Last modified: 2014-10-04 by zoltán horváth
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images by Corentin Chamboredon, 16 March 2014
I had the chance to discover a color video which shows this flag:
http://youtu.be/dXKuLSeQDFE (from
14:12 to 14:45)
The video was made in 1943 by two American soldiers, captain Ilya Tolstoy and
lieutenant Brooke Dolan. They had been sent to Tibet in order to negotiate with
the government a possible agreement. The idea was to allow shipments for China
to travel through their territory (which the Tibetan government never really
accepted). At the time, China's main supply line through Burma had been cut by
the Japanese, leaving only Tibet as a possible alternative.
I thought the flag of the Tibetan regiment was just a square Tibetan flag, but
the video showed me I was wrong.
First, instead of the yellow border, there are three borders of different colors
: yellow at the top, red at the hoist, blue at the bottom. As usual on Tibetan
flags, there are one yellow square at the lower hoist and a yellow lozenge in
the middle of the border. There should be a second square at the upper hoist but
it is hidden, and since the top border is already yellow it wouldn't perhaps be
noticeable.
Then, the rays radiating from the sun are also different. In the usual flag,
they are alternatively red and blue. Here, there are also two yellow rays (the
2nd and the 11th). As for the thing that appears between the lions' paws, I
thought it was a burning ball, but the video shows it in a dark blue color. It
doesn't seem to be a ying-yang symbol in a different style, nor a
wish-fulfilling gem. As I had written before, the flag is shown with its hoist
on the right, still the characters are perfectly readable. Tibetan is written
from left to right, and the Tibetan flag is displayed that way, so I think this
flag is two-sided.
Corentin Chamboredon, 16 March 2014
In the film, finally, it's clearly visible that these are not the same
colour as flag yellow. Maybe these are golden? (That would mean they the
upper square would be different from the top border as well.)
String is visible protruding from the lozenge, which supports the idea
that this is a matter of fastening the flag to the staff (or that at
least it started out that way).
Not just the segments are different, the rays of the sun symbol itself
are different as well. They seem less spiky, and there's a lot of them;
more than double what's on the current national flag.
I'm not sure either. It has the thick rim of an eight-spoked wheel, but
there's something inside it that shows the same shape in all of both
shots, so I'd assume it's not merely the way the light falls, or
something like that.
There are some other differences as well: The depiction of the flaming
jewels has different details, and judging by the line rising up from the
gem the lions holding the jewels up have their paws touching, with the
manes merging.
As I don't read Tibetan, I can only comment that the dexter-most
character appears to differ between the video and your image. Are these
regiment numbers, with this a different number, or is there a different
difference in meaning?
I've made a screen-capture. I
tried to pick the best frame: The shots are actually of two banners held
together, so I've tried pick a frame where the front-most completely
obscures the other, yet shows us as much of the interesting bits as
possible. I had to remove the actual army and the magnificent mountains
to get it under the 25k, sorry.
(It might be interesting to know what "dang" means, or possibly "adang".)
If the designs are equal except for their lettering, it would probably
make more sense to list the "regiments" (Who described them thus, if
they really weren't?), with their inscriptions on the flags, rather than
15 sets of almost equal images.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 16 March 2014
Indeed. It could also be a light green, as the flag shown at Tibetan flags of the imperial era. But
it could just look different because of the sun. The soldiers and the flags are
facing the sun, so the way the flags are furled might create some shadows. I'm
not sure at all.
Tibetan clearly describe twelve segments but say nothing of the rays, except
they are supposed to shine in every directions.
I checked with a black and white photograph which had been taken closer to the
flag, but I couldn't identify this. The wavy things really looks like those
around the burning ball at Tibet 1920 page but with a
thick rim, and the inner part is too blurry in both sources to be sure.
As for the chintamani or wish-fulfilling jewel, there are different ways of
drawing it, according to the artist. The disc and lotus can be shown, or not.
