Hardly less rare is the volume offered here was published a few months later. Consequently, very few copies remain and are exceptionally rare. These were almost immediately withdrawn from circulation for fear that the information contained would reveal classified details to the Chinese. They were later issued in a two volume set with letterpress descriptions by C.B. Johnston and Hoffman’s promotional catalogue of 1905 mentions that the images were initially issued individually or in albums, as half-tone or carbon prints.
Cerbung asmaraman s kho ping hoo series#
70 platinum prints and 2 folding panoramas, images approximately 160 x 210mm., captioned on the mounts, contemporary half green morocco, lettered ‘TIBET’ on the upper cover, sailcloth chemise, oblong folio, īack to catalogue Place Bid or Track Lot Lot No: 528 � WHITE (JOHN CLAUDE) Tibet and Lhasa, 53 photogravure plates, including a folding map, autograph letter signed (“John White”) and postmarked envelope from Lhasa pasted down to verso of upper cover, occasional light soiling, contemporary red cloth gilt, spine sunned, oblong 4to (200 x 265mm.), Johnston and Hoffman, Estimate: �7,000 – 9,000, � 7,900 – 10,000 Request Condition Report Footnote: A RARE SERIES OF IMAGES FROM YOUNGHUSBAND’S TIBET MISSION OF 1903-1904. An album of important images taken by John Claude White during Sir Francis Younghusband’s Tibet Mission of 1903-1904.
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It sold for £38,400 ($61,592), inclusive of buyer’s premium.
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This album was recently at Bonhams for auction. The British military mission ended in 1904, unpopular at home and everywhere else. Younghusband, who now assumed command of the British army, marched into Lhasa and negotiated a treaty with the Regent, who declared, “When one has known the scorpion the frog is divine.” The rest were allowed to peacefully retreat. The British, armed with Maxim machine guns, mowed down between 600-700 Tibetan troops. The Battle of Guru, and a very short battle it was.Īfter negotiations to head things off failed, confusion ensued and the shooting began. Leading a military force of over 3,000, including Nepalese Gurkhas, faced off against 3,000 Tibetan troops armed with muskets at The Tibetans were none too happy with the British incursion, the Chinese even less so, and the British were none too kind to the Tibetans.īrigadier-General James Ronald Leslie Macdonald,
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As recently as 2002, the Chinese were imprisoning Tibetan nuns and forcing them to let their hair grow out, the least offensive of their many humiliating punishments. 1905.Īmongst the platinum prints and two folding panoramas isĬonsidering that Buddhist nuns are required to keep their hair cropped short it is unclear why this group allowed their hair to grow to such impious length. White took a series of seventy photographs which were collected in an album c. The commander of the expedition, Sir Francis Younghusband, brought along British civil servant and photographer John Claude White to document the campaign. Fearful that the Chinese were on the verge of granting Tibet to Russia and endangering their Raj in India, the British sent a military expedition into Tibet to prevent the rumor from becoming a reality.