Forging the Golden Urn: The Qing Empire and the Politics of Reincarnation in Tibet

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In 1995, the People’s Republic of China resurrected a Qing-era law mandating that the reincarnations of prominent Tibetan Buddhist monks be identified by drawing lots from a golden urn. The Chinese Communist Party hoped to limit the ability of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan government-in-exile to independently identify reincarnations. In so doing, they elevated a long-forgotten ceremony into a controversial symbol of Chinese sovereignty in Tibet. In Forging the Golden Urn, Max Oidtmann ventures into the polyglot world of the Qing empire in search of the origins of the golden urn tradition. He seeks to understand the relationship between the Qing state and its most powerful partner in Inner Asia—the Geluk school of Tibetan Buddhism. Why did the Qianlong emperor invent the golden urn lottery in 1792? What ability did the Qing state have to alter Tibetan religious and political traditions? What did this law mean to Qing rulers, their advisors, and Tibetan Buddhists? Working with both the Manchu-language archives of the empire’s colonial bureaucracy and the chronicles of Tibetan elites, Oidtmann traces how a Chinese bureaucratic technology—a lottery for assigning administrative posts—was exported to the Tibetan and Mongolian regions of the Qing empire and transformed into a ritual for identifying and authenticating reincarnations. Forging the Golden Urn sheds new light on how the empire’s frontier officers grappled with matters of sovereignty, faith, and law and reveals the role that Tibetan elites played in the production of new religious traditions in the context of Qing rule.

Author(s): Max Oidtmann
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: 353
City: New York

Table of Contents
......Page 8
Preface and Acknowledgments......Page 10
Abbreviations......Page 18
Introduction......Page 22
Act I: The Royal Regulations......Page 74
Act II: Shamanic Colonialism
......Page 116
Act III: Amdowas Speaking in Code
......Page 178
Conclusion: Paradoxes of the Urn and the Limits of Empire
......Page 215
Chronology of Key Events
......Page 248
List of Usages of the Golden Urn Ritual
......Page 252
Tibetan Orthographic Equivalents......Page 256
Translation of the Qianlong Emperor’s Discourse on Lamas......Page 260
Notes......Page 266
Bibliography
......Page 316
Index
......Page 334