1st Edition

British India and Tibet: 1766-1910

By Alastair Lamb Copyright 1986
    370 Pages
    by Routledge

    370 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1960 and revised in 1986, is an important analysis of the under-studied Northern frontier of the British Indian Empire. It considers British relations across the Himalayas, looking at encounters with Bhutan, Sikkim, Nepal and Tibet.

    1. First Contacts: 1766-1792  2. Nepal: 1792-1816  3. Western Tibet: 1816-1861  4. The Opening of Sikkim: 1817-1861  5. The Sikkim Route: 1861-1874  6. The Chefoo Convention and the Macauley Mission: 1876-1886  7. The Sikkim-Tibet Convention and the Trade Regulations: 1886-1893  8. Yatung: 1894-1898  9. Curzon’s Tibetan Policy: 1899-1902  10. The Younghusband Mission: 1903-1905  11. The Aftermath: 1905-1910

    Biography

    Alastair Lamb graduated from the University of Cambridge. He worked in the early 1960s in the Public Record Office and India Office Library in London. Later, he taught at the University of Malaya and also worked as a Senior Fellow in the Department of History at the Australian National University for three years. Later he was a Professor of History at the University of Ghana (1968–1972). He was a Reader of History at Hatfield Polytechnic during the 1980s.