qiang 西羌 tribes that lived of pastoral nomadism on the Qinghai Plateau and the Tibetan Highland. Yet some of them also engaged in agriculture and planted barley, wheat and buckwheat. During the late 6th century the Tibetan tribe of the Yarlung living in a side-valley of River Tsanpo was unified under one leader whose position was called btsan-po (Chinese rendering zanpu 贊普). The king was assisted in government by a senior counsellor (blon chen, Chinese translation dalun 大論) and a junior counsellor (blon chung, Chinese translation xiaolun 小論). In 629 King Srong brtsan sgampo (Song-tsen Gam-po, Chinese rendering Songzan ganbu 松贊干布, r. 618-641) conquered the lands of Sapi 薩毗 and Yangtong 羊同 in Eastern Tibet and created the kingdom of Great Tibet. His capital was Lhasa, in Chinese sources called Luoxie 邏些 (modern form Lasa 拉薩). Tibet established not only economic, but also diplomatic relationships with the Chinese Tang empire 唐 (618-907) and the states of India. From both countries, ideas of government, religion and literature came to Tibet. Tibet adopted the Brahmi script of India, juristictional and economic rules from India and China, as well as administrative and military patterns from China. Tibet soon became a militarily prevalent state and dominated the peoples of the Tuyuhun 吐谷渾 and the Tanguts 黨項 that lived in the regions of modern Gansu and Qinghai. The government of Tibet came to know that the Chinese used a kind of alliance system with their powerful vassals by exchanging princesses (heqin 和親 "peace by marriage") and therefore also required a Chinese princess, like the Turks 突厥 and the Tuyuhun. In 640 Princess Wencheng 文成公主 was married to the king of Tibet. The Tibetan king therefore supported the Tang commissioner Wang Xuance 王玄策 in a campaign against the Indian king Arunashwa (Chinese rendering Aluonashun 阿羅那順). Yet a few decades later the Tibetans destroyed the realm of the Tuyuhun and threatened the regions of Longyou 隴右 and Hexi 河西, the westernmost provinces of the Tang empire. They also conquered the Greater and Lesser Burusho 大小勃律 and critically endangered the Chinese control over their Protectorate of the Pacified West (anxi duhufu 安西都護府), and often battled with Tang troops and Turkish units. In spite of all military conflicts the Tang court in 709 married Princess Jincheng 金城公主 to king Khri lde gtsug brstan (Tri-de Tsug-ten, Chinese rendering Qilai suozan 棄隶蹜贊, r. 704/12-755). The Princess was bestowed a bath town in the region of Hexi that served as her appanage. The Tibetans therefore incessantly attacked the province of Hexi. The Tang government therefore enforced the garrisons in that region and entrusted the military commissioners (jiedushi 節度使) with a higher military power. This situation lasted until the mid-8th century, when Tang China was disturbed by the rebellion of An Lushan and lost control over many provinces. The Chinese protectorate in the west finally fell into the hands of the Turks, the Uyghurs 回鶻 and the Tibetans who contended for power over the citystates on the Silk Road. The kings of Tibet could even gain control over the kingdom of Nanzhao 南詔 in the modern province of Yunnan that had been a vassal to the Tang empire until that date. Tibet had become one of the largest empires in Asia and covered not only the area of what it today known as the so-called Autonomous Region of Xizang (Tibet), but also parts of Xinjiang, Qinghai, Sichuan, and of Yunnan. In 763 Tibetan troops even sacked the Tang capital Chang'an 長安 (modern Xi'an 西安, Shaanxi). Tibetan pressure on the Tang empire only slackened from 789 on when the Tang were able to establish an alliance with the Uyghurian khanate and the king of Nanzhao again declared his status as a vassal to the Tang. The politics of conflict were thereafter replaced by attempts at realliance. In 823 a bilateral treatise between Tibet and Tang China was declarated, and a bilingual stele was erected in Lhasa commemorating the unity of the two empires. In 842 Glang darma (Lang Darma, Chinese rendering Lang Dama 郎達瑪, r. 842-846) died without a heir. The Yarlung dynasty had come to an end, and the throne passed on to the late king's brother-in-law, but the latter was challenged by a large number of members of the Tibetan aristocracy, and the unified kingdom of Tubo disintegrated. Some border regions returned to be part of the Tang empire, like Dunhuang 敦煌 that was transformed into the military prefecture of Shazhou 沙州. With the advent of Buddhism in Tibet society changed to a large extent. The native religion of Tibet was a religion called Bon or Bön, a kind of shamanism with mystical and shamanistic features. It was enriched by a kind of late Buddhism that is often called "esoteric". One of the most important features of this so-called Tantric Buddhism is the use of a special kind of incantations that are called tantra. In Tibet this late Indian Buddhism was merged with shamanic forms of religion, in which the priests (lama) played a very important spiritual role. Tibetan Buddhism is therefore also known under the name of Lamaism. King Khri srong lde brtsan (Tri-song De-tsen, Chinese rendering Qisong dezan 棄松德贊, r. 756-797) initiated the office of chos-plon ཆོས་བློན་ (Chinese rendering quelun 卻論), a monk counsellor and so laid the foundation of the later influence of religion on lay government.

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1 Later, many wars broke out between the Tubo regime and the Tang Dynasty

2 Tubo was an ethnic group which formed on the Tibetan plateau.

3 The Xixia regime, founded mainly by the Dangxiang Tribe, was not taken as part of the Tubo Kingdom in its process of unifying the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.