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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Life of Yakoob Beg, by Demetrius Charles Boulger.
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life of Yakoob Beg, by Demetrius Boulger
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Life of Yakoob Beg
+ Athalik Ghazi, and Badaulet; Ameer of Kashgar
+
+Author: Demetrius Boulger
+
+Release Date: September 12, 2010 [EBook #33712]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF YAKOOB BEG ***
+
+
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+Produced by The Bookworm, [bookworm.librivox AT gmail.com],
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+at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned
+images of public domain material from the Google Print
+project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1><span id="title">THE LIFE<br />
+<small><small>OF</small></small><br />
+<big>YAKOOB BEG;</big><br />
+<small>ATHALIK GHAZI, AND BADAULET;</small><br />
+AMEER OF KASHGAR.</span>
+
+<span id="id">BY</span>
+
+<span id="author">DEMETRIUS CHARLES BOULGER,</span>
+<span>MEMBER OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center"><br /><br /><i><big>WITH MAP AND
+APPENDIX.</big></i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><br /><br />LONDON:<br />
+W<span class="super">M</span> H. ALLEN &amp; CO., 13, WATERLOO
+PLACE, S.W.<br />
+1878.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">LONDON:<br />
+PRINTED BY WOODFALL AND KINDER,<br />
+MILFORD LANE, STRAND, W.C.</p>
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>THE LIFE<br />
+<small>OF</small><br />
+<big>YAKOOB BEG.</big></h2>
+
+<hr />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">TO MY FATHER,<br />
+<br />
+<big>BRIAN AUSTEN BOULGER,</big><br />
+<br />
+<span class="old"><big>I Dedicate</big></span><br />
+<br />
+<small>THE FOLLOWING PAGES, AS SOME FAINT TOKEN
+OF FILIAL AFFECTION AND GRATITUDE.</small></p>
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</a></span></p>
+<div class="chapter" id="preface">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> following account of the life of Yakoob Beg was
+written with a twofold intention. In the first place, it
+attempts to trace the career of a soldier of fortune, who,
+without birth, power, or even any great amount of
+genius, constructed an independent rule in Central Asia,
+and maintained it against many adversaries during the
+space of twelve years. The name of the Athalik Ghazi
+became so well known in this country, and his person
+was so exaggerated by popular report, that those who
+come to these pages with a belief that their hero will
+be lauded to the skies must be disappointed. Yakoob
+Beg was a very able and courageous man, and the task
+he did accomplish in Kashgaria was in the highest
+degree creditable; but he was no Timour or Babur.
+His internal policy was marred by his severity, and the
+system of terrorism that he principally adopted; and
+his external policy, bold and audacious as it often was,
+was enfeebled by periods of vacillation and doubt. Yet
+his career was truly remarkable. He was not the
+arbiter of the destinies of Central Asia, nor was he
+even the consistent opponent of Russian claims to
+supremacy therein. He was essentially of the common
+mould of human nature, sharing the weaknesses and
+the fears of ordinary men. The Badaulet, or "the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
+fortunate one," as he was called, was essentially indebted
+to good fortune in many crises of his career. He
+cannot, in any sense, be compared to the giants produced
+by Central Asia in days of old; and among
+moderns Dost Mahomed of Afghanistan probably should
+rank as high as he does. Yet he gives an individuality
+to the history of Kashgar that it would otherwise lack.
+The recent triumphs of the Chinese received all their
+attraction to Englishmen from the decline and fall of
+Yakoob Beg, the hero they had erected in the country
+north of Cashmere.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, the following pages strive to
+bring before the English reader the great merits of
+China as a governing power; and this object is really
+the more important of the two. It is absolutely
+necessary for this country to remember that there are
+only three Great Powers in Asia, and of these China is
+in many respects the foremost. Whereas both England
+and Russia are simply conquering Governments, China
+is a mighty and self-governing country. China's rule
+in Eastern Turkestan and Jungaria is one of the most
+instructive pages in the history of modern Asia, yet it
+may freely be admitted that the brief career of Yakoob
+Beg gave an interest to the consideration of the Chinese
+in Central Asia that that theme might otherwise have
+failed to supply. The authorities used in the compilation
+of the facts upon which the following pages
+have been erected are principally and above all the
+official Report of Sir Douglas Forsyth, and the files of
+the <i>Tashkent</i> and <i>Pekin Gazettes</i> since the beginning
+of 1874. Mr. Shaw's most interesting work on "High
+Tartary," Dr. Bellew's "Kashgar," and Gregorieff's
+work on "Eastern Turkestan," have also been consulted
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>
+in various portions of the narrative. A vast mass of
+newspaper articles have likewise been laid under contribution
+for details which have not been noticed anywhere
+else.</p>
+
+<p>In conclusion, the author would ask the English
+reader to consider very carefully what the true lesson of
+Chinese valour and statesmanship may be for us, because
+those qualities have now become the guiding power in
+every Indian border question, from Siam and Birma to
+Cashmere. Mr. Schuyler's "Turkestan," which still
+maintains its place as the leading work on Central Asia,
+although not treating on the affairs of Kashgar, has
+been frequently referred to for the course of affairs in
+Khokand; but, in the main, Dr. Bellew's historical
+narrative in Sir D. Forsyth's Report has been followed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<div>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of contents">
+<tr><td align="center" class="chap1"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></td><td class='pgno'><span class="sml">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Geographical Description of Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Ethnographical Description of Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>14</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">History of Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Conquest of Kashgar by China</span></td><td class='pgno'>41</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Chinese Rule in Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>54</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Birth of Yakoob Beg and Career in the Service of
+Khokand</span></td><td class='pgno'>76</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Invasion of Kashgar by Buzurg Khan and Yakoob Beg</span></td><td class='pgno'>92
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Wars with the Tungani</span></td><td class='pgno'>119</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg's Government of Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>137</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg's Policy towards Russia</span></td><td class='pgno'>173</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg's Relations with England</span></td><td class='pgno'>212</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg's Last War with China, and Death</span></td><td class='pgno'>236</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Chinese Reconquest of Kashgar</span></td><td class='pgno'>268</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Chinese Factor in the Central Asia Question</span></td><td class='pgno'>277</td></tr>
+<tr><td>APPENDIX.</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_303">The Position of Lob-nor</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>303</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_308">Treaty between Russia and China</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>308</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_315">Treaty between England and Cashmere</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>315</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_320">Treaty between Russia and Kashgar</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>320</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_322">Treaty between England and Kashgar</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>322</td></tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#Page_330"><span class="smcap ml3">Rules for the Guidance of the Joint Commissioners</span><br />
+<span class="smcap ml3">appointed for the New Route to Eastern Turkestan</span></a></td><td class='pgno'>330</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap ml3"><a href="#Page_334">A Story from Kashgar</a></span></td><td class='pgno'>334</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><br /><br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><big><big><b>YAKOOB BEG.</b></big></big><br /><br /></p>
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a><span>CHAPTER I.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTION OF KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> state of Kashgar, which comprises the western
+portion of Eastern or Chinese Turkestan, has been
+defined as being bounded on the north by Siberia, on
+the south by the mountains of Cashmere, on the east
+by the Great Desert of Gobi, and on the west by the
+steppe of "High Pamere." This description, while sufficiently
+correct for general speaking, admits of more
+detail in a work dealing at some length with that
+country. Strictly, the name Kashgar or Cashgar applies
+only to the city, and it was not until after the time of
+Marco Polo, when it was the most populous and opulent
+town in the whole region, that it became used for the
+neighbouring country. The correct name is either
+Little Bokhara or Eastern Turkestan, and the Chinese
+call it Sule. Recent writers have styled the territory
+of the Athalik Ghazi Kashgaria. It certainly extended
+through a larger portion of Chinese Turkestan than
+did any past native rule in Kashgar, the Chinese of
+course excepted. The definition given above of the
+limits of Kashgar states that on the north it is
+bounded by Siberia, but this is erroneous, for the extensive
+territory of Jungaria or Mugholistan intervenes.
+Jungaria under the Chinese was known as Ili from its
+capital, and now under the Russians is spoken of as
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+Kuldja, another name for the same city. This very
+extensive and important district was included in the
+same government with Kashgar when the Chinese
+dominated in all this region from their head-quarters
+at Ili; but in the final settlement after the disruption
+of the Chinese power in 1863, while Kashgar fell to
+the Khoja Buzurg Khan, and the eastern portion of
+Jungaria, together with the cities of Kucha, Karashar,
+and Turfan south of the Tian Shan range, to the
+Tungani; Kuldja or Ili was occupied by the Russians.
+The frontier line between Kuldja and Kashgar is very
+clearly marked by the Tian Shan, and the same effectual
+barrier divides the continent into two well-defined
+divisions from Aksu to Turfan and beyond. Eastern
+Turkestan is, therefore, bounded on the north by the
+Tian Shan, and on the south the Karakoram Mountains
+form a no less satisfactory bulwark between it and
+Kohistan and Cashmerian Tibet. As has been said, on
+the west the steppe of Pamir and on the east the desert
+of Gobi present distinct and secure defences against
+aggression from without in those directions. There are
+few states in Asia with a more clearly marked position
+than that of which we have been speaking. Nature
+seems to have formed it to lead an isolated and independent
+existence, happy and prosperous in its own resources
+and careless of the outer world; but its history has been
+of a more troubled character, and at only brief intervals
+has its natural wealth been so fostered as to make it that
+which it has been called, "the Garden of Asia." This
+condition of almost continual warfare and disturbance
+during centuries, has left many visible marks on the
+external features of the country, and in nothing is this
+more strikingly evident than in the small population.
+A region which contains at the most moderate estimate
+250,000 square miles, is believed by the highest
+authorities to contain less than 1,000,000 inhabitants.
+In breadth Kashgaria may be said to extend from
+longitude E. 73° to 89°, and in width from latitude N.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+36° to 43°; but the ancient kingdom of Kashgar has
+been always considered to have reached only to Aksu,
+a town about 300 miles north-east of Kashgar. When
+the Chinese about fifty years ago conceded certain trade
+privileges to Khokand, they were not to have effect east
+of Aksu; this fact seems conclusive as to the recognized
+limits of the ancient dynasty of Kashgar. The capital
+of this district, which at one time has been a flourishing
+kingdom under a native ruler, at another a tributary of
+some Tartar conqueror, and then distracted by the
+struggles of his effete successors, and at a third time a
+subject province of the Chinese, has fluctuated as much
+as the fortunes of the state itself. Now it has been
+Yarkand, now Kashgar, and yet again, on several occasions,
+Aksu. The claims of Kashgar seem to have prevailed
+in the long run, for, although Yarkand is still
+the larger city, Yakoob Beg established his capital at
+Kashgar, and made that town known throughout the
+whole of Asia by the means of his government.</p>
+
+<p>Kashgar is situated in a plain in the north of the
+province, and the small river on which it is built is
+known as the Kizil Su. Immediately beyond it the
+country becomes hilly and mountainous, until in the far
+distance may be seen the snow-clad peaks of the Tian
+Shan, and the Aksai Plateau. Although the population
+is barely 30,000, there is now an air of brisker activity
+in the bazaars and caravanserais of this capital than in
+any other city in the country. The trade carried on
+with Russia in recent years has given some life to the
+place; but few, if any, merchants proceed more inland
+than this, whether they come from Khokand or from
+Kuldja. The town stretches on both sides of the river,
+which is crossed by a wooden bridge; but there are no
+buildings of any pretensions for external beauty or
+internal comfort. The <i>orda</i> or palace of the Ameer,
+which is in Yangy Shahr, five miles from the city, is a
+large gloomy barrack of a place with several buildings
+within each other; the outer ones are occupied by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+household troops and by the court officials, and the
+inner one of all is set apart for the family and <i>serai</i>
+of the ruler himself. In connection with this is a
+hall of audience, in which he receives in solemn state
+such foreigners as it seems politic for him to honour.
+In the old days, Kashgar used to be a strongly fortified
+position, but the only remains of its former strength are
+the ruins which are strewn freely all around. Kashgar
+is, therefore, an open and quite defenceless town, and
+lies completely at the mercy of any invader who might
+come along the high road from Aksu or Bartchuk, or
+across the mountains from Khokand or Kuldja; but at
+Yangy Shahr, about five miles south of Kashgar, Yakoob
+Beg constructed a strong fort, where he deposited all his
+treasure, and this may be taken to be the citadel of
+Kashgar as well as the residence of the ruler. Yangy
+Shahr means new city, and as a fortification erected by
+a Central Asian potentate with very limited means, it
+must be considered to be a very creditable piece of
+military workmanship. The Andijanis or Khokandian
+merchants who have at various times settled here, form
+a very important class in this town in particular, and it
+was they who more than any one else contributed to the
+success of the invasion of Buzurg Khan and Mahomed
+Yakoob. It is, however, said that these merchant classes
+had become to some extent dissatisfied with the late
+state of things, whether because Yakoob Beg did not
+fulfil all his promises, or for some other reason, is not
+clear. If Kashgar under its late rule was not restored
+to that prosperous condition which excited the admiration
+of Marco Polo, and the Chinese traveller, Hwang
+Tsang, before him, it may be considered to have been
+as fairly well-doing as any other city in either Turkestan,
+while life and property were a great deal more secure
+than in some we could mention.</p>
+
+<p>Situated about half-way on the road to Yarkand is
+Yangy Hissar, a town which has always been of importance
+both as a military position and as a place of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+trade. It has greatly fallen into decay, however, but
+still possesses a certain amount of its former influence
+from being a military post, and from the exceptional
+fertility of the neighbouring country.</p>
+
+<p>Yarkand, about eighty miles as the crow flies, and 120
+by road, to the south-east of Kashgar, is still the most
+populous of all the cities of Eastern Turkestan. It lies
+in the open plain on the Yarkand river, and its walls,
+four miles in circuit, testify to its former greatness.
+Under the Chinese it was quite the most flourishing
+town in the region, and even now Sir Douglas Forsyth
+estimates that it contains 40,000 people, while the surrounding
+country has nearly 200,000 more. The fruit
+gardens and orchards, which extend in a wide belt round
+it, give an air of peculiar prosperity to the country, and
+quite possibly induce travellers to take a too sanguine
+view of the resources of the country. In addition to the
+abundance of fruit and grain produce that is brought
+into the city for sale, there is a large and profitable
+business carried on in leather. Yarkand has almost a
+monopoly of this article, and the consumption of it
+is very great indeed. The Ameer himself took large
+quantities yearly for his army, for, in addition to that
+required for boots and saddles, many of his regiments
+wore uniforms of that substance.</p>
+
+<p>But, although Yarkand is the chief market-place of
+the richest province, and although its population is
+thriving and energetic, there is a general <i>consensus</i> of
+opinion that it has become much less prosperous and
+much more of a rural town since the transference of
+the seat of government to Kashgar, and the disappearance
+of Chinese merchants with the Chinese ruler. A
+very intelligent merchant of the town replied as follows
+to questions put to him, as to the Chinese and native
+rulers, and it will be seen that it was especially favourable
+to the claims of the Chinese as the better masters.</p>
+
+<p>"What you see on market-day now, is nothing to the
+life and activity there was in the time of the Khitay.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+To-day the peasantry come in with their fowls and eggs,
+with their cotton and yarn, or with their sheep and
+cattle and horses for sale, and they go back with printed
+cotton, a fur cap, or city made boots, or whatever domestic
+necessaries they may require, and always with
+a good dinner inside them; and then we shut up our
+shops and stow away our goods till next week's market-day
+brings back our customers. Some of us, indeed, go
+out with a small venture in the interim to the rural
+markets around, but our great day is market-day in
+town. It was very different in the Khitay time.
+People then bought and sold every day, and market-day
+was a much jollier time. There was no Kazi Rais,
+with his six Muhtasib, armed with the <i>dira</i> to flog
+people off to prayer, and drive the women out of the
+streets, and nobody was bastinadoed for drinking spirits
+and eating forbidden meats. There were mimics and
+acrobats, and fortune-tellers and story-tellers, who
+moved about amongst the crowd and diverted the
+people. There were flags and banners and all sorts
+of pictures floating at the shop fronts; and there was
+the <i>jallab</i>, who painted her face and decked herself in
+silks and laces to please her customers." And then,
+replying to a question whether the morals were not
+more depraved under this system than under the strict
+Mahomedan rule of the Athalik Ghazi, the same witness
+went on to say&mdash;"Yes, perhaps so. There were many
+rogues and gamblers too, and people did get drunk and
+have their pockets picked. But so they do now, though
+not so publicly, because we are under Islam, and the
+shariàt is strictly enforced."</p>
+
+<p>This very graphic piece of evidence gives a clearer
+picture of the two systems of government, than perhaps
+paragraphs of explanatory writing; and, to return to
+the immediate subject before us, it shows that Yarkand
+has deteriorated in wealth and population since the
+Chinese were expelled from it fifteen years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Khoten is situated 150 miles south-east of Yarkand,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+and about ninety miles due east of Sanju. It lies on the
+northern base of the Kuen Lun Mountains, and is the
+most southern city of any importance in Kashgaria.
+Under the Chinese, it was one of the most flourishing
+centres of industry, and as the <i>entrepôt</i> of all trade with
+Tibet it held a bustling active community. The Chinese
+called it Houtan, and even now it is locally called Ilchi.
+In addition to the wool and gold imported from Tibet,
+it possessed gold mines of its own in the Kuen Lun
+range, and was widely celebrated for its musk, silk, and
+jade. It likewise has suffered from the departure of the
+Chinese; and the energy and wealth of that extraordinary
+people have found, in the case of this city also,
+a very inadequate substitute in the strict military order
+and security introduced by Yakoob Beg.</p>
+
+<p>Ush Turfan, New Turfan, is a small town on the road
+from Kashgar to Aksu, and is not to be confounded
+with the better known Turfan which is situated in the
+far east on the highway to Kansuh. This latter town is
+called Kuhna Turfan, or Old Turfan, to distinguish it
+from the other. Ush Turfan, without ever having been
+a place of the first importance, derived very considerable
+advantage from its position on the road followed by the
+Chinese caravans, and Yakoob Beg converted it into a
+strong military position by constructing several forts
+there.</p>
+
+<p>Aksu, one of the old capitals of Kashgar, may fairly
+be called the third city of the state, although it has,
+perhaps, more than any other declined since the expulsion
+of the Khitay. Before that event took place there
+was a road across the mountains to Ili, by the Muzart
+glacier, and relays of men were kept continually employed
+in maintaining this delicately constructed road in a state
+fit for passage both on foot and mounted. But all this
+has been discontinued for many years now, and not only
+is the road quite impassable, but it would require much
+labour and more outlay to restore it to its former utility.
+In the neighbourhood of this town there are rich mines
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+of lead, copper, and sulphur. These have, practically
+speaking, been untouched in recent years. Coal is also
+the ordinary fuel among the inhabitants; and both in
+intelligence as well as in worldly prosperity, the good
+people of Aksu used to be entitled to a foremost position
+among the Kashgari. As a consequence of the blocking
+up of the Muzart Pass, the old trade with Kuldja has
+completely disappeared, and all communications with
+this Russian province are now carried on by the Narym
+Pass to Vernoe. This change benefits the city of
+Kashgar, but is a decided loss to Aksu. Aksu may still
+justly rank as an important place, and under very
+probable contingencies may regain all the ground it has
+lost. In conclusion, we may say that Yakoob Beg has
+converted its old walls and castles into fortifications,
+which are said to be capable of resisting the fire of
+modern artillery.</p>
+
+<p>We have enumerated six cities&mdash;Kashgar, Yangy
+Hissar, Yarkand, Khoten, Ush Turfan, and Aksu&mdash;and
+these constitute the territory of Kashgar proper. At
+one time, indeed, it was called Alty Shahr, or six cities,
+from this fact. In addition to these may be mentioned,
+in modern Kashgaria, Sirikul, or Tashkurgan, in the
+extreme south-west, which is principally of importance
+as the chief post on the frontier of Afghanistan. Near
+Sirikul are Badakshan and Wakhan, and it has been
+asserted that Shere Ali, of Afghanistan, viewed with a
+suspicious eye the presence of Kashgar in this quarter.
+It is quite certain that he would not have tolerated
+that further advance along the Pamir, which Yakoob
+Beg seemed on several occasions inclined to make.
+Sirikul commands the northern entrance of the Baroghil
+Pass, and has consequently been often mentioned in
+recent accounts of this road to India.</p>
+
+<p>Maralbashi, or Bartchuk, a military post of some
+strength, is strategically important, as being placed at
+the junction of the roads from Kashgar and Yarkand,
+which lead by the bed of the Yarkand river to Kucha.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+But it possesses greater interest for us, as being the
+chief town of the district inhabited by the extraordinary
+tribe of the Dolans. These people are in the most backward
+state of intelligence that it is possible to imagine
+human beings to be capable of. In physical strength
+and stature they are, perhaps, the most miserable objects
+on the face of the earth, but their social position is still
+more deplorable. Some of their customs are of the most
+disgusting character, and their dwellings, such as they
+are, are of the rudest kind and subterranean. Travellers
+who have seen them in the larger cities, say that all the
+rumours that have been circulated about them do not
+exaggerate the true facts of the case; and the most
+pitiable part of the matter is, that they have become so
+resigned to their degraded position, that they are averse
+to any measure calculated to improve their existence.
+They have been compared to the Bhots of Tibet, but
+these latter are quite superior beings in comparison
+with them. They are treated with contempt and derision
+by all the neighbouring peoples.</p>
+
+<p>Kucha is, or rather was, another very flourishing
+city which has never recovered the loss of Chinese
+wealth, and the subsequent disturbances during the
+Tungan wars. At one time Kucha had at the least
+50,000 people, and it was not less famed than Aksu for
+the resources and ingenuity of its people. But now it
+is almost a deserted city. The greater part of the old
+town is a mass of ruins, and during the nine years that
+have elapsed since the Tungani were crushed by the
+Athalik Ghazi, scarcely anything has been done to repair
+the damage caused in those very destructive wars.</p>
+
+<p>Korla, Kouralia, or Kouroungli, as it has been
+named, and Karashar, two towns which lie to the east
+of Kucha, have likewise never revived from the period of
+anarchy and bloodshed, through which the whole of
+this district has passed; but even the state of these
+places contrasts favourably with the far worse ruin
+wrought at Turfan. Turfan, perhaps more than any
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+other, profited by the trade with China, for, although
+it may not itself have been as rich as either Aksu or
+Kucha, it derived a certain source of income as the
+rendezvous of all the caravans proceeding either east
+or west, or north to Urumtsi and Chuguchak. Very
+often a delay of several weeks took place, before merchants
+had arranged all the details for crossing the Tian
+Shan to Guchen, or for proceeding on to Hamil through
+the desert, and Turfan flourished greatly thereby. Now
+its streets are desolate, the whole country round it is
+represented to be a desert, and all its former activity
+and brightness have completely disappeared. Yakoob
+Beg had extended his rule a short distance east of
+Turfan, to a place called Chightam, but Turfan may be
+styled his most eastern possession.</p>
+
+<p>We have now given a somewhat detailed description
+of the chief cities of Kashgaria, and in doing so we have
+distinctly intended thereby to convey the impression to
+the reader that it is only these and their suburbs that
+were at all productive under the late <i>régime</i>. To
+those who have been to Kashgar, nothing has remained
+more vividly impressed on their mind, than the exceedingly
+prosperous appearance of the farms in the belt of
+country from Yarkand to Kashgar; but at the same
+time this wealth of foliage and of blossom has only made
+the barrenness of the intervening and surrounding
+country more palpable. The farms are certainly not
+small in extent, but rather isolated from each other, and
+surrounded by orchards of plums, apples, and other
+fruit trees, in which they are completely embowered.
+A Kashgarian village is not a main street with a line
+of cottages and a few large farms; but it is a conglomeration
+of farmsteads covering a very extensive area
+of country, and presenting to the eye of a stranger
+rather a thinly peopled district than a community of
+villagers. Again, although the soil is naturally fertile,
+the system of agriculture is of an exhaustive character,
+and it seems probable that only a small portion of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+land on each farm is at all productive. But these
+settlements, which present an exterior of rural happiness
+and simplicity, are but oases in an enormous extent of
+barren country. If each proprietor seems to possess
+more land than he can require, and if the fertile soil
+produces bountifully that which is unskilfully sown
+therein, the total amount of land under cultivation
+is still very limited indeed. Worse still, the soil is
+gradually exhausted, and as the system of sowing but one
+kind of grain seems to have taken deep root among the
+people, it is to be feared that it may be perpetuated
+without hope of recovery. There is a constant difficulty
+to be overcome, too, on account of the meagre supply
+of water. The general aspect of the region is barren,
+a bleak expanse stretches in all directions, and in the
+distance on three sides the outlines of lofty ranges complete
+the panorama. The scarcely marked bridle track
+that supplies the place of a highway in every direction
+except where the Chinese have left permanent tokens of
+their presence, offers little inducement to travellers to
+come thither; nor must these when they do come expect
+anything but the most imperfect modes of communication
+and of supply that a backward Asiatic district can
+furnish. If we wish to imagine the scene along the road
+from Sanju to Yarkand, we have only to visit some of
+the wilder of the Sussex Wealds to have it before us in
+miniature. The spare dried-up herbage may be still
+more spare, and the limestone may be more protruding
+on the Central Asian plain; and the wind will certainly
+remind you that it comes either from the desert or from
+the mountain regions; but you have the same undulating,
+dreary expanse that you have above Crowborough.
+The miserable sheep watched by some nomad Kirghiz
+will alone forcibly remind you that you are far away
+from the heights of the South Downs. In the far
+distance you will see the cloud-crested pinnacles of the
+Sanju Devan or of the Guoharbrum, and then the
+traveller cannot but remember that he is in one of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+most inaccessible regions in the world. But if these
+southern roads are scarcely worthy of the name, the
+great high road from Kashgar to Aksu, Kucha, Korla,
+Karashar, and Turfan is a masterpiece of engineering
+construction. It need not fear to brave comparison with
+those of imperial Rome herself, and remains an enduring
+monument to Chinese perseverance, skill, and capacity
+for government. In China itself there are many great
+and important highways, but there the task was facilitated
+by the possession of great and navigable rivers.
+In Eastern Turkestan no such assistance was to be found,
+and consequently this road, along which was conducted all
+the traffic that passed from China to Jungaria, Kashgar,
+Khokand, and Bokhara, had to be maintained in the
+highest state of efficiency. To do this we cannot doubt
+was a most expensive undertaking, and, not mentioning
+such an exceptional work as the Muzart Pass, one that
+required a very perfect organization to accomplish with
+the success that for more than a century marked it.</p>
+
+<p>The great drawback in the geographical position of
+Kashgar, is the want of a cheap and convenient outlet
+by water. The country itself suffers in a less degree
+from the same cause, but with a more perfect system of
+irrigation, the rivers, such as the Artosh, &amp;c., which in
+spring carry down the mountain snows, might be made
+to give a more extended supply throughout western
+Kashgar at all events. The climate is equable, and the
+people suffer from no very prevalent disease, except in
+the more mountainous parts, and in Yarkand, where
+goitre is of frequent occurrence. The people themselves
+seem to be frugal and honest, but indeed there are so
+many races to be met with in this "middle land," that
+no general description can be given of them all. The
+Andijanis, or Khokandian merchants, are the most prosperous
+class in the community, and they appear to be,
+from all accounts, possessed of more than an average
+amount of business capacity in the arts of buying and
+selling. The Tarantchis are the descendants of Kashgarian
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+labourers imported by the Chinese into Kuldja
+in 1762, and there is still both in the army and in the
+state a large number of Khitay remaining, who were
+permitted to pursue in secret the observances of their
+religion. The other races are ill disposed towards them,
+and attribute all the vices they can think of to their
+doors. But these Khitay managed to efface themselves
+in the country, and although they formed a very important
+minority among the males, they never appear
+to have been regarded in the light of a possible danger
+when their brethren from China should draw near.
+In addition to the native Kashgari, and these two
+important elements just mentioned, there are numerous
+immigrants from the border states, particularly from
+Khokand, to the people of whom Yakoob Beg naturally
+manifested especial favour. We have now given at
+some length a description of the geographical features
+of Kashgar, and are about to follow it up with an
+ethnological description as well as a historical statement
+of the past features of the same region. It is
+hoped that these preliminary chapters will clear the way
+from some obscurity for a correct appreciation of the
+career of the late Athalik Ghazi.</p>
+
+<p>Kashgaria may be said to be a portion of Asia which
+possesses some great advantages of position and very
+considerable resources, but by a singularly hard fortune,
+except for the brief period of Chinese rule in modern
+times, it has been so distracted by intestine disturbances
+that it has retrograded further and further with each year.
+It is quite possible that its natural wealth has been too
+hastily taken for granted, and that it does not possess
+the necessary means of restoring itself in some degree
+to its former position. This is quite possible, but the
+best authorities at our disposal seem to point to a more
+promising conclusion, and to justify us in assuming that
+the position, natural resources, and general condition of
+Kashgar will enable a strong and settled rule to raise
+it into a really important and flourishing confederacy.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a><span>CHAPTER II.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">ETHNOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTION OF KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the extensive region stretching from the Caspian
+and Black Seas to the Kizil Yart and Pamir plateaus,
+and from the Persian Gulf to Siberia, the two great
+families, the Aryan and the Turanian, have in past
+centuries striven for supremacy. The latter, embracing
+in its bosom in this part of the world the more
+turbulent and warlike tribes, succeeded in subjecting
+those who claimed the same parent stock as European
+nations. The Tajik or Persian is the chief representative
+in this region of the Aryan family, and he has now
+for many centuries been the subject of the Turk rulers
+of the various divisions of Western Turkestan. These
+latter are the personifiers of Turanian traditions. The
+Tajik appears to have been subdued, not so much by
+the superiority of his conqueror in the art of war, as by
+his own inclination to lead a peaceful and harmless life.
+The pure Tajik, hardly to be met with now anywhere in
+Asia, except in the mountainous districts of the Hindoo
+Koosh, is represented to us to have been of an imposing
+presence, with a long flowing beard, aquiline nose, and
+large eyes. He is generally tall and graceful; yet in
+Khokand and Bokhara the Tajik is at present viewed
+much as the Saxons were by the Normans. In those
+states, too, a man is spoken of by his race. He is an
+Usbeg, a Kipchak, a Kirghiz, or a Tajik, as the case
+may be, and by this means the rivalry of past ages is
+to some extent preserved down to the present time. It
+is the dissension spread, or rather the destruction of any
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+sympathy between the various races caused, by these
+outward tokens of diversity in origin, that has made
+Western Turkestan the familiar home of intestine disturbance,
+which has in its turn led up to the easy
+dismemberment of the various Khanates by Russian
+intrigue and by Russian force. In Eastern Turkestan
+the rivalry of races has become less bitter, and in nothing
+is this better manifested than in the fact that there a
+man is described by his native town. He may be a Tajik,
+or an Usbeg, or a Kirghiz, or a Kipchak, too, but he is
+only known as a Yarkandi, or a Kashgari. And while
+we are at once struck by this broad and salient difference
+in popular custom, and consequently in popular
+sentiment also, between the Western and Eastern
+divisions of Turkestan, a slight inquiry is sufficient to
+show that the antipathies of the various races towards
+each other have become much more a thing of the past
+in Kashgaria than they have in the Khanates of Khokand
+and its neighbours. At all events, the antipathies
+that still prevail in that state are clearly traceable to
+other causes than Aryan-Turanian hostility, and are
+undoubtedly produced either by religious fanaticism,
+motives of personal ambition, or the hatred roused by
+Chinese pretensions on the one hand, and Khokandian
+on the other, to the supreme control of Kashgaria.
