《大英图书馆藏英国政府涉中国西藏情报档案全编(1903-1950)(下编)》
书 名: 《大英图书馆藏英国政府涉中国西藏情报档案全编(1903-1950)(下编)》 全47册
I S B N: 9789887856689
编 著: 本书编委会
出版社: 蝠池书院
装帧开本: 精装 1/16
出版日期: 2018年3月
定 价: 46500.00

近代以来西方帝国主义一直觊觎中国西藏,以英国为代表的西方列强不断以各种方式侵略西藏,围绕西藏问题中英两国展开了激烈的较量和交涉。1774年,英国东印度公司秘书博格尔以通商为名进入西藏,拉开了英国入侵西藏的序幕。1858年,英国政府成立印度事务部,负责处理有关印度的政治、军事、贸易事务。同时也负责具体制定和执行有关中国西藏的政策及相关活动。十九世纪末至二十世纪初,英国两次武装入侵西藏,与清政府和西藏地方政府签订了一系列不平等条约,企图将西藏从中国分裂出去并制定了相应的政策和具体措施,此间形成了大量历史文档和原始资料。1982年,英国海外和英联邦办公室将这批文件移交给大英图书馆,并且作为图书馆东方和印度事务部馆藏的重要组成部分。这些原始文件和资料基本上反映了近代以来英国对中国西藏的政策和各项活动。

1999年至2003年,由大英图书馆东印度事务部前副主任A.J.法林顿编辑整理,由荷兰Brill出版社以缩微胶片的载体形式出版了《British Intelligence on China in Tibet 1903-1950》(英国有关中国西藏的情报 1903-1950),是近代英帝国侵略西藏有关档案文献中的重要组成部分,基本反映了二十世纪上半叶英国侵略西藏的各项政策和具体活动。共计576卷缩微胶片,内容分为八个部分,从荣赫鹏到革命、1911年至15年的中国辛亥革命、西姆拉会议及相关协议、旅行家的进入、西藏边界事务与对外贸易、现代化的教育、14世达赖喇嘛、二战和共产主义的中国之间的关系。作为第一手原始资料,全面系统地反映了英国对中国西藏的各项政策和具体行动。对于研究近代中国和西藏的关系具有重要的参考价值。

这批原始文献档案一直受到国内外藏学研究人员的关注,二十世纪初,中国藏学研究中心陈庆英、邓锐龄等学者在原始文献的基础上翻译编辑了部分内容,供内部参考使用。中央民族大学藏学研究院副教授王远大先生曾经翻译了其中一部分文献,刊发于《西藏民族大学学报》第二至第五期。该原始文献档案在国内仅被几家大型图书馆收藏,并且为缩微胶片格式,阅读和利用十分不便,有的馆藏还不全。2016年,学苑出版社出版了由张晧。张双智主编的《民国时期藏事问题英文档案汇编》一书,该书共23册。其中前二十一册为英国印度事务部藏事档案,第二十二册选编了英国外交部涉藏档案选录,第二十三册收入了美国外交文件中涉藏事务档案,这套书主要以《英国有关中国西藏的情报 1903-1950》的CIT4和CIT8两部分为蓝本,CIT4反映了1910-年至30年英国、印度政府策划西藏独立、制造西藏问题的侵略活动,以及中央政府与西藏地方的关系。CIT8反映了三四十年代英国印度政府干涉中国内政、破坏中国中央政府和西藏地方政府关系的主要活动,此外还收录了英国外交部有关西藏文件100份,美国有关西藏文件200份。需要说明的是从总体量上这套文献仅仅是这部涉藏原始档案的四分之一,而且在文献编排顺序上打乱了原始档案的排列顺序,从时间编排角度上不够科学合理,从学术研究参考角度上看具有一定的局限性。

本公司为了更好地方便相关研究人员的利用,将该原始涉藏档案文献全部还原,按照时间顺序编辑整理出版。综合而言具有以下特点:

1.在国内首次将该原始涉藏档案全部还原,相对与其它出版机构的类似出版物而言,做到全面系统,而不是节选。

2.编辑严谨,力求保持文献原貌,以维护档案数据的客观性。

3.为方便读者检索利用,编者根据文献的主题内容,简要翻译了中文目录,并且按照时间先后顺序编排。

4.具有重要的学术性和数据性。

英国涉藏档案是研究近代西藏历史问题不可或缺的重要史料,也是研究近代西藏的重要参考资料,对于我们研究近代西藏问题具有重要的学术参考价值

(原文)索引

British Intelligence on China in Tibet, 1903-1950

Formerly classified and confidential British intelligence and policy files

Editor: A.J. Farrington, Former Deputy Director, OIOC, British Library, London

Contents Introduction

2

CIT-1

From Younghusband to the Revolution, 1903-1912

5

CIT-2

Revolution in China, 1911-1915

7

CIT-3

Simla Conference and the 1914 Convention, 1912-1946

9

CIT-4

Internal affairs and boundaries, 1912-1947

11

CIT-5

Travellers and entry control, 1905-1950

16

CIT-6

Trade, 1904-1949

20

CIT-7

Education for modernisation, 1912-1947

22

CIT-8

14th Dalai Lama, World War II and Communist China, 1933-1950

24

Index

25

background to the nature of China’s present position in Tibet.

