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Trespassers on the Roof of the World: The Secret Exploration of Tibet PDF

308 Pages·1995·22.022 MB·English
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-'S , "K a new envoi d by the Author ‘The Secret ‘Exploration of'Tibet HffFST IfIfill "Hopkirk's wonderfully vivid be ;ribes t thrilling efforts of explorers, spie y r a6 r1 b 1 i 2 L 0 c A i lM b u , Pn o n t os to s B o B TRESPASSERS ON THE ROOF OF THE WORLD Also by Peter Hopkirk Foreign Devils on the Silk Road: The Search for the Lost Cities and Treasures of Central Asia Setting the East Ablaze: Lenin’s Dream of Empire in Asia The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia Like Hidden Fire: The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire TRESPASSERS ON THE ROOF OF THE WORLD THE SECRET EXPLORATION OF TIBET PETER HOPKIRK KODANSHA INTERNATIONAL New York • Tokyo • London Kodansha America, Inc. 575 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10022, U.S.A. Kodansha International Ltd. 17-14 Otowa 1-chome, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 112, Japan Published in 1995 by Kodansha America, Inc. by arrangement with John Murray (Publishers) Ltd., London ^ First published in 1982 by John Murray (Publishers) Ltd., London. First American edition published in 1983 by J. P. Tarcher, Inc., Los Angeles. This is a Kodansha Globe book. Copyright © 1982, 1995 by Peter Hopkirk. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hopkirk, Peter. Trespassers on the roof of the world : the secret exploration of Tibet / Peter Hopkirk. p. cm. — (Kodansha globe) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-56836-050-9 1. Tibet (China)—History. I. Title. II. Series. DS786.H6177 1995 951'. 5—dc20 94-48629 Printed in the United States of America 03 04 RRD/H 10 9876543 Contents Sources of Illustrations vi Acknowledgements • • Vll Prologue i Tibet - The Forbidden Land I 5 The Unholy Spies of Captain Montgomerie 2 20 With Prayer-Wheel and Sextant to Lhasa 3 28 Panning for Gold on the Roof of the World 4 37 The Race for the Holy City Begins 5 55 6 Four Dreams of Lhasa 68 Death of an Explorer 7 92 8 The Bizarre Adventure of Henry Savage Landor H4 The Nightmare of Susie Rijnhart 9 137 Lhasa - at Last io 159 ii ‘Golden Domes like Tongues of Fire’ 184 12 The Riddle of the Snows 206 13 Lhasa Lowers its Guard 220 Jumping into the Land of God 237 14 Red Guards in Lhasa 248 15 Afterword 267 Bibliography of Principal Sources 269 Index 273 About the Author 277 Sources of Illustrations Nos. i 2, 4, 5, 9, io and n from Tibet, the Mysterious by Sir Thomas Holdich, published by Alston Rivers, London; No. 3 by courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society; No. 6 from Three Years in Tibet by Ekai Ka¬ waguchi, published by Theosophical Publishing Society, 1909; No. 7 from With the Tibetans in Tent and Temple by Dr. Susie Rijnhart, published by Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier, 1901; No. 8 from Two Lady Missionaries in Tibet by Isabel Robson, published by S. W. Partridge, London; No. 12 from India and Tibet by Sir Francis Younghusband, published by John Murray, 1910; No. 13 from Peking to Lhasa compiled by Sir Francis Young- husband, published by Constable, 1925; No. 14 from My Journey to Lhasa by Alexandra David-Neel, published by William Heinemann, 1927; No. 15 from In the Forbidden Land by H. S. Landor, published by William Heinemann, 1898; No. 16 from Francis Younghusband by George Seaver, published by John Murray, 1952; Nos. 17, 18, 22 and 23 by courtesy of the National Army Museum; No. 19 from Trans-Himalaya by Sven Hedin, published by Macmillan, 1909; No. 20 sketch from The Great Closed Land by Annie Marston, published by S. W. Partridge, London; No. 21 photo by F. Spencer Chapman; No. 24 from With Mounted Infantry in Tibet by Major W. J. Ottley, published by Smith, Elder and Co., 1906; No. 25 from Lhasa: The Holy City by F. Spencer Chapman, published by Chatto and Windus, 1938; No. 26 from The People of Tibet by Sir Charles Bell, published by Oxford University Press, 1928; No. 27 from On the Frontier and Beyond by Sir Frederick O’Connor, published by John Murray, 1931. Maps by Denys Baker. Acknowledgements In piecing together this narrative my greatest debt must be to those remarkable men and women - all long dead and little remembered - who took part in the race to reach Lhasa. Their adventures and misadventures, as related at the time, provide much of the book’s drama. I owe a similar debt to those other travellers whose trespasses into Tibet also form part of the story. Without their first-hand accounts of what befell them in this wild and remote Asian backwater this book could not have been written. All these sources, today long forgotten and out of print, are acknowledged in my bibliography. For my knowledge of the political and diplomatic history of the period I owe much to Professor Alastair Lamb’s works, particularly to his Britain and Chinese Central Asia, a book which no one writing on modern Tibet can afford to ignore. Like him I have spent illuminating hours combing the so-called political and secret files, and I am grateful to the staff of the India Office Library and the Public Records Office for their help. For my understanding of more recent events in Tibet, I found Hugh Richardson’s Tibet and its History invaluable, its author having personally witnessed many of them and partici¬ pated in not a few. The individual to whom I owe most, however, is my wife Kath whose thoroughness in all things has contributed so much to this book at every stage. Others to whom my gratitude is due for assistance include Dr Michael Aris of Wolfson College, Oxford, and Zara Fleming, formerly of the Victoria and Albert Museum, both Tibetan specialists. I am also indebted to Mrs Joan Mary Jehu of Fulham who, as a pre-war teenager, was the Acknowledgements - Vlll - second Englishwoman ever to visit Lhasa (her mother being the first), and her memories of it were a valuable source of insight to me. My gratitude, too, is due to Janina Slater, once of Peking, now of The Times, who battled against the clock to produce the final typescript and who suggested a number of useful clarifica¬ tions. Finally I must thank my publisher and editor, John R. Murray, without whose constant encouragement this book would have remained no more than a synopsis scribbled on the back of an Income Tax demand. Peter Hopkirk

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