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Tibetan attack on Songzhou : ウィキペディア英語版 | Tibetan attack on Songzhou
The first military conflict between the Chinese Tang dynasty and the rising Tibetan Empire occurred in 638. When Emperor Taizong of Tang refused a marriage alliance, the Tibetan emperor Songtsän Gampo sent an army to attack the Chinese frontier city of Songzhou (松州, in modern Sichuan). After a Tang army inflicted heavy casualties on the Tibetans in a night-time attack, Songtsän Gampo withdrew. He sent emissaries and tributes to Chang'an to apologize, and to again request marriage. Taizong decided to give Songtsän Gampo a distant niece, Princess Wencheng, in marriage. The peace held for the remainder of the reigns of Taizong and Songtsän Gampo, although Tibet would pose major military threats for most of the rest of the Tang period. == Initial contacts between Tang and Tibet == During the early decades of the 7th century, the major threat to the west of China was the Xianbei state of Tuyuhun. Thereafter, Tuyuhun's southwestern neighbor, the Tibetan Empire, rose in power. The existence of Tibet was unknown to the Chinese until 608, when Tibetan emissaries from Emperor Namri Songtsen arrived with tribute to Sui China.〔〔 p. 115.〕 In 634, his son Songtsän Gampo sent tribute and a request for a ''heqin'' ("marital alliance"). In the interim, a North China aristocrat had defeated the Sui and declared himself Emperor Gaozu of Tang. When Songtsän Gampo's marriage overture arrived, Taizong, the second Tang emperor, was battling the Tuyuhun and did not initially respond, but did sent the emissary Feng Dexia (馮德遐) to Tibet to establish peaceful relations.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tibetan attack on Songzhou」の詳細全文を読む
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