Obviously the stance which emerges is Anglo-centric – indeed at times it becomes India Office-centric – but much of the value of this collection lies in the way it shows how the three players on the British side, the Government of India, the India Office and the Foreign Office, grappled with different imperatives. The view from the British Embassy in Peking and later from wartime Chungking was frequently at odds with that from Delhi or the India Office. Over decades the British side juggled with the self-imposed conundrum that recognition of Chinese ‘suzerainty’ should be conditional upon China’s recognition of Tibetan ‘autonomy’, while avoiding precise definitions of either concept. Meanwhile Tibet went its own way in a semi-independent limbo, subject to varying degrees of British intervention and support channelled through Government of India officials at Gyantse and Gartok, in Sikkim, or latterly in its Lhasa Mission.

The collection begins with Lord Curzon’s ‘forward policy’ of 1903-04, designed to create a Tibetan buffer state against Russian influence – significantly, all this material was printed-up by the Foreign Office. Then follow negotiations to keep Russia at a distance, and the return of the 13th Dalai Lama from China to Tibet.

There is extensive coverage of Tibet’s break with China after the 1911 Revolution, the subsequent Simla Conference of 1912, and the delimitation of Tibet’s borders.

A fascinating group of files offers minute detail on an attempt to turn four young Tibetans into a vanguard of ‘modernisers’ through the medium of an English public school education, and a further large group records the way in which access to Tibet was closely controlled by the British.

Tibet’s internal affairs and British encouragement of de facto semi-independence through the 1920s and 1930s lead to a renewed concern for Chinese Nationalist claims during World War II. Particularly interesting from this period are the files on the discovery of the 14th (the present) Dalai Lama in 1937-39. The collection ends with the complete reversal following the Independence of India and Pakistan in 1947 and the Communist victory in China.

2

Provenance & historical background

All the files and related confidential print reproduced form part of the papers of the Political & Secret Department in the India Office Records (with the exception of three items from the Military Department and its World War II offshoot, the War Staff – Fiche 29-35 and 299).

The Political & Secret Department originated in provisions of William Pitt’s India Act of 1784 which established a statutory Secret Committee of the East India Company’s Court of Directors. The Act also set up a Secret & Political Department at the newly created Board of Control, which exercised on behalf of the Crown in Parliament powers to ‘superintend, direct and control’ the East India Company’s rapidly expanding government in South Asia. In 1804 the Company’s Secret Committee was supplemented by a Political Department within the office of the Examiner of Indian Correspondence at East India House.

Upon the abolition of the Company in 1858 and the creation of the India Office as a British Government department, the Board of Control and Company elements coalesced to form the India Office Political & Secret Department. During the nineteenth century ‘Political’ came to deal largely with matters involving the Indian Princely States, while ‘Secret’ handled India’s external and frontier affairs. In 1931 the title was changed to Political Department, sub-divided into two branches, Internal (Indian States, and questions relating to honours) and External (foreign and frontier affairs). All the India Office departments were subsumed within the Commonwealth Relations Office (subsequently the Foreign & Commonwealth Office) after Independence in 1947.

The files comprise a wide variety of papers received from the Government of India Foreign Department and other sources in India, and from the Foreign Office in London, together with India Office-generated minuting, comment and replies. Incoming papers passed through the departmental registry, where they were placed on a file numbered in an annual sequence before being passed to the department’s officers. As a result of a regular programme of ‘weeding’ and merger the files in the present collection were eventually archived in one of three groups:

L/P&S/10 Political & Secret Separate (or Subject) Files, 1902-1931

On-going files of documents on a particular subject accumulated over

a period of years.

L/P&S/11 Political & Secret Annual Files, 1912-1930

Files relating to business disposed of within a single year.

L/P&S/12 Political External Collections, 1931-1950

Broad subject collections such as ‘Tibet’ or ‘Travellers’, each containing

a large number of on-going files.

The department also maintained a separate series of memoranda prepared by India Office, Foreign Office or Government of India officials (L/P&S/18), and had its own reference library of secret/confidential print and official publications (L/P&S/20).

In 1982 the Foreign & Commonwealth Office transferred the administration of the India Office Library & Records to the British Library, where it now forms one part of the Library’s Oriental & India Office Collections.

3

Organisation of the files

For the present publication the OIOC files and related confidential print have been re-listed and arranged in eight subject groups, in roughly chronological order:

CIT-1 From Younghusband to the Revolution, 1903-1912

CIT-2 Revolution in China, 1911-1915

CIT-3 Simla Conference and the 1914 Convention, 1912-1946

CIT-4 Internal affairs and boundaries, 1912-1947

CIT-5 Travellers and entry control, 1905-1950

CIT-6 Trade, 1904-1949

CIT-7 Education for modernisation, 1912-1947

CIT-8 14th Dalai Lama, World War II and Communist China, 1933-1950

Within these groups the following information is provided for each file:

fiche number,

subject description (or bibliographical details for print items),

covering dates,

OIOC reference number,

original India Office registry reference,

number of folios/pages.

A.J. Farrington

Former Deputy Director

Oriental & India Office Collections, The British Library

4

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