The civil war of 1882–1885 was the final major internal conflict of the Druk Desi era, ending with the victory of Trongsa Penlop Ugyen Wangchuck at the Battle of Changlimithang in 1885. The conflict consolidated Ugyen Wangchuck's authority over the rival Penlops and Dzongpens and laid the political foundation for his unanimous selection as the first Druk Gyalpo in 1907.
The Bhutanese civil war of 1882–1885, culminating in the Battle of Changlimithang, was the last major armed internal conflict of Bhutan's pre-monarchical era. It pitted Ugyen Wangchuck, the Penlop of Trongsa, against an alliance of the Dzongpens of Punakha and Thimphu — Phuntsho Dorji and Alu Dorji — who had attempted to install their own nominee as Druk Desi. The decisive engagement at Changlimithang, on the floodplain east of Thimphu Dzong, ended in Ugyen Wangchuck's victory and made him the unrivalled political authority in Bhutan for the remaining quarter-century before the establishment of hereditary monarchy.[1][2]
The war is conventionally dated to 1882–1885, although sources differ on details. Wikipedia and a number of Indian-source compilations give 1886 as the year of the climactic engagement, while Bhutanese narrative histories and most secondary scholarship including Karma Phuntsho place it in 1885. Most accounts converge on 11 August 1885 as the date of the decisive action at Changlimithang. The discrepancy reflects the difficulty of converting between the Tibetan lunar calendar used in Bhutanese chronicles and the Gregorian calendar used in Indian and British records.[2][3]
Together with his father Jigme Namgyel's earlier consolidation of Trongsa, the 1885 victory established the Wangchuck house as the only Penlop family with the military reach and political legitimacy to govern the country as a single political unit, a position formally recognised by the unanimous selection of Ugyen Wangchuck as the first Druk Gyalpo at Punakha Dzong on 17 December 1907.
Background: the late Druk Desi era
By the 1870s the dual system of governance established by Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal in the 17th century had effectively collapsed. Real power lay with the regional Penlops — of Trongsa, Paro and Daga — and the Dzongpens of the major fortress-towns of Punakha, Thimphu and Wangdue Phodrang. The office of Druk Desi, nominally the secular head of state, had become a short-lived prize awarded by whichever faction commanded the field at any given moment, with tenures sometimes lasting only months and ending in deposition or assassination.[1][3]
The 10th Trongsa Penlop, Jigme Namgyel (1825–1881), had begun the process of consolidation in the central and eastern regions, defeating rivals at Punakha and Simtokha in the 1860s and 1870s. On his death in 1881, his son Ugyen Wangchuck succeeded as the 11th Trongsa Penlop at the age of nineteen and inherited his father's rivalries. Among them were the entrenched ambitions of the Dzongpens of Punakha and Thimphu, who effectively controlled the western valleys and the office of Druk Desi.[2]
Outbreak: the rebellion of Alu Dorji and Phuntsho Dorji
Alu Dorji, the Thimphu Dzongpen, and Phuntsho Dorji, the Punakha Dzongpen, were Ugyen Wangchuck's adoptive brothers, having been raised in the Trongsa household by Jigme Namgyel. Their alliance against the new Trongsa Penlop took shape in the early 1880s, and around 1882 they enthroned a candidate of their choice as Druk Desi at Punakha while the reigning incumbent was still in office. Ugyen Wangchuck refused to recognise the unilateral installation, treating it as an open challenge to his paramountcy.[2][4]
The rebellion drew in other actors. The Paro Penlop Dawa Penjor was at first ambiguous in his alignment but eventually backed Trongsa. Smaller engagements were fought in 1883 and 1884 in the Punakha and Wangdue Phodrang valleys, with Trongsa forces gradually eroding the Dzongpens' control of the western dzongs.[2][4]
The campaign of 1885
In the summer of 1885 Ugyen Wangchuck mobilised approximately 2,140 troops from Trongsa and Bumthang and marched west. Two preparatory engagements were fought in the Punakha valley — at Mendagang and Jiligang — both Trongsa victories. The combined Trongsa and Paro forces then pressed on to Thimphu, where Alu Dorji and Phuntsho Dorji had taken up positions around Simtokha Dzong and the open ground at Changlimithang to the east of Thimphu Dzong.[1][4]
The engagement at Changlimithang on 11 August 1885 took the form of a brief battle followed by a parley. During negotiations, according to the Bhutanese chronicle tradition, Phuntsho Dorji killed one of Ugyen Wangchuck's retainers; the Paro Penlop Dawa Penjor then intervened to kill Phuntsho Dorji on the spot. Alu Dorji, learning of his ally's death, fled north to Tibet. With both leaders of the alliance removed from the field, the rebellion collapsed and Simtokha Dzong was occupied without further resistance.[1][4]
Aftermath and consolidation
The Battle of Changlimithang made Ugyen Wangchuck the de facto ruler of Bhutan. Although the office of Druk Desi nominally continued, no incumbent thereafter exercised authority independent of Trongsa. Ugyen Wangchuck spent the next two decades consolidating his position: marrying into the Paro household, cultivating relations with British India through Sir John Claude White and the 1903–1904 Younghusband expedition, and presiding over the country's major dzongs through his appointees.[2][3]
British India formally recognised his paramountcy. In 1905 he was awarded the KCIE, and in 1907 the assembled Penlops, Dzongpens, monastic representatives and people's representatives unanimously selected him as the first hereditary Druk Gyalpo at Punakha Dzong. The unanimity reflected not so much consensus on the merits of monarchy as the absence of any rival capable of contesting Trongsa's position — an absence created at Changlimithang twenty-two years earlier.[2][5]
Legacy
Changlimithang occupies a foundational place in Bhutanese national historiography. The site, the floodplain east of the old Thimphu Dzong, has been redeveloped as the Changlimithang National Stadium, the country's principal venue for state occasions, archery tournaments and football matches; the stadium's name explicitly memorialises the 1885 engagement. The battle is identified in official narratives as the moment at which the long fragmentation of the Druk Desi era was decisively ended and the path to the founding of the Wangchuck dynasty was opened.[1][5]
References
- The Battle of Changlimithang — Bhutan Tribute
- Ugyen Wangchuck — Wikipedia
- Karma Phuntsho, The History of Bhutan (Random House India, 2013), chapters on the late Druk Desi era and the founding of the monarchy
- The Battle of Changlimithang: The Last Struggle for Peace — Norbugang Pa Thinley
- Creation of Modern Bhutan in 1907 and Its First Four Kings — Facts and Details
- Michael Aris, The Raven Crown: The Origins of Buddhist Monarchy in Bhutan (Serindia, 1994)
See also
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