Old Tibetan provinces
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Both the Republic of China (1911-1949) and the People's Republic (1949-date) kept most of the Qing setup, so the current political and administrative boundaries are quite different from the old provinces.
- What was once Ü-Tsang province plus a large chunk of Kham are now the Tibetan Autonomous Region or TAR. The Chinese name for the region, Xizang (西藏) is their rendering of the Tibetan word which we transliterate as Ü-Tsang. This is what the term "Tibet" typically refers to in current English usage, and the area that our main Tibet article covers. Its dialect is the subject of our Tibetan phrasebook.
- Kham was historically controlled by a couple of dozen tribes and small kingdoms (not all Tibetan) who fought each other often. Some places that are major tourist destinations today, such as Dali and Lijiang, were regional capitals in that era. Both Beijing and Lhasa tried for some centuries, and with considerable success, to control the area, but there were rebellions against both.
The Qing put the eastern parts of Kham under the jurisdiction of the Chinese provinces Yunnan and Sichuan, and they still are. Our article on the Yunnan tourist trail covers travel through parts of Kham.
In the 1950s, the western part of Kham was incorporated into the TAR. In the current administrative system, Kham has no role; all of its old territory is now part of other administrative divisions. However, the locals still call themselves Khampas and speak a somewhat different dialect of Tibetan.
The Qing established the province of Qinghai, roughly corresponding to historic Amdo, and it has been retained by later governments. We also have an Amdo Tibetan phrasebook.
None of the current boundaries correspond exactly with the older ones; the above is just a general guide.