Sikkim History
Goa
We believe the planet is not lonely.                    Contact us
Copyright 2008 awe. All rights reserved world wide.                                        We believe the planet is not lonely.                    Contact us
The earliest recorded event related to Sikkim is the passage of the
Buddhist saint Guru Rinpoche through the land in the 8th century. The
Guru is reported to have blessed the land, introduced Buddhism in Sikkim,
and foretold the era of monarchy in the state that would arrive centuries
later. In the 14th century, according to legend, Khye Bumsa, a prince from
the Minyak House in Kham in Eastern Tibet, had a divine revelation one
night instructing him to travel south to seek his fortunes. His descendants
were later to form the royal family of Sikkim. In 1642, the fifth generation
descendant of Khye Bumsa, Phuntsog Namgyal, was consecrated as the
first Chogyal (king) of Sikkim by the three venerated Lamas who came from
the north, west and south to Yuksom, marking the beginning of the
monarchy.

Phuntsog Namgyal was succeeded in 1670 by his son, Tensung Namgyal,
who moved the capital from Yuksom to Rabdentse. In 1700, Sikkim was
invaded by the Bhutanese with the help of the half-sister of the Chogyal,
who had been denied the throne. The Bhutanese were driven away by the
Tibetans, who restored the throne to the Chogyal ten years later. Between
1717 and 1733, the kingdom faced many raids by the Nepalese in the west
and Bhutanese in the east, culminating with the destruction of the capital
Rabdentse by the Nepalese. In 1791, China sent troops to support Sikkim
and defend Tibet against the Gurkhas. Following Nepal's subsequent
defeat, the Qing Dynasty established control over Sikkim.

Following the arrival of the British Raj in neighboring India, Sikkim allied
with them against their common enemy, Nepal. The Nepalese attacked
Sikkim, overrunning most of the region including the Terai. This prompted
the British East India Company to attack Nepal, resulting in the Gurkha War
of 1814. Treaties signed between Sikkim and Nepal resulted in the
returning of the territory annexed by the Nepalese in 1817. However Ties
between Sikkim and the British weakened when the latter began taxation of
the Morang region. In 1849 two British doctors, Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker
and Dr Archibald Campbell, the latter being in charge of relations between
the British and Sikkim Government, ventured into the mountains of Sikkim
unannounced and unauthorised. The doctors were detained by the Sikkim
government, leading to a punitive British expedition against the Himalayan
kingdom, after which the Darjeeling district and Morang were annexed to
India in 1853. The invasion led to the Chogyal becoming a titular ruler
under the directive of the British governor. In 1890, Sikkim became a British
protectorate and was granted more sovereignty over the next three
decades.

In 1947 a popular vote rejected Sikkim's joining the Indian Union and Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru agreed to a special protectorate status for
Sikkim. Sikkim came under the suzerainty of India, which controlled its
external affairs, defence, diplomacy and communications, but Sikkim
otherwise retained autonomous. A state council was established in 1955 to
allow for constitutional government under the Chogyal. Meanwhile, the
Sikkim National Congress demanded fresh elections and greater
representation for the Nepalese. In 1973 riots in front of the palace led to a
formal request for protection from India. The Chogyal was proving to be
extremely unpopular with the people. In 1975, the Kazi (Prime Minister)
appealed to the Indian Parliament for a change in Sikkim's status so that it
could become a state of India. In April, the Indian Army took over the city of
Gangtok and disarmed the Palace Guards. A referendum was held in which
97.5% of the voting people (59% of the people entitled to vote) voted to
join the Indian Union. A few weeks later, on May 16th 1975, Sikkim officially
became the 22nd state of the Indian Union and the monarchy was
abolished.

In 2000, the seventeenth Karmapa Urgyen Trinley Dorje, who had been
proclaimed a Lama by China, escaped from Tibet to the Rumtek Monastery
in Sikkim. Chinese officials were in a quandary on this issue, as any
protests to India would mean an explicit endorsement of India's governance
of Sikkim, which the Chinese still regarded as an independent state
occupied by India. China eventually recognized Sikkim as an Indian state in
2003, on the condition that India accepted Tibet Autonomous Region as a
part of China. This mutual agreement led to a thaw in Sino-Indian relations.
New Delhi accepted Tibet as a part of China in 1953 during the
government of then Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. On July 6th 2006 the
Himalayan pass of Nathula was opened to cross-border trade, further
evidence of improving relations in the region.