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Kham

TheGeographer

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Kham


Kham province is one of several provinces comprising traditional Tibet (the others are Amdo and Ü-Tsang). During the Republic of China's rule over mainland China (1911-1949), most of the region was called Xikang Province (Xīkāng Shěng). It was, however, only a "special administrative district" until 1939, when it became the status of a Chinese province - nominally and without much cohesion.

Kham comprises a total of 50 contemporary counties, distributed between the Chinese provinces of Sichuan (16 counties), Yunnan (3 counties), and Qinghai (6 counties) as well as the eastern portion of the Tibet Autonomous Region (25 counties).

Kham has a rugged terrain characterized by mountain ridges and gorges running from northwest to southeast. Numerous rivers, including the Mekong, Yangtze, Yalong Jiang, and the Salween flow through Kham.

From the time of collapse of the Tibetan empire in the 10th century until the 1950s, the people of Kham have maintained a large degree of independence from both Lhasa and China, aided by the rugged nature of their homeland. Kham itself was never controlled by a single king, but was comprised of a patchwork of two dozen or more chiefdoms.

In 1932, an agreement signed between Chinese warlord Liu Wenhui and Tibetan forces formalized the partition of Kham into two regions: Eastern Kham, which was administered by Chinese forces, and Western Kham, which was administered by Tibet. Eastern Kham subsequently became the actual area of control of China's Xikang province. The border between eastern and western Kham is the Yangtze River - Dri Chu in Tibetan and Jinsha Jiang, or Chang Jiang respectively, in Chinese.

In 1950, following the defeat of the Kuomintang rulers of China by communist forces in the Chinese Civil War, the People's Liberation Army entered western Kham. Western Kham was then set up as a separate Qamdo Territory, then merged into Tibet Autonomous Region in 1965. Meanwhile, Xikang province, comprising eastern Kham, was merged into Sichuan province in 1955. The border between Sichuan and Tibet Autonomous Region has remained the Yangtze River. The northernmost region of Kham, Yushu, is part of Qinghai province since the 18th century.

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Deni said:
God...I feel like I'm back in school or something. Bleh...

Yeah, me too. I'm dreaming I'm in class and it's test time. I haven't studied and I can't read the test page. And I don't have a No. 2 pencil. Where are my glasses? And I'm naked. I hate stressful dreams.
 
Enkephalen said:
Yeah, me too. I'm dreaming I'm in class and it's test time. I haven't studied and I can't read the test page. And I don't have a No. 2 pencil. Where are my glasses? And I'm naked. I hate stressful dreams.

Exactly!
 
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