+Bearing these facts clearly in mind, it is evident that
+ethnographical descriptions will not make the political
+relations of the peoples of the state more easily
+intelligible; yet, as matter of historical import, these
+cannot be altogether passed over in silence.</p>
+
+<p>The inhabitants of the little known regions now
+variously known as Jungaria and Eastern Turkestan
+were, until recent years, considered to be of pure Tartar
+origin, and consequently members of the Turanian
+family. There are some still who believe that this
+definition is the most accurate. Others dispute it on
+various grounds, and with much plausibility. There is
+no question that the original inhabitants, historically
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+speaking, were the Oigurs, or Uigurs, and these people
+were certainly Tartars. But frequently the Tajik
+merchants who traded with Kashgar in the earlier
+centuries of the Middle Ages, took up their abode in
+the country, and by degrees a large colony of Tajik
+immigrants was formed on the foundation of the
+original Oigur stock. These Tajiks gradually became
+Tartarised, but they still retained the unmistakable
+characteristics of the Aryan family. The two brothers
+Schlagintweit, and Mr. Shaw following in their footsteps,
+were the first to maintain this view, which is becoming
+generally accepted. We have, therefore, in Kashgar
+the strange spectacle of a Tajik people becoming not
+only unidentifiable from the Turanian stock with which
+it has been intermingled; but we have also a race
+tolerance that is unknown in any other portion of
+Asia. Undoubtedly the hostility of the settled and
+peaceful Andijani immigrant and Kashgari resident to
+the irreclaimable Kirghiz is deep-rooted, and, so long as
+the latter continues a source of danger to all peaceful
+communities, abiding; but even this sentiment, and the
+religious hatred that has at various epochs marked the
+political intercourse of Buddhist and Mahomedan, are
+probably less durable, and susceptible of greater improvement
+in the future, than the race antipathies that
+seem perennially vital among the tribes of Western Asia.
+The vast majority of the inhabitants of Alty Shahr
+are of Tajik descent. In the course of centuries the
+purity of their lineage has been leavened by much intermingling
+with Tartar blood, both at the time of the
+Mongol subjection and of the Chinese. In addition to
+these two great divisions, there are many Afghan
+and Badakshi settlers, who have flocked to Kashgar
+whenever the progress of events seemed to justify the
+expectation that military service in that state would
+prove a remunerative engagement. Many of these
+remained, and they have also left a clear impression on
+the features of the inhabitants. It is, however, to pre-historic
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+times, or certainly to a period lost in the mist
+of history, that we must refer for that general exodus
+of the Aryan family from the Hindoo Koosh and the
+plains of Western Asia into the more secluded prairies
+of Kashgar, which took place when the Turanian
+nations first spread like destroying locusts over the face
+of that continent. It was at this period that Khoten,
+which in its name shows its Aryan origin, was founded.</p>
+
+<p>The great nomadic tribe of the Kirghiz, or Kara
+Kirghiz, as the Russians call them, to distinguish them
+from the Kirghiz of the various hordes who, by the
+way, are not true Kirghiz at all, has at all times played
+a fitful, yet important part in the histories of Khokand,
+Jungaria, and Eastern Turkestan. Preserving their
+independence in the inaccessible region lying west of
+Lake Issik Kul, and along the Kizil Yart plateau and
+range, this tribe has always been a source of trouble to
+its neighbours, whosoever they might be. On various
+occasions, too, they have joined the career of conquest
+to their usual avocation of plunder, and under the few
+great leaders that have arisen amongst them they have
+appeared as conquerors, both of Eastern and Western
+Turkestan. But their achievements have never been of
+a permanent nature. Like the irregular undisciplined
+mass of horsemen which constitute their fighting force,
+their chief strength lay in a sharp and decisive attack.
+They had not the organization or the resources necessary
+for the accomplishment of any conquest of a permanent
+kind. Their incursions, even when most
+formidable and most sweeping, were essentially mere
+marauding onslaughts. Their object was plunder, not
+empire; and having secured the former, they recked
+little of the value of the latter. At one time they were
+able to carry their raids in almost any direction with
+perfect impunity; but as settled governments arose
+around their fastnesses, and curtailed their field of
+operations, what had been a life of adventure through
+simple love of excitement, became a struggle for sheer
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+existence. The region where they dwelt was far too
+barren to support throughout the year even the limited
+numbers of the Kirghiz, and yearly they had to issue
+forth against prepared and disciplined enemies in search
+of the sustenance that, to preserve their existence, had
+to be obtained. But for the intestine quarrels that were
+sapping the life strength of the Asiatic states slowly
+away, there is no doubt that the Kirghiz would have
+been gradually exterminated. Soon, however, they had
+the skill to avail themselves of these disagreements to
+sell their services as soldiers to the highest bidders; and
+although they were not equal to the Kipchak tribes in
+valour, their alliance was considered of importance, and
+on many a dubious occasion sufficed to turn the fortune
+of the day. By such measures of policy their existence
+has been preserved, and at the present time they perform
+much the same functions, and are regarded in much the
+same manner by their neighbours, as in the past.</p>
+
+<p>The Kipchaks, another great tribe, who however are
+scarcely represented at all in Kashgaria, pride themselves
+on being the most select of all the Usbegs, but
+their day of power has passed by, for the present at all
+events. Thirty years ago they were at the height of
+their success, but they incurred the jealousy of other
+Usbeg tribes and of the Kirghiz. Owing to the abilities
+of their great chief, Mussulman Kuli, they succeeded in
+erecting in Khokand a powerful state, which was able
+to restrain the encroachments of Bokhara, at that time
+the great enemy of the former Khanate. But the plots
+that broke out against them in 1853, in conjunction with
+the advance of Russia on the Syr Darya, were crowned
+with success, and with the execution of Mussulman
+Kuli the Kipchak power was completely broken. Since
+that date, however, several of the more distinguished
+leaders who have appeared on the scene, such as Alim
+Kuli and Abdurrahman Aftobatcha, have been members
+of this clan. The eastern portion of the dominion
+of Yakoob Beg is almost exclusively inhabited by
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+Calmucks, or tribes of Calmuck descent. The great
+majority of the inhabitants of Manchuria and Jungaria
+are of Calmuck descent, and even in Russia in Europe
+there are many settlements of this tribe along the
+Volga and the Don. None of these, however, possess
+any political importance except those who inhabit the
+country north of Gobi and between Eastern Turkestan
+and China, and the chief of these are the Khalkas.
+The Calmucks are attached by old associations to the
+Government of Pekin; and, although they have sometimes
+revolted against, and often caused trouble to, the
+Central Government, they have generally acknowledged
+their culpability and submitted to the Chinese authorities.
+In the revolt of the Tungani the Calmucks
+remained true to China, and performed very opportune
+service on various occasions. The Chinese army in
+Eastern Turkestan was mainly recruited from among
+these tribes, who became distinguished from the Tungani
+by their religion and fidelity.</p>
+
+<p>The origin of the Tungani, or Dungans, as the
+Russians call them, is much in dispute; and as they
+played so important a part in the loss of Kashgar and
+Ili by China, as well as in the history of the rule of
+Yakoob Beg, it may be as well to put the facts as they
+stand at some length before the reader. There is no
+question, we believe, that the Chinese in applying the
+term Tungani attach the meaning thereto of Mahomedan.
+There is equal reason for supposing that the
+term Khitay, literally meaning simply Chinese, has
+been applied to the Buddhists by general usage. If
+we acknowledge the validity of these two assumptions&mdash;and,
+so far as we have been able to ascertain, the
+best authorities have adopted them&mdash;there would be
+little difficulty in explaining who the Tungani were.
+Granting these, they would simply be the Mahomedan
+subjects in the eastern portions of China. But others
+believe that the Tungani are a distinct race, presenting
+peculiar ethnological features. According to this version,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+the tribe of the Tungani can be traced back as
+a distinct community to the fifth and sixth centuries,
+when they were seated along the Tian Shan range,
+with their capital at Karashar. The most recent investigations,
+under Colonel Prjevalsky, are believed to show
+no signs of there having been any important cities in this
+quarter. It may be convenient to mention here, that
+at that time they were Buddhists; but when Islamism
+broke over Asia in the eighth century, they were among
+the first to adopt the new tenets. This defection from
+the religion of China brought them into collision with
+the Emperors of Pekin, and many of these Tungani
+were deported into Kansuh and Shensi, where we are
+to suppose they continued a race apart, with their own
+religion and their own code of morality, for more than
+ten centuries. Even granting the possibility of such a
+consistency to a new religion, which history informs us
+was thrust upon them at the point of the sword, it seems
+scarcely credible that we should not hear more of this
+troublesome tribe in Chinese history. Frequent allusions
+are made in imperial edicts and other official proclamations
+to the Tungani, but always in reference to their
+religion, and not in any way as if they were any other
+but heretic Chinamen. Besides, even in this way little is
+heard of the Tungani until the sixteenth and seventeenth
+centuries, when very sharp measures were taken
+against them by the emperors, solely because religious
+propagandists from their ranks were appearing as
+enemies of a Buddhist Government. The theory that
+the Tungani were a people and not a sect is new, but
+it is possible that it may be a true discovery. On the
+other hand, it is far more probable that it is only an
+ingenious attempt at elucidating what appears on the
+face of it to be a simple matter enough. The reader
+must decide for himself between the two versions. If
+the Tungani are to be considered a distinct race, then
+the majority of the inhabitants of Eastern Turkestan
+are not Calmucks, but Tungani; if the view taken here
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+is adopted, then they are Calmucks who have at various
+times adopted Mahomedanism. These are the chief
+tribes of this portion of Central Asia; and in the following
+pages it may be as well to bear in mind that
+Khitay is applied exclusively to the Buddhist or governing
+class, and Tungani to the Mahomedan or subject
+race in Kansuh and its outlying dependencies. As race
+antipathies have not entered during recent times so
+much into the contests of the people of the regions
+immediately under consideration as religions, the difference
+as to the true significance of the term Tungani
+does not materially affect one's view of the general
+question.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a><span>CHAPTER III.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">HISTORY OF KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> great difficulty encountered in giving a description
+of the past history of Kashgar is to evolve, out of the
+series of successive conquests and subjections that have
+marked the existence of that state for almost two
+thousand years, a narrative which shall, without confusing
+the reader with a mere repetition of names that
+convey little meaning, place the chief features of its
+history before us in a light that may make its more
+recent condition intelligible to us. We may say in commencement,
+that those who desire a historical account
+in all its fulness of Kashgar must turn to that contributed
+by Dr. Bellew to the Official Report of Sir
+Douglas Forsyth on his embassy to Yarkand. They
+will there find ample details of the events that took
+place in this region of Central Asia from the commencement
+of our era; but a mere reiteration of the various
+calamities, with brief and intermittent periods of prosperity,
+each wave of which bore so striking a similarity
+to its predecessor, would not serve the purpose we have
+at present in view&mdash;viz., of considering its own history,
+for the purpose of better understanding its relations with
+its neighbours and with China, and how the state consolidated
+by the Athalik Ghazi was constructed on ruins
+handed down by an almost indistinguishable antiquity.</p>
+
+<p>For a considerable number of years anterior to the
+ninth century, the Chinese Empire extended to the
+borders of Khokand and Cashmere. But the dissensions
+that marked the latter years of the Tang dynasty
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+were not long in producing such weakness at the extremity
+of this vast empire that the subject races and
+their proper ruling families were enabled to obtain
+either their personal liberty or their lost positions once
+more, unhappily without in any case achieving with
+the severance of their connection with China any perceptible
+amelioration in their lot&mdash;indeed, on almost
+every occasion only binding themselves with harder
+fetters, and sinking into a deeper state of servitude.
+When the petty princelets of Kashgar, Yarkand,
+Turfan, and the rest broke away from their allegiance
+to Pekin, and when the imperial resources were unable
+to coerce their rebellious subjects, the whole country
+passed under the hands of their feudatories, who
+split up into innumerable factions, waged continuous
+war, and sacrificed the happiness and welfare of the
+subject people to a desire to promote their own individual
+interests. As the barons and counts of Italy in
+the Middle Ages devastated some of the fairest provinces
+of Europe, so these Oigur princes fought for
+their own hand in the valleys of the Artosh and the Ili.
+It is very possible that this state of things would have
+continued until China became sufficiently strong and
+settled to reassert once more her dormant rights over
+her lost provinces, but that a new force appeared on the
+western frontiers of Kashgar. As early as 676 the
+Arabs, under Abdulla Zizad, had crossed over from
+Persia, and were carrying destruction and terror in
+their course along the banks of the Oxus. At that
+moment a beautiful and gifted queen, named Khaton,
+ruled for her son in Bokhara. She had not long been
+left a widow when her country was threatened by this
+unexpected and terrible invasion. Although assistance
+came to the queen from all the neighbouring States,
+including Kashgar, she was defeated twice in the open
+field, and compelled to seek safety within the walls of
+her capital. But the Arab leader was unable to take
+the city by storm, and slowly retired, with a large
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+number of captives and an immense quantity of booty,
+back to Persia. Some years later the Arabs again
+returned, but withdrew on the payment of a heavy
+indemnity. Another chief, Kutaiba, was still more
+successful, for on one occasion he carried fire and sword
+through Kashgar to beyond Kucha. This was the first
+occasion on which the doctrines of Mahomed had been
+carried into the realms of China, and with so cogent
+an argument as the sword it is not wonderful that some
+hold was secured on the country. Subsequent expeditions
+in the next few centuries strengthened this
+beginning, and it was not long before the ruling classes
+of Kashgar became infected with the new doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>In the tenth century, Satuk Bughra Khan, the ruling
+prince of Kashgar, who had been converted to Islam,
+forced his people to adopt that religion, although it is
+tolerably clear that up to this time there had been no
+acknowledgment of supremacy to the representative of
+Mahomed on earth. A disunited state, which had on
+several occasions felt the heavy hand of the authority of
+its generals, and at whose very gates its power was consolidated,
+could not but be in some sort of dependence
+to the stronger power, as there was no ally to be found
+sufficiently powerful to protect it, now that the Chinese
+had retrogressed into Kansuh. Towards the end of
+the tenth century the Mahomedans met with a series of
+reverses from the Manchoo and Khoten troops, who still
+preserved their relations, political and commercial, with
+China. It was in the neighbourhood of Yangy Hissar
+that their general, Khalkhalu, inflicted the most serious
+defeat on the Mahomedan rulers of Kashgar, but within
+the next twenty years, assistance having come from
+Khokand, these defeats were retrieved, and Khoten
+itself for the first time passed under the rule of Islam.
+The family of Bughra Khan was now firmly established
+as rulers of Eastern Turkestan, and their limits were
+almost identical with those of the late Yakoob Beg.</p>
+
+<p>The Kara Khitay, who had migrated from the country
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+bordering on the Amoor and the north of China, after
+long wanderings, had settled in the western parts of
+Jungaria, and, having founded the city of Ili, in course
+of time formed, in union with some Turkish tribes, a
+powerful and cohesive administration. Their chief was
+styled Gorkhan, Lord of Lords, and their religion was
+Buddhism. It was of this tribe, according to some,
+that the celebrated Prester John, or King John, was
+supposed to be the chief in the Middle Ages. Some
+neighbours who had been harassed by predatory tribes
+came to Gorkhan for assistance, which was willingly
+conceded; but, having successfully repulsed the Kipchaks
+and other tribes, this leader did not withdraw from the
+country he had occupied as a friend and ally. Not only
+did he then annex Kashgar and Khoten, but he crossed
+the Pamir into the province of Ferghana, and in a short
+period brought Bokhara, Samarcand, and Tashkent under
+his dominion. This extensive empire was of very brief
+duration however, and civil war was waged for more
+than half a century after the first successes of Gorkhan,
+in which Khiva, or Khwaresm, and the Kara Khitay
+fought for supremacy. A chief of the Naiman tribe of
+Christians, Koshluk by name, then entered the lists
+against the aged Gorkhan, who was, after some hard
+fighting, defeated and captured. This was in the year
+1214. Koshluk's triumph was also, however, of very
+brief duration, for he now came into contact with one
+of the most formidable antagonists that the soil of Asia
+has ever produced, Genghis Khan.</p>
+
+<p>The Mongols or Mughols began to appear as a distinct
+tribe about the same time that the Kara Khitay
+migrated to Jungaria, and as early as the commencement
+of the twelfth century they had carried destruction into
+the Chinese provinces of Shensi and Kansuh. When
+Genghis Khan appeared upon the scene he found the
+tribe which he was destined to lead to such great
+triumphs in a state of singular strength, and its neighbours
+either at discord among themselves or only just
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+recovering from a long period of anarchy. The Chinese
+were particularly divided at that moment, and Genghis
+Khan, who had family connections in that empire, soon
+found it an easy task to lead successful inroads into the
+heart of his rich but defenceless neighbour. Genghis
+Khan was born at Dylon Yulduc, in the year 1154.
+His father, Mysoka Bahadur, was a great warrior, and
+waged several successful wars with the Tartars. The
+earlier years of Genghis Khan were occupied exclusively
+in overcoming the difficulties of his own position.
+His tribe, divided into several distinct bodies, formed
+only one confederacy when a foe had to be encountered
+in the field. It required years to remove the dislike
+they experienced at submission to a distinct authority;
+and it was only when the renown of his military
+achievements threw a halo over his name that these
+tribes could be induced to acknowledge a supremacy
+which they had become powerless to resist. But during
+these years, when he led a life unknown and insignificant
+as the chief of a small nomad clan, he was all
+the time preparing for a wider career, and for a more
+extended authority. It was while he was residing in
+the remote district round the salt springs of Baljuna
+that he drew up the code on which his administrative
+system was founded. It was based on the fundamental
+principle of obedience to the head, on the maintenance
+of order and sobriety in the ranks of the
+warriors, and on the equal participation in the spoils
+of battle by all; but its regulations were so strict on
+the former points, and the gain of the individual had
+to be so completely sacrificed for the advantage of the
+many, that at first the establishment of this code of
+order had rather the effect of driving his followers from
+him, than of attracting to his standard zealots capable
+of the conquest of a world. It was not until the year
+1203, when he was nearly forty-nine years of age, that
+Genghis Khan succeeded in bringing all the Mongol
+tribes under his leadership. No sooner had he accomplished
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+this much than he embarked on military
+enterprises, which, in the course of a very few years,
+placed the greater part of Asia at his disposal. Having
+subjugated various Tartar and Tangut tribes, he included
+them in his military organization, and by making
+them embrace his system of compulsory service in the
+army, he found himself in the possession of an enormous
+following. Genghis Khan therefore ruled at the
+time we have specified over Kashgar, including Khoten,
+Jungaria, and the Tangut country; and there was no
+force capable of opposing his except, in the east China,
+and in the west the government of Khiva, at this period
+omnipotent in Western Turkestan. The rumours which
+reached the Shah of Khwaresm of the formation of this
+new confederacy in Mugholistan induced him to send
+an embassy to discover the true facts of the case, and
+accordingly, while Genghis Khan was prosecuting a
+war against the Chinese, there arrived in his camp the
+emissaries of Western Asia. Haughty and imperious
+as this conqueror undoubtedly was, he received the
+embassy affably, and with expressions of the deepest
+friendship. He sent them back with rich presents and
+the following characteristic message:&mdash;"I am King of
+the East. Thou art King of the West. Let merchants
+come and go between us and exchange the products of
+our countries." In furtherance of this wish he sent a
+mission composed of merchants and officials to represent
+the advantages that would be derived from mutual
+intercourse. But the Shah of Khiva, either incredulous
+of the formidableness of the adversary with whom he
+had to deal, or mistaking his own strength, did not
+reciprocate the amicable expressions of Genghis Khan,
+nor, when the merchants who had been despatched to his
+country were murdered, did he make any offer of reparation.
+Such treatment would not be tolerated by any
+civilized ruler of the nineteenth century, much less was it
+brooked by an irresponsible conqueror, whose will was
+his sole law, in the thirteenth. As soon as his campaign
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+with China had closed with success, Genghis Khan
+made every preparation for the punishment of this act
+of treachery. It was then that Genghis Khan, with an
+armed horde of many hundred thousands, burst upon
+the astonished peoples of Western Asia like a meteor
+from the east. It was then that some of the fairest
+regions of the earth were given over to a soldiery to
+devastate, a soldiery who had raised the work of destruction
+to the level of one of the fine arts; and whose
+handiwork in Bokhara, Balkh, Samarcand, Khiva and
+the lost cities of the desert, is to be seen clearly imprinted
+in the ruins which mark the site of ancient
+capitals, even at the present moment, 700 years after
+the Tartar conqueror swept all resistance from his
+path. Afghanistan, and the mountain ranges which are
+now considered to be impassable by Russians, did not
+retard the progress of this "Scourge of God." Cabul,
+Candahar, Ghizni fell to the warriors of far distant
+Mongolia, as they fell not forty years ago to British
+valour, and as they must again fall when the onset shall
+be made with equal intrepidity and with equal discipline.
+And not content with having defaced the map
+of Asia, with having converted rich and populous cities
+into masses of ruins, and with having depopulated
+regions once prolific in all that makes life enjoyable,
+Genghis Khan carried the terror of his name into
+the most remote recesses of the Hindoo Koosh. He
+wintered in the district of Swat on our north-west
+frontier, a territory which is quite unknown to us
+except by hearsay, and which has only been occupied
+by the Mongol and Macedonian conquerors. From his
+headquarters on the banks of the Panjkora he sent
+messengers to Delhi; and it is uncertain whether he
+did not meditate the addition of an Indian triumph to
+those already obtained.</p>
+
+<p>A rebellion in the far eastern portion of his dominions
+distracted his attention from the Indus, and he
+was compelled to hasten with all speed to quell in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+person the rising that was jeopardising his position
+in the seat of his power. He hastily broke up from
+his quarters in Swat, and, by the valley of the Kunar
+and Chitral, he entered Kashgar, through the Baroghil
+Pass. Although he suffered much loss from a journey
+across mountain roads, which were scarcely practicable
+in the early spring, he succeeded in reaching Yarkand,
+with his main body, and hastening across Turkestan
+arrived at Karakoram, his capital, in time to quell the
+disturbance. After this his life was spent in conquering
+China, a feat which he never accomplished. But in
+several campaigns, extending over a period of about
+twenty years, he worsted the Imperial troops so continually,
+that before his death, in 1227, he had occupied
+all the northern provinces of that empire, with Pekin,
+and left to his son and successor, Ogdai Khan, the task
+of completing the work which he had commenced. On
+the death of Genghis Khan, his vast possessions were
+divided amongst his children, and Kashgar, including
+Jungaria, Khwaresm, and Afghanistan, fell to the lot
+of Chaghtai Khan. This ruler was able to hold during
+his life the extensive territory he had succeeded to;
+but on his death dissensions broke out in all quarters of
+the country, and produced a fresh distribution of the
+various provinces. It may be mentioned that, although
+Chaghtai was a fanatical Buddhist and a confirmed
+debauchee, he was a prudent and sagacious ruler, and
+no unworthy successor to his distinguished father. The
+dissensions that broke out on his decease continued,
+with more or less violence, for a period of almost 100
+years after that event took place, and they finally only
+received a momentary solution in the formation of a
+new kingdom of Mugholistan, or Jattah Ulus, as it
+was more specifically called, under one of Chaghtai's
+descendants.</p>
+
+<p>As briefly and as clearly as possible, we will endeavour
+to lay before the reader the chief events of this troubled
+epoch, when the numerous progeny of Genghis Khan
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+warred throughout the whole extent of Central Asia,
+and a term was only at last placed to their restlessness
+by their disappearance. In the first place, it may be as
+well to mention, that the religions of Christ, Buddha,
+and Mahomed, were equally tolerated in Eastern
+Turkestan during the greater part of this period. The
+Arab invasion and the advance of Islam, had been
+hurled back beyond Bokhara "the Holy," by the
+victorious arms of the great Buddhist conqueror, Genghis
+Khan; and for a long period after the Mongol
+conquests, little was heard of attempts at conversion to
+the tenets of the "true Prophet." But it must not
+be supposed that, although Genghis Khan, in the sack
+of Bokhara, had almost exterminated the race of Mahomedan
+priests, he was disposed to stamp out the new
+heresy from his realms. Having crushed its power in
+the field, he was quite content to let it live on or die
+out, so long as his imperial or personal interests were
+not affected. So we have the strange picture before us,
+of the three great doctrines of the earth flourishing side
+by side in Eastern Turkestan in the fourteenth century.
+The Nestorian Christians of Kashgar, who in the time
+of Marco Polo were rich and flourishing, were obliged
+later on to succumb to the violent measures of the other
+members of the community, and have entirely disappeared
+for many centuries.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after the death of Chaghtai Khan, Kaidu, a
+great-grandson of Genghis, obtained the throne of
+Kashgar and Yarkand; and a few years later on, by a
+skilful piece of diplomacy, backed up by force, added
+thereto the greater part of Khokand and Bokhara.
+His triumph was, however, of brief duration, and he
+was displaced by other competitors. Dava Khan, the
+son of Burac, the great-grandson of Chaghtai, had been
+appointed governor of Khoten, but his ambition was
+not satisfied with less than the throne of Western
+Turkestan also. He eventually obtained his desire;
+but in a rash moment he threw himself in the path of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+the Chinese Emperor, Timour Khan, who was returning
+from a raid carried almost to the gates of Lahore. He
+was defeated somewhere in the neighbourhood of
+Maralbashi, and was compelled to acknowledge the
+supremacy of China. He is of some note to us, as
+having been the father of Azmill Khoja, who was
+selected as ruler by the people themselves, about the
+year 1310, and from whom descend that line of Khoja
+kings of Kashgar, who have clung to their hereditary
+claims for a longer time than any other royal Central
+Asian house. The last of the Chaghtai Khans who
+held the sceptre with any effective purpose, was Kazan
+Ameer. On his death another period of trouble broke
+out, and military governors and rival princelets of
+dubious titles advanced their pretensions to the vacant
+seat. Up to this all the rulers had, however, been
+Buddhists. Toghluc Timour, one of the few remaining
+representatives of the Genghis families, had only been
+saved by the pity of a leading man in Kashgar, from
+one of the most extensive massacres of his kinsmen, and
+for years he was obliged to lead an uncertain existence
+in the mountains or deserts bordering on the state.
+His associations were all Buddhist; but one day he was
+so struck by the definition of the "true faith" given
+by the descendant of a Mahomedan priest, spared by
+Genghis Khan at the destruction of Bokhara, that he
+made a vow to become a Mussulman when he had
+regained his rights. Not long after this the turn of
+events in Kashgar made people seek for some person
+with recognized claims to be their ruler, and none in
+this respect surpassed Toghluc Timour. He, on succeeding
+to the throne, openly owned his conversion to
+Islam, and in a few years he was gradually imitated
+by all the leading chiefs of Turkestan. From this
+time downwards to the present day, the religion of the
+majority in this state has been Mahomedanism, except
+perhaps during the Chinese rule, when the number of
+Chinese merchants, officials, and soldiers, put the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+minority of the followers of Buddha on a par with those
+of the rival religion. Toghluc died in 1362.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time that the second great
+conqueror of Asia appeared upon the scene. Timour
+was born in 1333 in the Shahrisebz suburb of Kish.
+He was the son of Turghay, governor of that district
+and chief of the Birlas tribe, and on the death of his
+father he himself became governor of Kish also.
+During his earlier years he was hospitably received at
+the Court of Kazan Ameer, and that ruler, in addition to
+giving him several high and distinguished appointments,
+married him to his beautiful granddaughter Olja Turkan
+Khaton. Timour did not continue long in favour at
+Court. His restless spirit impelled him to fields of
+greater activity than any the Ameer could, or indeed felt
+disposed to, place at his disposal. He openly mutinied
+against the central authority in his government of
+Kish, and on being overthrown by the troops of the
+state, he sought safety with his wife among the
+Turcomans of the Khivan desert. Among these
+uncertain nomads he felt scarcely secure, and collecting
+round him a small band of desperadoes, he entered
+upon a more ambitious enterprise by undertaking a
+marauding expedition into the Persian province of
+Seistan. This was attended with considerable success,
+but he himself was wounded in the foot by an arrow.
+From the effects of this wound he never completely
+recovered, and was known henceforth as Timour Lang,
+Timour the Lame, whence the well-known name of
+Tamerlane. The <i>éclat</i> obtained by this marauding
+expedition stood him in good stead, for shortly afterwards
+he was able to raise a sufficient force to invade
+Tashkent. He occupied the whole of what is now
+Russian Khokand including Ferghana, and he placed a
+fresh occupant on the throne, Kabil Shah, in 1363. In
+the following years he contended for supremacy with
+another chief named Husen, and in 1369 had so far
+been victorious that he threw off the mask, and declared
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+himself king. He made Samarcand his capital, and
+converted that once populous city into the wonder and
+admiration of Western Asia. Having settled his
+internal affairs, he commenced operations against the
+states lying beyond his border. The mountaineers of
+Badakshan were the first to incur his wrath, and after
+several stubborn battles they were obliged to acknowledge
+his supremacy. He then turned his attention
+to his northern frontiers, beyond which the Jattah
+princes reigned in Jungaria. He overcame their prince,
+Kamaruddin, in several encounters, but not with complete
+success until his final campaign against him in
+1390. As he advanced they retired to the fastnesses east
+of Lake Issik Kul, and only reissued from their hiding-places
+when the invader had withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p>To return to Kashgar, on the death of Toghluc, his
+son Khize Khoja was displaced and did not regain
+possession of his kingdom till 1383, when he was thirty
+years of age. He was a stanch Mussulman, and was
+on terms of as much amity and as close alliance with
+Timour as it was possible for any neighbour, wishing to
+preserve his independence, to be. Allied as he was with,
+yet not participating in the wars of Timour, against the
+Jattahs, he suffered in common with those people from
+the expedition of 1389&ndash;90, when both sides of the Tian
+Shan were ravaged by the armies of that ruler. Although
+for the next fifteen years they maintained friendly
+relations, it can easily be imagined that Khize Khoja
+was not very comfortable with so formidable a suzerain
+just over his frontiers. The irksomeness of the position
+is well illustrated by the orders transmitted to Khize
+Khoja by Timour, to have corn planted and cattle collected
+at certain places for the immense army which he
+was levying for the invasion of China. It was while
+engaged in fulfilling these commands, that news reached
+the ruler of Kashgar that this "Scourge of God" had
+died suddenly on the 5th of February, 1405. Khize
+Khoja himself survived but a short time afterwards.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+For the second time within the short space of 150 years
+had the possessions of a great conqueror to undergo
+the process of redistribution. In Timour's case it was
+simpler than it had been in that of Genghis Khan, for
+the former ruler left no worthy representative of his
+cause as the Mongol conqueror had in Ogdai and
+Chaghtai. The branches of the great family of
+Genghis struck root so deeply, that down to modern
+times he has had descendants who perpetuate his name,
+but Timour left none such. With the death of his
+favourite son Jehangir, his hopes of having a worthy
+successor expired.</p>
+
+<p>Kashgar was in particular the scene of confusion and
+trouble, and it was not until about 1445 that any settled
+government was attained, when Seyyid Ali, grandson of
+the aged and patriotic minister Khudadar, restored some
+order and cohesion to the distracted country for a short
+period. He died in 1457. During these years Yunus,
+king of Jungaria, played a very prominent part in all
+the disturbances that were occurring on his borders.
+He is represented to have been a very enlightened
+prince, and emissaries from foreign nations returned
+from his court relating with surprise how they had
+found a courteous and refined man where they expected
+to have seen a coarse and savage Mongol. While
+Yunus ruled in Jungaria another striking individual was
+predominant in Kashgar. Ababakar, son of Saniz, who
+was the son of Seyyid Ali, ruler of Kashgar, was one of
+the few sovereigns of that state whose acts entitle them
+to consideration. During a long and troubled tenure of
+power he had the good fortune to overcome many
+difficulties, and although his career was to become
+clouded before his death, the brilliant years that preceded
+the catastrophe justify us in considering his career
+for a little while. He was a great athlete, hunter and
+soldier, and was so favoured by his mother on that
+account that he distanced his brethren in the race for
+supremacy. As governor of Khoten he soon absorbed
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+Yarkand, and long and furious were the wars he
+waged with Hydar, the ruler of Kashgar, who was
+assisted by Yunus of Jungaria. Nor, although successful
+on several occasions in the field against the allied
+forces, could Ababakar hope to overcome the huge armies
+at the disposal of Yunus; and it was not until Hydar
+himself foolishly broke off from Yunus, that Ababakar
+succeeded in asserting his claim to all Eastern Turkestan.
+War then broke out between Hydar and Yunus, and the
+latter with the assistance of large reinforcements from
+Jungaria overthrew and captured his former ally. But
+these dissensions favoured the cause of Ababakar, and
+on the death of Yunus in 1486, his possession of
+Kashgar became undisputed. The first serious danger
+with which he was menaced after his complete possession
+of Kashgar, was in 1499, when Ahmad, the son of
+Yunus, or Alaja the "slayer," as he was generally
+called, invaded his territory at the head of the Jattah
+Mongols. The campaign was in the commencement
+indecisive, but Ababakar before long triumphed over
+his northern invader.</p>
+
+<p>During the next fifteen years Ababakar ruled in peace
+and prosperity in Kashgar, accumulating great riches
+and presenting an object of attraction to his covetous
+neighbours. During these years the country, although
+ruled in an arbitrary way, flourished, and, as one of the
+native chronicles put it, "A traveller could go from
+Andijan to Hamil on the borders of China without fear
+of molestation, and without having to make an extra
+long march in order to find a place wherein to rest and
+obtain refreshment." But in 1513 a storm broke upon
+his country that resulted in his complete overthrow. Said,
+son of Ahmad and brother of Mansur, who was ruling in
+Jungaria, undertook the invasion of Kashgar in that
+year, and it was not long before he occupied Kashgar,
+which, however, Ababakar left but a heap of ruins.