See some examples
here:
No the lions' paws dont touch the thing between them nor each other's paw. See
the photograph here (I have a file of still better quality if you want to have a
look):
http://www.tibet-encyclopaedia.de/moderne-armee.html
I don't read Tibetan too, but I can recognise the letters and these characters
are clearly the "ka" letter and the Tibetan digit for one. The scholar Melvyn
Goldstein recorded a number of interviews with former Tibetan officials, and you
can read their transcripts on http://tibetoralhistoryarchive.org. Some
interviews describe at length the old Tibetan regiments. Some words of the
transcripts have a hoverbox and this is what Mr Goldstein writes about the
Kadang regiment:
"In the traditional Tibetan army, regiments were numbered alphabetically rather
than numerically. Consequently, the Kadang regiment refers to the 1st regiment
since "ka" is the first letter of the Tibetan alphabet. It was also called the
Bodyguard (Kusung [sku srung]) Regiment of the Dalai lama."
"Q: What was the structure of the Riwoche regiment, how many soldiers? And what
kind of military officers were there and where did the soldiers come from?
A: We were the Jadang Regiment.
Q: Why did they name it Jadang?
A: It was named according to the letters in the alphabet. Ja was one of the 30
consonants."
Sources:
http://tibetoralhistoryarchive.org/resource.xqy?q=wall&uri=%2Flscoll%2Ftohap%2Floc.natlib.tohap.H0205.xml&index=1&segment=seg03
http://tibetoralhistoryarchive.org/resource.xqy?q=wall&uri=%2Flscoll%2Ftohap%2Floc.natlib.tohap.H0202.xml&index=3&segment=seg01
http://tibetoralhistoryarchive.org/resource.xqy?q=regiment&uri=%2Flscoll%2Ftohap%2Floc.natlib.tohap.H0048.xml&index=4&segment=seg01
The list is given at Tibet-encyclopaedia.de, and the sources are quoted at the
bottom of the page.
http://www.tibet-encyclopaedia.de/moderne-armee.html
Here are the characters to use for each regiment, except the first one since I
already gave them.
Khadang (2nd): ཁ༢
Gadang (3rd): ག༣
Ngadang (4th): ང༤
Chadang (5th): ཅ༥
Chadang (6th): ཆ༦
Jadang (7th): ཇ༧
Nyadang (8th): ཉ༨
Tadang (9th): ཏ༩
Thadang (10th): ཐ༡༠
Dadang (11th): ད༡༡
The following letter is normally "Na", but there is no NaDang regiment in the
list I found. So, I will give the numbers corresponding to the following letters,
since it seems logical.
Padang (13th): པ༡༣
Phadang (14th): ཕ༡༤
Badang (15th): བ༡༥
Madang (16th): མ༡༦
Corentin Chamboredon, 16 March 2014
If you watch the shots you'll see the flag furl over and throw shadow, and
then fold back again; in this image the only shadows are in the folds, none on
the hoist border.
But if all regimental flags follow the same pattern, it might be considered a
characteristic difference.
From the film I couldn't say whether the lines were part of the lions or of a
burning ball. Burning ball it is, but I don't now what's inside it. From the
black and white I'd say something with rays, but whether it's 8 spokes with a
symbol at the hub or a wishing gem with glow shining outward I can't tell. We'll
probably need someone who actually knows what (s)he's seeing.
As the line rising up seems to be a burning ball after all, it can't be part of
the lions, neither can the others. So, different from the current flag, the
lions neither touch/hold up the jewels nor the gem.
Well, the film most of the time seems to show something non-existent
letter, but with the shadow over it, it seems to match the black and white
picture, where it looks more like a "kha" instead.
So, if it's kha, this is the khadang, which is the second something (dang?). And
it's the first I don't know what of that dang(?)?
That's Trapchi, apparently, but since I didn't listen to the video I don't know
whether that matches.
Seem to have mossed something again. Poetry and flags don't seem to match very
well.
