The Makpon Kingdom or the Makpon Empire (Balti: དམག་དཔོན།, Wylie: dmag dpon),[1] also called Tibet-I-Khurd (Little Tibet) by the Mughals, was a Balti Tibetan empire led by the Maqpon Dynasty. It existed on the Tibetan Plateau and reached from Chitral in the west to Burang in Western Tibet in the east.[2][3][4] Ibrahim Maqpon founded it in 1190, and it lasted for about 700 years.[5] The most prosperous period started with Ali Senge Anchan, who united Baltistan and expanded his rule from Chitral to the Mansarowar Valley in Western Tibet.[6][6] Makpon empire under Ali Senge Anchan is regarded as the "Golden age" of Baltiyul.[7]
The Makpon Empire is named after the Tibetan and Balti title "Makpon", which means 'Army Leader,' 'Commander-in-Chief,' or 'Military Chief'.[1] In 1835, G. T. Vigne visited Baltistan and translated "Magpon/Makpon" as "Duke" or "Chief" in his book Antiquities of Indian Tibet.[8]
History
Until the tenth century, Baltistan was part of West Tibetan province, practicing Tibetan Buddhism. Over time, Buddhist influence decreased. Sayyid Ali Hamadani is credited with introducing Noorbakhshism in Baltistan by converting Buddhists in Khaplu and Shigar valleys.[5]
In the 12th or 13th century, Ibrahim Shah, a Prince from Kashmir (Egypt in some sources) married the Princess of Skardo, establishing the Makpon Dynasty.[1] After Tibetan suzerainty dissolved, the Maqpon dynasty ruled Baltistan. A student of Sayyid Ali Hamadani, visited Baltistan in the 9th century, converting many Baltis to Islam.[9][10][11]
Maqpon Bukha or Bugha (1464-1490 A.D.) is considered the real founder of the Makpon Dynasty. He established the capital of Skardo.[12] He faced challenges but surprised his subjects by governing effectively. Ali Khan (1540-1565 A.D.) expanded his kingdom, and Ghazi Mir (1565-1580 A.D.) conquered the Rondu Valley. Ali Senge Anchan (1580-1624 A.D.) is a significant figure who expanded the empire from Chitral to Burang in Western Tibet.[13]
Ali Senge Khan also conquered Ladakh, facing conflict with the Ladakh raja.[14] Later rulers, like Ghazi Mir and Ali Senge Anchan's son, expanded the kingdom to Gilgit, Hunza, Nagar, Nuristan and Chitral.[15] In Balti folk songs Anchan's remarkable conquests are praised and Maqpon Empire's boundaries are defined as following:[16][17]
‘Leh Purang na Brushal Shingel’.[18]
Meaning from Leh's Purang to Brooshals Shingel is Makpon. Ali Senge Anchan initiated the game of Polo at the Shundur Polo Ground, which is the worlds highest Polo ground.[19] The Mughal Empire conquered Baltistan in 1586, and the local rulers pledged allegiance.[20] Ali Senge Anchan had a significant encounter with the Mughal court, forming an alliance and introducing Mughal arts to the region.
In 1839, the Dogra commander Zorawar Singh defeated Balti forces, leading to the end of the Maqpon dynasty in 1845.[21] The last king, Ahmed Shah, was taken prisoner and died in captivity in Lhasa, Tibet.[22]
— Imperial house — Maqpon dynasty | ||
Preceded by Tibetan Empire |
Monarchy 1190–1840 CE |
Succeeded by Dogra Rule |
Religion
The Balti people were once influenced by Zhangzhung and the Bon religion, practicing Animism. In 686, Baltistan came under the control of the Tibetan Empire. Under the rule of Songtsen Gampo, Tibetan Buddhism started influencing the region. Gompas and stupas were built, and lamas became important in Balti life.[23]
In the 14th century, Islamic scholars from Kashmir traveled through the mountains to spread Islam. By the late 17th century, Islam gained strength in Baltistan due to the efforts of the Noorbakshia Sufi order. Over time, many people converted to Shia Islam, while only a few chose Sunni Islam.[10]
Maqpon Dynasty
The Makpon dynasty or the Makpon Royal House ruled the Makpon Empire. The dynasty was founded by Ibrahim Makpon, who married the Princess of Skardu.[24] Following is the timeline of Makpon rulers:[25]
Name | Balti | Reign |
---|---|---|
Ibrahim Makpon | ཡིབྲ་ཧིམ་དམག་དཔོན། | 1190-1220 CE |
Astak Senge | ཨ་སཏག་སེང་གེ། | 1220-1250 CE |
Zak Senge | ཟག་སེང་གེ། | 1250-1280 CE |
Bardak Senge | བར་དག་སེང་གེ། | 1280-1310 CE |
Sek Senge | སེག་སེང་གེ། | 1310-1340 CE |
Tam Gori Tham | གཏམ་གོ་རི་ཐམ། | 1340-1370 CE |
Sa Gori Tham | ས་གོ་རི་ཐམ། | 1370-1400 CE |
Khohkor Senge | ཁོ་ཧྐོར་སེང་གེ། | 1400-1437 CE |
Ghota Cho Senge | གོ་ཏ་ཆོ་སེང་གེ། | 1437-1464 CE |
Bahram Cho | བ་ཧྲམ་ཆོ། | 1464-1490 CE |
Bo Kha | བོ་ཁ། | 1490-1515 CE |
Senge Shah | སེང་གེ་ཤ། | 1515-1540 CE |
Ali Wangchen | ཨ་ལི་དབང་ཆེན། | 1540-1565 CE |
Ghazi Mir | ག་ཟི་མིར། | 1565-1590 CE |
Ali Senge Khan Anchan | ཨ་ལི་སེང་གེ་དབན་ཆེན། | 1580-1624 CE |
Abdal Wangchen | ཨ་བདལ་དབང་ཆེན། | 1624-1636 CE |
Adam Wangchen | ཨ་དམ་དབན་ཆེན། | 1636-1655 CE |
Murad Wangchen | མུ་རད་དབན་ཆེན། | 1655-1670 CE |
Senge Wangchen I | སེང་གེ་དབན་ཆེན། ༡ | 1670-1678 CE |
Muhammad Rafi Wangchen | མུ་ཨ་མད་ར་ཕི་དབང་ཆེན། | 1678-1680 CE |
Senge Wangchen II | སེང་གེ་དབང་ཆེན། ༢ | 1680-1710 CE |
Mohammad Rafi | མོ་ཨ་མད་རཕི། | 1710-1745 CE |
Gyalpo Murad | རྒྱལ་པོ་མུ་རད། | 1745-1780 CE |
Azam Wangchen | ཨ་ཟམ་དབང་ཆེན། | 1780-1785 CE |
Mohammad Zafar Wangchen | མོ་ཨ་མད་ཟ་ཕར་དབང་ཆེན། | 1785-1787 CE |
Ali Senge Wangchen II | ཨ་ལི་སེང་གེ་དབང་ཆེན། ༢ | 1787-1811 CE |
Ahmed Shah | ཨ་ཧྨད་ཤ། | 1811-1840 CE |
References
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