+His advance on Yangy Hissar was opposed, but, having
+defeated the army of Kashgar before that city, he occupied
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+it without any further opposition, and thus secured
+what has been called the key of Yarkand as well as of
+Kashgar. For some months Ababakar remained shut
+up in Yarkand, but on the approach of Said's army he
+abandoned that position and fled to Khoten. But not
+long afterwards he retired still further into the mountainous
+country south-east of Kashgar, and halted some
+time at Karanghotagh. But being first plundered and
+then deserted by his attendants, he withdrew into the
+valleys and deserts of the Tibetan table-land. For many
+months he wandered, half-starved and solitary, in this
+deserted region, and at last it was reported that he had
+been found murdered by some of the mountaineers.
+Such was the end of the once magnificent Ababakar, a
+prince who in his fortunes reminds us very much of the
+great Darius. That he was avaricious is clear to those
+who read of the great treasures he had stored away;
+that he was bloodthirsty and cruel is impossible of
+denial; but that he possessed in his earlier years many
+of the virtues, with some of the vices, of a great ruler
+is equally incontestable. His son Jehangir, whom he
+had left in command at Yarkand, on the approach of the
+army of Said fled to Sanju, and was in a few months
+captured and executed. About this epoch the third
+great Asiatic conqueror was appearing on the scene.
+Babur was born in 1481, and was chosen to succeed
+his father Uman Sheikh on the throne of Khokand,
+by the nobles of that state, when he was only twelve
+years of age. This conqueror of India influenced but
+indirectly the fortunes or Kashgar. His career was in
+another sphere, and it is not necessary here to enter
+into any description of his life, such as has been given
+of his predecessors Genghis Khan and Timour.</p>
+
+<p>Said, having overcome Ababakar, employed himself
+in extending his rule over the neighbouring states.
+He was seized with the desire of occupying that mountainous
+region, which is divided into almost as many
+petty states as it contains mountain chains, lying between
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+our Indian frontier and the Pamir and Badakshan.
+But although he employed all his resources in endeavouring
+to subject the Kafirs of Bolor, or Kafiristan
+as it is now called, he was unable to make any
+permanent additions in this direction. In other years
+he carried fire and sword into Tibet and Cashmere; and
+it was when returning from one of these expeditions,
+in the year 1532, that he expired from the effects of the
+rarefied atmosphere, near the Karakoram pass. His
+death was the signal for the outbreak of fresh disturbances.
+His legitimate sons were ousted by Rashid,
+the son of Said by a slave, who had already distinguished
+himself as a general in the wars against
+Kafiristan and Tibet, and on the death of Rashid after
+a brief reign, the confusion became, if possible, worse
+confounded. It would be tedious in the extreme to
+follow the variations that now took place. Benedict
+Goes, a Portuguese missionary and traveller, found a
+ruler named Mahomed Khan on the throne in 1603,
+by whom he was hospitably received; but as he had
+placed the sister of the Khan, when returning from a
+pilgrimage to Mecca, under an obligation to him, this is
+scarcely a fair criterion either of the personal merits of
+this ruler, or of the state of civilization to which the
+country had attained.</p>
+
+<p>It was now that the Khoja family appeared prominently
+upon the scene. Two factions were playing the
+parts of Montagu and Capulet in Eastern Turkestan in
+the earlier years of the seventeenth century. They were
+known as the Aktaghluc and Karataghluc, and in the
+course of their strife the leader of the former called in
+to his aid the Khoja Kalar of Khodjent, a descendant
+of Azmill before mentioned. It was in the year 1618
+that this Khoja first came to Kashgar, and his grandson,
+Hadayatulla, was the chief means of attracting
+the affections of the people to this family. That
+veneration has not disappeared to-day, and the Hazrat
+Afak, as he is generally spoken of, is scarcely inferior in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+the eyes of the people to Mahomed himself. The
+great miracles he is reported to have wrought, and the
+peculiar sanctity which attached to him during his life,
+gave him complete ascendancy throughout the country,
+and before his death he was entrusted with the supreme
+authority. His son, Yahya or Khan Khoja, succeeded
+him during his lifetime, but was murdered in a riot
+a few months after the death of Hadayatulla. Then
+recommenced with fresh vigour the old series of disturbances.
+Aspirant after aspirant appeared in the political
+arena, but, as each had little claim to lead on account
+of original merit, a successful rival always was forthcoming,
+and so this wearying cycle continued until
+1720.</p>
+
+<p>The course of the history of Kashgar has now been
+brought down to the commencement of the eighteenth
+century, during which a fresh change occurred in the
+history of the country by the Chinese conquest. It may
+be well, therefore, before narrating that event and the
+causes which immediately produced it, to consider the
+chief lessons taught us by the history of Eastern
+Turkestan, as revealed in the preceding pages. The
+most cursory reader must have been struck by the fact,
+that only twice in the course of eight centuries did the
+country secure a firm and settled government, and they
+were when two conquerors, Genghis Khan and
+Tamerlane, reduced every semblance of authority to
+one bare level of subjection. At fitful moments there
+arose, indeed, some leader, Yunus, Ababakar, or the
+first Khojas, capable of preserving for a few years his
+frontiers against the inroads of hostile neighbours, and
+of maintaining an outward show of prosperity and
+tranquillity to foreign travellers; but even such gleams
+of sunshine as these were transitory on the dark horizon
+of the condition of mankind in Central Asia. With
+the fall of each pretender, too, hopes of an improvement
+became fainter in the breasts of the people; and when
+the successors of the Khoja saint showed themselves
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+not less amenable to the errors and frailties of their
+predecessors than any past ruler had been, it was to some
+extraneous circumstance, we may feel sure, that the
+people looked for aid. There is an old saying in this
+part of the world, that when "the people's tithe of
+bricks is full, then comes a Moses in the land;" and it
+cannot be doubted that in the year 1720 the people of
+Kashgar had suffered much and for so long, that relief,
+so that it came effectually from some quarter or another,
+could not be otherwise than welcome. But the Moses
+who had been, for centuries almost, expected, had as yet
+not proved forthcoming, and as "hope deferred maketh
+the heart sick," so had the Kashgari lost the courage
+even to look forward to a period when their life of
+misery, under oppressive tyrants and exorbitant taxation,
+aggravated by every form of peculation in its levy,
+might be changed for a more favourable state of being.
+There can be no doubt that if the chaos which reigned
+throughout Jungaria and Kashgar had continued
+much longer those vast regions would have been completely
+exhausted. As it was the population decreased
+in alarming proportions, and the wealth and general
+resources of the country disappeared with no apparent
+means of supplying the gap. What is, perhaps, most
+surprising of all is that all these later rulers seem to
+have lived in a sort of fools' paradise with regard to
+the resources of their state. The thought never seems
+to have occurred to them that there must be an end
+some day or other to a realm distracted by continual
+wars and sedition, and that subjects who have been
+tyrannised over for centuries will at last rise up in arms
+and teach their tyrants, in the words of the poet, "how
+much the wretched dare." These Khans or Ameers of
+Central Asia are not worthy of one moment's consideration
+for their own sake; but, as some account of
+them is a proper preparation for the modern history of
+Kashgar, they have been described in this chapter.
+From the disappearance of Chinese authority in Central
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+and Western Asia in the eighth and ninth centuries,
+down to the commencement of the eighteenth century,
+the history of Kashgar, in common with that of its
+neighbours, was a series of misfortunes. There is
+nothing to attract our sympathies in any of the rulers,
+with the exception perhaps of Yunus; and all our commiseration
+is monopolised for the unhappy races who
+peopled that region. We therefore have arrived at this
+crisis in a fit state to appreciate the feelings of the
+Kashgari at the changes that occurred in the eighteenth
+century; and before we consider, in a fresh chapter,
+those alterations we may close this without regret at
+the disappearance of a long line of Central Asian
+Khans, who possessed scarcely one redeeming quality
+among many vices.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a><span>CHAPTER IV.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE CONQUEST OF KASHGAR BY CHINA.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> continuing the narrative of the events that took
+place in Kashgar after the year 1720, until it fell into
+the hands of the Chinese in 1760, it may be as well to
+consider briefly the history of China, in order that it
+may be intelligible to us how that power was induced
+to undertake such far distant enterprises, and how,
+moreover, it was able to accomplish them successfully.
+In the earlier years of the seventeenth century the
+dynasty of Ming was seated on the throne of Pekin,
+but its power had been shaken to its foundations by
+repeated disasters in wars with the Mantchoo Tartars,
+who had wrested the province of Leaou Tung from the
+Emperor Wan-leh, before his death in 1620. The
+Mantchoos are said to have been the descendants of the
+Mongol conquerors of the thirteenth century, who had
+been forced to take refuge in the wilds north of China
+when the native Chinese rose up and destroyed their
+power. Whether this very plausible suggestion be true
+or not, or whether, as some affirm, these were a new
+race issuing from the frozen regions of Kamschatka and
+driven south by the necessity for obtaining sustenance for
+their increasing numbers, matters little for our present
+purpose. It is certain that they were a warlike people at
+this time, and that they could bring considerable numbers
+into the field, and it is very probable that, when
+they had obtained some success, their ranks were swollen
+by recruits from their Tartar kinsmen of Eastern Jungaria.
+On the death of the Chinese Emperor Wan-leh,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+dissensions broke out in China as to his successor, and
+in the struggle that ensued the Mantchoos were invited
+in to support the cause of one of the claimants. Their
+aid turned the scale in his favour; but when the fortunes
+of war had been clearly manifested, the Mantchoos
+showed no disposition to take their departure as had
+been stipulated. As the Saxons in our own history,
+and the Mongols in the Chinese had acted, so now did
+the Mantchoos, and in 1644 their first Emperor
+Chuntche was installed in the imperial dignities, as
+the first of the present ruling dynasty of Tatsing, or
+"sublimely pure," When Chuntche was crowned by
+his victorious soldiery, it must not be supposed that he
+had conquered the whole of China. During the seventeen
+years of his reign he was constantly engaged in
+warring with the native Chinese forces; but always
+with invariable success. In 1661 Kanghi, his son,
+ascended the throne, and by a series of judicious measures
+and successful enterprises, firmly maintained the
+position won in China by his father. It was during
+this brilliant reign that Tibet was annexed to the
+Chinese Empire, and from Cochin-China and the frontiers
+of Birma to the River Amoor there was none to
+question the power of the Mantchoo Government. It
+cannot be doubted that the conquest of Tibet opened up
+fresh ideas in the minds of the Chinese as to their right
+to rule in Eastern Turkestan; and with the re-assertion
+of their old suzerainty over the Tibetan table-land, the
+remembrance of a similar claim, at a far distant epoch,
+over Jungaria and Turkestan would be forced on the
+minds of the Chinese people, until some ambitious ruler
+or viceroy might avail himself of the opportunity of
+distinction by acquiescing in, and giving effect to, the
+popular desire. Kanghi was too prudent to jeopardize
+his recently consolidated state by expeditions either
+into Jungaria or Turkestan; and was quite satisfied
+with the respect shown to his empire by the Eleuthian
+princes of those regions. On Kanghi's death, in 1721,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+his son, Yung-Ching, came to the throne, and during
+his short reign, the example of his two predecessors not
+to interfere in the troubles of the states lying beyond
+Kansuh, was closely followed. Yung-Ching died in
+1735, and thus made way for his ambitious and warlike
+son, Keen-Lung. When Keen-Lung first commenced
+to reign for himself he found that he was
+irresponsible ruler of a most powerful empire, at peace
+within itself, and satisfied to all outward seeming with
+its <i>de facto</i> government. His treasury was full; the
+country was, perhaps, at its very highest point of prosperity,
+and the sovereign had only to maintain in this
+wealth and vigour the nation which had been brought
+to such a pitch by the wisdom of his predecessors.
+To a warlike monarch, however, the career of ruler of a
+thriving, peace-loving, and domestic people, has never
+been a palatable one, and Keen-Lung thought, as have
+many other great sovereigns of our own age, that the
+only use of a wealthy and numerous subject race was to
+enable the ruler to undertake high-sounding enterprises,
+and to spread the terror of his name through distant
+regions. The reputation and the real strength of the
+Chinese Empire were so great at this time in Asia, that
+no single power, or even any possible confederacy, would
+have thought of entering the lists against it. Keen-Lung
+had, therefore, no just cause for hostilities with
+the neighbouring states, as they were always too willing
+to offer the amplest reparation for any cause of offence
+to the Imperial dignity. The conquest of Turkestan
+was therefore an object with which he would heartily
+sympathise; and when we remember his warlike disposition,
+and the exact condition of China at the time,
+possessing a superabundance of wealth, and of numbers
+sufficient to achieve far more difficult enterprises than
+the one in question, it is easier to understand the eagerness
+with which Keen-Lung intervened in the affairs of
+Jungaria, when the following opportunity, which we
+are about to narrate, offered for so doing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is now time to return to Kashgar and narrate the
+events that were happening in that troubled district.
+The feud between the Aktaghluc and Karataghluc
+factions reached its height when Afak, who had been
+placed on the throne of Yarkand by the Calmucks, under
+Galdan, the chief representative of the Aktaghluc,
+succeeded in expelling all the prominent supporters of
+the rival clan. Afak ruled for some years, but with
+difficulty maintained himself in some parts of Kashgar,
+against the Calmucks, Kirghiz, and Kipchak. His
+sons had no better fortune, and the state was finally
+divided between a Kipchak and a Kirghiz leader.
+These quarrelled between themselves, but happily they
+each expired in the first encounter. Acbash, one of the
+sons of Afak, was executed at Yangy Hissar in the
+course of this contention; but he had previously called
+in to his assistance from Khodjent, in Khokand, a
+Khoja, Danyal, of the rival Karataghluc faction. This
+roused the enmity of the more bitter among the Aktaghluc,
+and, on this, Khoja Ahmad was brought in to
+represent their interests. Danyal was besieged in
+Yarkand, but, with the assistance of a contingent of
+Kirghiz, he was able to repulse his assailants. But,
+although successful in the field, Danyal was compelled
+shortly afterwards to flee, and leave his rival in possession
+of the state. He fled to the Calmucks, in Jungaria,
+and pleaded so well, that an army was lent him
+to regain Kashgar. Victory attended this expedition,
+but the Calmuck leader, who had captured Ahmad at
+the siege of Kashgar, instead of placing Danyal in
+power, took both him and his rival as prisoners to his
+capital of Ili. With so forcible a settlement of the
+question, little room was left for useless complaining to
+the ambitious Danyal, and from this time down to the
+Chinese conquest, the Calmuck rulers of Ili asserted
+their right to supremacy over Eastern Turkestan.
+Danyal, himself, was appointed, some years later on,
+governor of Kashgar, now called Alty Shahr, or six
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+cities; but, under him, there was a local governor for
+each town, appointed by the Calmucks themselves.
+His power was more apparent than real. His eldest
+son was kept at Ili as a hostage for the good behaviour
+of his father, and Danyal, himself, had frequently to
+proceed to Ili to make his report on the state of affairs
+in Kashgar. Such was the condition of Kashgar, as a
+subject province of the Calmuck rulers of Ili, governed
+by Danyal, a member of the Karataghluc party, in the
+year 1740. On the death of Galdan, the son of Arabdan
+Khan of Jungaria, in 1745, two chiefs, Amursana and
+Davatsi, or Tawats, seized the governing power, and for
+a time they divided the authority fairly between them;
+but it was not long before they fell out, and resolved to
+advance their own interests at the expense of each other.
+Amursana was unable to cope with the armies of his
+rival, Davatsi, and, having been defeated in several
+encounters, fled from Jungaria to China. On his arrival
+at Lanchefoo he demanded permission to proceed to
+Pekin to lay his grievances at the feet of the Emperor,
+and to offer in his name, and in that of many of his
+compatriots, the districts of Ili and of Kashgar to his
+omnipotent majesty.</p>
+
+<p>The request was granted, and Keen-Lung received
+him with favour, promised to consider what he had
+stated, and, in the meanwhile, gave him titles and
+revenues within the Chinese Empire. Amursana's
+address was so insinuating, and he played so skilfully
+on the king's ambition and love for military renown,
+that at last Keen-Lung consented to lend him the
+forces, which he had been so lavish of promises to
+secure. In 1753, the Chinese army, under Amursana,
+appeared in Jungaria, and, after several desperate encounters,
+Davatsi was driven out of that state, and, according
+to one account, was delivered up to the Chinese
+by Khojam Beg, the governor of Ush Turfan. According
+to another version, he was captured in the field;
+but both agree that he was taken to Pekin and there
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+executed. Amursana, having regained his position in
+Jungaria, now turned his attention to the conquest of
+its dependency, Kashgar. He was now supreme in
+Jungaria, with his capital at Ili; but his army, which
+maintained him in his position, was a Khitay force,
+owing allegiance solely to the Emperor of Pekin, and
+only obeying the instructions issued by his general accompanying
+the Eleuth prince Amursana. At this
+epoch Yusuf, a son of Galdan, had seized the chief
+authority in Kashgar, and, raising a cry that the true
+religion of Islam was in danger from the advance of the
+Khitay, endeavoured to rally to his cause in the struggle
+that he saw was approaching the Mahomedan governments
+of Khokand and Bokhara. Amursana, on the
+northern frontiers of Kashgar, was eagerly watching for
+the opportunity to arise for an active interference in
+that state, and Yusuf was prudent in seeking beyond
+his frontiers for allies that were able to assist him
+against the machinations of his foes. Yusuf had made
+himself the leader and representative of the Karataghluc
+party in the state, and Amursana accordingly resolved
+to put forward the pretensions of the rival Aktaghluc
+faction. In this design the Chinese general acquiesced,
+and, with the assistance of the Calmuck governors of
+Ush Turfan, and Aksu, no delay interfered with its
+prompt realization. The descendants of the ancient
+Khojas were consequently sought out, and Barhanuddin,
+son of Ahmad, was selected for the purpose. He,
+at the head of a mixed following, promptly seized
+Ush Turfan, and was there received with acclamation,
+and several of the minor tribes joined him at once.
+Yusuf was, however, hurrying up with a large force
+from Yarkand, and Barhanuddin's chances seemed to be
+more than doubtful, when Yusuf died on the way. His
+son Abdulla, who took the name of Khoja Padshah,
+hastened on, however, and besieged Barhanuddin in
+Ush Turfan. Abdulla then endeavoured to come to
+terms with Barhanuddin, and made overtures for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+reconciliation of the Karataghluc and Aktaghluc parties
+to be cemented in a crusade against the invading
+Khitay. Barhanuddin, a true Mussulman, was personally
+inclined to accept the arrangement offered, but,
+as he was surrounded by Chinese officials and their
+allies, he was constrained to give instead the advice
+that Abdulla should surrender to the Chinese and acknowledge
+their supremacy. Abdulla was not at all willing
+to forfeit his independence without some struggle,
+and the siege of Ush Turfan was pressed on. In the
+camp of the besieging forces there were some who
+favoured the pretensions of Barhanuddin, and these
+deserting from the Karataghluc cause, the remaining
+forces of Abdulla were compelled to retreat with precipitation.
+Barhanuddin immediately advanced on
+Kashgar, where he was received with open arms.
+Yarkand soon afterwards fell into his possession, and the
+conquest of Kashgar by the descendant of the Khojas
+and the triumph of the Aktaghluc party were complete.</p>
+
+<p>So far the Chinese had been merely spectators of
+the progress of events in Kashgar. Amursana had
+induced them to approve of this enterprise of Barhanuddin,
+and they had given general support in the
+war with Yusuf and his son; and it was not until
+Barhanuddin, elated with his success, set their wishes
+at defiance, that they resolved to occupy the country.
+But before that, Amursana's career had been cut short.
+Although escorted by a large force of native Chinese
+troops, he had aspired, in 1757, to establish himself
+as an independent prince in Jungaria, and had broken
+loose from Chinese control. The forces he raised were,
+however, defeated with remarkable ease by the Chinese,
+and Amursana was compelled to flee once more from his
+home&mdash;this time with no certain refuge, as he had
+before in Pekin. The Russians were then in possession
+of Siberia, but their influence for good or for ill beyond
+their desert and almost impenetrable stations was practically
+<i>nil</i>; but, such as it was, it seemed to Amursana
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+the only place affording any prospect of security. He
+died at Tobolsk, in 1757, soon after he arrived there;
+but the implacable Chinese haughtily demanded from
+the Russians his body as a proof of his decease, and the
+Russian government sent it to Kiachta for surrender
+to them. Such was the career of the ill-fated, but
+ambitious, Amursana, who was the immediate cause
+of the introduction of Chinese power into Eastern
+Turkestan.</p>
+
+<p>With so unmistakable a proof before his eyes of the
+power of the Chinese, it is strange to find Barhanuddin
+also proving contumacious in Kashgar, but so it
+was. In 1758, the very next year after the death of
+Amursana, this ruler and his brother Khan Khoja
+broke out in open mutiny to the Chinese. At Ili some
+Khitay officers were maltreated, and outspoken contempt
+was shown for Chinese commands. Such attitude
+could not be brooked by any established rule, and, to do
+the Chinese simple justice, never had been tolerated by
+them on any occasion; and accordingly a Chinese army
+was despatched from Ili to chastise this recalcitrant
+ruler, and to remind him that the arm of Chinese power
+was terribly long. Barhanuddin and his brother were
+defeated in several pitched battles, city after city opened
+its gates to the dreaded invader, and the last representatives
+of the Khojas were compelled to seek refuge
+in the isolated region of Badakshan. But even here
+they were not safe. The terror of the Chinese name
+had gone before them, and the sovereign of Badakshan,
+eager to propitiate the conqueror, sent the heads of the
+two brothers to the Chinese general, who was advancing
+from Yarkand. Only one of the numerous sons of
+Barhanuddin escaped the destruction wrought in the
+family of the Khojas by the victorious Chinese: his
+name was Khoja Sarimsak. The Chinese had now
+completely annexed all the territory north of the
+Karakoram and east of the Pamir and Khokand, and
+it does not appear that in doing so they had suffered
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+any great loss. By availing themselves of Amursana's
+claims in Jungaria they had obtained a firm foothold in
+that state, and then by an equally skilful manipulation
+of the rival parties of Aktaghluc and Karataghluc, they
+had extended their authority over Kashgar as well.
+When their puppets, Amursana and Barhanuddin,
+became restive as Chinese vassals, and strove for independence,
+the Chinese forces were called into action and
+swept all opposition from their path. All this may
+seem the most unjustifiable ambition, nor do we wish
+to palliate in any way the terribly harsh repressive
+measures adopted by the Chinese. There is no doubt
+that, so long as there remained the shadow of any
+opposition to their rule, they did not temper their
+power with any exhibition of mercy. It is computed
+that almost half a million of people were slain during
+the wars of these two or three years, and that the great
+majority of these were the innocent inhabitants, who
+had been massacred. Nor, although we should be
+disposed to think that this is a greatly exaggerated
+number, have we any reason to doubt that the sword of
+the Chinese was called into use whenever any resistance
+was offered to their advance, and that the feelings of
+the soldiers were embittered to a great extent by
+religious fervour, in their encounters with the Mussulmans.
+The Chinese, having conquered Kashgar, turned
+their arms against Khokand, and entered Tashkent and
+the city of Khokand in triumph. As the year 1760
+was drawing to a close, quite a panic was spreading
+through Western Asia at the advance of the Chinese.
+Afghanistan, then as now the only formidable Mahomedan
+territory left intact from foreign conquest,
+was implored by the suffering Islamites to check the
+Chinese advance. Then, as recently on a somewhat
+similar occasion, Afghanistan thought prudence the
+better part of valour, and confined her action to the
+invasion of Badakshan, which she coveted, in order
+to punish its ruler for the murder of the fugitive
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+Khojas. But, having terrified Khokand, the Chinese
+wisely retired to the proper frontier of Kashgar, and
+then set about consolidating their rule there by an
+energy and administrative capacity which must excite
+the admiration of every governing nation.</p>
+
+<p>It was some years, however, before the conquest of
+Kashgar, which had been so rapidly accomplished, could
+be considered to have been altogether completed.
+Fresh troops had to be summoned from Kansuh, and
+military settlers imported in large numbers from Shensi
+and other Chinese provinces, to supply the place of the
+massacred Kashgari. Settlers were also brought from
+the neighbourhood of Urumtsi and Hamil; and with
+these and imperial troops sent from Pekin, the Chinese
+felt complete masters of the situation. It was only
+then that the Chinese viceroy considered himself sufficiently
+strong to place his army in detachments in the
+various cities. Up to that time it had been kept
+mobilised in one, or at most two or three stations,
+ready for instant action. When the Chinese withdrew
+from Khokand they imposed a tribute on that state,
+and then they turned their arms against the nomad
+tribes on the north of the Jungarian frontier. The
+various hordes of the Kirghiz nomads sent in their
+submission one after the other, and the Chinese
+invariably accepted their fealty, and as a rule rewarded
+their duteous behaviour with Chinese titles and rank
+Thus Ablai, Chief of the Middle Horde, was made Prince
+in 1766, and Nur Ali, of the Little Horde, went so far
+as to send special emissaries to Pekin, where they were
+favourably received, and returned with recompenses for
+the fidelity of their master. The Chinese had thus
+secured their position in Jungaria and Kashgar before
+the dose of 1765, and by their possession of Khoten,
+they had opened up communications with their province
+of Tibet. On the south they possessed an admirable
+frontier, and it was only in the south-west that any
+check seemed to be put upon their advance. As already
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+mentioned, the Ameer of Afghanistan had overran
+Badakshan, in chastisement for the murders of Barhanuddin
+and his brother; and he was continually
+receiving applications to declare an open war against
+the Chinese. His own troubles with the rulers of
+Scinde and Persia were sufficient to keep his religions
+sympathies within due bounds. But he sent an embassy
+to Pekin, to point out that his fellow-religionists were
+suffering under the conquering sway of the Chinese
+forces in Central Asia; and on its return with an
+unsatisfactory reply, he appears to have stationed a
+large body of troops in Badakshan. The proud Durani
+monarch was probably eager to oppose the Chinese, but,
+wiser than his contemporaries in Turkestan and Jungaria,
+he accurately reckoned up the risks of the enterprise,
+and contented himself with the maintenance of
+the powerful empire he had erected on the ruins of
+the conquests of Nadir Shah. When the Afghans had
+done so much, and given promises of aid in the defence
+of Samarcand, it is not to be wondered at if the people
+of Kashgar thought they would do more, and risings
+took place in several parts of the state, notably at Ush
+Turfan. The Chinese measures were prompt and
+effectual; the rebellion was suppressed, the inhabitants
+massacred, and the town destroyed. This failure struck
+so complete a panic into the hearts of the people, that
+no inducements, for more than half a century, could
+encourage them to rise against the Chinese. The
+Chinese conquest of Kashgar gave an effectual solution
+to the rivalries of the numerous claimants to its sovereignty,
+and among other competitors to the Khojas,
+that is, to the descendants of that Sarimsak who alone
+survived the massacre of his family in 1760. While
+very possibly the people may have suffered that mental
+depression which must accompany the installation of a
+foreign rule, and despite the very harsh and unmistakable
+evidences given by the Chinese of their intolerance
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+of opposition, there was some prospect, notwithstanding
+these, that the Chinese would prove permanent
+masters, and that their rule would consequently become
+milder and milder every year. It was this feeling, that
+things could not become much worse, that rendered the
+Kashgari apathetic in their resistance to the Chinese.
+They did not dare to expect much improvement in
+their lot; but at all events they might suppose that
+Chinese massacres would cease with the disappearance
+of resistance, whereas massacres by their own countrymen
+and tyrants had been for centuries an every-day
+occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>Before considering the Chinese occupation of Kashgar,
+it may be useful to give some description of the Aktaghluc
+and Karataghluc parties, of whose rivalry the
+history of Kashgar in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and
+eighteenth centuries is so full. It may be remembered
+that in 1533, Reshid, the younger son of Said, who
+had distinguished himself in his father's wars, seized
+the state from his brothers, to whom he was inferior
+both in age and in birth on his mother's side. In
+effecting this he availed himself of the alliance of the
+Usbeg rulers west of Pamir, and during the negotiations
+that were transacted between them, the distinguished
+divine, Maulana Khoja Kasani, of Samarcand, visited
+him. He was greeted with the most striking marks of
+Reshid's affection, and granted a large estate in Kashgar.
+He married and left two sons in that state to represent
+his interests and share his possessions. The elder son,
+whose mother was a Samarcand lady, was averse to the
+younger, whose mother was a native of Kashgar. In
+the course of time they each rose prominently in the
+service of the state, but they transmitted their antipathy
+to their descendants. Khoja Kalan, the elder, whose
+influence was greatest in Yarkand and Karatagh, was
+the founder of the Karataghluc, or "Black Mountaineers."
+Khoja Ishac, the younger, whose influence was greatest
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+in Kashgar and Actagh, another form of Altai, was the
+founder of the Aktaghluc, or "White Mountaineers."
+The descendants of either of these Khojas, or priests,
+the sons of the great divine of Samarcand, claim the
+title of Khoja, but that must not be confounded with
+the more exclusive signification it possesses as representing
+the once ruling family.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a><span>CHAPTER V.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE CHINESE RULE IN KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Chinese conquest of Jungaria and Eastern Turkestan
+having become an accomplished fact, what did the new
+rulers do to justify their forcible interference in Central
+Asia? What measures did they adopt to conciliate the
+subject peoples, and what to increase the prosperity of
+a vast region, naturally fertile, but impoverished by
+centuries of improvident government and of civil
+anarchy and war? Did they follow the precedent that
+had been set them by every past ruler of those countries,
+and leave the people to their own devices, to
+starve or to exist as best they might, so long as the
+tribute money was forthcoming? Did the Chinese
+Viceroys of Ili, or their lieutenants in Kashgar, Yarkand,
+Aksu, or Kucha adopt a policy of inaction, and pursue
+a line of conduct of unprincipled selfishness in advancing
+their own personal fortunes, and thus prove that they
+were of the same stamp as all other Asiatic despots,
+careless of the day and utterly regardless of the morrow?
+The best way to see how they acted, what they did,
+and what they did not that was possible, is to follow
+their rule in Kashgar with some attention. In itself
+this may be found to be no uninstructive lesson for us,
+who are also a great governing people; and from the
+perusal of what the Chinese administrators did in
+Central Asia we may arise willing to accord them high
+praise, because we are better able than other nations to
+appreciate the difficulties of their task.</p>
+
+<p>After the fall of Amursana, the Chinese, in the first
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+place, organized their administrative system upon the
+following basis:&mdash;The supreme authority was vested in
+the hands of the Viceroy of Ili. Under him an amban,
+or lieutenant-governor, administered affairs in Kashgar.