(And one certainly shouldn't trying to break down the song More than Words, from
Extreme, in between to find out more about the timing and the tuning. It's kind
of distracting.)
One hit for
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22nadang+regiment%22. It may have existed
after all.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 17 March 2014
obverse side
reverse side
images by Corentin Chamboredon, 17 March 2014
Ok. Let's go with golden squares and lozenge.
As long as we don't have any example for other regiments we can't be sure,
anyway. Maybe the general design was the same but the colors could vary somehow
according to the regiment. Moreover, this color video contradict W. D. Shakabpa
(see above) when he wrote:
"In 1918, the Tibetan army was trained in the English style. At the same time,
the design of all the banners of the Tibetan military camps was determined.
Twelve blue and red sun rays sat upon the peeak of a white snow nountain, while
a three eyed jewel was held in the paws of a pair of white lions. It has a gold
border."
A golden border ? Not on this flag, though. So what about the others ?
"In 1931 and 1932, the Dalai Lama's bodyguard and the Tibetan army respectively
were given banners; each of the banners had a lotus and vajras crossed on a
sharp sword, with five colored victory banners hanging."
So the first regiment (bodyguard) has a flag different from those used by the
regiments.
image located by Corentin Chamboredon, 17 March 2014
The first letters of the Tibetan alphabet are: Ka, Kha, Ga, Nga. The first two
are obviously almost similar to us, but they are still different. The dang part
is a shorter form of "dangpo" (wylie: dang-po, དང་པོ), which means "first". What is confusing is that the
other regiments also had this dang in their name. We can ignore the Bodyguard
regiment which was special, but we would logically expect the Ga regiment to be
called the second (nyipa, in Tibetan). So, I guess the best translation we could
find would be: First regiment of Kha (numbered 1), First regiment of Ga (numbered
2), First regiment of Nga (numbered 3), etc. I wonder if those names couldn't
date back to the imperial era, when Tibetan armies were much more powerful and
numerous. Maybe then, there were such things as Third regiment of Kha, Second of
Ga, and so on.
And now I suddenly and sadly realize that even I wrote wrongly that the first
character was a Ka, while it is indeed a Kha... All my apologies, I shouldn't
send emails when I'm tired. So the list I gave is also wrong, then let's do it
again. The first character is the letter, the one or two following characters
are the digits.
Kadang (Bodyguard regiment): had its own flag
Tibetan army as a whole: also had its own flag
Khadang (1st): ཁ / ༡
Gadang (2nd): ག / ༢
Ngadang (3th): ང / ༣
Chadang (4th): ཅ / ༤
Chadang (5th): ཆ / ༥
Jadang (6th): ཇ / ༦
Nyadang (7th): ཉ / ༧
Tadang (8th): ཏ / ༨
Thadang (9th): ཐ / ༩
Dadang (10th): ད / ༡༠
Nadang (11th): ན / ༡༡
Padang (12th): པ / ༡༢
Phadang (13th): ཕ / ༡༣
Badang (14th): བ / ༡༤
Madang (15th): མ / ༡༥
Trapchi was the place where the regiment had its headquarters, near the
hydroelectric plant and several offices of the government, north of Lhasa.
Corentin Chamboredon, 17 March 2014
Indeed, so for the time being the differences are just worth noting.
And the lions aren't holding the three jewels either. (Or the gem if
that's what he means.) Well, unless / -til we find another I guess that
will remain a mystery.
I wonder what happened to these flags.
Maybe it's first/prime subdivision of the whole army? Then subdivisions of the
dangpo would be "Seconds", etc..
Well, since the numbers are in their very names, we should probably call Kadang
1st, Khadang 2nd, etc.. They would number to 16, but they would still have only
15 such flags (if that number is mentioned n one of your sources).
But do you have a source for the numbers counting up as well? Since the first
character is the letter-numbering part, I could imagine the ༡ to just stand
for "dangpo".
