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| Sikkim History |
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Much of the history of Sikkim is veiled by legends
of antiquity and myths. However, its majestic peaks,
its rushing rivers and tropical forests have played
important role in shaping the history of Sikkim. But
it is an established fact that the earliest
inhabitants of the land were the Lepchas. The
Lepchas were food gathering people who claimed they
came from Mayel, a legendary kingdom on the slopes
of Khangchendzonga. They lived in close harmony with
nature, for she gave them all they needed—the flesh
of animals, fruits, medicinal herbs, honey and
fibres that could be woven in fabric. They called
themselves, Rong Pa literally meaning ravine folk or
the Mutanchi, meaning the beloved people of the
mother earth. |
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It is said that the Namgyals
were Tibetans and belonged to the Minyak house of
Kham region of eastern Tibet. In the first half of
the fifteenth century a prince of Minyak dynasty
went on a sojourn cum pilgrimage towards west along
with his five sons. They visited the then under
construction monastery of Sakya. They found the
lamas struggling unsuccessfully to erect four giant
pillars in the main hall. One of the son of the
Minyak prince accomplished the Herculean task of
lifting the pillars and setting them in proper
place. This remarkable feat earned him the title of
Khey Bumsa, the one who possesses the strength of
one lakh persons. He was offered the hand of Sakya
hierarch daughter in marriage and was insisted upon
to settle down there. He accepted the offer and
settled down with his wife at Phari in the Chumbi
valley. This place became the nucleus of the later
Kingdom of Sikkim in the first decade of the 16th
century. |
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The
legend goes that Khey Bumsa couple could not have
children for many years, so they were advised to
seek the blessings of Thekong Thek the Lepcha king
who was said to have possessed prophetic powers.
Khey Bumsa went to the king Thekong Thek, prostrated
before him, and offered him the gifts and explained
the reason of his visit. Thekong Thek prophesised
that they will, not only get one child but three
children and one of their descendents would be the
ruler of Denzong. In time the prophecy came true.
Three sons were born to Khey Bumsa. He felt highly
obliged to the Lepcha king. A great and deep
friendship grew between the Lepchas and the new
comers. Khey Bumsa and the Lepcha chief Thekong Thek
swore blood brotherhood and signed the same in blood
at Khabe Longstok. To this day the pact is
celebrated in Sikkim. The story symbolically
rationalizes the alliance between the traditional
Lepcha-Bhutia ruling elite in Sikkim. |
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Mipon Rab,the youngest son of the
Khey Bumsa, moved to Sikkim from Chumbi and became a
local chieftain and his son, Guru Tashi moved to
Gangtok. Tashi’s son was Jowas Apha, whose son was
Guru Tenzing and Tenzing’s son was was Phuntsog
Namgyal, the first Chogyal of Sikkim. |
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Phuntsog
Namgyal’s crowning is charged with all the vivid
fantasy and miraculous phenomenon that is befitting
to so important an occasion. Back in the 8th
century, the legendary Buddhist monk Guru
Padmasambhava or Guru Rimpoche prophesied that
Sikkim would be overrun by Buddhism. This prophecy
came to pass in the 17th century, when the great
Lama Lhatsun Chempo decided that he must go and
“open the northern gate of Beyul Demozong”. He led
his disciples to the mountain wall, beyond which lay
Sikkim but could find no way to cross the mountain
until a vision of Khangchendzonga showed him the
way. |
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When Lhatsun Chempo entered the
new country from the north, he found two other
lamas, Sempa Chempo and Rigzing Chempo coming from
the west and south. They met at Yoksam, meaning
place of the three wise ones and began a debate on
the desirability of having a temporal and religious
head to rule over Sikkim. Two of the lamas furthered
their own claims but the third lama reminded them of
the prophecy of Guru Padamasambhava that a man
coming from east and Phuntsog by name would rule
Sikkim. Messengers were sent to seek Phuntsog. Near
Gangtok the desired young man was found and was duly
crowned Chogyal or Great Religious King. He was
given one of Lhatsun Chempo’s(the Lama who told
about prophesy) names, Namgyal, and the title of
Chogyal. It happened in year 1642. |
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Phuntsog Namgyal, is credited not
only with the political consolidation of Sikkim, but
also with the establishment of monasteries and
encouraging the spread of Buddhism by proclaiming it
the State religion. The concept of Kingship in
Sikkim was charged, thus, with religious leadership.
He divided the kingdom into 12 Dzongs and appointed
twelve Dzongpens and Kazis to help him administer
the Kingdom. These were drawn from leading Lepcha
and Bhutia families, and had the status of local
Governors. |
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The
kingdom was many times in its size today. In the
north it reached Thangla near Phari {Tibet}, in the
East Tagongla near Paro {Bhutan}, in the South
Titalia near the borders of Bengal and Bihar and in
the West Tamar Chorten {Tamar river, Nepal}. In the
eighteenth century Sikkim lost considerable
territories first to Bhutan and then to Nepal due to
internal feuds and foreign aggressions. The Gorkha
expansionism under Raja Prithiwinarayan Shah led to
loss of all Lepcha and Tsong lands in what was then
Western Sikkim. There were border disputes with
Tibet also. In 1817 and in 1834-35 territories
constituting Darjeeling district and southern
borders were acquired by the Britiish East India
Company. In 1880s Sikkim's rights to Chumbi Valley
were surrendered to Tibeto- Chinese authorities by
the British authorities in India. The Namgyal
dynasty ruled over Sikkim as hereditary kings for
about 332 years. |
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Court intrigues, conspiracies and
attempts against the monarch were not uncommon in
those troubled centuries of Sikkim’s history.
Equally serious were threats from outside. Time and
again hordes of warlike Bhutanese surged in from the
east, while in the second half of the eighteenth
century the Gorkhas of Nepal mounted repeated
incursions from the west. Sikkim was like corn
caught between two millstones, its population forced
into a desperate two pronged war. The British who
were exploring a trade route to Tibet, had no
intention of allowing the rampage. After the Treaty
of Sigoli, Sikkim acquired the protectorate status.
Sikkim joined India as an associate State in 1975 in
accordance with it’s people aspiration for a
democratic form of government, and later attained
full Statehood within the Indian Union. With the
merger, the age of monarchy came to an end. |
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Inspite of the fact that Sikkim
comprises of different people and multi ethnic
society, perhaps it is the most peaceful State of
the Indian Union to promote communal harmony and
human relations, a feat which is much expected in a
plural society like India. In general strikes,
terrorism, violence, lock-outs, unrest and
anti-social activities are unheard of in Sikkim.
Unity of the people, good governance, excellent
committed administration and proper thought control
of the masses by seasoned politicians make the
beautiful State of Sikkim a paradise on the face of
the earth. |
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