+His place of abode was Yarkand. In internal matters
+the Yarkand Amban was without a superior south of the
+Tian Shan, but in external affairs he only acted in
+subordination to the Viceroy of Ili, who alone was in
+communication with Pekin. Under each of these potentates
+there were the usual deputy-ambans and Tay
+Dalays, or military commanders. All the cities had
+Gulbaghs constructed outside of them, and these forts
+were held by Chinese troops&mdash;that is, by a mixture of
+Khitay and Tungani. It is computed that 20,000
+troops used to garrison Kashgar and the neighbourhood
+alone. The military posts were restricted to Chinamen,
+and the higher judicial and administrative offices were
+also withheld from the subjected race. But these were
+the only privileges retained by the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>The Khan, or chief Amban, who resided in Yarkand,
+made all the appointments to the minor offices, which
+were filled almost exclusively by Mahomedans. The
+only precaution the Chinese seem to have taken was to
+refuse employment to a Kashgari in his native town, so
+that a Yarkandi would have to go to Aksu, or some
+other place away from his home, if he desired to participate
+in the government of his country. But beyond
+this there was no restriction, and nominally the Hakim
+Beg, the highest Mussulman officer, ranked on an
+equality with the Chinese amban. His subordinates
+were all Mahomedans, with the exception of his personal
+guard of Khitay troops. In the hands of these
+natives of the country lay all the administration of
+justice among their co-religionists, the collection of the
+revenue, and the levying of customs dues on the frontier
+and of trade taxes in the cities. It was only when
+cause for litigation arose between a Buddhist and a
+Mussulman that the amban interfered. We have
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+therefore the instructive spectacle before us of a Buddhist
+conquest becoming harmonized with Mussulman
+institutions, and Chinese arrogance not content with
+tolerating, but absolutely fostering, a régime to which
+its hostility was scarcely concealed. This is the only
+instance of the Chinese exhibiting such more than
+Asiatic restraint towards Mahomedans; for their dealings
+with Tibet, a country of peculiar sanctity and Buddhist
+as well, is not a case in point. The scheme worked
+well, however. Chinese strength was husbanded by
+being employed only when absolutely necessary to be
+called into play, and the people, to a great degree their
+own masters, did not realise the fact of their being a
+subjected nation. Their first anxiety was the payment
+of their taxes&mdash;far from exorbitant, as it had been
+under their own rulers; but that task accomplished,
+they could free their minds from care.</p>
+
+<p>Very often their own countryman, the Hakim Beg,
+was a greater tyrant than the Chinese amban in the
+fort outside their gates; but against his exactions they
+could obtain speedy redress. When their Hakims, or
+Wangs as the Chinese called them, became unpopular in
+a district, the amban promptly removed them; even if he
+considered they were not much to blame, he always transferred
+them to some other district. The first object in
+the eyes of the amban was the maintenance of order,
+and he knew well enough that order could not be maintained,
+unless he resorted to force, which he studiously
+avoided, if the people were discontented. The people
+therefore could repose implicit trust in the Chinese
+amban securing a fair hearing and justice for them in
+their disagreements with their own leaders; and the
+Mussulman Wangs, who were the old ruling class, saw
+the unfortunate tax-payer at last secure from their
+tyranny through the clemency of a Buddhist conqueror.
+We are justified in assuming that the population saw
+the force of these patent facts, and that, if not perfectly
+to be relied on in any emergency, the Chinese had no
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+danger to expect from the tax-producing and patient
+Kashgari.</p>
+
+<p>So long as the Chinese rule remained vigorous&mdash;that
+is, for about the first fifty years&mdash;the Ambans worked
+in perfect concord with the Wangs, and through them
+with the people. But the internal relations between
+these various personages became more complicated and
+less cordial through the importation, about the beginning
+of this century, of a fresh factor into the question.
+The Chinese had granted the cities west of, and including,
+Aksu very considerable privileges in carrying on
+trade with Khokand; and in the course of commercial
+intercourse a Khokandian element was slowly imported
+into these cities, when it became a people within a
+people, enjoying the prosperity to be derived from the
+Chinese Empire, but not experiencing any sentiment of
+gratitude towards those by whom the favours were
+conferred. After some years, when these Khokandian
+immigrants had become numerous, the Chinese acquiesced
+in their selecting a responsible head for each
+community, and this head, or Aksakal, was nominated
+by the Khan of Khokand, the only temporal sovereign
+these people recognized. The creation of this third power
+in the state, which was first sanctioned as a matter of
+convenience, was to be fraught with the direst consequences
+for the Chinese. The Khitay would be justified
+in saying that the Aksakals were "the cause of
+all their woe," in Kashgar at all events. The Aksakals
+were far too prudent to challenge the supremacy of the
+Chinese officials, and their first object was rather to
+make themselves independent of the Wangs than to
+compete with the Ambans. In this they were successful,
+for the Chinese neglected to take into account the
+dangers that might arise from these same bustling, intriguing,
+and alien Aksakals. The Wangs had always
+been obedient vassals, but the plausibility of the Aksakals
+put them on a par with their rivals. The Chinese
+washed their hands of the quarrel, and may have
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+imagined that their rule was made more assured by
+divisions among the Mussulmans. In this they were
+mistaken. The Aksakals, who after a time repudiated
+their obligations to the Wangs, became the centre of
+all the intrigue that marked the last half-century of
+Chinese rule, and, puffed up by their triumph over the
+Wangs, did not hesitate to challenge the right of the
+Ambans to exercise jurisdiction over them. But of
+this more later on.</p>
+
+<p>While the Chinese adopted these liberal measures in
+their dealings with the Mussulman population, they
+did not neglect those other duties which belong to the
+government by right. The greatest benefit they could
+confer was of course the preservation of order, and to
+maintain the balance impartially between the numerous
+litigants was the first article in the creed of the Chinese
+viceroys. As tranquillity settled down over these distracted
+regions, trade revived. The native industries,
+which had greatly fallen off, became once more active;
+and foreign enterprise was attracted to this quarter,
+which Chinese power soon made the most favoured
+region in Central Asia. But the rulers did not rest
+content with the mere preservation of good order.
+They did not leave it to the inclination of an indolent
+people to progress at as tortoise-like a speed as they
+would wish; but they themselves set the example which
+the rest felt bound to imitate. Not only did the enterprising
+Khitay merchant from Kansuh and Szchuen
+visit the marts of Hamil and Turfan, but many of
+this class penetrated into Kashgar proper, where they
+became permanent settlers. These invaluable agents
+supplied the deficiency that had never before been filled
+up in the life of the state, for they brought the highest
+qualities of enterprise and practical sagacity, together
+with capital, as their special characteristics. In the
+train of these Khitay merchants came wealth and increased
+prosperity. Yarkand, Kashgar, Aksu, and
+Khoten became cities of the first rank, and the population
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+of the country in the year 1800 was greater than
+it had ever been before.</p>
+
+<p>There was perfect equality too between all the
+various races in respect to trade. The Chinese did not
+demand special immunities for their own countrymen, as
+might have been expected. The Khitay, who came all
+the way from Lanchefoo in search of a fortune, must
+be prepared to compete in an equal race with the
+Khokandi, the Kashgari, or the Afghan. His nationality
+would obtain for him no immunity from being
+taxed, or could give him no advantage over the foreign
+or native traders. The main portion of the trade of
+the country remained in the old hands. Khokand
+benefited as much as Kashgar by the trade, and China,
+in a direct manner, least of the three.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese have at all times been justly famous for
+their admirable measures for irrigating their provinces.
+The wonderful canals which cut their way, where there
+are no great rivers, in China proper are reproduced even
+in this outlying dependency. Eastern Turkestan is one
+of the worst-watered regions in the world. In fact
+there is only a belt of fertile country round the
+Yarkand river, stretching away eastward along the
+slopes of the Tian Shan as far as Hamil. The few
+small rivers which are traced here and there across the
+map are during many months of the year dried up, and
+even the Yarkand then becomes an insignificant stream.
+To remedy this, and to husband the supply as much as
+possible, the Chinese sank dykes in all directions. By
+this means the cultivated country was slowly but
+surely spread over a greater extent of territory, and the
+vicinity of the three cities of Kashgar, Yangy Hissar,
+and Yarkand became known as the garden of Asia.
+Corn and fruit grew in abundance, and from Yarkand
+to the south of the Tian Shan the traveller could pass
+through one endless orchard. On all sides he saw
+nothing but plenty and content, peaceful hamlets and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+smiling inhabitants. These were the outcome of a
+Chinese domination.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese, besides possessing a dual line of communication
+with their own country, one north and the
+other south of the Tian Shan, had also a caravan route
+from Khoten to Lhasa, the capital of Tibet. There was
+also some intercourse with Cashmere by this way. The
+jade, for which Khoten was justly, and is still, famous,
+was exported in immense quantities, both to Tibet and
+to China, through Maralbashi. This mineral was held
+in high esteem by Chinese ladies, and alone sufficed to
+make the prosperity of Khoten assured. Gold, silk, and
+musk, were other articles included in the commerce of
+this flourishing city. There was also, in the Chinese
+time, a very extensive manufacture of carpets and cotton
+goods. The gold mines, which, with two exceptions,
+have not been worked since the same time, are believed
+to be scarcely touched, and only await a fostering hand
+to be put in working order once more.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese also devoted great attention to the coal
+mines in the vicinity of Aksu, and these were worked
+both by private enterprise and the Government. Coal
+was an article of common use in that city, but it does
+not appear to have been exported beyond the neighbourhood.
+It is known that the Chinese took greater
+interest in the development of the internal means of
+wealth of the country than in inducing foreigners to
+enter it. Thus, we see that mines, in a special degree,
+received state approval and support. The gold mines of
+Khoten, the coal of Aksu, and the zinc of Kucha, are
+all conspicuous instances of this; as, under all past,
+and the recent Mahomedan, rule, they have been most
+foolishly, but consistently neglected.</p>
+
+<p>Nor were those special trades for which Kashgar had
+in prosperous moments been renowned, neglected. The
+leather-dressers of Yarkand and Aksu, the silk-mercers of
+Kashgar and Khoten, were never so busy as in the
+warlike days of Keen-Lung, and the great mass of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+people, the agricultural class in the villages, was equally
+prosperous and well governed. Trade was fostered on
+all sides, and the conquering power was content to stand
+aside and witness the steady progress of its subjects
+towards hitherto unattained and unattainable prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, the Chinese directed their attention to the
+improvement of the means of communication between
+one part of the province and another. It was absolutely
+necessary to the security of their rule that there should
+be an easy and always open road between Ili and
+Kashgar. Therefore, a way was cut, at great expense,
+through the Tian Shan, north of Aksu, and this pass
+was known as the Muzart, or Glacier. So difficult was
+the country through which it passed, and such the
+danger from ice-drifts and snow-storms, that relays of
+men had to be kept constantly at work in order to
+prevent it getting out of repair for a day. The construction
+of this road was, in the first place, most
+expensive, but, perhaps, the cost of repairing was much
+more. This, the most striking engineering achievement
+of the Chinese, has become practically useless, through
+fifteen years of neglect. If China is to regain Ili, it
+will, no doubt, be restored. The passes west of this, by
+the Narym River to Vernoe, and through Terek to
+Khokand, were those selected by Yakoob Beg to supply
+its place.</p>
+
+<p>The next object to which the Chinese specially paid
+attention was the preservation of their road home to
+China. Thus the road in Tian Shan Pe Lu, and the other
+in Tian Shan Nan Lu, were kept in the most effective
+state possible. The former, north of the mountains,
+passed through Manas and Urumtsi to Hamil; the latter,
+south of them, through Aksu and Kucha to the same
+place. The alternative route from Kucha to Kashgar
+and Yarkand, through Maralbashi, was also much used,
+more especially, however, by those who desired to break
+off at that outpost in the desert to reach Khoten and
+Sanju. In each city there was appointed a committee
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+to superintend the roads in the district, and this Road
+Board was a highly important and useful corporation.
+It was by such measures as these that the Chinese
+made their rule a blessing to Kashgar and Jungaria for
+more than fifty years. Of course, there was the fiscal
+side of these schemes of public utility. Roads could
+not be opened up and maintained in order, canals could
+not be dug, the state could not administer justice, promote
+trade, and make itself respected abroad, without
+an assured revenue, and this revenue, after the first ten
+years, was very productive.</p>
+
+<p>The principal taxes were the tithe on the produce of
+the land, called "<i>ushr</i>" and the <i>zakat</i> (fortieth), on
+merchandise and cattle. Then, in the cities, there was
+a house tax, which was essentially, like our own income
+tax, a war tax, fluctuating in accordance with the
+military necessities, caused by foreign or civil war.
+From the mines, too, the state derived a large annual
+sum, which was generally devoted to some object of
+public utility. There was also the tribute money from
+the Kirghiz nomads, whose flocks and horses were numbered
+and taxed at a low rate, in return for which they
+were taken under the protection of China. In addition
+to these great taxes there were several smaller ones, such
+as a fee on fuel sold in the market, and another levy
+on milch-kine kept in cities. A writer on Kashgar has
+said that these "proved a ready means of oppression,
+and a prolific source of that discontent which left the
+rulers without a single helping hand, or sympathising
+heart, in the hour of their distress and destruction."
+But this assumption of cause and effect is scarcely just.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, all taxes can be made a ready means of
+oppression by the tax-gatherer, who, in this case, was a
+Mussulman and fellow-countryman. But taxes are
+absolutely necessary to all good government, and when
+we consider what China did with her revenue, with
+what public spirit her representatives laid it out in
+plans for the advantage of the state, can we pronounce an
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+opinion that she imposed unfair burdens on the subjected
+race? Moreover, no one denies the prosperity
+general throughout Kashgar in those days, a period
+looked back to with regret by the inhabitants during
+the most favoured years of Yakoob Beg's rule. It is
+not in accordance with facts, then, to imply that the
+Chinese ground Kashgar under them by severe taxation,
+and whatever petty tyranny there was, was carried
+on not by the Khitay Ambans, but by the Mahomedan
+Wangs.</p>
+
+<p>In the hour of distress and destruction the people,
+indeed, proved traitorous to their best friends, or, more
+generally, apathetic; leaving to the energetic Andijani
+element within their gates the task of crossing swords
+with Buddhist rule, to which the hostility of these
+immigrants had always been declared.</p>
+
+<p>The short-sightedness of the Kashgari played the
+game of the more fanatical and ambitious people of
+Khokand; but the rule of China did not pass out of
+Eastern Turkestan until the disturbances of forty years
+had generated ill-feeling that formerly was not, and had
+so embittered the relations of governing and governed,
+that what had come to be considered a lenient and
+impersonal government, assumed all the darker hues of
+a military and foreign despotism. Even then China did
+not fall until there was dissension within herself, when,
+split into three hostile camps, her sword dropped nerveless
+from her hand in Central Asia, 2,000 miles away from
+her natural border. To follow Chinese rule in Kashgar
+down to 1820, is to observe the monotonous course of
+never varying prosperity. From that year to 1860, the
+tale is of a different complexion, less monotonous but
+also less satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>In 1758 and 1760 Chinese armies entered Khokand.
+Tashkent fell in the former year, and the capital in the
+latter. The Chinese then withdrew, after imposing a
+tribute upon Khokand. During the long reign of
+Keen-Lung&mdash;that is, down to 1795&mdash;the tribute was
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+regularly paid. After that year, however, the payment
+became irregular, and border warfare of frequent occurrence
+between the two neighbours. At last, in 1812,
+Khokand, then under an able prince, refused to pay tribute
+any longer, and the Chinese acquiesced in the repudiation.
+Nor did the change in the relations between
+China and Khokand stop here; for, a few years afterwards,
+the Chinese found it expedient to pay Khokand
+an annual sum to keep the Khoja family, whose representatives
+were residing in Khokand, from intriguing
+against them. The amount of the subsidy was £3,500
+of our money. In addition to this, the Khan of Khokand
+was permitted to levy a tax on all Mahomedan
+merchandise sold in Kashgar through Andijan merchants.
+This tax was collected by the Aksakals before
+mentioned, and was a very profitable source of income
+for the impecunious khans. But even these concessions
+and perquisites did not satisfy the Mussulmans
+of Central Asia, who saw in Chinese moderation an
+evidence of weakness and decline. The Aksakals, in
+these years of Mahomedan revival, became political
+agents of the greatest importance. It was they who
+gave a point to all the discontent there might be in
+Kashgar; it was they who attributed to the Chinese
+the blame for whatever evils this world is never wholly
+free from; and it was they who agitated for the return
+of the old Khoja kings, who were always destined, in
+their eyes, to bring the most perfect happiness. With
+such causes at work both within and without their position,
+the Chinese had not to wait long before their
+authority was more openly challenged.</p>
+
+<p>Sarimsak, the only member of the Khoja family surviving
+the massacre by the Chinese, had fled, as a child,
+into the impenetrable recesses of Wakhan. From
+thence, in later years, he had gone to settle in Khokand,
+where he married. This prince had three sons&mdash;Yusuf,
+Bahanuddin, and Jehangir, the youngest and
+best known. In 1816, the first outbreak against
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+Chinese authority occurred, when a small rising took
+place in Tash Balik, a town to the west of Kashgar.
+This was speedily put down, and its leaders executed.
+It was but the forerunner of the storm.</p>
+
+<p>In 1822, Jehangir resolved to reassert his claims over
+Kashgar, and, while his eldest brother continued to
+reside in retirement at Bokhara, he joined the Kara
+Kirghiz. With a party of these, under the command
+of their chief, Suranchi Beg, Jehangir raided up to the
+city of Kashgar. He was there repulsed in the suburbs,
+and compelled to flee. He then joined the Kirghiz of
+Bolor round Narym, who were nominally feudatories of
+China, and, with their aid, commenced a petty sort of
+border war. A small Chinese force was despatched
+against him, and drove the Kirghiz up as far as Fort
+Kurtka. On their return from this successful attack,
+they were, however, surprised in one of the defiles, and
+almost all were destroyed. This was the first reverse
+the Chinese had ever met with in the field, and it was
+at once bruited about through all parts of Central Asia.
+It gave a life to the Khoja cause which it had hitherto
+lacked, and adventurers from all parts flocked to the
+standard Jehangir now raised on the borders of Kashgar.
+The Khan of Khokand so far assisted him as to
+send him a skilled general, Isa Dadkhwah, and extended
+over his cause that protection and sanction which Khokand
+has ever since thrown over the Khoja family.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1826, Jehangir advanced in force
+against Kashgar, and the Chinese, despising their assailant,
+left their fortifications to encounter him in the
+open. A battle then ensued, of which the particulars
+have not come down to us, but which resulted in the
+defeat of the Chinese. Jehangir entered Kashgar in
+triumph, was received with acclamations by the people,
+urged on by the Aksakals, and proclaimed himself sovereign
+of the country, under the style of Seyyid Jehangir
+Sultan. His first act&mdash;the most significant exposure of
+the true sentiment of the Kashgarian people there well
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+could be&mdash;was to order the execution of the Mahomedan
+Wang of Kashgar, by name Mahomed Seyyid.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of Kashgar was the signal to the Aksakals
+throughout Altyshahr to begin that work for which
+they had been long preparing. In Yangy Hissar, Yarkand,
+and Khoten risings at once took place. The
+Chinese, surprised and unarmed, were butchered in the
+streets, and the Gulbaghs, as the visible token of the
+foreign rule, were razed with the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The Gulbagh of Kashgar itself alone held out, but it
+at last fell, after sustaining a long siege, into the hands
+of Jehangir. His triumph completed, he had to concern
+himself more with his relations with Khokand
+than about the Chinese, who were mysteriously quiet.
+Mahomed Ali Khan, of Khokand, who thought that
+Jehangir's success was solely due to him, laid claim
+to a certain historical superiority over his vassal of
+Kashgar, to which the Khoja prince was not willing
+to assent. A large Khokandian army which had been
+sent to Kashgar returned, after losing 1,000 men
+before the walls of the Gulbagh, and its withdrawal was
+the signal for plots and counterplots to break out in the
+palace of the new ruler. These he promptly repressed,
+reduced the intriguing general, Isa Dadkhwah, in rank,
+and had emancipated himself from his thraldom to Khokand,
+when the news came that the Chinese were at last
+returning.</p>
+
+<p>Although the western portion of Altyshahr had fallen
+away from the Chinese, Aksu and Maralbashi remained
+true to their allegiance. The Chinese still possessed
+the military keys of the country. Moreover, their possession
+of Ili gave them an enormous strategical advantage,
+and in the Tungan population they possessed
+an almost inexhaustible supply for recruiting "revindicating"
+armies. It is apropos here to state that
+China retained both of these advantages down to the
+time of Buzurg Khan and Yakoob Beg, and that, so
+long as she possessed them, the utmost Mussulman
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+fanaticism and Khokandian patronage of the Khojas
+could do was futile against the arrest of fate. During
+six months Jehangir ruled in Kashgar, and during six
+months the Chinese viceroy made his preparations at
+Ili for a thorough revenge. An army of more than
+100,000 men, raised from the Tungani, the Calmucks,
+and the Khitay garrison, was despatched from Ili, and
+in January, 1827, entered Aksu. Here all the brigades
+were concentrated, and the Viceroy, in conjunction with
+the general under him, by name Chang-Lung, drew up
+the plan of campaign, which was as follows:&mdash;A small
+army of 12,000 men was sent against Khoten across the
+desert through Cày Yoli, while the remainder of the
+host advanced on Maralbashi. Here another detachment
+of 7,000 strong was directed against Yarkand,
+while the main body marched on Kashgar by the banks
+of the Kizil Su.</p>
+
+<p>Their advance was unopposed until they reached
+Yangabad, or Yangiawat, where Jehangir had concentrated
+an army computed at 50,000 men, but probably
+considerably less. When the armies sighted each other
+they pitched their camps in preparation for the decisive
+contest that was at hand. In accordance with immemorial
+custom, each side put forward on the following
+day its champion. On the part of the Chinese a gigantic
+Calmuck archer opposed on the part of Jehangir an
+equally formidable Khokandi. The former was armed
+with his proper weapons, the latter with a gun of some
+clumsy and ancient design, and while the Khokandi
+was busily engaged with his intricate apparatus, the
+Chinese archer shot him dead with an arrow through
+the breast. Of course, neither army would have acquiesced
+in the decree of the God of Battles as shown by
+the fate of its champion, but, in this case, it was true
+that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Who spills the foremost foeman's life,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His party conquers in the strife."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After a sharp, but brief, skirmish, the Kashgarian army
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+withdrew in confusion, and the following day the
+Chinese surrounded Kashgar on three sides. During
+the night the heart of Jehangir misgave him, and he
+fled to the Karatakka mountains. But here the snow
+had rendered the passes impracticable, and, after hiding
+for a few days in that difficult region, he was captured
+by the Chinese. His fate was that usually met with by
+traitors to that empire, for, being sent to Pekin, he was
+executed after torture. In this war Ishac Wang, of
+Ush Turfan, played a great part against the Khoja
+prince, and was rewarded for his good service by being
+appointed Wang of Kashgar. The Chinese constructed
+a fresh fort, Yangyshahr, in the place of the destroyed
+Gulbagh, and left a large Khitay garrison under Jah
+Darin. But Ishac Wang, who was given some such
+title as Prince of Kashgar, was soon afterwards deposed
+and recalled to China.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese authority was re-established without
+difficulty in the three cities, and peace settled down
+over Eastern Turkestan. But the repressive and punitive
+measures that the Chinese felt compelled to adopt
+raised a bitterer sentiment in the minds of the people
+than had previously existed. The Chinese were, indeed,
+only employing the same weapons that had been
+used against themselves, but none the less did these
+reciprocal atrocities dissipate whatever friendship there
+had been. Among other acts the Chinese removed
+12,000 Mahomedan families from Kashgar to Ili, and
+these, destined to play an important part in the history
+of that province, became known as Tarantchis, or
+Toilers.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese resolved to punish Khokand as well.
+They broke off all trade with that state, and happy
+would it have been for them if they could have continued
+to preserve a closed frontier. But the Khan of
+that time was Mahomed Ali Khan, the most ambitious,
+as he was the ablest, of the princes of that country.
+He had just annexed Karategin, and had acquired some
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+of the outlying provinces of Badakshan, which Mourad
+Beg, of Kundus, had absorbed about the same time. It
+was not probable that he would put up with the Chinese
+defiance. He was prudent enough to delay his advance
+until the main body of their army had been withdrawn.
+But, as soon as he was informed that the Chinese had
+gone back to Ili, Mahomed Ali, calling Yusuf, Sarimsak's
+eldest son, from his retirement in Bokhara, placed
+him at the head of an army, under the charge of his
+own brother-in-law, Hacc Kuli Beg. The Chinese were
+worsted at Mingyol, and all the cities west of Aksu
+turned against the Chinese, as before, and proclaimed
+for Yusuf Khoja. Then the massacres were repeated,
+and the invasion of Yusuf was that of Jehangir over
+again in exact detail. But Yusuf's triumph was still
+more brief. Whereas Jehangir had ruled for nine
+months, Yusuf only swayed the sceptre for three.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese movements were delayed by small Mussulman
+revolts in Barkul and Shensi until the spring of
+1831, but then, when they returned, they found that
+Yusuf and the Khokandian army had retreated some
+months before. The facts were that the moment Khokand
+invaded Kashgar, Bokhara attacked Khokand, and
+Hacc Kuli Beg had to be recalled to cope with matters
+more pressing than Khoja rights. With the general
+had gone Yusuf, far from anxious to encounter the
+Chinese alone. The return of the Khokandian army
+sufficed to dispel all danger from Bokhara, and, a few
+months after, Mahomed Ali Khan recommenced operations&mdash;in
+the east this time&mdash;against the Kirghiz under
+Chinese protection. The Chinese were thoroughly sick
+of these petty disputes, and made a treaty with Khokand,
+by which that state acquired fresh commercial
+privileges, in addition to the old ones, and by which the
+importance of the Aksakals rather increased than waned.
+Mahomed Ali Khan had acquired all he wanted, and
+discouraged the Khoja party, as, indeed, the terms of
+this treaty compelled him to do. The risings under
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+Jehangir and Yusuf were undoubtedly a great blow to
+Chinese prestige. To all appearance each had nearly
+been successful, and the Chinese, whose prestige was
+enormous in Central Asia&mdash;quite as great as that of
+Russia is now&mdash;had been, on one or two occasions,
+openly defeated. But, after all, this was a little matter
+compared to the shock the sentiments, called into being
+by sixty happy years, had received. Between Buddhist
+and Mussulman, between Chinaman and Central Asiatic,
+all the old antipathy was revived in the butcheries of
+Yarkand and Kashgar. The Kashgari showed that they
+could not appreciate the benefits they had received from
+China, and the Chinese, enraged at the slaughter of
+their countrymen, and, perhaps, also at the ingratitude
+evinced towards them, retaliated in kind. They did
+not appreciate that moderation, which Europeans have
+not always shown under similar circumstances, and
+wrought out their revenge in their own ancient
+fashion. It is absolutely necessary that the reader
+should remember that the two rapidly succeeding
+invasions of Jehangir and Yusuf form a turning-point
+in the history of the Chinese rule in Kashgar. Up to
+that epoch it is difficult to find words sufficient to do
+justice to China's beneficent government there; after
+that year it would be absurd to employ the same language.
+For the change the chief blame must fall upon
+the fickle and ungrateful Kashgari themselves, and then
+on the intriguing Andijanis. The Chinese are justified,
+at least, in saying that, having for more than half a
+century ruled this people with justice, they only relaxed
+in their efforts to promote its well-being when their unarmed
+countrymen and soldiers had been surprised and
+butchered by thousands.</p>
+
+<p>Strange, and almost contradictory, as it may appear,
+there was a brief respite during which things seemed
+to have got into their old groove of happy prosperity;
+and the chief credit for this must be given to a Mahomedan
+sub-governor of the Chinese viceroy. Zuhuruddin,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+such was his name, had raised himself to the high
+post of Amban in Kashgar, a post never before held
+by any other than a Khitay. By birth he was of
+Kashgar, but he always represented himself as having
+been born and brought up in Khokand, where he had
+been imprisoned for a political offence. For seven or
+eight years he governed Kashgar to the perfect satisfaction
+both of the people and of the Chinese, and
+among some of his public acts may be mentioned the
+reconstruction of new forts outside the cities, in the
+place of those destroyed in the recent revolts. These
+were known now as Yangyshahr instead of Gulbagh.
+But in 1846 Zuhuruddin's rule was disturbed by hostilities
+on the part of Khokand and the Khojas.</p>
+
+<p>In 1845 Khudayar Khan had been called to the
+throne after the death of Mahomed Ali, but his
+authority was not without its rivals. In the state of
+confusion that then ensued, Khokandian adventurers
+urged the Khoja princes, who were now represented by
+the sons of Jehangir, to renew their old attacks against
+the Chinese. To these advisers the Khojas turned a
+willing ear, and preparations were accordingly made
+for the enterprise. At that time Khokand was full
+of adventurers to whom Mahomed Ali had been able to
+give constant employment, but who now under the
+more peaceful rule of Khudayar idled their time in the
+cities of that khanate. Among these and the ever
+willing Kirghiz, it was not difficult for the princes of
+Kashgar to raise an army, formidable in numbers, if
+not remarkable for cohesion. At that time there were
+seven prominent Khoja princes in Khokand, of whom
+we may here mention Eshan Khan, usually called Katti
+Torah, Buzurg Khan, and Wali Khan. This inroad
+did not take its name from any one of these, but from
+them all combined; thus it was distinguished as Haft
+Khojagan, or that of the Seven Khojas.</p>
+
+<p>With his brothers and relations and a considerable
+following, Katti Torah advanced upon Kashgar, always
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+the first object of these invaders, which fell after a siege
+of thirteen days through treachery. This was the only
+success they achieved; the other cities would have nothing
+to do with them; and after two months' indulgence
+in unbridled licence the Chinese beat them in a fight at
+Kok Robat, and drove them out of the country. For
+the first time there was an air of ridicule thrown over
+these Khoja invasions in the eyes of the Kashgari,
+while the outrages they had committed during their
+brief stay had raised bitterer feelings still. Zuhuruddin,
+who fell under the displeasure of the Chinese, was
+removed from his post, and fresh Ambans, once more
+Khitay, were appointed. For nine years the Khojas
+remained passive, but in 1855 Wali Khan and his
+brother Kichik Khan, began to bustle once more on the
+Kashgarian frontier. It was not until 1857 that Wali
+Khan succeeded in forcing the advanced guard of
+pickets maintained in the passes by the Chinese, but
+having accomplished that his triumph was rapid.
+Kashgar fell into his possession by a <i>coup de main</i>, and
+once more a Khoja prince was seated in the <i>orda</i> at
+Kashgar. Artosh and Yangy Hissar fell into his possession,
+and he threatened Yarkand. But everywhere the
+Chinese garrisons remained unconquered in the forts,
+biding the exhaustion of their foe and the arrival of
+reinforcements. After a rule of nearly four months the
+armies of Wali Khan having been then defeated by
+the Chinese, the Khoja fled to the remote state of
+Darwas, where he was surrendered to Khokand by its
+chief Ismail Shah. This ruler, the most tyrannical,
+bloodthirsty, and licentious of all the Khojas, met the
+fate which he deserved long afterwards at the hands of
+Yakoob Beg. His temporary tenure of power is still
+remembered with dread by the people, who consider
+him to have been the most incarnate monster who ever
+held the destinies of their country in his hand. The
+Chinese were more severe in their punitive measures
+after this campaign than they had been after any other,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+but, notwithstanding the part Khudayar and his people
+had played in Wali Khan's affair, the old relations
+between "these incompatible people," as Dr. Bellew
+aptly calls them, were restored. After this event there
+was but one minor disturbance caused by an inroad of
+Kirghiz nomads, headed by the sons of one of the
+principal victims of Chinese vengeance, but this had
+no political importance.</p>
+
+<p>The invasion of Wali Khan was the last of those
+Khoja expeditions which took place prior to the Tungan
+revolt. In the thirty-two years that elapsed from the
+date of Jehangir's attempt to that of his son, there
+had in all been four of them. That of Jehangir himself
+being the first; of his elder brother Yusuf, the
+second; of Yusuf's eldest son, Katti Torah, the third;
+and of Jehangir's second son, Wali, the fourth. Not
+one of these is in any sense noteworthy, except for the
+crimes with which it was attended, and none of them
+did more than inflict an untold amount of misery and
+suffering on their own followers, as well as on the
+people they claimed to represent by right divine. It
+may also be noticed that with each enterprise there was
+a decline in moral character. Thus Jehangir was infinitely
+the best of them in every sense, and ruled fairly
+according to his lights. His brother Yusuf was of a
+more timid mind, but evidently not less imbued with
+some notion as to the sanctity of his mission. But
+from these to Katti Torah is a long descent. That
+prince seemed to aspire to securing his personal comfort
+and enjoyment alone, and disregarded all his subjects'
+complaints at the arbitrary rule of his deputies. But
+Wali Khan, the next of these Khoja kings from "over
+the mountains," excelled his cousin in vice, and tyranny,
+and utter want of purpose, not to speak of honour,
+quite as much as Katti Torah surpassed their sires.
+Nor can there be much hesitation in saying, from what
+Buzurg Khan did during the few months he held
+power, that, had not Yakoob Beg clipped his flight,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+he would have surpassed Wali Khan in his own peculiar
+vices. The reader will scarcely be disposed to take
+much interest in this irredeemable family, mad with the
+insanity of wickedness. But in justice to the Chinese,
+and to Yakoob Beg, it is only right that the rivals of the
+former should be made to appear in their true colours.