Indeed, but I don't know whether in the video they mention being near
there, or specifically mention they meet the B-prime.
Well, taking that into considering, what can we now tell from the well-known
horses and flags photograph? E.g.
http://www.jamyangnorbu.com/blog/2010/03/04/independent-tibet-%E2%80%93-the-facts/
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 17 March 2014
Not necessarily. Tibet was once a powerful empire that had to be treated
cautiously by its neighbours. I think the British representatives just
translated these words with what they knew. The Tibetan word is "magar" (wylie :
dmag sgar, with the following meanings :
- military encampment, barracks, military camp, battalion
- building/ barracks/ tent where soldiers stay, military [en]camp[ment]
Tibet-encyclopaedia states that there were other units below the regiments :
battalions (mda'), ru (company ?), lding and still others. I have no idea if
they were called "seconds".
My only source is the Tibet-encyclopaedia. I have googled the hypothetic other
names, but I found nothing. It is indeed possible that the ༡means the dang part
of the name.
I also have this photograph in better quality, and it tells us that there was
indeed a square in the upper hoist, with another color than the upper border. I
think the flag on the left show two more yellow sections, because they look as
bright as the upper border. I think this photograph confirms it:
http://nyc.indymedia.org/images/2008/04/96773.jpg. The other flag is
apparently the double vajra army flag shown above. It also have a distinct
border, and squares and lozenge in a different color.
Let's try other photographs. I found several others which may interest us:
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?a=BMR.86.1.63.3&coord_x=241&coord_y=63&percent=100
This one clearly show the "Ka" letter in the upper hoist. Its borders are very
clear so maybe it has a full yellow border. I can see a snow lion and the white
mountain, but not the sections. I think I can see a lozenge on the hoist border.
Very similar to the Khadang flag. Click on Back to record to read the
description.
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?a=2001.35.217.1&coord_x=112&coord_y=61&percent=100
Probably the same flag, with the same "Ka" letter.
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?a=2001.59.9.54.1&coord_x=150&coord_y=98.5&percent=100
That one is much more interesting. We see again the "Ka" letter, and maybe one
clearer section on the obverse. The flag on the left has no characters next to
the wish-fulfilling jewel.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/Bundesarchiv_Bild_135-S-11-07-17%2C_Tibetexpedition%2C_Milit%C3%A4rparade.jpg
That one is already shown at xt-1938.html. I think this is the Khadang flag,
since we a distorted "Kha" letter just next to the jewel. It confirms too the
squares and lozenge, at least for this regiment.
All this, and the report I had sent about a flag used by
General Derge Se make me think that perhaps the characters would not
necessarily appear in the same place of the flag : on the white mountain for
Khadang, in the upper hoist for Kadang / Bodyguard (and what about their
alledged own flag ?), above the sun if this page is not
about a rank flag but Dadang regiment.
Corentin Chamboredon, 18 March 2014
I agree. But the one in the video doesn't! When the flag furls and unfurls we
can see every sector at some point, and they are as you drew them. So, unless
this one is pre-standardisation, (in practice) the flags do differ.
Maybe access it as
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?percent=100&coord.x=249&coord.y=79&a=BMR.86.1.63.3
instead.
I can only discern to lower border, so I'm not sure.
From 1936, so if the flags really were standardised by the 13th Dalai Lama, this
would have to be a standard flag. (Hold on: The Dalai Lama died in 1933, so whom
did that diplomatic mission in 1943 in the video exchange letters with?)
It's a related design, but unless all the detail we see on the top half of the
flag are light patterns, it's different from a regimental flag. If it is the
same design after all, would the Ka then be a number of a subdivision?
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?a=2001.35.217.1&coord_x=138&coord_y=65&percent=100
A visible top border here. but I'm not sure the one sector I can see in the
cloth really has a ray shape.
http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/zoom.php?a=2001.59.9.54.1&coord_x=134&coord_y=93&percent=100
... that we can see.
