Trespassers on the Roof of the World: The Secret Exploration of Tibet

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Description

For nineteenth-century adventures, Tibet was the prize destination, and Lhasa, its capital situated nearly three miles above sea level, was the grandest trophy of all. The lure of this mysterious land, and its strategic importance, made it inevitable that despite the Tibetans’ reluctance to end their isolation, determined travelers from Victorian Britain, Czarist Russia, America, and a half dozen other countries world try to breach the country’s high walls.In this riveting narrative, Peter Hopkirk turns his storytelling skills on the fortune hunters, mystics, mountaineers, and missionaries who tried storming the roof of the world. He also examines how China sought to maintain a presence in Tibet, so that whenever the Great Game ended, Chinese influence would reign supreme. This presence culminated in the Chinese invasion of Tibet in the 1950s, and in a brief afterword, Hopkirk updates his compelling account of “the gatecrashers of Tibet” with a discussion of Tibet today—as a property still claimed and annexed by the Chinese.

Additional information

Weight 0.37 kg
Dimensions 2.16 × 14.36 × 21.47 cm
PubliCanadation City/Country

USA

by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

286

Publisher

Year Published

1995-4-15

Imprint

ISBN 10

1568360509

About The Author

PETER HOPKIRK is the author of Like Hidden Fire: The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire, Trespassers on the Roof of the World: The Race for Lhasa, and two other books. A staff writer for the Times of London for nineteen years, five as its chief reporter, he is a Middle and Far East specialist.

"Hopkirk’s wonderfully vivid book describes the…always thrilling efforts of explorers, spies…to plumb Tibet’s secrets."—Philadelphia Inquirer"Hopkirk handles the storytelling with infectious enthusiasm…[with] great and obvious love for the subject, and is one of those British writers who cannot write an awkward of boring sentence."—Bruse Colman, The San Francisco Chronicle"A lament for a country that, wanting only to be left alone, was hauled unceremoniously into the twentieth century, and is now an unwilling satellite of Communist China."—Richard E. Nicholls, The Philadelphia Inquirer

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