A Mountain in Tibet
Page 26
kadakh (T) – ceremonial white scarf
Kailas – lit. spire, 22,028-ft mountain peak in S. W. Tibet believed by Hindus to be physical manifestation of Meru and Shiva’s paradise. See Kang Rinpoche
Kali – black goddess, see Devi
kang (T) – ice, snow; also gang, thus kangri – snow peak
Kang Rinpoche – jewel of chief of snows, Tibetan name for Kailas, believed by Tibetans to be physical manifestation of Tisé
khola (N) – river
kiang (T) – Tibetan wild ass
Kumaon – former Himalayan province west of Nepal and east of British Garhwal
kund (S) – pool or lake, thus Brahmakund
Kungribingri – up and down, pass from Milam to Tibet, elevation 18,300 ft
la (T) – pass, hill
lama (T) – superior person, thus priest or teacher
Lanchen-Khambab (T) – Elephant-Mouth, source or upper reaches of the Sutlej river
lapcha (T) – cairn of stones, surmounted with prayer-flags; also laptche
lingam (S) – phallic symbol, the form in which Shiva is most commonly worshipped
Lipu Lekh – border pass leading from Garbyang to Taklakar, elevation 16,750 ft
Mahabharata – epic poem assembled about 400 BC but describing events that took place a thousand years earlier in N. India
Mahadeva – the great god, Shiva
Mana, La – border pass between Mana and Tsaparang, elevation 17,900ft
Manasarovar (S) – Manasa-sarovara – formed in the mind (of Brahma), celebrated in the Manasa Khanda and puranas as the holiest of lakes; also Mapham Tso
mandala (S) – symbolic microcosm for meditation; see yantra
mani (T) – the mantra Om Mane Padme Hum, thus mani-cylinder or prayer-wheel containing mantra, and mani-walls on which inscribed mani-stones are placed
mantra (S) – mystic formula or incantation
Mapchhu-Khambab – Peacock-Mouth, source or upper reaches of the Karnali river
Mapham Tso (T) – unconquerable lake, see Manasarovar
Marathas – Hindu peasant-warriors of Deccan and Western Ghats
Marchhas (B) – Bhotias living in upper Alaknanda and Dhauli Ganga valleys
Maryum La (T) – pass dividing provinces of Ngari and Tsang; also Mayum, Mariam, elevation 16,900 ft
mela (H) – fair, festival; thus Magh Mela – early spring festival at Hardwar and Kumbh Mela held every twelve years at several sites beside the Ganga
Meru (S) – Sumeru, mythical world-pillar, world-lotus or cosmic navel, on which is sited Swarga – heaven, also known as Tisé to Tibetans. Manifest as Kailas or Kang Rinpoche
Milarepa – Tibetan yogi of twelfth century, known also as Jetsun, Milarspa
mithun (A) – form of Indian bison, domesticated and reared only for status
morang (Abor) – tribal long-house
munshi (H) – language teacher or interpreter
Ngari (T) – province of Western Tibet, capital at Gartok
nirvana (S) – salvation, ultimate absorption into the absolute
Niti La – border pass leading from Niti to upper Sutlej, elevation 16,630 ft
nor (T) – lake, thus Tengri Nor
nyen (T) – Great Tibetan Sheep, Ovis Ammon; also nyan
obo (T) – cairn, more correctly lapcha
Om (S) – mantra, mystic symbol and sound of the universe
padma (T) – lotus, thus Padmasambava, Indian founder of Tibetan Buddhism in the eighth century AD
pahar (H) – hill, mountain; thus pahari – hill-man
palki (H) – palanquin
Panchen Lama (T) – spiritual co-leader of Tibet, living at Tashilunpo monastery, also known as Tashi Lama
parbat (H) – mountain; thus Kailas Parbat, Mount Kailas; Parvati (the Mountaineer) – Devi
parikarama (S) – circuit of object of devotion made by devotee
pashmin (Kashmiri) – long-haired goat of Kashmir and Tibet
peling (T) – European
Po (T) – Tibet, thus Tsang-Po, great river of Tibet
posa (A) – annual grant of government funds
prayag (S) – sacred confluence, as in Deoprayag
puja (S) – act of worship; thus pujari – priest
pundit (H) – learned man, religious teacher (sometimes pandit); also title given to the surveyor-spies trained by the Survey of India
purana (S) – old, thus Puranas, eighteen sacred texts written between 200 BC and AD 800, of which the Vishnu Purana is the best known
Purang (T) – ancient kingdom in S.W. Tibet, now a district, with its capital at Taklakar