But then again, we've seen those characters on sinister hoist side only, haven't
we? Would they be on just the one side?
As they are supposed to have a different style flag, I don't think the Ka
signifies a Kadang flag on these regular style flags.
Can you still see that image of the flag of Derge Se, BTW, as for me it's
captioned on page XV, which apparently isn't in the preview.
I wonder: if they are always in pairs, would there be a left flag and a right
flag?
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 18 March 2014
I think the standardization was quite relative in Tibet in the first decades
of the XXth century.
Even if a Dalai lama died or traveled abroad, their were people to talk to. In
fact, even the XIIIth Dalai lama rarely had to give his opinion except in the
most important cases. All the daily and regular stuff was managed by the Kashag
(Cabinet) or by representatives designated either by the former Dalai lama or
the Tsongdu (a "national assembly", see this graph if you want to know more).
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Organizational_chart_of_Ganden_Phodrang.png
So in 1936, the leader was the regent, Reting Rinpoche, who was in charge from
1933 to 1940, stepped aside that same year because of misbehaviour and to avoid
disgrace on the young XIVth Dalai lama and who tried to launch a coup d'état in
1947 and died in jail shortly after.
Black and white photos are quite helpless for such colorful flags. It was a
great luck to find an almost fully displayed flag for few seconds in a color
video (which was a rarity even in Europe by that time).
That would be rather strange to put one's unit's distinctive character only on
ose side of the flag, but go figure, perhaps that was the custom in the Tibetan
army.
I had to zoom to see it. I wondered why the wish-fulfilling jewel looked
different. I may be wrong but I think there is a "Kha" letter, which looks like
it is a part of the jewel, and something blurred on the right which seems to
have the shape of the Tibetan digit 1.
I thought it had to do with the country I live in. Some books can be viewed in
some countries but not in others. I have ordered a copy of the book to check
that. Regarding the pairs of flags, are there even any examples of such things
in other armies?.
Corentin Chamboredon, 18 March 2014
I was thinking more along the lines of: You may have to draw both a 2 yellow
sector flag and a four yellow sectors flag.
(But the video about that 1943 journey says: "Their endeavour made possible the
exchange of letters and gifts between the President of the United States and his
holiness the Dalai Lama ...". It may have made such an exchange possible, but an
exchange could not actually have happened until the incarnation of the Dalai
Lama was formally recognised, which must have been somewhere near the end of the
1940-s.)
Well, other banners and colours in other countries sometimes have a
completely different reverse, so it wouldn't be that unimaginable. After
all, why would you write something on the reverse of the flag, where no-one
would see it? No, neither on the triple jewels, nor on the wishing gem, sorry. I
can see that the former has something sticking out, but as there's a fold
there, it may just be that part of the jewels is obscured.
Usually pairs of flags have different functions: One national flag and one unit
colour. I couldn't say whether there are other cases where a unit appears to be
have two flags of the same design.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 18 March 2014
obverse side
reverse side
images by Corentin Chamboredon, 18 March 2014
Here are two flags with four yellow sectors.
The XIIIth Dalai lama died in 1933, and the XIVth was born in 1935 and was
formally enthroned in Lhasa in 1940. So when the American military arrived, they
met an eight year old boy, and the new regent, Taktra Rinpoche.
Anyway, I have just discovered two recent books about the political and military
history of Tibet. I will try to find them, I hope they will give me some answers.
Corentin Chamboredon, 18 March 2014
A sample of regimental flag
images by Corentin Chamboredon, 31 March 2014
I found several interesting informations about Tibetan flags in a two-volumes
book: Political and military history of Tibet, by Gyaltse Namgyal Wangdue
(Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, 2010 and 2012). The author is a retired
army officer of the Indian Special Frontier Force, and had also been a soldier
in the traditional Tibetan army until 1959.
I hoped to find much more accurate informations in these books, but there wasn't
that much things about flags. There are plates in each volume, but they show
black and white photographs, and their quality isn't good enough for my search.
