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For
nearly 900 years, from the middle of the 10th
century, Ladakh was an independent kingdom, its
ruling dynasties descending from the kings of old
Tibet. The kingdom attained its greatest
geographical extent and glory in the early 17th
century under the famous king Singge Namgyal, whose
domain extended across Spiti and western Tibet right
up to the Mayum-la, beyond the sacred sites of Mount
Kailash and Lake Mansarovar.
Gradually, perhaps partly due to the fact that it
was politically stable, Ladakh became recognized as
the best trade route between the Punjab and Central
Asia. For centuries it was traversed by caravans
carrying textiles, spices, raw silk, carpets,
dyestuffs, narcotics, etc. Heedless of the land’s
rugged terrain and apparent remoteness, merchants
entrusted their goods to relays of pony transporters
who took about two months to carry them from
Amritsar to the Central Asian towns of Yarkand and
Khotan. On this long route, Leh was the midway stop,
and developed into a bustling entrepot, its bazars
thronged with merchants from distant countries.
The famous pashmina (better known
as cashmere) also came down from the high-altitude
plateaux of eastern Ladakh and western Tibet,
through Leh, to Srinagar, where skilled artisans
transformed it into shawls known the world over for
their softness and warmth. Ironically, it was this
lucrative trade that finally spelt the doom of the
independent kingdom. It attracted the covetous
attention of Gulab Singh, the ruler of Jammu in the
early 19th century, who sent his general Zorawar
Singh to invade Ladakh in 1834 AD. There followed a
decade of war and turmoil, which ended with the
emergence of the British as the paramount power in
north India. Ladakh, together with the neighbouring
province of Baltistan, was incorporated into the
newly created state of Jammu & Kashmir. Just over a
century later, this union was disturbed by the
partition of India, as a result of which Baltistan
became part of Pakistan, while Ladakh remained in
India as part of the State of Jammu & Kashmir. |
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