Raj (H) – kingdom, but generally understood to refer to period of British crown rule from 1858–1947
Rajput (H) – martial Hindu caste, originally from Rajputana – land of kings
rakshas (S) – demon
Rakas Tal – lake of demons, known to Tibetans as Langak Tso, Rawan Hrad
Ramayana (S) – oldest Sanskrit epic, probably compiled about 500 BC
Rawat (B) – clan name for Bhotias of Johar; see Shokpas
ri (T) – peak; thus kangri – snowpeak;
Rinpoche (T) – jewel, blessed; thus Gyalpo Rinpoche – blessed leader
rishi (S) – sage; thus Rishikesh – abode of sages
sadhu (S) – ascetic, holy man
Sakya Muni (T) – Buddha
sal (H) – plains hardwood, shorea robusta
sambur (H) – large deer, found throughout India
sanyasi (S) – ascetic
semal (H) – plains tree, bombax hepta phyllum
Senge-Khambab (T) – Lion-Mouth, source or upper reaches of the Indus
Shaiva – See Shiva
shakti (H) – female creative energy released in conjunction with male principle, Shiva. See tantra
shikar (H) – hunting; thus shikari – hunter
Shiva (S) – (also Siva) destroyer and transformer, third god of the Hindu trinity, evolved from Rudra, also manifest as Mahadeva, Nilkantha, Kedaresh war, most often worshipped in form of lingam, residing on Kailas; thus Shaiva – follower of Shiva
Shivling – Shiva’s lingam, 21,468-ft peak near Gaumukh
Shokpas (B) – Bhotias of Johar, also known as Rawats or Shokas
sirdar (H) – honorific title of chief, often given to leader of working men
Siwalik (S) – abode of Shiva, first range of the Himalayan foothills bordering on UP
sola topee (H) – pith helmet made from sola plant fibre
stupa (S) – Buddhist monument in the form of a microcosmic mound
swastika (H) – talisman or mark of spiritual strength, good luck
tal (H) – lake, as in Rakas Tal
Tamchok-Khambab (T) – Horse-Mouth, source or upper reaches of the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra
tang (T) – plain, plateau, as in Chang Tang
tantra (H) – mystical cult associated with Shiva-Shakti
tasam (T) – staging-post for changing horses; thus the Tasam highway from Lhasa to Leh, and Tarjum – official in charge
Tashi Lama (T) – see Panchen Lama
terai (H) – belt of formerly thick jungle south of Himalayan ranges
thugee (H) – secret cult of Kali involving murder prevalent in N. India until about 1845
Tisé (T) – peak, world-pillar, Tibetan version of Meru, also Ri-Rab, made manifest as Kang Rinpoche
tsampa (T) – parched barley flour, staple food of Tibet
Tsangpo (Tsang-Po) (T) – great river of Tibet, upper course of Brahmaputra river
tso (T) – lake, as in Mapham Tso; also tsho
Unta Dhura (B) – pass leading north from Milam to Kungribingri pass, elevation 17,590 ft
UP – Uttar Pradesh, formerly United Provinces, originally comprising Rohilkand, Budelkand, Oude and Doab, first absorbed by stages into the East India Company’s Bengal Presidency, then North-West Provinces
Vaisnova – See Vishnu
Vishnu – preserver and creator, second god in th
e Hindu trinity after Brahma, also manifest as Badrinath, Krishna, Hari, Rama; thus Vaisnava – follower of Vishnu
Vedic – first ‘Aryan’ form of Hindu religion, being principally nature-worship
yab-yum (T) – male-female principles or deities of tantric Buddhism
yak (T) – Tibetan ox, bos grunniens, found domesticated and wild (dong) and cross-bred with cattle; also Chowhur (B), Banchowr (H)
yankti (B) – river
yantra (S) – mystic instrument for meditation and tantric exercises; see mandala
yatra (H) – journey to holy places; thus yatri – pilgrim
yin-yang (Chinese) – female-male polar forces of Taoist philosophy
yoni (H) – female sexual principle; see lingam
NOTES AND SOURCES
My use of Ganga for the more familiar (to Westerners) Graeco-Roman Ganges may irritate some readers, but if 650 million Indians prefer to call this most sacred of rivers the Ganga then the least Westerners can do is to follow suit.
Scholars may be disappointed at the absence of numbers in the text and footnotes, but not, I think, the general reader. The following notes give the main sources for each chapter.
