Gungsangnorbu Explained

Gungsangnorbu
Office:Jasagh of the Kharachin Right Banner
Term Start:1898[1]
Term End:1930
Predecessor:Wangdut Namzil
Successor:Banner abolished
Office1:Head of the Josutu League
Term Start1:1918
Term End1:1930
Office2:Director of the Bureau of Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs
Term Start2:February 1923
Term End2:July 1928
Predecessor2:Tawangbulagjal
Successor2:Position abolished
(Yan Xishan as head of the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission)
Term Start3:16 October 1912
Term End3:April 1922
Predecessor3:Yao Xiguang (acting)
Successor3:Xiyan
Office4:Minister for Inner Mongolia[2]
Term Start4:1912
Term End4:1913
Monarch4:Bogd Khan of Mongolia
Primeminister4:Tögs-Ochiryn Namnansüren
Office5:Minister for National Minority Affairs
Term Start5:1 July
Term End5:12 July 1917
Primeminister5:Zhang Xun
Successor5:Position abolished
Birth Date:1871
Birth Place:Kharachin Right Banner, Qing Empire
Death Place:Josutu League, Republic of China
Party:Royalist Party
Module:
Child:yes
S:贡桑诺尔布
T:貢桑諾爾布
P:Gòngsāngnuò'ěrbù
W:Kung Sang No Erh Pu

Gungsangnorbu (1871 – 1930) was an Inner Mongolian jasagh and politician of the Republic of China. Some scholars describe him as a moderate, progressive moderniser caught between the influence of conservative older leaders and young radicals. Others describe him less favourably as a conservative who, despite his early activities for promoting education, would go on to become protective of his own rights and interest as a member of the nobility, and suspicious of young Mongols who had received a modern education as potential challengers to those interests.

Names

His Mongolian name, which is of Tibetan origin, is transcribed into Chinese as . In the (proleptic) Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet, it is written Гүнсэнноров (Günsennorov). His courtesy name was . His art-name was, and he was consequently also known as Prince Gung.

Career

Gungsangnorbu was prince of Right Harqin Banner (today part of Chifeng). He was born and spent his childhood in his ancestral home, the Ka La Qin Palace. In 1902, he established what has been described as one of the first modern schools in Inner Mongolia. In 1903, he was invited to visit Japan along with a group of Manchu nobles, where he was highly impressed with the Meiji period reforms; upon his return to Inner Mongolia established a military school and a girls' school, both with Japanese teachers. Among his pupils there was Serengdongrub. Later, he sent a small number of Mongolian students to Japan, including Altanochir. In 1911, he was a Chinese legislator for the Advisory Council.

When the Xinhai Revolution broke out in 1911, Gungsangnorbu probably joined the Royalist Party and advocated the independence of Mongolia from China. As Outer Mongolia managed to gain independence with Russian support, Gungsangnorbu turned to the Japanese. He and other Inner Mongolian princes took loans and received arms from the Japanese to prepare their secession from China. The Imperial Japanese Army even dispatched a major and two captains in December 1911 to act as liaison officers for Gungsangnorbu. In the aftermath of the Xinhai Revolution, Gungsangnorbu made some attempts to form an alliance with Bogd Khan and the Khalkha Mongols in the newly independent state of Mongolia, with the Pan-Mongolist aim of annexing China's Inner Mongolian territories to an independent, Mongol-dominated Greater Mongolia. However, political fragmentation and the reality of a large Han Chinese population in his own domains thwarted this idea. He restricted himself to a more modest effort to attempt to consolidate his own power and unite the Inner Mongolian nobility. He began purchasing weapons from a group of Japanese army officers in Beijing connected to Kawashima Naniwa; however, the arms shipments were intercepted and the officers involved arrested, bringing to an end Gungsangnorbu's efforts to strengthen his own military power. Instead, he participated in Yuan Shikai's Beiyang government, taking a position as director of the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission, and overseeing the establishment of the Mongolian and Tibetan Academy in Beijing, which trained a number of cadres who would go on to achieve prominence in Inner Mongolian politics in the coming decades. He was the only Mongol prince to achieve ministerial rank in Yuan's government. He would hold that position for seventeen years, though in the chaos of the Warlord era he was not able to achieve all that he hoped for. After the 1928 Northern Expedition he resigned from his position, and died two years later.

Notes

Citations

Notes and References

  1. Book: Erxun, Zhao . 清史稿·藩部世表 . Zhonghua Book Company . zh . Drafts of Qing History: List of Fan Departments.
  2. 张子新,蒙藏委员会涉藏事务研究,中央民族大学硕士学位论文,2007年