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In 1904, the British in India sent a strong expedition to Tibet resulting in the Lhasa Treaty comprising some humiliating terms for the Tibetans. Who led this expedition?
Colonel Young husband
Major A. Scott
Brigadier E. Slocum
Lord P. Salisbury
The British invasion in 1904 instigated by Lord Curzon (1859 – 1925), the Viceroy of India, and led by the imperial adventurer Colonel Sir Francis Edward Younghusband (1863-1942), was in part a mission to curtail Russia’s expansionist raids into Central Asia and in part, a colonial effort to establish British interests and open lucrative trading routes between India, Tibet and China. The Treaty of Lhasa, officially the Convention Between Great Britain and Tibet, was a treaty signed in 1904 between Tibet and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, then under administrative rule of the Qing dynasty.
By: Sandeep Dubey ProfileResourcesReport error
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