Key Dates |
602 Namri Songtsen, lord of Yarlung, becomes the first king of Tibet.
620-49 Reign of King Songsten Gampo; Tibet grows into an empire.
670 Prolonged warfare between Tibet and Tang China begins.
763 Tibet captures Changan, the Tang capital; tribute paid to Tibet.
Tibetan king invites Buddhist teachers from India and China.
792 Exponents of Indian and Chinese Buddhism debate at Samye monastery;
the Indian representative is declared to have won the contest.
821 China-Tibet Peace Treaty: "Tibetans shall be happy in Tibet and Chinese shall be happy in China".
842 King Langdarma assassinated; Tibet fragments into several states.
1073 Sakya monastery founded.
1206 Chingis Kham elected first ruler of united Mongol clans.
1234 Mongols led by Ogodai Khagan defeat Junchen and conquer north China.
1247 Grand Lama of Sakya submits to Mongols;
beginning of priest/patron relationship between lama and khan.
1261 Tibet reunited with the Grand Lama of Sakya as king.
1279 Final defeat of Sung by Mongols; Mongol conquest of China complete.
1350 King Changchub Gyaltsen ousts Sakya and founds a new secular dynasty.
1368 China regains its independence from the Mongols under Ming dynasty.
1409 Tibetan monk Tsongkhapa founds the Gelugpa sect.
1578 Gelugpa leader receives the title of "Dalai Lama" from Altan Khan.
1640 Gushri Khan, leader of Qoshot Mongols, invades and conquers Tibet.
1642 Gushri Khan enthrones the 5th Dalai Lama as temporal ruler of Tibet.
1644 Manchu overthrow Ming, conquer China, and establish the Qing dynasty.
1653 "Great Fifth" Dalai Lama meets Qing Emperor Shunzhi near Beijing.
1682 Fifth Dalai Lama dies; death is concealed for the next 14 years.
1717 Dzungar Mongols invade Tibet and sack Lhasa; 5th DL's tomb looted.
1720 Qing forces drive out Dzungars and install Kesang Gyatso as 7th DL.
1721 Qing emperor declares Tibet a tributary state; first Ambans sent to Lhasa.
1724 A Qing territorial government is created for Kokonor (Amdo).
1792 Qing troops enter Tibet to drive out Gorkha (Nepalese) invaders.
A ban on visitation by non-Chinese foreigners is imposed.
1854-56 Nepal defeats Tibet; peace treaty requires Tibet to pay tribute
1904 British troops under Colonel Younghusband enter Tibet & occupy Lhasa.
1910-12 A Qing army led by General Zhao Erfeng invades and occupies Tibet.
1912 Last Qing emperor abdicates; Republic of China claims Mongolia, Tibet.
1913 Dalai Lama proclaims Tibet independent; paper money and coins issued.
Mongolia and Tibet conclude a treaty of mutual recognition.
1914 Britain and Tibet agree to McMahon Line in a treaty signed in Simla,
(the border claimed by India today).
1918 Tibetan army, led by British-trained officers, defeats Chinese army.
Tibet and China sign a peace treaty; China refuses to ratify treaty.
1933 13th Dalai Lama dies; Reting Rimpoche selected as Tibetan regent.
1937 Britain publishes Simla Convention and begins enforcing McMahon Line.
1940 14th Dalai Lama is enthroned; Chinese delegation attends ceremony.
1943 Britain affirms that Tibet is "already self-governing and determined to retain [its] independence".
1947-49 Tibetan Trade Mission travels to India, Britain, U.S., and China;
the mission is received by the British Prime Minister Attlee.
1949 People's Republic of China is proclaimed by Chinese Communist Party.
1950 Radio Beijing announce: "The task of the People's Liberation Army for 1950 is to liberate Tibet."
40,000 Chinese troops invade Tibet in October, unprovoked and with no accepted legal basis for claims of sovereignty.
Fifteen-year-old Tenzin Gyatso given full powers to rule as the 14th Dalai Lama - the Tibetans' spiritual and temporal leader.
1951 China undertakes 17-Point Agreement to refrain from interfering with Tibet's government and society following negotiation by the Dalai Lama.
1953 Mao Zedong promises the Dalai Lama that the Chinese will leave Tibet once 'liberation' is complete.
1959 National Uprising - explosion of Tibetan resistance resulting in severe crackdown by the Chinese and widespread brutality.
An estimated 430,000 Tibetans are killed (Chinese estimate: 87,000 killed).
One hundred thousand Tibetans flee with Dalai Lama into exile in India.
1960 - 1962 340,000 Tibetan peasants and nomads die in Tibet's first recorded famines following the destabilisation of the economy after an influx of Chinese settlers and forced agricultural modernisation.
1965 Chinese formally inaugurate one of Tibet's three provinces as the 'Tibet Autonomous Region' (TAR).
(See map below.)
1966 Thousands of Buddhist monasteries destroyed

Late 1970s The Dalai Lama starts to make political speeches abroad and international support for Tibet starts to grow.
1979 Following death of Mao and Deng Xiaoping’s coming to power, Tibetan exiles send three delegations to investigate the situation in Tibet.
First personal contacts between Tibetans in Tibet and those in exile for 20 years.
1980 Period of liberalisation in Tibet inaugurated by Hu Yao Bang.
1987 Tibetans begin a new era of protest. Police fire on a massive pro-independence demonstration in Lhasa.
1988 The Dalai Lama puts forward the 'Strasbourg proposal' in which he calls for genuine autonomy for Tibet rather than independence.
Qiao Shi, China's security chief, visits Tibet and vows to "adopt a policy of merciless repression".
1989 The Dalai Lama receives the Nobel Peace Prize.
1992 China declares Tibet "open" to foreign investment.
Chen Kuiyuan is named CCP leader for Tibet and calls for a purge of those party members who "act as internal agents of the Dalai Lama clique".
1995 Six year-old Gendun Choekyi Nyima, recognised by the Dalai Lama as the 11th Panchen Lama, and his family disappear.
China selects and enthrones another child.
Gendun's location and safety remain unknown.
1996 China launches a patriotic re-education campaign, removing photos of the Dalai Lama from monasteries.
1999 The 40th anniversary of the Tibetan Uprising marked by protest in Lhasa.
2000 The 17th Karmapa flees Tibet.
2002 Formal contacts are re-established between the Tibetan government in exile and China.
2005 Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's offered to hold talks with the 14th Dalai Lama on the Tibet issue, provided he drops the demand for independence.
2006 Gormo-Lhasa Railway opened.
2007 State Religious Affairs Bureau Order No. 5 makes it illegal for lamas to reincarnate without
Chinese government approval.
Dalai Lama awarded US Congressional Gold Medal.
2008 Biggest protests in Tibet for over 20 years
China's Olympic torch is met by worldwide protests over Tibet.
During the Beijing Olympic Games, protesters highlight the Tibet issue as China continues to prevent access to Tibet.