+All the sanctity that a peculiarly venerable descent from
+Hazrat Afak could give; all the stories told of the good
+deeds of some of their ancestors; all the affection that
+naturally attaches to a native rule, and all the dislike
+that must undermine a foreign, be it never so beneficent;
+all these things were destroyed by the weakness and ill
+success that attended the first two Khojas, and by the
+cruelty, indifference, and licentiousness that marked the
+last two. When Buzurg Khan came he found loyalty
+to the Khoja the heirloom of a few families, not of a
+people.</p>
+
+<p>Had the Chinese restrained their vindictive feelings
+after the war with Jehangir, and proclaimed a free
+pardon to every one save the Khokandis, and then
+devoted their attention with the old vigour to peaceful
+pursuits, we believe that the Chinese rule would have
+been permanently secured. At that moment the Chinese
+were strong enough to have defied Khokand, and to
+have broken off all intercourse with that state. By
+dismissing the Aksakals, and severing the connection
+between the two states, the Chinese would have dispelled
+a danger that was for forty years to be ever before them,
+and, in the end, when the Tungani also rose, was to
+overcome them. Even clemency after Yusuf's inroad,
+which was really caused by the Chinese repressions,
+might not have been wholly in vain, and would have
+consolidated their position, when reinvigorated by
+Zuhuruddin's tenure of power. But the Chinese did
+not appreciate the quality of mercy. They could be
+just and impartial in the ordinary avocations of life,
+but to those who revolted against their authority they
+showed no trace of human feeling. For a man to rebel
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+against them was certain death; for a people, history
+tells us, the fate was not far different. Nor in dealing
+with such did they hesitate to supplement their military
+strength by the most despicable of artifices. Garrisons,
+accorded honourable terms, ruthlessly butchered;
+princes, who threw themselves on their mercy, deported
+to Pekin to be hanged or tortured out of life: these
+are frequent occurrences in the history of China, and of
+her career in Central Asia the tale is identical. Yet,
+while drawing a veil over these blots on an otherwise
+brilliant surface, should we not desire to conceal them
+wholly from the view. It is necessary that they should
+be stated to understand what Chinese domination means
+as a whole; of its great benefits there can be no doubt, if
+the people will remain quiescent. For fifty years, or for
+five hundred, China will rule an unmurmuring people
+with justice, and lead them into the paths of prosperity
+and peace; but if they rebel, if they openly defy authority,
+if they invite a hostile stranger within their borders,
+the punishment will be as sweeping, as cruel, and, in
+one and a higher sense, as wrongfully foolish, whether
+the association of the races may have been for fifty
+years or five centuries, as it was in the case of Kashgar.
+There is not much reason for hoping that China will
+deviate from her ancient custom, on the occasion now
+transpiring, of demanding "an eye for an eye" and
+"a tooth for a tooth."</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a><span>CHAPTER VI.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE BIRTH OF YAKOOB BEG AND CAREER IN THE
+SERVICE OF KHOKAND.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have now traced the history of Kashgar and of the
+neighbouring states down to the year 1860, immediately
+before the last Khoja invasion under Buzurg
+Khan, and the Kooshbege, Mahomed Yakoob. Before
+giving an account of that enterprise it is necessary that
+the reader should know what the past career of the
+future Athalik Ghazi had been. The previous chapters
+have, it is hoped, thrown some light on the state of
+Central Asia, and will assist the student of the question
+in comprehending how it was that Yakoob Beg achieved
+success, and what claims he may have to be considered
+a great ruler, for having done a work that is unique in
+the annals of modern Asia.</p>
+
+<p>Mahomed Yakoob was born in or about the year
+1820, in the flourishing little town of Piskent, in the
+khanate of Khokand. His father, Pur Mahomed
+Mirza, had, at various periods of his life, filled positions
+of responsibility in the government of the towns in
+which he resided. Thus, a native of Dihbid, near
+Samarcand, he had migrated to Khodjent, in the reign
+of Mahomed Ali Khan, with the intention of entering
+the priestly order. There, although he enrolled himself
+as a student in a religious seminary, for some reason or
+other, he appears to have changed his mind, and, instead
+of entering the Church, turned his attention to secular
+affairs. He was soon made Kazi of Kurama, a district
+and town of Khokand, and married a lady of that
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+place. By this marriage he had one son, Mahomed
+Arif, who has since filled several posts of trust in
+Kashgar, notably that of Governor of Sirikul; but of late
+this half-brother of Yakoob Beg seems to have been,
+either for incompetence or some other reason, under a
+cloud. Pur Mahomed, or Mahomed Latif, as he was
+more usually called, changed his residence from Kurama
+to Piskent, about the year 1818, and he shortly after
+his settlement in his new abode married again, his
+second wife being the sister of Sheik Nizamuddin, the
+Kazi of Piskent. Yakoob Beg was the issue of this
+marriage. The family of Yakoob Beg's father seems
+originally to have come from Karategin, on the borders
+of Badakshan, but in the time of the Usbeg conquest
+of that district the father of Mahomed Latif, then an
+infant, took refuge in Khokand. It is uncertain
+whether Mahomed Latif was born before their arrival
+at Dihbid or afterwards; and it is now asserted that he
+claimed descent from Tamerlane. Whether this was a
+claim brought forward when his son was advancing in
+the world or not, it is impossible to test its accuracy.
+The parents of Yakoob Beg were therefore not without
+some pretensions, and it would seem that the bad
+fortune, from which for some generations they had
+been suffering, was beginning to disappear before the
+ability of Yakoob Beg raised it to a higher point than
+ever. In addition to the claims of his father and
+grandfather as Kazis of an important community, a
+sister of Yakoob Beg married Nar Mahomed Khan,
+Governor of Tashkent; and, as we shall see later on,
+this connection was very instrumental in promoting the
+interests of the youthful Yakoob.</p>
+
+<p>Piskent, Pskent, or Bis-kent, as it is sometimes spelt,
+is still a flourishing little community, fifty miles south
+of Tashkent, on the road to Khodjent. Its inhabitants
+are a thrifty, good-tempered set of people, who take
+great pride in the fact that the great Athalik Ghazi,
+the supporter of Islam, and the reputed terror of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+Russians, was one of themselves. In this little settlement
+there are many Tajiks, and this, doubtless, with
+other reasons, induced Mahomed Latif, a Tajik himself,
+to take up his abode there. To the east of Piskent the
+mountains begin to rise, which stretch onward until
+they become the Tian Shan and the Kizilyart ranges, and
+in these elevated regions the Tajik descendants muster
+in strong numbers. The Tajiks are Persian in their
+origin, and consequently of the Aryan stock, in contradistinction
+to the Turk or Tartar ruling class in Western
+Turkestan. They have, however, for so many generations
+been restricted to a limited career in the organization
+of the state, that, quite unjustly as it is, they
+have come to be regarded as an inferior race. English
+writers have fallen into this mistake, and have accepted
+as correct the definition given by the Turks of this
+subject race. As a matter of fact the contrary holds
+true, and the Tajik is superior to any of his masters
+in point of mental capacity. They are represented
+to still retain the fine presence and long flowing
+beards which distinguish those of Aryan blood from
+their Tartar opposite; and in height and strength they
+quite eclipse every other race of Central Asia. It was
+of this race that Yakoob Beg was the representative,
+and, although the greater part of his life was passed in
+ruling nations almost exclusively Tartar, some of the
+more prominent among his supporters, as well as the
+flower of his army, boasted that they, too, represented
+that master race, whose birth-place was to be found in
+the Indian Caucasus. The Tajiks still speak a Persian
+dialect, and their Iranian origin is thereby rendered
+almost indisputable.</p>
+
+<p>Mahomed Yakoob's early years were passed at his
+home at Piskent, and it is said that it was intended that
+he should follow the profession which his father had repudiated.
+As a youth he was too wayward to submit
+to any check on his impulses, and the design of educating
+him as a "mollah," if it was ever seriously entertained,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+was abandoned long before he arrived at man's estate.
+He appears to have passed the first twenty years of
+his life in an idle, uneventful manner at Piskent, and
+then suddenly to have resolved to seek his fortune as
+best he might in the troubled waters of Khokandian
+politics. In 1845, we find him in the train of the
+newly seated khan, Khudayar, as "mahram," or chamberlain,
+and shortly afterwards, by the influence of his
+brother-in-law, the Governor of Tashkent, nominated a
+Pansad Bashi, a commander of 500. This was in 1847,
+about which year he married a Kipchak lady of Zuelik, a
+village in the district of Ak Musjid. He had three sons,
+of whom we shall hear more hereafter, by this marriage&mdash;Kooda
+Kul Beg, Kuli Beg, and Hacc Kuli Beg. Later
+on, in the year 1847, he was raised to the rank of Koosh-Bege,
+or "lord of the family"&mdash;more intelligibly described
+as vizier&mdash;and entrusted with the charge of the
+important post on the Syr Darya, called Ak Musjid,
+"White Mosque." This post he held with credit for six
+years, until 1853, when the Russians commenced that
+forward movement, of which we have not yet seen the
+close. At that time, Russia had not acquired one of the
+numerous strategic points now in her possession. The
+Syr Darya then was as far off from her frontier as the
+Oxus is now. Ak Musjid, built in the lower reaches of
+the river, and representing a Khokandian outpost of
+exceptional importance, was the grand obstacle in the
+path of the Russians operating from Kazalinsk, at the
+mouth of the Syr Darya. It was resolved, therefore, that
+this post, which, doubtless, encouraged all the marauders
+in the neighbourhood to continue their depredations
+against the Russian caravans, should be wrested from the
+hands of its owners, and either razed to the ground or
+converted into a Russian stronghold. General Perovsky
+was entrusted with this undertaking. The distance
+from Kazalinsk, or Fort No. 1, to Ak Musjid is not
+much over 200 miles, along the banks of the Syr
+Darya. Not many commissariat arrangements were
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+necessary, nor did the distance to march require much
+time to delay the Russian officer in beginning his
+operations against the fort. The army with which
+he appeared before the walls may not have been large
+in numbers when compared with the armies of modern
+times, but, in all that makes a disciplined force formidable,
+it was exceptionally well supplied. The artillery
+was in greater strength than is usually considered
+necessary, and the expedition was still more efficient in
+engineers and cavalry. The garrison of Ak Musjid was,
+on the other hand, ill supplied, both in provisions and in
+ammunition, and the fort itself presented, neither in its
+position nor in its construction, any feature that an
+engineer officer would have considered calculated to
+make it capable of sustaining the attack of artillery for
+twenty-four hours. The Russian lines were constructed
+in the most approved method; but twice were their
+approaches destroyed, and twice their mines counter-mined.
+During twenty-six days the Russian bombardment
+was fast and furious, and during all that
+time the Khokandian defence was stubborn and persistent.
+But all the efforts of the garrison to break
+through the beleaguering lines were unavailing, and
+after so long a cannonade little more resistance could
+be expected from ramparts which were pierced in several
+places by wide and gaping breaches. The resolute
+commandant, who had done everything required by the
+most exacting code of military honour, confessed that
+there was nothing to be gained by a continued defence,
+and as it was known that the Russians were making
+preparations for an early assault, a messenger was
+despatched without delay to the Russian commander,
+expressing the willingness of the garrison to capitulate
+on honourable terms. General Perovsky, who had
+expected an easy triumph here, and possibly some more
+extended triumph in farther regions, was indignant at
+the resistance opposed to him by a paltry place like Ak
+Musjid, and received the messenger from the fort with
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+ill-concealed impatience. Scarcely bestowing any attention
+on the letter, couched in humble terms as it was, of
+the commandant, General Perovsky petrified the astonished
+emissary with the declaration that on the
+morrow the fort would be taken by assault. This
+arbitrary assertion of his power, which was carried
+into practice, of course successfully, the next day, on
+an occasion when magnanimity ought to have been
+shown by the successful general, does not redound to the
+credit of the officer in question, and throws an instructive
+light on the latitude left to Russian generals in
+their instructions, and on the opinion felt for Central
+Asiatics by the civilizing representatives of the White
+Czar. To say that General Perovsky was urged to this
+act of gratuitous tyranny by a desire to obtain a cross
+of either St. Anne or St. George, is, after all, only to
+magnify the offence, and that Ak Musjid has taken the
+name of its conqueror, Fort Perovsky, is the means of
+perpetuating, not his fame, but his infamy, and the
+courageous conduct of the defenders. In the winter
+following its fall Yakoob Beg, with Sahib Khan,
+brother of the Khan of Khokand, attempted to retake
+the fort, but the <i>coup</i> proved abortive, and the Russians
+have never receded from their new acquisition.</p>
+
+<p>Khudayar Khan had been elevated to the throne of
+Khokand in 1845, by the energy of Mussulman Kuli,
+a Kipchak chief, of singular astuteness, and aptitude for
+business. During his tenure of the post of Wazir,
+Khokand was peacefully and beneficently governed; but,
+as on every similar occasion in Central Asia, the ruler
+soon became jealous of the popularity acquired by his
+minister, although his own position was in reality confirmed
+by the wise measures of the very man to whom
+he had conceived a covert hostility. So with Khudayar
+Khan, the effeminate, and his minister, Mussulman
+Kuli, in the decade of which we are now speaking; as
+with Buzurg Khan, the debauchee, but correct representative
+of the Khojas, and his general and vizier, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+Kooshbege, Mahomed Yakoob, in the following. In
+1858, Mussulman Kuli was seized by order of Khudayar
+Khan, and barbarously murdered; and from that occurrence
+the decadence of this unfortunate ruler of Khokand
+can be traced until, at last, he became a mere
+pensioner on the bounty of the Russians. Although
+Yakoob Beg became, to a certain extent, notorious
+for his gallant defence of Ak Musjid, it would appear,
+from his being styled after that event simply "Mir," or
+chief, that he had sunk in grade in his official status.
+It is probable that the chief cause of this was his failure
+to retake it, and not his ill success in defending it. He
+was, however, entrusted with the charge of the Kilaochi
+fort, a post which he held down to the murder of Mussulman
+Kuli.</p>
+
+<p>Khudayar Khan had an elder brother, Mullah Khan,
+who had been passed over by Mussulman Kuli, when
+the state was put in order after the dissensions that arose
+on the death of the great ruler, Mahomed Ali. Now,
+on the death of Mussulman Kuli, who had given vitality
+to the régime of Khudayar, Mullah Khan and his
+partisans began to intrigue once more. Several Kipchak
+and Kirghiz leaders joined his cause, and Yakoob Beg
+at once became one of his most active supporters. Khudayar
+Khan was deposed, and retired into temporary
+seclusion. For his services to the new ruler Yakoob
+Beg was made Shahawal, an officer corresponding to a
+chamberlain or court intendant. He was soon restored
+to his old rank of Kooshbege, and appointed governor
+of the frontier fort of Kurama, the same place of which
+his father had been Kazi. And in 1860 he came still
+more to the front, when he was summoned to Tashkent
+to assist Kanaát Shah, the Nahib of Khokand, in making
+preparations in case the Russians, who had for some
+time seemed to be threatening Khokand, should cross
+the frontier. Mullah Khan was murdered at this time,
+having held the reins of power but for the brief space
+of two years, and Khudayar Khan emerged from his
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+hiding place. He was welcomed both by Kanaát Shah
+and Yakoob Beg; and in return for their support he
+consented to forget the past. Yakoob Beg, as his
+reward, received the governorship of Kurama. It was
+during these troubles that Alim Kuli, a Kirghiz chieftain,
+appeared upon the scene. He possessed many of
+the attributes that distinguished his predecessor Mussulman
+Kuli, and his successor, in the eyes of the people,
+Yakoob Beg. He had undoubtedly a great capacity
+for intrigue, but was inferior to the former in administrative
+capacity, and to the latter in military skill. He
+now set Shah Murad, grandson of Shere Ali Khan, up
+as a claimant to the throne, and was speedily joined by
+Yakoob Beg, who once more abandoned the cause of
+Khudayar Khan, who, it must be remembered, had
+always treated Yakoob Beg in a friendly way, and who
+in their early days had been his boon companion. This
+conspiracy was unsuccessful, and Yakoob Beg, who had
+yielded up Khodjent, with the defence of which he had
+been entrusted by Alim Kuli, on the approach of the
+forces of Khudayar Khan, took refuge in Bokhara.
+Here he was favourably received, and resided as a noble
+attached to the court. In 1863 the Ameer of Bokhara,
+Muzaffur Eddin, marched a large army into Khokand
+for the purpose of restoring his brother-in-law, Khudayar,
+to the throne, for he had again been deposed by
+the intrigues of Alim Kuli; Yakoob Beg accompanied
+this force, and once more appears, for the last time,
+on the troubled arena of Khokandian politics. The
+Bokhariot army was soon recalled, and Khudayar Khan
+was left to face the difficulties of his position unaided.
+In a few months an arrangement was come to between
+Alim Kuli and Yakoob Beg and other leading nobles
+against Khudayar. Sultan Murad, who had first been
+supported and then murdered by Alim Kuli, having
+been thus effectually removed, this king-maker had
+set up Sultan Seyyid in his place. Yakoob Beg so far
+profited by this new confederacy that he was restored to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+his old offices and perquisites, and sent once more to hold
+his former post as governor of Kurama. He collected
+as many allies as he was able, and brought them with
+him to assist in the capture of Khodjent. On this
+important town being secured the regent Alim Kuli
+passed through Kurama on his way to seize and settle
+the capital, Tashkent. He appointed a connection of
+his own, Hydar Kuli, with the title of Hudaychi, as
+governor of Kurama, and took Yakoob Beg in his
+train to Tashkent. Shortly after their arrival at
+Tashkent, news came of the Russian occupation of
+Tchimkent, and the survivors of the force driven out
+by Tchernaief soon appeared with a confirmation of
+the intelligence. This was in April, 1864, and until
+October of that year, when the Russians appeared before
+the town, Yakoob Beg was engaged in strengthening
+the fortifications of the capital. When the army of
+General Tchernaief did appear in the neighbourhood,
+Yakoob Beg, with a rashness that cannot be too strongly
+condemned, went forth to encounter it in the open. As
+might have been expected, the Russians were victorious,
+and Yakoob Beg was compelled to seek refuge with
+his shattered forces within the walls of Tashkent. The
+Russians themselves had suffered some loss, and either
+awed by the bold demeanour of their old antagonist, or,
+as is more probable, encountering some difficulty in
+bringing up supplies, and being unprovided with a
+siege train, thought the more prudent policy would be
+to retire to Tchimkent until reinforcements and other
+necessaries should arrive. Alim Kuli, in the course of
+a few days after this reverse, arrived at Tashkent in
+person with a large body of troops, and employed all
+his energies in strengthening the defences before the
+return of the Russians. It is very certain that on
+this occasion, the first on which Yakoob Beg had a
+command of any consequence, he permitted his natural
+impetuosity to get the better of his discretion, and
+that it was the height of madness on his part to enter
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+into an engagement in the open with the disciplined and
+formidable forces of Tchernaief, when, by leaving that
+general to undertake the siege of Tashkent, he might
+have had it in his power to inflict a serious, and for the
+time conclusive, blow against the Russians when the
+reinforcing army of Alim Kuli came up. With half
+his army discouraged by defeat, Alim Kuli found himself
+restricted to a policy of inaction, through the
+over-hastiness of his lieutenant. The Russians did not
+return until after the departure of Yakoob Beg for
+Kashgar, but when they did they found that Alim Kuli
+had made every preparation in his power to receive
+them. On the first occasion they were again forced to
+retreat after a skirmish which the Khokandians claim
+as a victory; but in 1865 they appeared before the
+walls in greater force. Alim Kuli, with a gathering
+vastly superior in numbers to the Russians, attacked
+them a few miles to the north of Tashkent, and the
+fortunes of the day hung in the balance, until the fall
+of Alim Kuli, who, whilst boldly leading a charge of
+Kirghiz cavalry, was pierced in the chest by a musket
+ball. He was carried from the field by a faithful officer,
+and expired that night in Tashkent. Alim Kuli appears
+to have been actuated to some extent by a disinterested
+patriotism, as much as by more personal motives.
+With his fall, and the departure of Yakoob Beg
+for another sphere of operations, all hope of a continued
+state of independence for Khokand was dissipated.
+After this severe defeat the Russians laid close
+siege to Tashkent. The Khokandians in their distress
+applied to Bokhara for aid, and the Russians hastened
+to occupy Chinaz to intercept it. The Bokhariot army
+was routed by the Russian army under General Romanoffski
+at the battle of Irjar, in May, 1866, eleven
+months after Tashkent had been occupied by Tchernaief.
+It was during this period of anarchy, with a hostile
+Russian and an allied Bokhariot force on his soil, that
+Khudayar Khan once more supplanted the nominee of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+Alim Kuli, Sultan Seyyid, and at the close of the campaign
+Khudayar was left in possession of the southern
+portion of Khokand. This Khan appears to have been of
+an unambitious nature, for, during his various exiles, he
+devoted himself to private business with an energy he
+had never shown in the management of the public
+affairs, and when he at last sank into private life and became
+a pensioner of the Russian Court, on the complete
+annexation of his state, he is said to have acquired not
+only a happiness, but many virtues unknown to him in
+his more elevated lot. The unfortunate Sultan Seyyid,
+after wandering for some years out of Khokand, was,
+when he ventured to return in 1871, executed. Many
+of the partisans of Seyyid on the defeat by the
+Russians, and on the overthrow of his rivals by Khudayar,
+sought refuge in the mountains of the Kizilyart,
+whence they proceeded to join Yakoob Beg in Kashgar,
+where they arrived at a most opportune moment as will
+be seen.</p>
+
+<p>To return to Yakoob Beg. After his defeat before
+Tashkent he was employed under Alim Kuli in repairing
+the defences of that town and collecting troops
+from the whole district, but his reputation had been
+lowered by that reverse. There was a certain jealousy
+between the Kirghiz chief and the Tajik soldier of
+fortune. Yakoob Beg saw in Alim Kuli an obstacle to
+his further promotion, and Alim Kuli recognized in the
+Kooshbege a possible rival and successor. Any excuse
+therefore to keep Yakoob Beg in the background, or
+indeed to get rid of him altogether, would be very
+welcome to Alim Kuli. We hear little more of the
+unsuccessful general until his departure for Kashgar a
+few months afterwards. He had to wipe out in other
+regions and against other foes the stain he had incurred
+in his encounters with the Russians.</p>
+
+<p>While these events were in progress at Tashkent, an
+envoy arrived there from Sadic Beg, a Kirghiz prince
+on the frontiers of Ili and Kashgar. He brought
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+intelligence that his master had availed himself of the
+dissensions among the Chinese, to seize the city of
+Kashgar, and he requested the Khan of Khokand to
+send him the heir of the Khojas, in order that he might
+place him on the throne. As the facts really stood,
+Sadic Beg had only laid siege to Kashgar, and, finding
+that he was met with a strenuous resistance, had
+recourse to the plan of setting up a Khoja king to
+strengthen his failing efforts, but of the true state of
+affairs in Kashgar it is evident that everybody in
+Tashkent was primarily ignorant. The Khokandian
+policy had always been, however, to maintain their
+interests intact in Eastern Turkestan, and to weaken
+in every possible way the credit of the Chinese. An
+envoy bringing news of a fresh revolt in Kashgar was,
+therefore, sure of a friendly reception at Tashkent, even
+if he did not return with some more striking tokens of
+amity. But on this occasion the danger from Russian
+movements was so close at hand, and all the efforts of
+the state were so concentrated in preparations for defence,
+that Alim Kuli, whatever he may have thought of its
+prospects, and however much he may have sympathized
+with its object, was unable to give the Kirghiz emissary
+any aid in his enterprise. When, however, Buzurg
+Khan, the only surviving son of Jehangir Khan,
+either of his own free will, or instigated, as some say,
+by Yakoob Beg, offered to assert his claims on Kashgar,
+Alim Kuli expressed his approval of the design, and
+gave his moral assistance so far as was compatible with
+no active participation therein. He, however, gave
+Buzurg Khan the services of Kooshbege Mahomed
+Yakoob to act as his commander-in-chief, or Baturbashi.
+Thus did Alim Kuli free himself from his troublesome
+subordinate, and despatched on an errand which seemed
+likely to end in disgrace and defeat, but which really
+led to empire, the only native whom he dreaded as being
+capable of supplanting him.</p>
+
+<p>Yakoob Beg had up to this point given little promise
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+of future distinction. He had, indeed, earned the
+reputation of being a gallant soldier, if a not very
+prudent one; and in the intrigues that had marked the
+history of his state for twenty years, he had borne his
+fair share. But no one would have dreamt of prognosticating
+that he possessed the ability necessary to win
+campaigns against superior forces, and then to erect a
+powerful state on the ruins that fell into his possession.
+The most favourable opinion would have been, that he
+would have died manfully as a soldier, and as a true
+Mussulman. When he embarked in the enterprise of
+conquering Kashgar, he was no longer in the first flush
+of youth, but was a man who covered his fiery spirit
+and great ambition with a cloak of religious zeal and
+diplomatic apathy. Twenty years' experience in the
+most intriguing court in Central Asia had placed every
+muscle at his complete command, and even in the most
+disastrous moments in his career, he is always
+represented as being calm and collected&mdash;calm in his
+belief in Kismut, and collected in a persuasion of his
+own resources. One fact that will account for the
+slowness with which he advanced into notoriety is that
+he was entirely dependent on his own capacity for
+promotion. He had no wealth, no large following, and
+in the two leaders, Kipchak and Kirghiz, Mussulman and
+Alim Kuli, he had competitors of almost equal merit with
+himself, while they each possessed personal power and
+family connections that placed them far beyond the reach
+of the hardy soldier and court chamberlain. Some of his
+detractors had availed themselves of his impecuniosity
+to circulate stories of his having had dealings with
+the Russians; but these, although invested with circumstances
+originating in non-Russian quarters, are
+probably without any truth. The chief charge, to be
+taken for what it is worth, is, that the weakness of his
+defence of the Ak Musjid district, after the fall of the
+fort, was owing to his having received a large bribe
+from the Russians. Another is, that in 1863, after his
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+return from Bokhara, he neglected to retard the Russian
+movements for a pecuniary consideration. In both
+cases the sum mentioned is very large; and besides the
+apparent falseness of these rumours, we have only to
+consider that he was not worth a bribe, and that his
+opposition to the Russians was marked by all the want
+of foresight of religious zeal. All these considerations
+make such rumours appear in their true light; and
+although we are aware that a follower of Yakoob Beg
+confirmed, if he did not originate, these charges,
+it seems to us that the Russians, if there had been
+truth in the report, would long ago have placed the fact
+before the peoples of Asia, and required Yakoob Beg
+when Ameer of Kashgar to have acted in a more
+friendly way towards his former employers. But the
+simple reason that Yakoob Beg could not have rendered
+any service to the Russians worth the thousands of
+pounds he is said to have received, ought to demolish
+the whole fabrication. If Yakoob Beg's life proves one
+thing more than another, it was that he was a most
+fanatical Mussulman, and as such hating the Russians,
+as the most formidable enemy of Islam, with the most
+intense hate his fiery nature was capable of. This
+man's whole life must have been the greatest hypocrisy
+if he was not genuine in his religious intolerance,
+and that intolerance rendered any connivance with
+Russian measures an impossibility. Owing to his early
+connection with the church, and his maternal grandfather's
+high position therein, Yakoob Beg was always
+distinguished for the strict orthodoxy of his views.
+Through all his life he seems to have made it his chief
+object to keep the church on his side. When he was
+reduced to the most desperate straits in his after life in
+Kashgar, when some of the most faithful of his
+followers fell off from him, and when even Buzurg
+Khan, the man whom he had placed upon a throne,
+declared him a rebel and a traitor, he never lost heart
+so long as the ministers of the church held by him; and,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+on the other hand, they, recognizing the fidelity of their
+champion, supported him through good and ill repute.
+Whilst residing at Bokhara "the holy" he had attached
+to his person several of the most distinguished preachers
+of Islam throughout Asia, and he had taken all the
+vows that give a peculiar sanctity to the relations that
+connect the layman with his priest. It was here that
+he publicly announced his intention of going on
+pilgrimage to Mecca; an intention which he repeated
+on several occasions during his rule of Kashgar, but
+was obliged, by the position and precarious existence of
+that state, always to perform by deputy. When he had
+established himself as ruler, his first measure was to
+re-enforce the Shariàt and to endow several shrines
+that had been erected to the memory of the chief
+Khoja saints. It was by such means that he at every
+crisis of his life had striven to make his interests
+identical with those of his religion, and when he
+became a responsible and successful prince his past life
+stood him in such good stead, that he easily came to be
+regarded throughout Asia as the most faithful and
+redoubtable supporter of Islam.</p>
+
+<p>At this period of his life he is described by one who
+knew him as being of a short but stoutish build, with
+a keenly intelligent and handsome countenance. He
+had, during the vicissitudes of his career in Khokand,
+been so often near assassination, or execution, that the
+result of the morrow had, to all external appearance,
+become a matter of secondary consideration to him, and
+his features, schooled to immobility by a long career of
+court intrigue, appeared to the casual observer dull and
+uninteresting. When, however, the conversation turned
+on subjects that specially interested him, such as the
+advance of Russia, the future of Islam, or the policy of
+England, he threw aside his mask, and became at once
+a man whose views, with some merit in themselves,
+were rendered almost convincing by the singular charm
+of his voice and manner. He was honourably distinguished
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+at all times by the simplicity of his dress, and
+his freedom from the pretension and love of show
+characteristic of most Asiatics; and at the very highest
+point of his power he was only a soldier, occupying a
+palace. As was well said of Timour, the Athalik Ghazi
+placed the "foot of courage in the stirrup of patience,"
+and he evidently set himself to copy the great lessons
+of military success that might be learnt from the careers
+of Genghis Khan, Timour, and Baber. Such is some
+account of the commander-in-chief to the expedition of
+Buzurg Khan. The Khoja, himself, was a man about
+the same age as his lieutenant, but in every other
+respect as different as he well could be. Personally a
+coward, fond of show and every kind of luxury, and of the
+treacherous, fickle nature that marked his race, he had
+done nothing during his past life to compensate for the
+want of the most ordinary virtues. Although he participated
+in the expedition of Wali Khan, he showed no
+possession of merit, and in the subsequent occupation
+that the Khojas maintained in Kashgar during a few
+weeks, he, perhaps more than any other of his kinsmen,
+disgusted the people by his open and unbridled licentiousness.
+Such were the two men who, in the latter
+days of 1864, set out from Tashkent for the recovery
+of a kingdom. Of their chances of success few would
+have ventured then to predict a settlement in their
+favour; none, certainly, such as was obtained by
+Yakoob Beg. It is now time for us to relate how they
+fared in Eastern Turkestan.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_VII"></a><span>CHAPTER VII.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE INVASION OF KASHGAR BY BUZURG KHAN AND
+YAKOOB BEG.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Chinese were on several occasions, as we have seen,
+threatened in Eastern Turkestan by the pretensions of
+the Khojas, and the secret or open machinations of
+Khokand. But they had at all times triumphed over
+every combination of circumstances, so long as they
+themselves were united. The temporary success of
+Jehangir Khan was obliterated by the excesses which
+characterized his occupation of the country, and by the
+energy and large display of force, with which the
+Chinese pacified the state on his flight; and the last,
+under Wali Khan, can scarcely be dignified by any
+other appellation than that of a marauding incursion.
+But a great and important change had occurred in the
+few years that had elapsed since 1859. The Chinese
+no longer presented a collected force to the onslaught of
+an assailant. In every quarter of their empire, victorious
+rebels had established themselves, and had
+detracted in an immeasurable degree from the effective
+strength of the Government. A Mahomedan ruler
+swayed over the Panthays, in Yunnan, from his capital
+at Ta-li-foo; the Taepings round Nankin were at the
+summit of their career, just before the appearance of
+Colonel Gordon, when, in 1862, a fresh danger broke out
+in the provinces of Kansuh and Shensi. From a remote
+period there had been extensive Mussulman settlements
+in these provinces, and so early as the seventeenth
+century they had been the cause of trouble to the great
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+Kanghi. The Emperor Keen-Lung, indeed, at one
+time attempted to settle the question for ever by ordering
+the massacre of every Mahomedan over fifteen years
+of age. Even this sweeping measure did not have the
+desired effect, and whether persecution was the means
+or not of giving vitality to the cause, it is certain that
+they had become more numerous, more resolute, and
+more confident in their own superiority to the other
+Chinese by the middle of the present century. These
+Mahomedans were known as Tungani, Dungani, or
+Dungans, while the Buddhist Chinese are spoken of
+as Khitay. Many writers are not satisfied with this
+simple explanation of the name Tungani, and will have
+it that they were a distinct race, who were either transported
+to China at some period of Chinese conquest, or
+were compelled to seek refuge there by some advancing
+barbarian horde. They even assert that they can trace
+the name and origin of this people to a tribe dwelling
+in the country of the lower waters of the Amoor; but
+while there is complete uncertainty on the subject it
+seems simpler to accept the signification that the word
+Tungani conveys to the Chinese, and that is Mahomedan.