Anyone embarking on a more detailed study of the subject would do well to start with Sven Hedin’s Southern Tibet (vols I–III) and Col. R. H. Phillimore’s Records of the Survey of India (vols I–IV), both prodigious works of scholarship, and my more or less constant companions over the last four years. Hedin’s work is much more than a chronicle of his own travels and discoveries, being also a wide-ranging survey from remote antiquity to his own time of lake Manasarovar, the sources of the great Indian rivers and the Trans-Himalayan range. All the same, these three volumes represent the case for Sven Hedin’s defence and should be read with caution. Phillimore’s Records – the fruit of two decades of painstaking research after his retirement from the Survey of India – provide as accurate and comprehensive a history of the Survey up to 1860 as one could ever hope to find. For a pilgrim’s view of Kailas-Manasarovar that combines the esoteric with the scholarly point of view there is Swami Pranavananda’s Exploration in Tibet (1955), based on the Swami’s many pilgrimages to the area made between 1928 and 1947. For those seeking a more up-to-date and possibly definitive view on the sources of the Indus, Brahmaputra, Sutlej and Kamali his book has all the answers. Readers searching for a higher plane would do well to consult the German-Bolivian ‘Lama Anagarika Govinda’s’ The Way of the White Clouds (1966).
Abbreviations
AR
Asiatic (k) Researches
BL
British Library
GJ
Geographical Journal
IOLR
India Office Library and Records
JASB
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal
JRAS
Journal of the Asiatic Society
RGS
Royal Geographical Society
Prologue
GJ CXIX (1955); The Times 26 November 1952.
Chapter 1
For the geography and geology of the Himalayas and Tibet, see: B. C. Law(ed.), Mountains and Rivers of India (1968). A. Gansser and H. Heim, Geology of Central Himalaya (1958); Thron der Götter (1938) (also private correspondence). D. N. Wadia, ‘The Himalaya Moutains’, Himalayan Journal 26 (1965–6). S. G. Burrard and H. H. Haydon, A Sketch of the Geography and Geology of the Himalayan Mountains and Tibet (revised 1934). Prof. K. Mason, The Abode of Snow (1955)
For the Himalayas, Kailas-Manasarovar and the Indian rivers in antiquity see: Hedin, Southern Tibet. E. T. Atkinson, The Himalayan Districts of the North-Western Provinces vols I–II (1882). J. Dowson, A Classical Dictionary of Hindu Mythology and Religion (1913). K. S. Fonia, Uttarakhand (1978). Eric Newby, Ganga (1974). Hindu and Tibetan sources as stated in the narrative. Translations from the Puranas are H. H. Wilson’s. See also AR VI (1807), and AR X (1810).
For Hindu and Buddhist religion see especially: W. Y. Evans-Wentz, Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines (1935). Govinda, op. cit,. and The Foundations of Tibetan Mysticism (1960). Philip Rawson, Tantra, and Indian Cult of Ecstasy (1973). W. Y. Evans-Wentz, Milarepa – Tibet’s Great Yogi (1928). H. Hoffman, The Religions of Tibet (1955). E. B. Havell, The Himalayas in Indian Art (1934). E. Stoll, Ti-sé, Der Heilige Berg in Tibet, G. Helvetica 21 (1966). G. Tucci, Il Manasarovar, Lage Sacro del Tibet, Vie Italia e Mondo, vol. III (1936).
Chapter 2
For European views of Mogul India, see: Niccolo Manuchi, Storia di Mogor ed. W. Irvine (1908). S. Purchas, Purchas his Pilgrimes (1625). Sir W. Foster, The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to India (1926).
For the story of the Jesuit explorers, see: John MacGregor, Tibet: A Chronicle of Exploration (1970). C. Wessels, SJ, Early Jesuit Travellers in Central Asia (1924). Carlo Puini, II Tibet, SGI Memorie X (1904). Filippo de Filippi, An Account of Tibet – the Travels of Ippolito Desideri (1931). Father Hosten, JASB (1912), Memoirs of the ASB, vol. III (1914).
For a moving picture of Tsaparang as it is now, see Govinda.
Chapter 3
Still the best account of that exciting period (for the British) at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is Philip Woodruff’s The Men Who Ruled India, vol. I (1954). M. Gray and J. Garrett’s European Adventurers of Northern India (1929), provides a vivid account of the activities or mercenaries like Hearsey. Col. H. Pearce, The Hearseys: Five Generations of an Anglo-Indian Family (1905) is an inaccurate and dull account of a lively family (John Hearsey is currently engaged in writing a new history of the Hearsey family in India).
For exploration and surveys see: Phillimore, vols I and II. James Rennell, Memoir of A Map of Hindustan (1793). Capt. F. Raper, ‘Narrative of a Survey with the Purpose of Discovering the Source of the River Ganges’, AR XI (1810). Major H. Y. Hearsey, Account of a Tour to the Sources of the Ganges (1808), BL 26653. J. B. Fraser, Journal of a Tour Through Part of the Snowy Mountains of the Himala Mountains and to the Sources of the River Jumma and Ganges (1820). AR vols VIII, XI, XII, XIV; GJ vol. XXXI (1851). Emily Eden, Up the Country (1866).
