Liu Manqing was born in the late Qing dynasty, at a time when Britain was proactively plotting to support “Tibetan independence” following its second armed invasion of Tibet. Liu Manqing was born in Tibet and was a first-class clerk in the National Government. She was a “a woman who took on a responsibility that 400 million other people could not,” secretly traveling to Tibet on behalf of the National Government to meet the 13th Dalai Lama, twice, and at the risk to her own life, expressly stating the position of Kuomintang and the state.
Visitors
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3
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8
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- 1906
- 1915
- 1918
- 1929
- March 1930
- May 1930
- 1932
- 1937
- 1939
- 1942
- Born in Lhasa in 1906. Tibetan. Tibetan name Yongjin.
- Moved to Darjeeling, India, with her parents in 1915 and learned the English and Tibetan languages in a local Christian school.
- Returned to China with her parents in 1918 and lived in Peiping.
- On June 20, 1929, through a National Government official, she applied to Chairman Chiang to travel to Tibet to conduct an investigation, and was granted approval.
- Met with the 13th Dalai Lama on March 28, 1930.
- Met again with the 13th Dalai Lama on May 25, 1930. Left Lhasa on May 27, 1930, as arranged by the Dalai Lama.
- Attended the “National Calamity Conference” of the National Government in Luoyang, on April 7, 1932.
- Founded the “Backup Society of the People of Xikang and Tibet for the Anti-Japanese War” in September 1937 and was elected president of the society.
- Led the Publicity and Reward Group of the Central Government to Lhasa, on February 2, 1939.
- Passed away from illness in Baxian County (Xiyong Town), Chongqing, on September 29, 1942.