+We know, for certain, that these people had
+resided in Kansuh and its neighbouring province for
+centuries&mdash;that they were remarkable for a superiority
+in strength and activity over the Khitay, and that they
+possessed the virtues of sobriety and honesty. They
+were also not infected by the disease of opium smoking,
+and we should imagine them to have been a quiet, contented,
+and agreeable people at their most prosperous
+period. Their physical superiority to the Khitay would
+probably be owing to their abstention from "bang"
+and opium, and we need not suppose that they were the
+descendants of a stronger race, who had issued from the
+frigid north, when we have an explanation so much simpler
+and more natural at hand. They were found by
+their Khitay rulers to form excellent soldiers, policemen,
+and other Government servants, such as carriers, &amp;c. In
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+this last employment many found their way to Hamil,
+thence to Turfan and Urumtsi, and their numbers were
+increased by discharged soldiers, who remained as military
+settlers sooner than return to Kansuh. In the course of
+a few generations their numbers became much greater,
+until, at last, in the cities we have named, they formed the
+majority of the inhabitants. In Kuldja, too, they were
+very numerous, but south of the Tian Shan they do not
+seem to have advanced westward of Kucha in any great
+force. At Aksu the Andijan influence, supreme in Western
+Kashgar, presented an impassable barrier to the Tungani,
+who, it must be remembered, had no sympathy
+with Khokand. The Tungani were, therefore, Mahomedan
+subjects of China, originating in Kansuh, but
+who had also, in the course of time, spread westward
+into Chinese Turkestan and Jungaria. They were employed
+in the service of the country without restriction,
+nor can we find that they were subjected to any unfair
+usage, after the measures taken against them in the
+earlier days of Keen-Lung. They may not have been
+as highly favoured as the Sobo tribes, and they may
+have been subjected to some ridicule in Kansuh; but in
+Jungaria they were on an equality with all the other
+Chinese, and immeasurably better placed in the political
+scale than the Andijanis or Tarantchis. The Chinese
+had just grounds for believing that no danger to their
+rule in Eastern Turkestan or Jungaria would ever be
+caused by the Tungani, and it is not easy to explain
+how their reasonable anticipations were falsified. The
+Tungani were fervent, if not the most orthodox in
+form of, Mahomedans, and it would appear that they
+were not free from a belief in their own superiority to
+the Khitay. This feeling was fostered by the "mollahs,"
+or priests, who became very active within the Chinese
+dominions, when these had been extended by conquest
+into the heart of Asia. As if in retaliation for a Khitay
+conquest the Mahomedan religion was undermining the
+outworks of its rival's power slowly, but surely. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+impulse given to trade by the security and patronage
+that accompanied Chinese rule was, at least from a
+purely Chinese point of view, neutralized as an advantage
+by the admission into the empire of energetic and
+eloquent preachers of the superior merits of Mahomedanism.
+It required many generations before the effect
+of their efforts became perceptible, and it was not until
+the power of China fell into an extraordinary decline&mdash;a
+decline which many thought, with some show of reason,
+was to herald the fall, but which later events have
+seemed to make but the prelude to a more vigorous
+life than ever&mdash;that these Mahomedan missionaries
+among the Tungani knew that the time to reap what
+they had sown with patience and persistency was at
+hand. It is impossible not to connect this event in some
+degree with that unaccountable revival of fanaticism
+among Mahomedans, which has produced so many important
+events during the last thirty years, and of which
+we are now witnessing some of the most striking results.</p>
+
+<p>In 1862, a riot occurred in a small village of Kansuh;
+it was suppressed with some loss of life, and people were
+beginning to suppose that it possessed no significance,
+when a disturbance broke out on a large scale at Houchow,
+or Salara. The Tungani had risen, and the unfortunate
+unarmed Khitay were massacred right and
+left. The rising soon assumed the proportions of a
+civil war, and the infection spread to the neighbouring
+province of Shensi. Then ensued scenes of the most
+atrocious barbarity. The Khitay, who all their lives
+had lived at peace and as neighbours with the Tungani,
+were butchered without mercy. The Mahomedan
+priests seized all the governing power into their
+own hands, and set their followers the example of unscrupulous
+ferocity. The movement, even if we make
+allowance for the difficulties besetting the government
+in other regions, must be considered to have been attended
+by unexpected success. It can only be accounted
+for by the supposition that the Khitay were
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+taken completely by surprise, and realized neither the
+extent nor the nature of the danger to which they were
+exposed. Before the end of 1862, a Tungan government
+was established in Kansuh, and its jurisdiction
+was for a time acknowledged in Shensi. The priests
+formed an administration amongst themselves, and set
+themselves to the task of consolidating what they had
+won, and of preparing for the time when the Chinese
+should come for vengeance. The events happening
+in Kansuh were naturally of interest to the Tungani
+in the country lying beyond it, and it was not long
+before the example set them was followed in Hamil,
+Turfan, Urumtsi, Manas, and other cities of that district.
+The same success attended the movement here
+as in Kansuh. The Chinese power was subverted, the
+Khitay massacred with greater circumstances of cruelty,
+if possible, and a new Tungan state was formed in
+those cities. Each district retained a nominal independence,
+under the headship of a priest, or body of priests,
+or of one of the native Tungan princes, and then the
+movement spread with irresistible strides to Karashar,
+Kucha, and Aksu. There it stopped, and south of the
+Tian Shan the Tungan revolt proper never extended
+west of Aksu.</p>
+
+<p>In Altyshahr and Kuldja for some months longer
+the Chinese maintained the external show of power,
+but all their communications with China were cut off,
+and neither in numbers nor resources had they sufficient
+means to cope with the Tungani unaided. They
+would have accomplished as much as could have been
+expected from them if they succeeded in keeping possession
+of that which they still occupied. The Tungan
+element in Kucha and Aksu was not predominant.
+It had to share power with the Khojas, and, as we shall
+see later on, the Khojas of these two cities seized the
+governing power for themselves. It was the appearance
+of the Tungan sedition in these cities, which
+occupy a middle relation to the purely Chinese cities
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+of Hamil and Urumtsi, and the almost totally Khokandian
+cities of Yarkand and Kashgar, that roused
+the Kashgari to a full appreciation of the importance
+to themselves of this movement, and the Chinese garrisons
+and settlers to an equally just realization of
+their own danger. The Kashgari, not free from the
+fanaticism of all their co-religionists, and naturally
+elated at the successes of the Tungani, forgot, with their
+well proved fickleness, all the benefits they had received
+from the Chinese, and waited eagerly for a favourable
+opportunity to come for them to imitate the example
+set them by their eastern neighbours. Nor had they
+long to wait, although it was not from them that came
+the first spark that lighted the firebrand of civil war
+and anarchy throughout the length and breadth of
+Altyshahr.</p>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that the Khokandian government
+had the right to nominate in each city, where they
+received dues on Mahomedan merchandise, an agent or
+tax-collector to look after the proper levy of the tax.
+In some of the larger cities this official would require
+a considerable staff of assistants, and thus a certain
+number of skilled Khokandian officials were permanently
+located on Kashgarian or Chinese territory.
+After the failure of the expedition of Wali Khan, in
+which these officials seem to have disappeared, either
+having become merged in the body of his partisans or
+sacrificed during the massacres of that time, a fresh
+batch of Khokandians was installed, and occupied, in a
+legal sense, the same position as their predecessors.
+It would appear, however, that the natural result of
+their aid to Wali Khan followed, and that the Chinese
+Ambans regarded their presence with scarcely concealed
+dislike, and proclaimed that these Khokandian tax-gatherers
+were devoting more of their attention to the
+propagation of heretical religious and political doctrines
+than to the collection of dues on silk and other articles
+of commerce. It would require but the slightest untoward
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+circumstance to fan this ill-feeling into the most
+insatiate hatred and hostility. The danger was rendered
+the more serious when the Chinese Ambans perceived
+for the first time that the sympathies of a large
+portion of their Tungan soldiery were estranged from
+them. It was doubtful whether the Tungan regiments
+could be relied on against a fresh Khoja revolt,
+and it was certain that they would not combine in any
+repression of the Mahomedan religion, even though the
+sufferers should only be Andijanis. Such was the state
+of the public mind in Altyshahr in 1862, when the
+Tungani revolted and obtained success in Kansuh and
+Shensi.</p>
+
+<p>As early as 1859 the hostility of the Chinese Ambans
+to the Andijani tax-collectors received a forcible illustration
+in the town of Yarkand. At that time Afridun
+Wang was governor, and, whether there was any personal
+enmity at the root of the action or not, he found
+little difficulty in convincing both himself and the other
+Chinese residents that the Andijani agent had been
+stirring up discontent against them in the town. Accordingly,
+as self-preservation is the first law of nature,
+this Khokandian official, with his attendant, was arrested
+and executed. There may have been some
+foundation for the accusations made by Afridun Wang
+against his rival: more probably there was none; but
+on referring the matter to the Viceroy of Ili for decision
+it was decided that the governor should be removed.
+The Khokandian government sent fresh agents, and it
+is not stated that any reparation was given to the families
+of the sufferers. From this it would appear that
+the post of tax-collector in Altyshahr for His Highness
+the Khan of Khokand was not a very desirable
+position. Afridun Wang retired to his native town of
+Turfan, where, three years later on, he contributed more
+than any one else to the success of the Tungan movement.
+His policy, if anti-Khokandian, was pro-Mahomedan
+or Tungan, and his case is very typical of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+nature of this rising. In Turfan he continued to be
+one of the chief men, until, six years later on, it fell to
+the Athalik Ghazi.</p>
+
+<p>His successor in the governorship of Yarkand did not
+interfere with the Khokandian officials, but for this
+moderation he made up by the exactions he committed
+on the residents, more particularly on the Mahomedan
+portion of them. His extortions and cruelties had the
+effect as much of disgusting his own followers as of
+rousing a spirit of opposition among the oppressed.
+It was while things were in this uncertain state at
+Yarkand that the governor received secret notice of
+the Tungan revolt in Kansuh, and he at once perceived
+that, when this important intelligence became
+known, not only would his own Tungan troops become
+more openly mutinous, but that the Khojas might seize
+the opportunity to assert their claim to the country once
+more. In this special case, in addition to the general
+apprehension that would be felt by any Chinese governor
+at the aspect of affairs, there was personal fear for
+the unjustifiable acts of his government, and the Amban,
+in his trepidation, resolved on the most strenuous precautions
+to avert the danger from himself. He summoned
+a council of war of his Buddhist lieutenants,
+and stated the exact position to them; how the
+Tungan portion of their forces could not be depended
+on; how the Tungan settlers would join them; and
+how the Andijani agents would do their utmost to unite
+in one cause against themselves all those who followed
+the teaching of Islam; and how all these events,
+which before were possible, had been rendered probable
+by the Tungan successes in the east. He dwelt on
+the fact that no time was to be lost in the execution of
+such precautions as they thought necessary; that at
+any moment the news might arrive, and then they
+would be in a minority; and he did not attempt to
+conceal the purport of his address&mdash;that he was in
+favour of sharp measures, of going to the root of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+evil at once, and of massacring every Mussulman in
+the town. The council of war was not prepared to endorse
+such a violent proceeding without careful consideration.
+There were many dissentients, and the meeting
+was adjourned. It reassembled, and, on this occasion,
+although the supporters of more moderate measures had
+decreased, it adjourned once more before deciding. The
+danger evidently appeared more appalling to the governor
+than to his subordinates; perhaps also there
+was some personal dislike for their chief even among
+his Khitay following. At the second meeting they
+seemed, indeed, more willing to acquiesce in his proposed
+strong measures, and this may have been caused
+by their observation of the state of public opinion in
+the interval. But even then no final decision could be
+arrived at, and the Khitay never had a chance after that
+of making any defence in Yarkand. The Tungan
+troops were not long in hearing, through their chief
+officer, Mah Dalay, that there was a plot on foot among
+the Khitay to disarm, or, as others said, to massacre
+them, and they then learnt of the Mahomedan revolt in
+China and along the road thither. They immediately
+determined to be beforehand with the Amban and his
+lukewarm council, and no weak hesitation marred the
+execution of their plot, as it had that of the Chinese
+governor.</p>
+
+<p>The Khitay troops, unarmed, were surprised during
+the night, and cut down without quarter, and the small
+body of survivors sought refuge in the Yangyshahr fort.
+This was in August, 1863, and no fewer than 7,000
+Khitay soldiers are computed to have fallen on this
+single occasion. The Tungan troops were thereupon
+joined by the townspeople, and the question then to be
+decided was, who was to be supreme, the Tungani or
+the Andijan-Kashgari Mahomedans. The former were
+simply an unlettered and rather savage soldiery; the
+latter possessed keen intellects for manipulating a fanatical
+people, and for improvising an administration of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+superficial character. The balance of power was evenly
+distributed until reinforcements arrived from Aksu and
+Kucha to the anti-Tungan party. Two Khojas who
+had been banished from Kucha, for endeavouring to
+promote their own interests in the name of Khokand,
+had fled to Aksu, where they met the same fate. In
+this latter flight many of similar principles joined them,
+so that when they reached Yarkand they had a numerous
+force at their back. The Khojas in the first place
+joined their forces to the Tungani, to storm the remaining
+Khitay in the Yangyshahr. The Khitay after
+a gallant resistance perceived that further opposition
+was impossible. Then occurred one of those deeds,
+which, if Europe instead of Asia had been the scene,
+would have been handed down to posterity as a rare
+example of military devotion and courage, but which,
+although not unique even in the annals of the campaign
+we are entering upon, having occurred in little-known
+Eastern Turkestan, is not realized as an event that has
+actually taken place. It is a myth of the myth-land to
+which it belongs. And yet, when we read how the Amban
+summoned all his officers to his chamber, where he
+sat in state surrounded by his wives, his family, and his
+servants; how all were silent, and yet sedate and prepared;
+how, at the given signal that all were present, and that
+the foe was at the gate, the aged warrior dropped his
+lighted pipe into the mine beneath; how the exulting
+foe won after all but a barren triumph; and how the
+Khitay taught the natives that if they had forgotten
+how to conquer they had not how to die, we feel that
+there is an under-current throughout the story, that,
+apart from the admiration it must command, has claims
+to our own special sympathy. The Chinese, as we did
+in India in the dark hours of 1857, asserted their
+superiority over the semi-barbarous races under their
+sway, even when all hopes of a recovery seemed to
+be abandoned. After the fall of the citadel the Khoja
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+element was supreme in Yarkand, and a priest named
+Abderrahman was set up as king.</p>
+
+<p>The other cities of Altyshahr promptly followed the
+example of Yarkand, and the Chinese power was completely
+subverted on all hands. The Khitay were massacred
+whenever they fell into the hands of the Mahomedans,
+and the only places that still held out were the
+citadels, notably the Yangyshahr of Kashgar. The
+inhabitants of this city appear to have been unable to
+keep their advantage over the Chinese, for they appealed
+to the Kirghiz to come in and assist them. These
+nomads, under their chief, Sadic Beg, were nothing
+loth to join in expelling the Chinese, as such a change
+could only increase their advantages by substituting an
+unsettled for a settled government. Siege was accordingly
+laid to the citadel of Kashgar, but the irregular
+troops of the new allies were unable to make any impression
+on the fort, defended as it was by a large
+Khitay garrison. If the Chinese commander had
+assumed a more active policy, he might have destroyed
+his opponents, but he was waiting for the arrival of
+reinforcements, which he expected before many
+months. In not relying solely on his own resources
+he proved himself unable to read the changed signs of
+the time; if, indeed, he was not already meditating that
+surrender, which he ultimately concluded with Yakoob
+Beg. Sadic Beg, finding himself unable to take the
+fort, and knowing that it was uncertain how long the
+Kashgari would remain friendly to himself, resolved to
+play the part of king-maker, and sent the embassy to
+Tashkent for a Khoja to come and rule Kashgar, only
+he omitted to say that Kashgar was not conquered.</p>
+
+<p>We can now return to Buzurg Khan and his commander-in-chief.
+When they left Tashkent they had
+only a following of six, among whom were Abdulla,
+Pansad; Mahomed Kuli, Shahawal; and Khoja Kulan,
+Hudaychi. All of these played a very prominent
+part under Yakoob Beg. From Tashkent they went to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+Khokand, where their numbers rose to sixty-eight.
+Here the final preparations were made, and during the
+first days of January, 1865, this band of adventurers
+crossed the Khokand frontier into Eastern Turkestan.
+The mountain forts seem to have been deserted, for
+no opposition was encountered in the passage of the
+Terek defile. Several small bodies of troops joined
+them, and they reached Mingyol in the neighbourhood
+of Kashgar with increased numbers and confidence.
+Sadic Beg had conceived a more sanguine view of his
+situation by this time, and half repented that he had
+invited the Khojas in at all, more particularly when he
+found that the Khoja had a following of his own, and
+a skilled commander and minister in Yakoob Beg.
+He then strove to dissuade Buzurg Khan from proceeding
+further with an enterprise fraught with great peril,
+for he represented the Chinese as sure to return, when
+summary vengeance would be exacted. But his arguments
+were unavailing. Either Buzurg Khan or his
+adviser, Yakoob Beg, was deaf to all entreaty. The enterprise
+they had embarked on must be continued to
+the bitter end. They could not think of returning to
+Khokand with nothing accomplished, with the stigma
+attaching to them of a retreat when there had been
+no foe. Sadic Beg could not but submit with the best
+grace possible; and Buzurg Khan was accordingly
+placed on the throne of his ancestors.</p>
+
+<p>In his "<i>orda</i>" or palace he administered justice and
+received the congratulations of his own followers and
+of the Andijani townspeople. The court rules were
+drawn up on the model of those in use in Khokand,
+and while the expedition had but established itself, in
+an uncertain manner, in one city it was thought necessary
+that etiquette should be as strictly defined and
+enforced as if all this were taking place in a brilliant
+and luxurious capital. In a few days Sadic Beg, on
+finding that he played but a secondary part, revolted,
+and set himself up as ruler at Yangy Hissar. It was
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+now that Yakoob Beg came to the front, and assumed
+the control of affairs until the fall of the contemptible
+Buzurg. With great difficulty after the desertion of
+their Kirghiz allies was a force of 3,000 men collected
+around the new Khoja in Kashgar. Sadic Beg advanced
+on the capital with a much larger army, and
+Yakoob Beg had for a time to remain on the defensive.
+Each day, however, brought in recruits to his camp,
+while, the army of the Kirghiz leader presenting no
+object of sympathy to the people, his rival's remained
+stationary, if it did not decrease. An encounter at
+last commenced between the two forces which was
+made general by the intrepidity of Abdulla. The
+Kirghiz levies of Sadic were unable to withstand the
+vigorous charges that were led against them, and broke
+after a short combat into headlong flight. In the
+mountains the Kirghiz gathered around their chieftain
+in force, and, hovering on the northern districts of
+Kashgar, presented a danger that must be removed by
+Yakoob Beg before he could advance farther. His
+troops were therefore directed to proceed against the
+Kirghiz in their fastnesses, and it was not long before
+the Kirghiz, driven into a corner, turned at bay on their
+pursuer. The forces on either side were about equal,
+some 5,000 men in either army. But, as is customary
+in the East, the Kirghiz army put forth a champion,
+Suranchi by name, who had obtained great renown for
+his extraordinary height and strength. The challenge
+did not remain unanswered, for Abdulla stepped forward
+to the encounter. The fight, though furious, was short,
+and the smaller Khokandian warrior was victorious over
+his more ponderous antagonist. The Kirghiz power
+after this reverse was broken up, and Sadic Beg took
+refuge with Alim Kuli at Tashkent. Yakoob Beg's
+first campaign against the Kirghiz, who had sworn
+alliance with him, and by whose invitation he was present
+in Kashgar, had thus ended victoriously, and he
+was now able to resume the main purpose of conquering
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+Kashgar. Having rendered Kashgar secure from surprise
+on the north, and leaving a force to maintain their
+hold on it, and to keep in check the Khitay garrison,
+Buzurg and Yakoob proceeded south to occupy Yangy
+Hissar. The town was occupied without difficulty, but
+an attempt to storm the citadel in which the Khitay
+had taken refuge was repulsed with loss. Sending
+Buzurg Khan back to Kashgar, Yakoob Beg resolved
+to go on to Yarkand and endeavour to bring that city
+under their immediate influence.</p>
+
+<p>At this period he loudly proclaimed that there should
+be no differences among the Tungani, or Mahomedans,
+in their war with the Buddhists, and that Khojas and
+Tungani had but one interest in common. As we
+have seen, the Tungan disturbances broke out first in
+Yarkand of any city of Altyshahr, and accordingly an
+earlier settlement founded on a compromise had been
+attained there, than was the case in its northern
+neighbours, Kashgar and Yangy Hissar, where an
+ambitious Kirghiz chief had sought to carve a
+kingdom for himself. After Abderrahman Khoja had
+been made king or ruler in Yarkand, and after the
+Khitay had been destroyed with their citadel, a fresh
+arrangement was agreed upon between the Tungani
+and the Khoja party. By its terms the Tungani
+maintained possession of the citadel, and the Khojas
+held jurisdiction in the city. Neither of them would be
+disposed to view with any friendly eye the appearance
+of a claimant to supremacy in the person of a Khoja
+sovereign of the whole country, and it was as the representative
+of such a person that Yakoob Beg resolved to
+visit Yarkand. His march was delayed as much as
+possible, and it was not without some difficulty that he
+at last obtained admittance with his small following
+into the city. Yakoob Beg was naturally incensed at
+this inimical treatment from his fellow-religionists, and
+he soon set himself to the task of humbling the
+dominant Khojas of Yarkand. During a street riot
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+that was probably instigated by the wily Khokandian,
+the leading Khojas were seized, and their followers
+expelled from the city. With a force of only a few
+hundred men, Yakoob Beg had established himself as
+master in the largest city of the country; his success
+on this occasion was very temporary. As ill fortune
+would have it for him, a fresh army of 2,000 men from
+Kucha had arrived at Tagharchi, and, there joined by
+the forces from Yarkand and the neighbourhood, presented
+a very formidable appearance. They marched
+on the city at once with complete confidence in their
+superior numbers, and Yakoob Beg, always in favour of
+the boldest course, marched out to meet them. In a
+skirmish, however, the detachment under Abdulla was
+badly cut up owing to the rashness of that officer, and
+Yakoob Beg at once recognized the necessity for a
+prompt retreat. During the following night he made
+a forced march and arrived the next day at Yangy Hissar
+with no very great loss in men, but without any baggage
+whatever. The enterprise to Yarkand then appeared
+in its true light as a rash venture.</p>
+
+<p>The Khitay in the fort of Yangy Hissar still held
+out, and Yakoob Beg resolved to overcome them before
+he attempted any fresh enterprise. He called up
+reinforcements from Kashgar, and pressed the siege
+with renewed vigour, and alter strictly environing it for
+forty days the garrison surrendered. Although Yakoob
+Beg himself seemed desirous of showing moderation to
+the prisoners, more than 2,000 Chinese were massacred.
+During all these petty events, which had not produced
+even the results of past Khoja enterprises, there had
+been discontent and division within, as well as opposition
+from without. At this time a fresh danger
+was appearing on the horizon. A Badakshi army was
+advancing with hostile intent on Sirikul, and although
+Yakoob Beg disregarded its approach while he pressed
+on the works against the citadel of Yangy Hissar, when
+that fort fell it attracted his attention once more. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+Khitay garrison in the Yangyshahr of Kashgar was
+also a source of danger to the newly founded dynasty,
+and, although its inactivity had continued for a long
+period, it was uncertain at what moment it might pass
+off. We can only account for the extraordinary lethargy
+of the Chinese commander by supposing that he was in
+complete ignorance of what was passing in the country.
+At many moments it must seem to an observer of the
+facts that the Chinese governor, who had under him 6,000
+or 7,000 disciplined troops, could have crushed all the
+opposition of such heterogeneous crowds as those fighting
+under or against Yakoob Beg were up to this time.
+With the destruction of the Yangy Hissar garrison the
+prospects of Yakoob Beg greatly improved, and less opportunity
+was left to the Chinese governor for assuming
+the offensive, than when he possessed an ally in so close a
+position as Yangy Hissar. Yakoob Beg also resolved to
+press the Khitay still more in this their last stronghold,
+and before he encountered other opponents to
+crush the Khitay, as he already had the Kirghiz.
+At this point Sadic Beg reappears in Kashgar at the
+head of a Kirghiz force to oppose Yakoob Beg, and for
+a moment it seemed as if he were to have better fortune
+on this occasion. But Abdulla, the most trusted as
+well as the most courageous of Yakoob Beg's lieutenants,
+collected such forces as he could, boldly threw himself
+in his path, and, having routed Sadic in a sanguinary
+engagement, prepared to press that unfortunate chieftain
+into flight or ruin. Yakoob Beg, in want of allies and
+soldiers however, interfered and suggested an alliance
+instead of a war <i>à outrance</i>. The thwarted Sadic was
+only too glad to get off on such favourable terms, and
+joined his forces to those of his late enemy now
+besieging the Khitay with renewed vigour. This
+merciful termination of a difficulty, that might have
+become serious had it not been cured in time, was a
+performance very creditable in a diplomatic sense to
+Yakoob Beg. In a small way it may be compared with
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+Frederick the Great's action at Pirna, where he received
+the services of 40,000 Saxon troops. But, perhaps, still
+more remarkable was the manner in which Yakoob Beg
+averted the danger from the Badakshi army. The
+Badakshi, like their kinsmen the Afghans, may be considered,
+<i>cæteris paribus</i>, to be superior soldiers, on account
+of their larger build and more active habits, to other
+Asiatics, so that Yakoob Beg with his half-disciplined
+followers would have had some difficulty and must have
+incurred considerable loss in overcoming these new invaders.
+He made overtures to them, and the Badakshi,
+seeing that he was likely to give them exciting and
+profitable employment, entered into negotiations with
+him. The result was that they took service under him;
+and Yakoob Beg for the first time found himself at the
+head of a large army, composed of Khokand, Kashgar,
+Kirghiz, and Badakshan levies. It was fortunate for
+himself that he had been able to arrange his affairs so
+satisfactorily, for a fresh danger was approaching from
+the east.</p>
+
+<p>The reader may have observed that we have said little
+of Buzurg Khan during the operations of the campaign
+up to this point. Indeed, there is little or nothing
+to say of the movements of that prince, for he had
+been mainly stationary at Kashgar, where he passed
+his time in his harem, or besotted under the use of
+drugs. Yakoob Beg had from the very commencement
+come to the front as responsible chief, and as events
+progressed the people and the army came to look upon
+him as their future ruler. But Yakoob Beg, it would
+seem, was really in earnest in supporting the Khoja
+prince, for on several occasions not only did he give
+Buzurg the most salutary advice, but he also compelled
+him to take an active part in the public business. Such
+fits of action were most distasteful to the effeminate
+prince, and he always returned with renewed zest to
+the illicit pleasures in which he indulged. One of the
+occasions on which Yakoob Beg endeavoured to instil
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+into his sovereign some idea of the responsibilities of
+his office was this invasion by the Khoja-Tungani power
+of Altyshahr. Early in the summer a large force, estimated
+at 40,000 men, collected by the cities of Aksu,
+Kucha, and Turfan, appeared at Maralbashi, whence
+it equally threatened Kashgar or protected Yarkand.
+Yakoob Beg's utmost efforts, if we are to credit the
+native report, only availed to bring some 2,500 men into
+the field; but it is more reasonable to suppose, that,
+with his Kirghiz, Kipchak, and Badakshi auxiliaries,
+he had many more troops under him, perhaps 12,500
+instead of 2,500 men. Be the exact numbers of the
+forces what they may, however, it is certain that he
+was greatly outnumbered by the invader, and that the
+diverse elements of his army detracted very much from
+its effective strength. The Tungan army advanced from
+Maralbashi on Yangy Hissar, where Yakoob Beg had
+concentrated his army. He had drawn Buzurg Khan
+and such of the court followers as he could from their
+ignominious inaction in the capital to encounter the
+dangers and risks of a field of battle. Both sides were
+eager for the encounter, which took place in the
+neighbourhood of Yangy Hissar. The tactical disposition
+made by Yakoob Beg of his forces was such as
+would command the approval of skilled officers, and,
+having done all that mortal man could do to insure the
+result, he commended himself and his cause to Allah.
+The battle was long and stoutly contested. During
+hours it was impossible to say to which side the balance
+of victory was inclining; at last the Kirghiz troops,
+half-hearted in their fighting, were driven from the field,
+and the Badakshi division, which had up to that
+moment stubbornly held its ground, immediately
+followed the shameful example thus set it. There now
+only remained the division under the immediate orders
+of Yakoob Beg to withstand the onset of a whole army
+victorious in two different quarters of the field. The
+situation, on which the fate of the whole enterprise
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+depended, might have filled the boldest heart with
+momentary despair. Yakoob Beg had, however, so
+braced himself to the effort, that no more than ordinary
+emotion was permitted to betray the disturbed mind
+within, and with the exclamation that "Victory is the
+gift of God," he inspired his soldiery to continue the
+fight throughout the afternoon. The enemy, dismayed
+at the dauntless courage shown by this mere handful of
+men, and having incurred great loss in his effort to
+crush them, drew off his weakened forces towards
+evening; and Yakoob Beg, boldly seizing the opportunity
+for assuming the offensive, drove them from the
+field in disorder and with considerable loss. In addition
+to the loss in killed and wounded, more than 1,000
+Tungan soldiers enlisted under the standard of Yakoob
+Beg, and that general found himself on the morrow of
+one of his greatest battles, with a greater force under
+his command than he had just before it commenced.
+This great triumph gave fresh lustre to the Khoja
+family, and redounded to the military renown of
+Yakoob Beg. Nor should it be forgotten that on this
+occasion he showed that he possessed, besides military
+genius of some merit, qualities of an estimable character.
+For the first time in the annals of these wars the
+prisoners were treated with some consideration. For
+some reason or other this victory was not followed up,
+and the defeated Kucha army retired on Maralbashi,
+which it continued to hold for some months longer.
+The indirect results of this victory were scarcely less
+important, however, than the immediate and direct consequences
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>Buzurg Khan, who had been present at this battle,
+was among the first to seek refuge in flight; and when
+he received intelligence of the final success his satisfaction
+was almost eclipsed by his personal chagrin and
+mortification. Up to this event he had been content to
+let Yakoob Beg act the king so long as he could indulge
+undisturbed in his debaucheries; but from this date
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+there became mingled with his wounded vanity a conviction
+that Yakoob Beg was becoming so powerful and
+so popular that he might prove a dangerous subject.
+The weak-minded prince then permitted himself to be
+made the tool of every rival that the success of Yakoob
+Beg had raised up for himself either in the court or in
+the camp, and listened to tales brought him of his lieutenant's
+plots, when the conspirators most to be feared
+by himself were the ambitious chieftains in whose power
+he was placing his person and his crown. After the
+defeat of the Kucha army, the ruling parties in Yarkand
+thought it would be wise to come to terms with
+their victorious and aggressive neighbour, and accordingly
+an embassy was despatched to Yangy Hissar by
+the Khojas of Yarkand to tender their submission to the
+sovereign of Kashgar, and to ask to be favoured by the
+nomination of a city governor, who would be agreeable
+to Buzurg Khan and his vizier, Yakoob Beg. It is
+suggestive to watch how the name of the vizier occupies
+almost as prominent place in all their addresses as that
+of his master. The Tungan governor in the Yarkand
+Yangyshahr, not to be behindhand in his worship of
+the rising sun, immediately sent a similar expression of
+obedience to Kashgar.</p>
+
+<p>The course of events once more takes us back to
+Kashgar, where the Chinese still held the citadel against
+all comers. But with each fresh success of Yakoob Beg
+over his numerous opponents, and with the spread of
+the Tungan power into Jungaria, hope almost completely
+deserted the unfortunate Khitay, who, in this
+solitary fort, alone maintained the name of Chinese
+authority. Treason, within the walls, was now to aid
+the efforts from without. Kho Dalay, the superior
+officer in the citadel, although not the commandant,
+came to an arrangement with Yakoob Beg, by which
+honourable terms were conceded to the garrison; and
+3,000 Khitay troops surrendered and settled in Kashgar.