The only usable graphic content is in fact the colour cover (identical for both
volumes). There we can see the flag of the Tibetan army, the Tibetan flag, and a
third flag. It is drawn (still in black and white) in the
first volume (p. 233), with a caption saying "A sample of regimental flag"
without more details. The flag has a blue field with white mountains covering
all the lower half. A snow lion appears in the middle of the mountains, walking
toward the fly. There is a yellow border at the hoist.
Here are the interesting informations :
Vol 1, p. 6-7, about the flags of the imperial era
"Every regiment had its own regimental colours and flags attached to the spears
and helmet of the soldiers."
"The upper and lower U-ru had a red flag with multicoloured flaps (dar lce) and
a red heroic banner or padar (dpa' dar)."
"The upper and lower Yoru had a white flag, with an image of a black-chested
lion at the center."
"The upper and lower Yeru had a black flag with a white-chest garuda bird as its
emblem. Their padar flag was gray and had colourful borders."
"According to the old Tibetan records, the flag of the upper and lower Rulag had
a leaping snow lion as the emblem. They had a black padar flag."
Vol 1, p. 22-23, about the military and national flags
"The uniform, emblems, insignias and colours of all the Tibetan army units were
all made based on the British style."
"The Tibetan military flag was red with brownish edges, two snow lions at the
center, facing each other in the manner of lifting crossed-vajras together. In
those days, the national flag and the military flags of Tibet were similar in
design, except for their emblem - the national flag had flaming jewels instead
of crossed-vajras, A military law was codified and announced throughout the
country. The flags were flown permanently at the Army Headquarters and they were
flown or carried during all officiel ceremonies. In his memoir, Eric Teichmen,
who spent many years in Chengdu as the British consular officer in China,
describes the Tibetan national flag having a yellow background, with snowy
mountains on which two snow lions face each other. However, some Tibetan
veterans told me that the Tibetan national flag had a red background with light
brown edges, with two snow lions facing each other at the center, in the manner
of lifting the flaming jewels.
This is the real description ot the Tibetan national flag, and some samples of
old Tibetan national flags can still be found in army stores in Tibet. In fact,
the Tibetan national flag and military flags had the same background color, but
the national flag had the flaming jewels and the military flags had the
crossed-vajras as its emblem."
The author gives a list of the regiments. Phadang regiment is
particular. It was better known as Drongdrak (the better families) regiment
because its men had been conscripted from high class families, much to the
chagrin of their sons who really didn't want to go to the army. It was created
in 1932 by Künphela, a favorite of the XIIIth Dalai lama who saw this favored
regiment as a tool to support its own power. Less than two weeks after the death
of the Dalai lama, the regiment asked for its own disbandment, which caused the
fall of Künphela.
Vol 1, p. 60
"Regarding the Tibetan army's flag, as mentioned above, it had a red background
with yellow crossed-vajras as the emblem. The name of a regiment (ka, kha, ga,
nga, etc.) was written in the top corner of the flag. All the regiments had
their own regimental flags, whose colours differed from one another. There were
also small flags used for giving secret signals on the battlefield."
Vol 1, p. 69
"In 1945, soon after the end of the Second World War, the Tibetan military
uniforms and drill commands, which had been in British style, were changed to
Tibetan, except for the Kadang Bodyguard Regiment which retained the British
uniform."
"The military flag was the same as the old one. The Tibetan national flag was
modified and flown at the Tibetan Army Headquarters and all the regimental
barracks at all times, and carried and flown during all military parades, as in
the past."
The author also writes about the Simpa Guards, which dated back to the XVIIth
century. The Simpa Guards were tasked to protect the Potala and maintain order
in the palace and in Lhasa. The guards usually wore old style armor and weapons.
Vol 1, p. 48-53
"The two armoury-keepers of the Headquarters also had to attend, carrying both
the white and the yellow military banners."
