- Source: Peace treaty between China and Tibet (783)
The Peace treaty between China and Tibet of 783, also called the Sino-Tibetan Peace Treaty of 783 or Treaty of Qingshui (Chinese: 清水之盟) is a peace treaty negotiated in 783 between the Chinese Tang dynasty, ruled by Emperor Dezong and the Tibetan Empire ruled by Trisong Detsen, giving the latter all the land in the Kokonor region which corresponds to present-day Qinghai Lake. The treaty is celebrated in Qingshui, and was the sixth treaty between China and Tibet.
Context
During the reign of the Emperor of Tibet, Trisong Detsen (740 - 797), the Tibetans invaded the capital of China Chang'an in 763. The Chinese Emperor Dezong of Tang having fled, the Tibetans appointed a new emperor.
Trisong Detsen then sought to expand westward, reaching the Oxus River and threatening the Arab Caliph, Haroun ar-Rashid. The Caliph was concerned enough to establish an alliance with the Emperor of China. During the remainder of his reign, the king was occupied by wars with the Arabs in the west, and relieved the pressure on his Chinese adversaries in the east and north, until his reign ended in 797.
Peace Treaty
The Sino-Tibetan peace treaty was signed in 783 in present-day Qingshui depriving China of the territories west of the Dadu River. The treaty did not prevent hostilities between China and the Tibetan Empire from resuming three years later.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Peace treaty between China and Tibet (783)
- Changqing Treaty
- List of treaties
- Tibetan Empire
- History of foreign relations of China
- List of treaties of China before the People's Republic
- Trisong Detsen
- Hexi Corridor
- Religion in China
- Guangzhou