+They were required to acknowledge formally the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+supremacy of the Khoja, and to make a profession of
+Islamism. But they were never really interfered with
+in the observance of their own rites among themselves,
+and had nothing to complain of in their duty. They
+were called after their recantation "Yangy Mussulmans,"
+or "New Mussulmans." These were the last Khitay
+troops who surrendered to the new conquerors, and with
+them every vestige of Chinese authority disappeared
+from every part of Jungaria and Eastern Turkestan.
+Even among this garrison, reduced by a long siege and
+its attendant deprivations to despair, there was a small
+minority who preferred death to the dishonour involved
+in surrender. Chang Tay, the commandant, refused to
+be any party to the arrangement made between Kho
+Dalay and Yakoob Beg. When the day approached
+for the entry of the Kashgarian army, this resolute
+Amban withdrew to his palace, and having collected his
+family and dependents around him blew them all up
+with the explosion of a mine that he had constructed
+underneath. In the confusion that arose from this
+incident, the enemy broke into the fort, and it was not
+for some hours that Yakoob Beg succeeded in obtaining
+control over them once more. During that interval of
+insubordination many Khitay were murdered, but not
+without resistance. Kho Dalay and almost 3,000 men
+remained to take service in the conquering army, as
+already explained. The new alliance was cemented by
+the marriage of Yakoob Beg to the beautiful daughter
+of Kho Dalay, by whom he has had several children,
+too young as yet to take any part in public affairs.
+Perhaps Yakoob Beg's moderation to the Khitay is to
+be explained by this circumstance, and it is certain that
+down to the very end his Khitay wife exercised great
+influence over her husband.</p>
+
+<p>This was in September, 1865, nine months after his
+first arrival in Altyshahr, and in that period he had
+worked, if not very rapidly, with considerable thoroughness.
+The Khitay destroyed, the Kirghiz subdued,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+and the Tungan influence checked in its aggression
+against Western Kashgar, such was the tale of his
+achievements. Several battles and sieges successfully
+brought to an issue, and a numerous army formed
+out of the diverse fragments of conquered and conquerors.
+Personally, too, Yakoob Beg had done
+much towards preparing the public mind for the assumption
+of power by himself, and the reigning chief
+had done still more by his neglect of duty and abandonment
+to pleasure. Buzurg Khan might stand for
+the typical <i>roi fainéant</i>, and Yakoob Beg was a more
+than ordinarily resolute and determined <i>maire du palais</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The citadel of Kashgar had not long surrendered
+when messengers arrived, reporting the near approach
+of a large body of men from Khokand, but who they
+were, or with what intention they came, none knew.
+These were the unsuccessful conspirators against Khudayar
+Khan, who, after the death of Alim Kuli, had obtained
+his power once more; and these having been driven
+out of Khokand by his armies, were compelled to seek
+refuge in Kashgar. Yakoob Beg sent them the laconic
+message, while they were hovering on the frontier, that
+"if they came as friends, they were welcome; if as foes,
+he was ready to fight them." Until the arrival of this
+declaration there appears to have been some hesitation
+among the Khokandians what to do, as some were wishing
+to attempt the conquest of Kashgar in their own
+interests; but when so clear a statement was sent
+them by Yakoob Beg, and when they learnt more
+definitely of the permanence of his success, they
+threw off their reserve and joined the confederacy of
+Kashgar. In the meanwhile fresh disturbances were
+breaking out in Yarkand, and thither he proceeded in
+the later months of 1865 to quell them, taking Buzurg
+Khan with him. On his arrival before the town both
+the Khojas and the Tungani hastened to profess the
+greatest desire to fulfil his wishes, although they kept
+him outside their gates. It is probable that neither
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+party could have offered any prolonged resistance to
+him, had they not been encouraged to do so by
+Buzurg Khan. That prince had for some time been
+fretting against the iron will of his lieutenant, and, now,
+in an ill humour at being carried from his amusements
+and idleness at Kashgar to suffer the deprivations of a
+camp life before Yarkand, broke loose from all control, and
+plotted in his own camp, and in the enemy's, to free himself
+from his troublesome general. The plot among the
+Tungan soldiery had assumed alarming proportions, and
+all was ready to put an end to the career of Yakoob,
+when it was fortunately discovered by his faithful friend
+Abdulla. Precautions were taken, and the plot in the
+camp was effectually thwarted; but Yakoob Beg was
+not strong enough then to show his resentment. This
+danger was only removed to give place to another. The
+Tungani soldiers in Yakoob's service now opened up communications
+with their kinsmen in the Yangy-Shahr,
+and they formed the following plan to destroy the remaining
+portion of the Kashgarian forces. The garrison
+was to simulate a desire to yield into the hands of Yakoob
+Beg both their own persons and the fort, and when he,
+unsuspecting any covert design, should be lulled into a
+false sense of security, the Tungani in his service could
+join the Tungani in the fort in making a night attack
+on the other forces. The plan promised well. Yakoob
+Beg was deceived by the friendly overtures of the Tungani,
+and relaxed his precautions, and, during the
+night that was to precede the surrender of the Tungani,
+the conspirators marched out of the fort, and being
+joined, as had been arranged, by the other confederates,
+surprised Yakoob Beg and his immediate followers.
+A desperate resistance was offered by the half-armed
+men, but the Tungani were victorious, and Yakoob Beg
+had much difficulty in collecting around him on the
+morrow a few hundred soldiers. Among those, however,
+was Abdulla and some of his more trusted companions.
+The Kirghiz under Sadic Beg could not
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+be trusted, and it seemed that that chief was still inclined
+to play for his own hand. At this, the most
+critical period of his life, Yakoob Beg's tact and resolution
+were most conspicuous. When he was surrounded
+on every hand by hostile factions, and could count on
+the fidelity of scarce five hundred men, he triumphed
+over every obstacle, and rose omnipotent over the petty
+jealousies and dissensions of those who sought to crush
+him. Buzurg Khan seized the moment of this disaster
+to draw off into a separate camp with a large body of
+troops and all the Kirghiz, and it is very possible, as
+has been asserted, that he instigated the successful
+Tungan <i>coup</i>. There is no evidence that he did, and I am
+personally of opinion that it originated among the Tungani
+themselves, and that Buzurg Khan only rejoiced at
+its occurrence, as he would have done at any other
+reverse to Yakoob. The position now was as follows:&mdash;In
+the citadel were the victorious Tungani, and in the
+town they shared the distribution of power with the
+townspeople. Outside in one part was Buzurg Khan,
+with a force that was equivocal in its sympathies, and
+that might at any moment become hostile, to Yakoob
+Beg; and in another part was Yakoob Beg himself and
+his attenuated following. Affairs could not look less
+hopeful, and if the three parties could have accommodated
+their own differences for but the short space of
+twenty-four hours, Yakoob Beg must infallibly have
+been destroyed: as it was, they did nothing with an
+enemy like Yakoob Beg in their proximity, and permitted
+him to redeem all he had lost by his too great credulity
+in the good faith of his brother Mussulmans. Let us
+now see how he saved himself. The first point to do
+was to restore the courage and self-confidence of his own
+soldiers, and to do that, it was necessary to strike a
+sharp blow that was sure of success. The fort could not
+be taken by a <i>coup de main</i>, but the city, large and straggling,
+presented a more inviting aspect for such an
+attempt. Abdulla, the Murat of the army of Kashgar,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+with the most determined intrepidity, carried it by
+assault, although here again he attacked without awaiting
+the arrival of the other contingents. Like Edward Bruce,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Such was his wonted reckless mood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Yet desperate valour oft made good,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Even by its daring, venture rude,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where prudence might have failed."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This achievement put an end to the rejoicings among
+the Tungani, and compelled them to recognize what a terribly
+energetic and enterprising foe they had to deal with.
+But, at this moment, a severe mishap occurred which
+almost neutralized the advantage thus gained. Buzurg
+Khan, unable either to crush Yakoob Beg or to enjoy
+the indulgences to which he had enslaved himself, resolved
+to secure the latter, happen what might. He
+accordingly fled from Yarkand with many followers,
+and retired to his palace at Kashgar. There, not content
+with pillaging the palace of Yakoob Beg, he proclaimed
+him a traitor and rebel, and offered a reward to whomsoever
+should bring him his head. Another general
+was appointed to the command of the army, and preparations
+were made for defending Kashgar against any
+attempt of Yakoob Beg to attack it. But fortunately
+the Tungani in the citadel of Yarkand were not aware
+of this dissension among the Kashgari, and as they were
+struck with admiration for the valour of Yakoob Beg, they
+surrendered to him soon after the flight of Buzurg. He
+was then able to turn his undivided attention to his
+refractory chief. Yakoob Beg had always, as we have said,
+befriended the church; he was now to experience some
+benefit for that very commendable respect. Among the
+first means of crushing Yakoob Beg that Buzurg Khan had
+employed was an appeal to the Sheikh-ul-islam of Kashgar
+to proclaim his Baturbashi outside the pale of the
+law. This the ecclesiastic refused to do, and asserted, on
+the contrary, that Yakoob Beg had deserved well both
+of his country and of the Mahomedan world. Foiled in
+his effort to stir up a religious feeling against his general,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+Buzurg Khan was reduced to the more cogent, but in
+his hands quite useless, argument of the sword. Nor
+was the field, limited as it must appear to us, free from
+other pretenders. Sadic Beg, instead of coalescing with
+Buzurg Khan, set up his own pretensions to rule the
+country; and the Kucha Khojas and Tungani began to
+collect troops in view of possible eventualities.</p>
+
+<p>The army of Buzurg Khan, which had marched out
+to oppose the entry of Yakoob Beg, was outflanked and
+defeated by Abdulla in the country between Yangy
+Hissar and the capital; and Yakoob Beg, pressing on
+with irresistible strides, was received in Kashgar with
+the acclamations of the people and of his soldiers. He
+was then publicly proclaimed ruler, and his friend the
+Sheikh-ul-islam ratified the people's choice. Buzurg
+Khan, who had taken refuge in the Yangy-Shahr, was
+seized in his palace there, after a very slight resistance.
+Some of the more prominent of Yakoob Beg's rivals
+were executed, and Buzurg Khan himself was placed in
+a state of honourable confinement. He still persisted in
+futile intrigues, and so long as he remained in Kashgar
+was a source of endless trouble to the new government.
+For more than eighteen months he was permitted to remain
+however, and then, being detected in instigating
+the murder of Yakoob Beg, was banished to Tibet.
+After wandering for some years, he found his way to
+Khokand, where he is believed to be still residing with a
+large family. He may be considered to have been the last
+Khoja prince ruling Kashgar, for it is scarcely probable
+that, in any future settlement of that country, a restoration
+of the old reigning family will be supported by any one.
+He is no exaggerated type of the rule among Central
+Asian despots, who present to our gaze a long series of
+petty tyrants and debauchees, until for a few years they
+are displaced by a successful soldier such as the Athalik
+Ghazi, or by a skilful minister such as Mussulman Kuli
+was in Khokand.</p>
+
+<p>The Kirghiz chief, Sadic Beg, did not long hold out
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+against the consolidated power of Yakoob Beg; and the
+Kucha movements were suspended. In a little more
+than twelve months Yakoob Beg had occupied Kashgar,
+Yangy Hissar, and Yarkand. Sirikul and Khoten
+also acknowledged his rule; but his further operations
+against them will be narrated by-and-by. He felt now
+so secure in his seat that he permitted the Badakshi
+contingent to return home, presenting each soldier
+with a large present. Ever since that time Yakoob
+Beg seems to have maintained some influence in Badakshan,
+and to have been inclined on several occasions
+to compete with Shere Ali of Afghanistan for the possession
+of that province. His ambition was never
+fully revealed in this quarter; but it is certain that
+Shere Ali regarded him with scarcely concealed suspicion
+and dislike.</p>
+
+<p>With the assumption of personal power by Yakoob
+Beg, on the deposition of the Khoja Buzurg Khan, the
+first part of the enterprise undertaken in the later days
+of 1864 was brought to a termination. In the more
+extended operations of Yakoob Beg against the Tungani
+and Khoten, may be perceived the effects of events
+outside his immediate sphere upon, this energetic ruler,
+who, until his last years, never realized the strength
+of the Russians, and who had, up to the year 1870
+when Kuldja was occupied, convinced himself that he
+could retard the progress of the great Northern power.
+It was that idea, besides a thirst for military renown
+and excitement, that urged him on to the construction
+of what he fondly believed might prove a formidable
+and extensive state. As ruler of Kashgar, he could
+not be anything but a kind of vassal of the Khan of
+Khokand; as monarch of Eastern Turkestan, he might
+treat on terms of equality with the Czar of Russia or
+the Emperor of China. It was no unworthy ambition,
+and Yakoob Beg, created Athalik Ghazi, Champion
+Father, in 1866 by the Ameer of Bokhara, accomplished
+so much of it as was possible.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a><span>CHAPTER VIII.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">WARS WITH THE TUNGANI.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg</span>, having deposed Buzurg Khan and suppressed
+all resistance on the part either of the Tungani
+or of the Chinese in Western Kashgar, had some leisure
+to make a careful survey of his exact position. The
+result of the desultory fighting of the previous twelve
+months had been eminently satisfactory to himself;
+but, to say the least, it was dubious how long this
+state of things might last. Former adventurers had
+accomplished as much as he had, but the Chinese
+had always returned with renewed vigour. How was
+Yakoob Beg to know that the rumours were well
+founded which asserted that that empire had been sore
+stricken in other fields than against the Tungani, and
+that even the victories over the Taepings were not considered
+a complete set-off to the disasters in every other
+quarter of the empire? European critics predicted
+that the last hour of the Chinese Empire was fast approaching;
+but Yakoob Beg, with far more imperfect
+means of intelligence at his disposal, feared still, even
+when the citadel of Kashgar surrendered, that the
+Khitay would return for revenge. His fears were not
+groundless, as we now know, but he anticipated events
+by more than ten years. Yakoob Beg was not so sanguine
+in his own resources or good fortune that he
+believed that he should not have to encounter the
+danger that had overwhelmed all his predecessors, and
+his first object accordingly was to gather all his
+strength together in a compact mass to resist the
+Chinese when they should come. But the dissensions
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+that had, during the conquest of Altyshahr, manifested
+themselves so palpably in the ill-assorted conglomeration
+which had gathered round the standard of Buzurg
+Khan brought home to the mind of Yakoob Beg the
+disadvantages of a divided people. He accordingly
+determined that, whatever else he might fail or succeed
+in achieving, his most resolute effort should be to
+weld into one cohesive and effective whole Andijani
+and Tungani, Kashgari and Khitay. It was no mean
+ambition; but to cement such discordant elements
+a policy of "blood and iron" was required. Yakoob
+Beg did not shrink certainly in its application; but
+when he had accomplished the task he had set himself to
+bring about he discovered that the cost had been so great
+that the state, both in population and in wealth, was
+at a lower point than it had ever been before. But in
+the earlier days of 1866 no doubt crossed his mind on
+this latter point. It must be remembered that, strange
+to say, the great success of Yakoob Beg in Kashgar
+had alienated the sympathy of the government of Khokand
+from his cause; and, although this may be explained
+by the antipathy of Khudayar Khan, now
+firmly seated on the throne, who could not entertain
+any amity for a subject who had on several occasions deserted
+his cause, it is impossible to attribute to that sentiment
+alone a fact which must have had some deeper and
+less personal explanation. At all stages of the history
+of these petty princes of Asia are we met by the spectacle
+of mutual jealousy and recrimination, whenever
+any one of themselves seemed about to exalt himself
+above his fellows, either by the success of his arms or
+by the beneficence of his rule. Rarely, indeed, had
+any of them shown that he possessed more than ordinary
+ability or courage; but, whenever the phenomenon
+did appear, he was at once proclaimed by his neighbours
+to be a dangerous innovation, and as such to be
+thwarted and opposed. The practice has come down
+to our own day, and during the long wars that Russia
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+has waged in Asia we have never beheld two states, no
+matter how insignificant, combine to oppose the common
+foe. The Khokandians have never aided the Bokhariots
+or the Khivans, nor have the Afghans or the
+Kashgari the Khokandians. They have kept the ring,
+so to speak, as each of them has gone down singly
+before the prowess of the Muscovite, in a manner that
+ought to excite the admiration of all those who preserve
+the memories of the traditional honours of the
+prize ring; but, as their own existence has been the
+penalty, it is questionable whether their conduct, inspired
+by regard for no law of chivalry, but simply by
+mutual antipathy, has been very prudent. Over such
+petty jealousies had Yakoob Beg to triumph before he
+could hope to complete his dream of an united Kashgaria.
+His path was beset with difficulties. In satisfying himself
+with too little he might imperil what he had secured,
+but in attempting too much he might jeopardize everything
+he had won. Under such circumstances the boldest
+man might have stood uncertain, and the most resolute
+inactive until hurried into action by the progress
+of events. For some months Yakoob Beg seems to
+have remained uncertain what should be his next move.</p>
+
+<p>In 1865, before his last advance on Yarkand, he had
+seized Maralbashi or Bartchuk, and by so doing not only
+had he secured communication between Aksu and Yarkand,
+but also between Aksu and Khoten. This position,
+lying 200 miles to the east of Yangy Hissar, has always
+been and is still very important, and Yakoob Beg is
+supposed to have fortified it very strongly. This success
+was the permanent result of his great victory over the
+Tungani from Aksu and Kucha in the neighbourhood
+of Yangy Hissar, and it effectually secured his flank
+during further operations. It was not, however, until he
+turned his attention to the southern city of Khoten,
+that the importance of this acquisition was made incontestable.
+Then it enabled him to devote his attention
+exclusively to the extension of his sway southward to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+the mountains of Karakoram and Kuen Lun, beyond
+which he might expect no enemy. In Khoten the Mufti
+Habitulla had been invested with supreme control, after
+the deposition of the Chinese authorities; and during
+his government of the city and district, order appears
+to have been maintained without unnecessary exactions.
+When Yakoob Beg made his first appearance in Yarkand,
+after his earlier successes round Kashgar, it will be remembered
+that the Yarkandi acknowledged the supremacy
+of the new Khoja king. Their example was
+speedily followed by Habitulla of Khoten, and it is not
+stated that, even during the progress of hostilities with
+Yarkand, this ruler repudiated the arrangement into
+which he had entered. It is true that he was far removed
+from the immediate sphere of action, but that will not
+alone account for an indifference to the progress of events
+in Kashgar, which Khoten had never manifested on any
+previous occasion. Khoten may, therefore, be considered
+to have been exceptionally well behaved towards the new
+Khoja dynasty located at Kashgar; and when Yakoob
+Beg advanced to the south of Yarkand, Habitulla
+hastened to send representatives to the camp of the
+conqueror. They were received with consideration, but
+deep down in the breast of Yakoob Beg there lurked
+either an inveterate distrust of, or dislike to, the Mufti
+Habitulla. Dissembling his true feelings, Yakoob Beg
+sent a message requesting the presence of the Mufti in
+his camp. The Mufti, deluded by the friendly treatment
+bestowed on his emissaries, came with many of his
+relations and followers into the camp of the Kashgarian
+general. At first, we are told, they were treated with
+every mark of respect and kindness; they were feasted
+and clothed in precious garments, but all these honours
+were but the preliminaries to the concluding ceremony.
+During the progress of the evening meal they were
+disarmed, and led out to execution, while an attack was
+made from several quarters on the town. Even then
+the resistance was prolonged, and the slaughter by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+infuriated soldiery of the Athalik Ghazi continued long
+after all serious opposition had ceased. It is impossible
+to exonerate Yakoob Beg from the chief blame on this
+occasion, and if he had been a civilized European general,
+we should have made use of the phrase, that "It must
+ever remain a blot on his career;" but it would be the
+height of irony to apply such a phrase to this unscrupulous
+Asiatic, who, if not worse than the school in
+which he was brought up, was certainly not much better
+in a moral sense. As the fact stands, the seizure of
+Khoten, and the massacre of the unarmed leaders of that
+city, appear to have been acts as unnecessary as they
+were unjustifiable. Khoten may have seemed to the
+Athalik Ghazi of exceptional importance for several
+reasons, and he may have felt doubtful of the fidelity
+of Habitulla and his followers; but, so far as we are
+aware, the reasons for this action are shadowy in the extreme,
+even regarded from the point of view of political
+expediency. Down to the present day, too, the memory
+of this massacre, needless even in the eyes of a people
+accustomed to the shortest cuts to power by wholesale
+slaughter, has rankled in the minds of the inhabitants
+of Khoten and Sanju, and the Athalik Ghazi was least
+popular in that part of his state in which, according to
+the traditions of his predecessors, his action had been
+most sweeping, and accordingly most safe. This was
+early in the year 1867, and the Athalik Ghazi had now
+an opportunity for settling his relationship with his
+eastern neighbours, the Tungani.</p>
+
+<p>The Tungan movement proper originated, as explained
+in the last chapter, in the Chinese provinces of
+Kansuh and Shensi, and then extended with scarcely a
+check to Turfan south of the Tian Shan and to Urumtsi
+north of that range. The flame soon spread from Turfan
+to Karashar, Kucha, and Aksu, and at all of these
+towns it was fomented by the appearance of the new
+element of the Mahomedan Khokandian, and native
+settlers, acting in combination with the Chinese Tungani.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+North of the Tian Shan the movement received a temporary
+repulse; and it is necessary to say something in
+explanation of the course of the Mahomedan revival in
+Ili before we proceed to discuss the earlier wars of Yakoob
+Beg with the Tungani. As early as 1860 serious
+complications had arisen in that province, although
+the Chinese had always been more firmly situated there
+than in Kashgar. In that year a plot was concocted
+to murder the Chinese viceroy and to upset the existing
+government. It was discovered, however, and fell
+through. There appear to have been more causes at
+work in Ili to produce discontent than in the southern
+state, and it was not so much a question here between
+Khitay and Tungani, as it was between a people clamouring
+for work, for less taxation, and for payment for
+what they had done, and an administration that was
+unable to satisfy the demands made upon it from all
+sides. That last resource of a government at its wits'
+ends for money, the depreciation of the current coin and
+the issue of fictitious paper, was adopted by the Viceroy
+of Ili. The measure, which it had been expected would
+lessen the difficulty, only added fuel to the flame. The
+situation of affairs was becoming desperate; the people
+were encouraged by the disasters of the Chinese in the
+neighbouring states to increase the number of their
+demands; and the Chinese officials appear to have lost
+their heads in the storm that was gathering from all sides
+around them. They were but the effete representatives
+of a system which in its vigorous days had claims to
+general admiration, and they are only saved from incurring
+our contempt by the possession of courage, the
+sole virtue left them. When the Chinese first conquered
+Eastern Turkestan they brought from Kashgar a large
+number of settlers, and placed them in the country
+round Ili. They became known as Tarantchis, and, in
+the course of two or three generations, had increased
+into a very numerous community. These were always
+at heart disaffected to the Chinese, but, as they occupied
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+a very subordinate position, would probably never have
+thought of revolt had not a large division of the conquerors
+set them the example of insubordination. So
+soon as the discontent among the working classes had
+assumed formidable proportions by the pecuniary embarrassment
+of the Chinese, and the Tungan successes
+in the east of Jungaria had raised a fanatical feeling to
+swell the hatred against a declining and Buddhist rule,
+the Tarantchis were not backward for their part in reviving
+their almost forgotten grievances, and in joining in a
+defensive and offensive alliance with the Tungani. Each
+party collected such forces as they could, out in the
+encounter that ensued the disciplined soldiers of the
+Viceroy overcame the far more numerous mob by which
+they were opposed. The fortress of Bazandai, however,
+within the next few days, fell into the power of the
+insurgents, and that achievement more than compensated
+for the disaster in the open field. Ili itself surrendered
+in January, 1866, and a Tungani-Tarantchi
+government was formed. The Chinese viceroy had
+in the meanwhile destroyed himself and many of his
+followers and assailants by setting fire to a mine of
+gunpowder under his palace. The Tungan element
+gradually superseded the Tarantchi in the administration
+of the state, and the five years of independence,
+which continued until the Russians came in 1871, were
+chiefly marked by petty disagreements which had no
+influence on the progress of events in this part of Asia.
+The trade with Ili fell off, and many other valid reasons
+for Russian intervention were accumulated during those
+few years of national existence.</p>
+
+<p>With the beginning of 1867, Yakoob Beg, secure
+on the south and on the west from aggression, found
+himself in a position to cope with the disjointed but
+allied Tungan states on his north and east. The hostility
+of the Tungani and Khojas of Aksu and Kucha had
+been already demonstrated, and it was to be surmised
+that they were only waiting to recover from the disastrous
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+campaign of 1865 to renew their efforts to drive the
+Khokandian adventurers out of Kashgar. The facts
+that they acknowledged the same religious tenets, and
+that they had overcome, to some extent, a common
+enemy in the Chinese, and that they certainly had
+each to fear most from their return, seem to have
+weighed little with either the Tungani or the Athalik
+Ghazi. To do the latter simple justice, it must be
+remembered that the Tungani had been the aggressors,
+and that their attitude never ceased to be unfriendly
+towards himself. It is certain that he made some efforts
+to effect an amicable arrangement with the ruling party
+in Aksu, but his advances were received with coldness,
+and both the Khojas and the Tungani of that city held
+aloof from all intercourse with the new-comer. Both
+parties remained watching each other for some time,
+each waiting for the other to take the initiative. The
+Tungani had experienced the weight of the military
+power of Yakoob Beg, when they had taken the offensive
+in the earlier days of his appearance at Kashgar. It
+was, therefore, not very probable that they would repeat
+the experiment when he presented a far more formidable
+and united presence to their attack. Practically speaking,
+Yakoob Beg was safe from invasion from the east
+so long as he maintained order within his own frontier;
+and the Tungani in Ili on his north had manifested no
+special hostility against his state. Secure from any
+aggression on the part of the Tungani, Yakoob Beg
+might with some reason have declined to push to extremities
+his relations with them. It was certainly inconvenient
+that an antagonistic state should exist on his
+very borders, but, as he was in a very strong position for
+defence, the disadvantages of abandoning it to assume
+an offensive policy were all the more apparent. What
+necessity could be alleged to justify a scarcely excusable
+attack in a moral sense, and a quite unnecessary in a
+political? The proximity of Aksu was in a strategic
+sense more than neutralized by the possession of Maralbashi,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+and, with the lapse of time and the return of
+peace, the trade route from Kashgar to Aksu might be
+expected to revive once more. But such temporizing
+measures as these, involving the endurance of Tungan
+indifference, could not be brooked by the Athalik Ghazi.
+The orthodoxy of these Mahomedans was not above
+suspicion, and to so devout and energetic a Sunni as
+Yakoob Beg these differences were scarcely less offensive
+than if they had been believers in a rival religion.
+Dictatorial announcements were made to the Khoja-Tungan
+rulers of Aksu; and, on their persisting in
+defiance, Yakoob Beg collected his forces to chastise
+them. The doctrines of the Tungani were impeached
+as not being in strict accordance with the Shariàt, and
+the religious fervour of the Sunnis was appealed to, to
+bring these recalcitrant people to an acknowledgment
+of the error of their ways. In addition to the semi-religious
+element thus imported into the question,
+Yakoob Beg also laid claim to the country up to Kucha
+as part of the old territory of the Khoja kings.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1867 his army set out in two
+divisions for Aksu. The Tungani appear to have been
+paralyzed when the danger that had for many months
+appeared menacing came upon them. The resistance
+encountered at Aksu, naturally and artificially a very
+strong place, was not prolonged, and Yakoob Beg swept
+on against Kucha. Here the Tungani, having somewhat
+recovered from their trepidation, made a desperate
+stand, and with the reinforcements that had arrived from
+Turfan presented a sufficiently formidable appearance.
+The ruling authorities in Kucha were Khojas, who in
+the time of the Chinese had the custody of a shrine sacred
+to the memory of a Mahomedan saint, but who at the
+outbreak of disturbances left the temple for the council
+chamber, and the offering up of prayers to the memory
+of the saint for the more difficult task of issuing edicts
+for the management of a people. Unhappily for their
+reputation in our eyes, they had specially distinguished
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+themselves in the massacres of the Khitay. Their
+brief tenure of power seems to have been fairly beneficent,
+and, in the lull that succeeded the deposition of
+the Chinese and preceded the invasion of Yakoob Beg,
+they obtained without doing anything very noteworthy
+the approval and affection of their subjects. At Kucha,
+therefore, more than 500 miles distant from his own
+capital, with a long line of hostile country in his
+rear, Yakoob Beg found himself opposed by the full
+power of the Tungani. Previous to advancing beyond
+Aksu he had sent back officers to Kashgar to bring up
+fresh levies, and he had resorted to that doubtful
+expedient of drafting into his army many of the
+Tungani captured at Aksu. Arrived in front of Kucha
+he was unable to prosecute the siege with any vigour
+until the arrival of his reinforcements. The moment of
+delay was attempted to be turned to account by Yakoob
+Beg and some of the more prudent of his counsellors;
+but the Tungani, whether unwilling to acknowledge
+their inferiority or incredulous of the good faith of the
+Athalik Ghazi, refused to enter into negotiations that
+they asserted were unnecessary. Yakoob Beg had invaded
+them in their possessions, and he had annexed
+Aksu; the only condition in which they could acquiesce
+was a withdrawal of his army. All the efforts of the
+more peaceful and the more prudent on either side were
+unavailing, and each party used every exertion to bring
+up fresh troops to decide the question of superiority between
+Tungani and Kashgari. For several weeks the
+two armies stood facing each other, the one stationed on
+the hills to the north and west of the city, commanding
+the main road from Aksu, the other in the environs and
+the fortifications of the city itself. The Tungani were far
+the more numerous, but in the quality of his main body,
+and in general efficiency both of weapons and of experience
+among the officers, the advantage was completely
+on the side of Yakoob Beg. The nucleus of his force
+comprised Afghan, Khokandian, and Badakshi troops,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+veterans in the wars of the two previous years. The
+Tungani were either the assassins of helpless Chinese, or
+the fugitives of Aksu or Yangy Hissar. They were imperfectly
+armed, without any organization, and without
+any competent leaders. Above all, the cause they were
+fighting for was vague, and many of them in their
+hearts sympathized more with Yakoob Beg than they did
+with their own chiefs. The Kashgarian army, on the
+other hand, was encouraged by a long series of brilliant
+achievements, and looked forward with eagerness to the
+fray as the means of exalting their own religion, and as
+affording them an opportunity for advancing their own
+personal interests by the plunder of so rich a city as
+Kucha. The reinforcements were consequently eagerly
+expected, and some of the more ardent spirits demanded
+that they should be led without delay against the enemy.
+Yakoob Beg was so far prudent that he refused to be
+urged into premature action by the impetuosity of his
+followers, and the arrival of reinforcements sooner than
+was anticipated enabled him not only to keep the excitement
+of his soldiery within due bounds, but also to
+commence active operations at an earlier date than had
+seemed possible. The Tungan leaders, deluded by the
+inaction of Yakoob Beg into a belief that he was unable
+to prosecute the enterprise he had undertaken, assumed
+the offensive, only to be worsted in several minor
+engagements. The Tungan troops were driven within
+the walls, and the siege was prosecuted with the closest
+rigour. The garrison of Kucha was not sufficiently
+numerous to guard in proper strength the wide-stretching
+suburbs and extensive fortifications of the existing
+Kucha, and the cities that had in olden days stood upon
+its site. Not many days elapsed before Yakoob Beg
+perceived that the defence was confined to a limited
+portion of the fortifications, and that several points
+were entirely neglected. He resolved, therefore, to put
+an end to the slow process of a siege by carrying the
+town by a general assault. With the whole of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+available force he attacked the city on three sides; but
+the Tungani resisted strenuously, and all his direct
+attacks were repulsed with heavy loss. To his son
+Khooda Kul Beg he had entrusted an attack in the
+rear of the city, and on the success of that movement
+now entirely depended the result of the assault on
+Kucha. That division by great good fortune and the
+gallantry of its leader was victorious, and, although this
+promising son of Yakoob Beg, then only a little more
+than twenty years of age, was killed in the confusion
+that ensued on the entrance into the city, Kucha fell.