Chapter 4
The best account of Moorcroft’s extraordinary travels to date is given in John Keay’s Where Men and Mountains Meet (1977). Dr Garry Alder has a biography in preparation. See also: W. Moorcroft, ‘A Journey to Lake Manasarova in Undes, A Province of Little Tibet’, AR XII (1816). Hyder Jung Hearsey, ‘A Tour to Eastern Tatary’ (MS in the possession of John Hearsey). Col. H. Pearce, ‘Moorcroft and Hearsey’s Visit to Lake Manasarovar’, GJ XXVI (1905); London Asiatic Journal XVIII, Phillimore, vol. II. Hedin, vols I and II. There are several accounts of the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814–16, including John Pemble, The Invasion of Nepal (1962).
Chapter 5
Richard Wilcox’s narrative is contained in his ‘Memoir of a Survey of Assam and the Neighbouring Countries, Executed in 1825–6–7–8’, AR XVII. James Burlton’s MS Journal is in the Records of the Survey of India. See also: H. T. von Klaproth, Magazin Asiatique (1825–6). V. Elwin, India’s North-East Frontier in the Nineteenth Century (1959). L. W. Shakespear, History of Upper Assam (1914). Sir R. Reid, History of the Frontier Areas of Assam (1942). R. M Lahiri, The Annexation of Assam (1955). Phillimore, vol. III. Hedin, vol. II.
Chapter 6
For accounts of the Strachey and Schlagintweit brothers’ visits to Manasarovar see: Atkinson, op cit. H. Strachey, ‘On the Physical Geography of Western Tibet’, GJ XXIII (1853). R. Strachey, ‘Narrative of a Journey to Manasarovar’, GJ XV (1900); Notebook, Eur. Mss 2331, IOLR (1848); JASB XVI–XIX (1848–9), Letters RGS. Schlagintweit, Result of the Schlagintweit Mission to India (1862) RGS Map Room.
For Smyth’s journey of 1862 see T. L. Webber, Forests of Upper India (1902). Gen. G. MacIntyre, Hindu Koh: Wanderings and Wild Sports On and Beyond the Himalayas (1889).
For the Pundits see: K. Mason, op, cit., ‘Great Figures in Nineteenth Century Exploration, JRCAS (1956); ‘Kishen Singh and the Indian Explorers’, GJ (Dec.
1923). Indra Singh Rawat, Indian Explorers in the Nineteenth Century (1973). Col. T. G. Montgomerie, ‘Report on a Route Survey made by Pundit *——, from Nepal to Lhasa and thence through the Upper Valley of the Brahmaputra to its Source’, GJ XXXVIII (1868), XXXIX (1869). C. Markham, A Memoir on the Indian Surveys (1878), Survey of India Records, VIII, VIX. Gerald Morgan, ‘Myth and Reality in the Great Game’, Asian Affairs (Feb. 1973).
Chapter 7
Shakespear, op. cit. Reid, op. cit. H. E. Richardson, Tibetan Précis (1942). E. T. Dalton, Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal (1872). Sgt-Major G. Carter’s Diary of 1858, Eur. Mss. E.262 IOLR.
For Nain Singh Rawat’s last journey see: Rawat, op, cit., Survey of India Records vol. VIII. Capt. H. Trotter, ‘Account of the Pundit’s Journey in Great Tibet from Leh in Ladadkh to Lhasa and his Return to India via Assam’, GJ XLVII (1877).
For Kinthup’s story see ‘Explorations on the Tsangpo in 1880–4’, GJ XXXVIII (1911). L. A. Waddell, ‘The Falls of the San-Pu’, GJ (1885); Among the Himalayas (1899). Proceedings RGS 1885–6. Survey of India Records IX. Sarat Chandra Das, ‘Note of the Identity of the Great Tsang-Po’, JASB (1898).
For Needham and exploration of the Dihong see: St J. F. Michell, Report on the N.E. Frontier of India (1883). J. F. Needham, Report of a Trip into the Abor Hills (1884); Report of a Visit paid to the Abor Villages of Padu and Kumku (1885); Excursion in the Abor Hills. RGS Suppl. Papers vol. II (1887–9); RGS Letters. W. R. Little, Report on the Abor Expedition (1894).
For the Abor Campaign see: Angus Hamilton, In Abor Jungle (1913). Lt-Col. A. B. Lindsay, ‘Expedition Against the Abors’, Army Review, IV (1913); private letters belonging to Sir Martin Lindsay.
For European attempts to explore the Tsangpo gorge see: Capt. C. G. Rawling, The Great Plateau (1905); GJ XXXIII (1909). Major C H. D. Ryder, GJ XXVI (1905), XXXII (1909). F. M. Bailey, China-Tibet-Assam: A Journey (1945); No Passport to Tibet (1937); Reports on an Exploration on the North-East Frontier (1913, with Capt. H. T. Morshead). Arthur Swinson, Beyond the Frontiers (1971). Sir F. Younghusband, The Epic of Mount Everest (1926).