- The
Kashag (Tibetan: བཀའ་ཤག ་, Wylie: bkaʼ-shag, ZYPY: Gaxag,
Lhasa dialect: [ˈkáɕaʔ]; Chinese: 噶廈; pinyin: Gáxià) was the
governing council of
Tibet during...
- India. On 29
April 1959, the 14th
Dalai Lama in
exile re-established the
Kashag,
which was
abolished a
month earlier by the
Government of the People's Republic...
-
current Sikyong is
Penpa Tsering. The
Sikyong is the
political leader of the
Kashag, part of the
executive branch of the
Central Tibetan Administration. This...
-
selection process. To put this
rumor to rest for the
regent Taktra and the
Kashag, it was
decided to use a lot-drawing
process by
placing both
names in a...
- In 1950, the
Kashag embarked on a
series of
internal reforms, led by Indian-educated officials. One of
these reforms allowed the
Kashag's military chiefs...
- Lhalu, had made
elaborate military plans and
fortifications and
asked the
Kashag for more
soldiers and
weapons to stop the People's
Liberation Army from...
- such as the
Batang uprising in 1905. A
governing council known as the
Kashag also
operated in the
Ganden Phodrang administration.
During the British...
- of
Regent (Desi), put the
Tibetan government in the
hands of a four-man
Kashag, or
Council of Ministers, and gave the
ambans formal powers. The
Dalai Lama...
-
Tibet was
governed by Khangchenné, who led the
Tibetan cabinet known as the
Kashag under close supervision of the
Chinese garrison commander stationed in Lhasa...
-
Potala Palace. A new
Tibetan government was
established consisting of a
Kashag or
cabinet of
Tibetan ministers headed by Kangchenas.
Kelzang Gyatso, too...