Chiefdom of Tsanlha
Tibetan Tusi chiefdom (1650–1776)
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Chiefdom of Tsanlha (Tibetan: བཙན་ལྷ་, Wylie: btsan lha; Chinese: 贊拉土司; pinyin: Zànlā Tǔsī), also known as Chiefdom of Lesser Jinchuan (Chinese: 小金川土司; pinyin: Xiǎo Jīnchuān Tǔsī; Tibetan: གསོའུ་ཀྱིན་ཆྭན་གཡེན་ཧྭ་ཐོའུ་སི), was an autonomous Gyalrong chiefdom that ruled Lesser Jinchuan (present day Xiaojin County, Sichuan) during Qing dynasty. The rulers of Tsanlha used the royal title Tsanlha Gyalpo (Tibetan: བཙན་ལྷ་རྒྱལ་པོ, Wylie: btsan lha rgyal po).[1]
Chiefdom of Tsanlha བཙན་ལྷ་ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1650–1776 | |||||||
| Status | Chiefdom under the Chinese Tusi system | ||||||
| Capital | Tsanlha (in present day Xiaojin County) | ||||||
| Common languages | Gyarung | ||||||
| Government | Monarchy | ||||||
| Tsanlha Gyalpo | |||||||
• 17??–17?? | Tse dbang | ||||||
• 17??–1776 | Skal bzang (last) | ||||||
| History | |||||||
• Established | 1650 | ||||||
• Disestablished | 1776 | ||||||
| |||||||
| Today part of | China | ||||||
The chieftains of Tsanla were descendants of a Bon lama. He established the chiefdom in the end of the Ming dynasty. By the time of the Ming-Qing transition, he swore allegiance to Qing emperor, and was appointed Native Chieftain (Tusi).[2][3]
Later, Tsanla came into conflict with Chiefdom of Chuchen (Greater Jinchuan). After Jinchuan campaigns, it was annexed by the Qing dynasty.[2][4]