2001.59.2.71.2 (Print)
Hugh E. Richardson
Hugh Richardson
1950
Lhasa > Jokhang > Doring
2001.59.2.71.2
57 X 43 mm
Print silver
Donated August 2001
The executors of the estate of Hugh E. Richardson
Hugh E. Richardson
‘High Peaks, Pure Earth’, Hugh Richardson, London, Serindia Publications, 1998 [view list of illustrations]
Notes on print - 'Grtug Lag Khari, Rdo-rin at Lhasa from N/SE' (overwriting 'N' over 'S' or other way round). Also, there are numbers scribbled on the back.
Manual Catalogues - Notes on negative index - Folio 71/72. 'Treaty Pillar at Tsug lag khang'.
Manual Catalogues - Richardson Hand List. 'Album No. 2 [no.] 50. Inscribed pillar near Jo-khang at Lhasa recording bilingual treaty between Tibet and China 821/822 A.D."
Research publication - David Snellgrove and Huge Richardson, A Cultural History of Tibet, London: George Weidenfeld and Nicolson, Ltd. 1968. p.38, "The stone pillar in Lhasa which bears a bilingual inscription recording the treaty made in 821/822 between China and Tibet". [TS 22/3/2005][TS 31/3/2005]
Research publication - H. E. Richardson, High Peaks, Pure Earth' , London, Serindia Publications, 1998, plate 10. "Treaty pillar of 821-2 in front of the Jokhang at Lhasa. See also Plate 24." [KC 09/11/2006]
Other Information - History: For a full translation of and commentary on the inscription see H. E. Richardson, A Corpus of Early Tibetan Inscriptions , London, 1985. Royal Asiatic Society, pp:106-143. Richardson remarks that "The bilingual inscription on a stone pillar outside the Jo-khang at Lhasa recording a treaty between Tibet and China is probably the most widely known and in many ways the most important of the early inscriptions from Tibet. ... " (p. 106)
Other Information - Dates: The date of 1950 for this image is derived from Richardson’s negative album No.4, the cover of which is marked with ‘Lhobrag 1950’. There are 16 images, of Chidesho, Gongkhar Dzong, Lhasa Post Office, Nesar, Yamdrok Tso and Shabsha, Karmaling Chu, Lhobrag, which share the same batch development number and seem to relate to a trip that Richardson took in this year. His preference for using 6x4.5 images, the smallest exposure size possible using his Zeiss Super Ikonta camera, seems to have returned only towards the end of his time in Tibet, possibly to maximise the number of images that he could take on each roll of film (16 using a film plane mask of this size or 8 at 6x9 cm) and this also suggests that the image wa taken at the end rather than the beginning of his residence in Tibet [MS 17/12/2005]
For Citation use:
The Tibet Album.
"Treaty pillar outside the Jokhang in Lhasa"
05 Dec. 2006. The Pitt Rivers Museum.
<http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/photo_2001.59.2.71.2.html>.
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