"The two flag bearers would stand behinf the stupa and look ar the Potala palace
frequently [to see if whether the Namgyal Monastery's monks were appearing to
blow conch-shells], and remain alert. At around 9 am, two monks from Namgyal
Monastery at the Palace would sound conch-shells. The flag bearers of the Simpa
Army would immediately raise their flags."
"The flag or the banner of Simpa Yeru had white flaps and that of Simpa Yonru
had brownish flaps."
In 1916, after four units ot the Tibetan army were respectively trained in
Japanese, Russian, British and traditional Tibetan system, they held a public
competition so that the Dalai Lama could decide which training the Tibetan army
was to adopt.
Vol 2, p. 28
"He found the British military system the best, so he adopted it as the model
for the Tibetan army. In order to apply this system uniformly to all the army
units in Tibet, the Dalai Lama issued edicts to all the army barracks in Kham
and sent military instructors to give them training. Besides this, the Tibetan
army was divided into regiments, numbered in Tibetan alphabet (i.e. ka, kha, ga,
nga, etc.), created new military and national flags"
Vol 2, p. 33
[In 1918, in Eastern Tibet] "According to Eric Teichman's book (Travels of a
Consular Officer in Eastern Tibet), in those times, the flag of the headquarter
of the Governor-General of Kham and all the army regiments had a yellow
background with a white snowy mountain, two snow lions facing each other and a
sun and moon above the two lions."
The Governor-General, Jampa Tendar, was in the same time the monk-minister of
the Tibetan government (kalön lama), and the commander-in-chief of the Tibetan
army (magchi).
Corentin Chamboredon, 31 March 2014
Giving it a few seconds extra so YouTube can start counting while it's still
loading:
http://youtu.be/y2_oux3VmmU?t=9m25s.
After that a Tibetan regiment (?) flag, BTW, of the common design. It has
a yellow top edge, blue bottom edge, what seems to be a red hoist edge and
tube, two yellow sectors, a red sector in the bottom hoist corner (on the
dexter hoist side), and the reverse has the reverse pattern of the sectors.
Other details not clear enough to be certain, though it's obviously the
same general design.
These two are under the same comment about the relations between Tibet and
China, but I don't know whether they were shot as the same occasion.
The "presumably" for the red of the Chinese unit colours was because it looked
rather orangey. I now realised the Tibetan regiment flag has that same
shade for its red sectors, so it's fairly certain it's how flag red looks in
that film.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 04 April 2014
I totally missed these few shots, thank you ! Since we can't see any
character, we can't be sure of wether this is the Khadang regiment or not, but
its borders are identical to those appearing on the latter's flag (while what
seems to be Tadang regiment's flag had different borders).
Corentin Chamboredon, 04 April 2014
I now have a source for the numbering of the Tibetan regiments in In the
Service of His Country: The Biography of Dasang Damdul Tsarong, by Dundul
Namgyal Tsarong (2000, Snow Lion Publications), pp. 49-50.
http://books.google.fr/books?id=tVGgEbhi5JAC
"In accordance with His Holiness's desires, Tsarong continued to increase and
organize the army. As the new battalions were being formed, they were numbered
alphabetically, as Ka-1, Kha-1, Gha-1, etc., according to the Tibetan alphabet.
Thus it was easy during future expansion of the regiments to simply add numbers
once having completed the thirty letters of the alphabet. In this way, the army
continues to increase its numbers to about ten thousand men by 1924. The first
three regiments had one thousand troops in each, including the Dalai lama's
special bodyguard battalion; therafter each regiment had five hundred men."
Then, the Tibetan regiments were all called XX-dang (or 1st XX) because there
were never more regiments than Tibetan letters. If that had been the case, the
31st regiment would have been Kanyi (2nd Ka), the 32nd Khanyi (2nd Kha), etc.
Therefore, the list of regiments I sent with their possible numbers is totally
wrong since.
Corentin Chamboredon, 09 April 2014