+The triumph was, perhaps, not too dearly purchased. The
+Tungan power had received a blow, which took the
+sting out of its menace, and effectually protected Kashgar
+from any possible confederacy among the Tungan cities.
+Yakoob Beg followed up the success of Kucha with all
+his usual promptitude, but his power was not yet sufficiently
+matured to justify him in carrying on extensive
+operations at such a distance from the base of his
+resources. But another reason at this time combined
+to recall his attention to another part of his dominions.
+The Russians were advancing both in Khokand and in
+the district of Vernoe to the west of Kuldja.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident that prudence demanded a prompt
+return, and for the present all further triumph must be
+abandoned. However, before Yakoob Beg returned to
+regulate events in the western portion of his dominions,
+he had the satisfaction of receiving the submission
+humbly tendered by the ruling bodies of Karashar,
+Turfan, Hamil, and Urumtsi. After this brilliant
+campaign, he slowly retraced his steps through Kucha
+to Aksu. Then he turned into the mountains, and
+reduced Ush Turfan, which in his onward march he
+had passed by; and, after this acquisition, the Tungani
+of Ili expressed a desire to enter into terms of amity
+with one who had brought his empire into direct contact
+with their state. All these events occurred during
+the year 1867; and, although now and then uncertain
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+rumours reached England of these changes in Eastern
+Turkestan, the world in general, even the Russian
+world, remained indifferent to the progress of events of
+which it is now difficult to trace the exact course. But,
+with the close of this first Tungan campaign, and with
+the extension of the new state up to the walls of Kucha,
+the Russian Government, as will be seen in a later
+chapter, endeavoured to arrive at some clear view on
+the exact condition of the newly formed confederacy to
+which they in their career of conquest were approaching
+so rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>This commencement of foreign interest in, nay,
+almost supervision of, his actions in Eastern Turkestan,
+imposed some restriction on the hitherto unrestrained
+caprice of Yakoob Beg, and the country beyond Kucha
+up to Turfan was saved for a short time from the
+depredations from which in 1871&ndash;73 it suffered so
+much. On his return to Kashgar after this triumphant
+progress, and after having annexed the three important
+cities, Aksu, Kucha, and Ush Turfan, the danger which
+had seemed to threaten the state from Russia passed
+off, and Yakoob Beg proceeded to consolidate his hold
+on what he had secured. Aksu and Kucha were fortified,
+and various small forts were constructed in the
+passes leading to Khokand and Kuldja. Every precaution
+was taken that he had it in his power to observe,
+to ensure the safety of his little kingdom from without,
+and for the moment all murmur within seemed to be
+hushed by the loud acclamations at the victories of the
+Athalik Ghazi. He had, indeed, accomplished no slight
+task, and could afford to regard his handiwork with
+some complacency. To erect a powerful state on the
+ruins of the Chinese power, and to unite in some sort
+of settled government turbulent races and antagonistic
+sects, was no mean achievement; and to all the credit due
+to such Yakoob Beg has indisputable claims. But for
+him, confusion and disunion would have settled down
+over Eastern Turkestan, until either the Russians or the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+Chinese had come to establish a respectable government;
+but for him Kashgar would have lapsed into a
+state of almost hopeless disorder, and Russian triumphs
+would have been facilitated. But, when Yakoob Beg
+returned to find that he was not seriously threatened in
+Kashgar, he experienced deep regret and mortification
+that he had abstained from prosecuting his wars with
+the Tungani with a greater vigour. He eagerly looked
+forward to an excuse for resuming his discontinued
+operations against them. In the interval that elapsed,
+he waged a small war in the mountainous region of his
+territory extending into Badakshan and the Chitral.
+Sirikul had, ever since the appearance of the Badakshi
+army in the service of Kashgar, acknowledged a certain
+kind of obedience to Yakoob Beg; but in 1868, the
+governor hitherto supported by the Athalik Ghazi
+broke out into revolt, and committed several acts of
+depredation in the contiguous districts of Sanju and
+Yarkand. Yakoob Beg without delay despatched a
+small force against him, and, by the help of some
+mountain guns and the judicious employment of a
+small but select body of cavalry, was successful in overcoming
+all resistance with very slight loss. In February,
+1869, Yakoob Beg, having tried several milder
+alternatives, formally annexed this district, and carried
+the inhabitants into Yarkand. He resettled the territory
+with Kirghiz nomads and Yarkandis. Once more,
+he was able to turn his attention to the east, and in
+1869 commenced those final campaigns against the
+Tungani which only ceased with the reappearance of
+the Chinese. The great blot in the career of Yakoob
+Beg is the resumption of hostilities against the Tungani.
+In 1867, when he first engaged with any vigour
+the Tungani, some excuse may be found for that unforeseeing
+action, in the fact that the Tungani were unbroken,
+and might have proved formidable neighbours.
+But in 1869, they had been hurled back on Korla, and,
+although it may be true that they were inconvenient
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+neighbours, robbing caravans and molesting travellers,
+it is difficult to justify the later campaigns of Yakoob
+Beg against them, especially as they were conducted by
+himself and his lieutenants with exceptional ferocity.
+But, however weak may have been the impulse, and
+however disastrous in the result may have been his crusade
+against the Tungani, it was not difficult to discover
+a plausible excuse for proceeding to extreme measures
+with his troublesome neighbours. In the autumn of
+1869, Korla fell before his triumphant arms, and it
+would appear that he then turned north into the valleys
+of the Tekes and the Yuldus, two rivers rising in the
+Tian Shan, and flowing through Jungaria. This movement
+aroused the susceptibilities of the Russians, and
+afforded a very simple excuse for the acquisition of
+Kuldja. In that state, disturbances had arisen between
+the Tungani and the Tarantchis, and it must have fallen
+an easy prey to the Athalik Ghazi had he been permitted
+to advance. The Russians had, however, in
+1871, entered Kuldja, and explained their action by
+asserting that they had only done so to restore order,
+and to prevent its falling into the hands of Yakoob
+Beg. They merely held it in trust for the Chinese, so
+they said, and would restore it to them, its rightful
+owners, so soon as they should be able to keep permanent
+possession of it. While Yakoob Beg despatched
+a large detachment into the country of the Tian Shan,
+his main body was prosecuting with vigour the war
+against Karashar and Turfan. Yakoob Beg did not
+always conduct the war in person, for his two sons,
+Kuli Beg and Hacc Kuli Beg, were now growing up,
+and they, assisted by some of the older lieutenants,
+triumphed in various actions over the Tungan rulers of
+Turfan and Hamil, while even the princes of Urumtsi
+and Manas over the Tian Shan were unable to oppose
+the valour and energy of their adversary. The glory
+of these military achievements was tarnished by the
+ruthless manner in which the district was laid waste,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+and the inhabitants were massacred; and the senselessness
+of these proceedings only required an hour of trial,
+such as the Chinese invasion, to prove how fatal it would
+be to the enacters of these atrocities. Without any
+great cessation, their operations were carried on down
+to the end of 1873, and it does not appear that Yakoob
+Beg derived any benefit whatever from these costly and
+remote undertakings. Although the Tungan chiefs of
+Urumtsi and Hamil were on several occasions defeated
+by the armies of the Athalik Ghazi, their cities were
+never occupied, and they consequently escaped that
+desolation which stretched from the walls of Kucha to
+the regions north of Lake Lob. Chightam, a small town
+lying half way between Turfan and Hamil, was the
+extreme point to which the Kashgarian forces penetrated.
+The noble families of Urumtsi, Turfan, and
+Hamil were almost totally destroyed in the fall of
+Turfan; and their place in their own cities was seized
+by Tungan generals and adventurers, who began to
+retreat westward from Kansuh, on the rumours of
+Chinese preparations for invading Jungaria.</p>
+
+<p>The wars against the Tungani certainly served one
+useful purpose in enabling Yakoob Beg to collect a
+large and disciplined force round his standard; but the
+attractions of service in his army lost much of their
+value in the eyes of the hardier clans of Turkestan and
+the neighbouring states, when it became known that
+the prospect of loot and prize money in districts impoverished
+by several years of hostilities had diminished.
+The rigour of the discipline maintained, too,
+was irksome to nomads and irregulars accustomed to
+the easier service and freedom from restraint of the other
+Asiatic princes; and during the later years of his rule
+there were many desertions, and a difficulty was encountered
+in inducing recruits to enter his army. The
+old practice, employed with such success in the earlier
+years of his rule, of inducing the conquered to combine
+with the conqueror, was no longer possible, for
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+extermination had become the order of the day. The
+Usbegs, Kirghiz, and other tribes, could not supply in
+sufficient numbers the requirements of the state, and
+the Tungani, who should have comprised the largest
+portion of the subjects of the Athalik Ghazi, were
+coerced into subjection with an undiscriminating
+severity. The result was really a paralysis through
+sheer want of people, and it was not known until the
+hour of trial came how weakened his forces had become.
+Every inducement was held forth to Afghan,
+Badakshi, and, above all, to Indian soldiers to join,
+but these, although they formed a nucleus of trustworthy
+and efficient soldiers, were far too few to constitute
+a formidable army. We are justified in assuming
+from the facts that these Tungan wars, conducted
+in an unsparing manner, were the greatest mistake
+that marked the career of Yakoob Beg. So far as his
+occupation of Kucha goes, he could at least say that he
+had secured a valuable prize. He had acquired every
+part of what could be considered Kashgar, and his
+kingdom was effectually guarded, and his revenues
+prospectively increased, by the possession of the great
+cities of Aksu and Kucha. He might exclaim with
+justice that he had eclipsed all his predecessors in military
+prowess, and if he had been wise he would then
+have turned his attention to the well government of
+his state, and by so doing have demonstrated that he
+was of a higher capacity for ruling a people, as well as
+for commanding an army, than any Khoja prince of
+the past. Had he abstained from prosecuting with
+such unflagging persistency his inveterate dislike of the
+Tungani, he might easily have come to terms with his
+neighbours, and the harm they could have done him
+would have been infinitesimally small. But the chief
+advantage of that more prudent policy would have been
+visible when the Chinese advanced to chastise the
+Tungani. Not only would the Tungani have been
+more capable of resisting the Khitay, not only would
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+Manas and Urumtsi have been capable of offering a
+more determined defence, but the Tungani could have
+retired on Turfan, and held the country round that
+town, as well as Karashar and Korla, for a protracted
+period against General Kin Shun. The Athalik Ghazi
+with untouched resources could have awaited with just
+confidence the advance of the Chinese upon his strong
+frontier city of Kucha, and, as the Chinese accomplished
+the difficult task of crushing the Tungani, he
+would have had the satisfaction of knowing that in all
+probability the Chinese effort would have been spent
+before it reached his own borders.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to judge men except by the results
+of their actions, and the result of Yakoob Beg's incessant
+and unnecessary interference with the Tungani
+was that the Chinese army was able in a few months to
+dissipate the remaining Tungan communities, and to
+encounter in the full flush of their triumph the numerically
+weaker forces of Yakoob Beg. It is, therefore,
+impossible to exonerate the ruler from great blame in
+hastily undertaking operations which a little consideration
+ought to have shown to be unwise. Having
+traced Yakoob Beg's wars with the Chinese Mahomedans,
+it is time to consider his rule of Kashgaria proper, and
+the events that during these years were transpiring in
+other quarters of the state.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a><span>CHAPTER IX.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">YAKOOB BEG'S GOVERNMENT OF KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg's</span> chief claim to our consideration is that,
+for more than twelve years, he gave a settled government
+to a large portion of Central Asia, and that, however
+faulty his external policy may have been in critical
+moments, his internal management was founded on a
+practical and sufficiently just basis. As a warrior he
+had done much to justify admiration, and had proved
+on many a well-fought field, and in many a desperate
+encounter, his claims to be considered a fearless and
+resolute soldier; but in this quality he was equalled, if
+not excelled, by his own lieutenant, Abdulla Beg, the
+Murat of Kashgar, while some of the deeds of his son,
+Beg Bacha, will rank in daring and surpass in ferocity
+anything achieved by the Athalik Ghazi. But in
+capacity for administration Yakoob Beg far surpassed
+his contemporaries, and the merit of his success was
+enhanced, not so much by the originality of the method
+adopted, as by the unique vigour and perseverance with
+which it was put into force. The secret of his power
+can only be discovered by constantly bearing in mind
+the fact that he had constituted himself the champion
+of the Mahomedan religion in Central Asia. The
+Ameers of Bokhara and Afghanistan might trifle with
+the seductive promises of the Russians, and might consent
+to sacrifice the interests of their religion for a
+transitory advancement of their worldly possessions;
+but to such degradations the Athalik Ghazi&mdash;true
+"champion father" as he was&mdash;never stooped. With
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+whatever imaginary power the sympathy and good-will
+of the Mahomedan peoples of Turkestan may have
+clothed this ruler, there is no question that his attitude
+towards the Muscovite would have warranted the
+assertion of greater power than was ever attributed to
+him; and the secret of this delusion, an attitude of
+defiant strength without any solid foundation for so
+bold a course, can only be unravelled by remembering
+that the Athalik Ghazi strove to represent, not so
+much Kashgaria, as the whole Mahomedan world of
+Central Asia. The necessities of his own position,
+when, having conquered Kashgar, he found that he
+had aroused the susceptibilities of the Russians, compelled
+him to seek in every direction for aid, and to
+have recourse to every artifice for increasing his
+strength, or its semblance, in order to avoid the dissolution
+of his state and a subjection to the Czar. So
+well did he succeed in his efforts, and so prompt were
+his movements and so fearless his attitude, that the
+Russians were deluded into a belief&mdash;which was, as we
+emphatically insist, unfounded&mdash;that Kashgar would
+prove a more formidable antagonist than either Bokhara,
+or Khokand, or Khiva.</p>
+
+<p>The interior management of a state, which, young
+in years, yet seemed to tower among its fellows, might
+be supposed to be a very interesting topic to dilate
+upon; but on this subject there is less direct evidence
+than could be wished. Even Sir Douglas Forsyth, in
+his official report, is not able to throw as much light as
+is desired on the inner working of the administrative
+system of Yakoob Beg. Still, such as it is, with the
+exception of the Russian writer, Gregorieff, he is the
+only authority on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>To commence with the court and the immediate
+surroundings of Yakoob Beg, we are struck by two
+inconsistencies. In the first place, there were no great
+nobles, or indeed adherents or his family; those chiefs
+who, whether they were Khokandian nobles or Kirghiz
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+or Afghan adventurers, had proved their fidelity to
+his rule, and their capacity for service, were actively
+employed as governors of districts, or as commandants
+of fortresses in the wide-stretching dominions of their
+imperious master. Periodically they came to pay their
+respects in the capital, and at frequent intervals Yakoob
+Beg, in his journeys to the frontier, visited them, and
+superintended their operations in person; but, in so active
+a community where there was a dearth of mankind, the
+intellectually gifted members of the society were too
+valuable to be permitted to devote their energies and
+their attention to the object of becoming palace ornaments.
+Yakoob Beg had forced himself on a people who
+regarded him with indifference, and he had to maintain
+himself in his place by a never relaxing vigour. To
+make this possible, he required a large staff of efficient
+and trustworthy subordinates, who may be divided into
+three classes of various capacities, viz., soldiers, administrators,
+and tax-gatherers. Until the last few months
+of his reign there was no symptom that his system was
+declining in vigour, or that his supply of competent
+officials was limited and susceptible of being exhausted.
+Even in his most prosperous years, however, there was
+always a difficulty in obtaining a full supply; and
+in all inferior posts the disaffected Khitay had to be
+employed. The Tungani of Kucha and Aksu were
+scarcely more to be trusted in an emergency than their
+Buddhist kinsmen. Yet the extensive civil service of
+the state, which undertook the education, the religion,
+the civil order, the local administration of the people
+all into its own hands, had to be kept in working order,
+whatever else might happen. It can at once be perceived
+that, when a government which never obtained any deep
+hold on the affections of the people had only a limited
+population to draw upon, it was only a question of time
+to solve the difficulty by an exhaustion of the supply of
+suitable brain material, or by the uprising of an, at heart,
+dissatisfied people. No one will ever understand the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+secret of Yakoob Beg's rule unless he constantly bears
+in mind that his strict orthodoxy as a Mussulman, and
+his still stricter enforcement of the laws of his religion
+within his borders, were elements of strength only in
+his external relations; in his internal affairs they placed
+him in the light of a tyrant, and prevented his people
+ever experiencing any enthusiasm for his person and
+rule. It is doubtful whether outside the priesthood and
+the more fanatical Andijanis there was any great religious
+zeal at all, and it is quite a delusion to speak of
+the Kashgari, as a whole, as being fanatical Mahomedans,
+in the same degree that it is true to say so of the
+Bokhariots or Afghans. In addition to there being no
+noble or wealthy official class in the city of Kashgar,
+there was also the strange inconsistency of an intensely
+strict etiquette being enforced side by side with extreme
+plainness in costume and ceremonial. It is rare indeed
+to hear any traveller to Kashgar speaking of the richness
+or finery of court functionaries. Even Hadji Torah,
+or the Seyyid Yakoob Khan, as he is now called, and Mahomed
+Yunus, the governor of Yarkand, two of the most
+trusted and prominent followers of the Athalik Ghazi,
+were not to be distinguished from a host of minor luminaries
+in the court circle by any external insignia of
+their elevated position. Some of the military, officers
+of the household troops, wore a device of a dragon's
+head worked in silk over their plain uniform of leather;
+and this seems to have been a custom surviving the
+disappearance of the Chinese. Hadji Torah&mdash;who recently
+visited this country, and who had on previous
+occasions travelled in Russia, Turkey, and India&mdash;however,
+alone among Kashgarian notables, had introduced
+into his household some of the comforts and luxuries of
+European life. His example was not imitated by many
+others, and, after a brief period of fashion, the improvements
+he had striven to make popular died out and were
+lost sight of. The ordinary dress of a person above the
+rank of gentleman is a large blanket-like cloak worn
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+over a close-fitting tunic and breeches; and the dress of
+the peasant is similar, only his cloak is usually a sheepskin.
+The Ameer himself set the example of exceeding
+plainness in his costume, and his followers were far too
+skilled courtiers to vary their practice from that of their
+ruler. But what his court lacked in pomp it gained in
+impressiveness by the perfect system of etiquette enforced,
+and by the external show of reverence to the
+ruler and to his religion, manifested in every petty detail
+of the palace ceremonial. The Ameer received publicly
+in his audience-chamber every day, when all petitions
+and stringent punishments were submitted to him. His
+<i>shaghawals</i>, or foreign secretaries, made their report to
+him on whatever business might be most pressing,
+whether it was concerning his relations with India or
+Russia, with Afghanistan or the Tungani; and the local
+governors, who might happen to have arrived at the
+capital, were received in audience, either to present their
+personal respects to the ruler, or their reports of the
+government of their provinces. But with the exception
+of a few of his kinsmen, and more intimate associates,
+such as Abdulla, none were permitted to be seated in
+his presence. Even these could not sit within a certain
+distance of their sovereign. All subjects who were
+allowed to approach his person had to do so in the
+humblest manner, and with the deepest expressions of
+humility and subjection. His son, Kuli Beg, was still
+more particular in his intercourse with his subjects.
+Even his cousin, Hadji Torah, a man whose experience
+and lineage entitled him to exceptional consideration,
+never placed himself on an equality with this youthful
+despot, and always clothed his words and thoughts
+when in conversation with him in an outward show of
+humble respect and deferential obsequiousness. It will
+be at once surmised, and, so far as our information
+warrants an opinion, with correctness, that all this terrorism
+alienated any good feeling from the ruling family
+that its prowess in the field and the cabinet might have
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+secured for it. In Kashgar we have a forcible proof of
+the truth of Tennyson's line, that "he who only rules
+by terror doeth grievous wrong;" and yet, founded as it
+was on a military system, and on the deepest distrust of
+the subject races, it could not well have been otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>The most unmistakable proof of how Yakoob Beg's
+rule was founded, and how it was maintained, is to be
+seen in the fact that his <i>orda</i>, or palace, was one large
+barrack, the interior compartments of which were
+devoted to the accommodation of the royal household.
+His out-houses were filled with cannon of every description,
+from antiquated Chinese irjirs to modern Krupps and
+Armstrongs, and his select corps of artillerymen, clothed
+in a scarlet uniform, seldom left the chief cities, except
+for serious operations against foreign enemies. At the
+Yangy-Shahr of Kashgar, too, he kept his military stores,
+and it was said that in his workshops there he was able
+to construct cannon and muskets in considerable numbers
+in imitation of the most perfect weapons of European
+science. But it must be noted that we have no record of
+any of his home-made weapons being used in actual
+hostilities, while the supply of arms received from
+Russia, or this country, is known to have been made
+the most of. Besides the natural aptitude of his subjects
+of Chinese descent for imitation, he had in his
+service, particularly in his artillery, many sepoys who
+had deserted our service either at the time of the mutiny
+or since. These soldiers, valuable either as non-commissioned
+officers or in higher ranks still, combined with
+a large number of good troops from Khokand and the
+mountain tribes of the neighbourhood, gave a cohesion
+and vigour to the whole army that was simply inestimable.
+That army, it may be here convenient to say,
+was divided into two classes widely differing from each
+other, and called upon, except in an emergency, when
+all the resources of the state were summoned to take
+part in its defence, to perform duties as opposite as their
+own composition. The army of the Ameer, founded on
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+that confused assemblage with which he conquered
+Kashgar, was divided into two bodies, the <i>jigit</i> or
+<i>djinghite</i>, the horse soldier, and the <i>sarbaz</i>, or foot
+soldier. The former of these was the more formidable
+warrior, being selected for personal strength or skill.
+The <i>jigits</i> were trained to fight on foot as well as on
+horse, and were armed with a long single-barrelled gun
+and a sabre. Their uniform was a serviceable coat of
+leathern armour mostly buff in colour, and to all intents
+and purposes they correspond with our dragoons, or,
+perhaps, still more closely with the proposed corps of
+mounted riflemen. The <i>sarbaz</i>, among whom are
+included the artillerymen, presented greater varieties of
+efficiency than his mounted comrade; still he had gone
+through some regular drill and training, and resided in
+barracks. He was a regular soldier, and might be trusted
+in defence of his country up to a certain point. In
+numbers it is impossible to state accurately how many
+<i>jigits</i> and <i>sarbazes</i> there were in the service of the state;
+some months ago they would have been placed as high
+as 50,000 or 60,000 strong, possibly at a higher number
+still; now we are wiser on the subject, and we have gone
+to the other end of the scale. It is probable, however,
+that Yakoob Beg never had 20,000 perfectly trustworthy
+soldiers in his army, and that after the conclusion
+of the Tungan wars, half that number would more
+accurately represent his force of <i>jigits</i> and <i>sarbazes</i>.
+But in addition to the more or less effective main body,
+there was a nondescript following of Khitay, Tungani,
+half-savage Kirghiz, and rude degraded savages like the
+Dolans, that in numbers would have presented a very
+formidable appearance. The Khitay must at once be
+struck out of the estimate, for they were never permitted
+to go beyond the immediate vicinity of Yarkand
+and Kashgar, where they kept themselves apart, and
+were employed as military servants, as sentries, and as
+workmen in the military shops and factories. The
+Tungani, who enrolled themselves at various epochs in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+the service of Kashgar, were more than dubious in
+their fidelity to the state; besides they were of such
+questionable courage, that they were no allies of any
+importance. Even as compared with one another, these
+were of varying kinds of efficiency; the Tungani who
+joined Yakoob Beg in the earlier portion of his career
+seeming to be the best of them. Those who joined
+after the fall of Aksu and Kucha, less efficient and more
+ambiguous in their fidelity; and those who dwelt in the
+country from Korla to Turfan and Manas, were totally
+inefficient, and not to be trusted to any degree whatever.
+The Kirghiz and Kipchak nomads were rather a
+source of danger to their friends than of dread to their
+foes. Yakoob Beg had, therefore, at his orders but a
+very limited force to maintain his own dynasty against
+the machinations of Khoja and Tungan, and to defend
+a long and vulnerable frontier against many powerful
+and ambitious neighbours. It was absurd for him to
+think of venturing single-handed across the path of
+Russia, and to do him justice he never deluded himself
+into the idea that he could. All he seems to have
+aspired to was to resist to the uttermost any invasion of
+his territory by them, and to die sooner than surrender.
+Limited in numbers as his regular forces were, they seem
+to have had every claim to be placed high in the rank of
+Asiatic soldiers. They were certainly not as formidable
+a body as the Sikhs or Ghoorkas, probably not as the
+Afghans; still they were infinitely superior, except in numbers,
+to any forces the Ameer of Bokhara or the Khan of
+Khokand could place in the line of battle. To Yakoob
+Beg alone belongs the credit of their organization.</p>
+
+<p>Yakoob Beg's system of administration was simple in
+the extreme. A <i>Dadkwah</i>, or governor, was appointed
+for each district, and in his hands was vested the supreme
+control in all the affairs of his province. Yet he was no
+irresponsible minister who could tyrannize as he pleased.
+Tyrannize in small ways, undoubtedly, many of them did,
+but, as the life of the subject could only be taken away
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+by order of the ruler himself, the most powerful weapon
+in the hands of an unscrupulous viceroy was removed.</p>
+
+<p>At stated periods, too, he had to proceed to Kashgar
+to give a report of the chief occurrences in his province,
+and on such occasions petitions containing charges
+against the Dadkwah were formally considered in his
+presence. It may be said that this proceeding was a
+farce, and it is probably true that a favoured viceroy
+could laugh at any ordinary accusation against his character.
+But that would be an exceptional case. Many
+Dadkwahs were reduced in official rank, for malpractices,
+and some, such as Yakoob Beg's own half-brother, were
+removed for incompetence in their charges. Side by side,
+too, with the Dadkwah, ruled the Kazi or Judge, who,
+if of course not on a par in rank with the viceroy, was still
+invested with complete authority in all legal decisions
+on crime. This prominence given to the legal authorities
+had a good effect on the public mind, for, although
+the Kazi, as a rule, might not dare to thwart the wishes
+of the Dadkwah, the effect of the law being supreme
+was scarcely detracted from. And what was that law? it
+may naturally be asked. Precisely the same as the law of
+every other Mahomedan state, with a few innovations
+traceable to the influence of the Chinese. The Shariát,
+the holy code of the Prophet followed in all the Sunni
+states, was enforced by Yakoob Beg, with particular
+severity; and in its working no sense of mercy was
+permitted to temper the harshness of its regulations.
+Crimes committed by women were punished with greater
+inflictions than the same committed by men; and the
+ordinary punishments, whipping, mutilation, and torture
+could be inflicted by order of the Dadkwah. Only in
+capital cases had the decision to rest with the sovereign.
+Thieves, beggars, and vagrants found wandering about
+the streets at prohibited hours were immediately locked
+up, and brought before the Kazi, who would either
+administer a caution, or a whipping, if the accused had
+previously offended. Another check on the abuse of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+power by the officials was to be found in the following
+regulation. A charge to be visited with a severer punishment
+than twenty heavy strokes from the <i>dira</i>&mdash;a leather
+strap, fixed in a wooden handle&mdash;had to be investigated
+by a member of each official rank; so the Kazi passed
+a culprit on, with his comments, to the Mufti, the Mufti
+to the Alim, and the Alim to the Dadkwah. If any of
+these officials dissented from the remarks of his subordinate,
+and the matter was found impossible to arrange
+by mutual concessions, it was either referred to the
+sovereign for solution, or was permitted to fall through.
+The Dadkwah had also to be present at every punishment
+within his jurisdiction, and was directly responsible
+to the Ameer for any miscarriage of justice. The Kazi
+Rais, or head judge, had the right to decide all minor
+matters for himself&mdash;for instance, in his patrols through
+the streets, if he met a woman unveiled he could order
+her to be struck so many times with the <i>dira</i>; or if he
+found a man selling adulterated food, or using light
+weights, he could confiscate his goods, or in some other
+manner mulct him in addition to administering a certain
+number of strokes. He and his attendants were particularly
+energetic and zealous in compelling idlers about
+the bazaars to repair to the mosques at prayer time, and
+in a very paternal and authoritative manner did the Rais
+exercise his petty power for the good of his people.
+Even on his despotism there was some check, as he had
+no authority to inflict more than forty blows with the
+<i>dira</i> for one offence. Intimately connected with the
+administration of justice was the police system, which
+in its intricate ramifications permeated all sections of
+society. Much as we may feel admiration for the judicial
+code, which, up to a certain point admirably administered,
+ensured a certain kind of rough justice throughout the
+Athalik Ghazi's dominions, the police laws and discipline
+have greater claims to our favourable opinion, as evidences
+of an astonishing capacity for government. In
+his legal code, Yakoob Beg simply adopted the laws
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+enforced on all true believers by the Koran, and he had
+no claims to originality as a lawgiver. But as a ruler
+adopting all those checks on sedition which lie at the
+disposal of an unscrupulous sovereign, and which were
+brought to such a pitch of perfection under Fouché
+and the Second Empire, Yakoob Beg has reason to be
+placed in the very highest class of such potentates. In
+this achievement, too, he was not a plagiarist, and, as he
+must have been ignorant of similar regulations existing
+in Europe, he must be allowed the credit of having
+originated a system of police in which it is difficult to
+find a single flaw. In China, indeed, something of the
+same kind has at all times existed, and at periods when
+the Emperor grasped the sceptre firmly, and made his
+individuality felt in the management of affairs, the police
+were one of the most active tools of power. But even
+in that empire there is no record of their having attained
+so complete a control over the actions and sentiments of
+the people as in Kashgaria during the last decade. It
+appears, too, that in superiority of system lay the sole
+pre-eminence of the latter; for the Tungan, or policeman,
+of China was, individually man for man, a superior
+class to the Kashgarian and other constables of Yakoob
+Beg. In short, the whole credit of their existence belongs
+to that ruler.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now give some account of this important
+body. It was divided into two chief divisions quite
+distinct from and irrespective of each other, secret
+and municipal. The <i>secret</i> was not, like ours, a perceptible
+class of detectives, acting in combination with the
+municipal, to which was entrusted the discovery of crimes
+and conspiracies. It may loosely be described as consisting
+of every member of the community, for all
+desired to stand well with the powers that be, and the
+easiest way to attain that object would be to place all
+confidential information at their disposal. But it is
+evident that even in a state of irresponsible power, like
+Kashgar, a clear encouragement, such as this, to invent
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+libels of one's neighbours, could only end in unprofitable
+litigation and confusion. There was certainly a check
+on the too zealous imaginations of the subjects, and,
+although there is not much evidence on the subject, it
+appears to have been twofold. In the first place a
+libeller incurred the risk of receiving very severe punishment,
+particularly if the person libelled were of saintly
+lineage, or if he filled any official post. This operated
+as a check on too hasty accusations, especially when it
+became known that the reward for such service was
+seldom speedily forthcoming, and scarcely ever answered
+the expectations of the informer. But this check, which
+alone seems to have been adopted in the earlier years of
+Yakoob Beg's authority, was found to be insufficient as
+his power became consolidated. The secret police then
+became organized to a certain degree; that is to say, they
+so far formed a distinct corps that a member had to be
+approved of either by the Dadkwah or the Rais. So
+well, however, was the secret of their individuality
+maintained that few of them were generally known to
+the people. Suspicion was wide-spread throughout all
+ranks of society, and the governor in his <i>orda</i>, or the
+Rais in his hall of justice, or the shopkeeper in his booth,
+or the artisan in his hut, never felt safe that his neighbour,
+the man with whom he was holding the most
+friendly converse, was not dissecting his expressions to
+discover whether they contained anything treasonable.
+Members of this formidable body were always attached
+to the suite of either foreign envoys or merchants; and
+their presence in the rear of the <i>cortége</i>, always effectually
+closed the mouths of the inhabitants, or only induced
+them to open them to give false or contradictory replies.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no doubt that this secret organization,
+brought to a high pitch of perfection during the later
+years of his reign, gave a consistency and strength to
+Yakoob Beg's tenure of power that was wanting to all
+his predecessors. In leaving this part of the system, it
+is as well to point out in conclusion that this detective
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+force was only useful in discovering what was about to
+occur in the state among Andijani or Tungani, and
+that it was powerless to attempt the repression by force
+of any outbreak of popular feeling. Its members were
+simply spies, and as a body its value vanished when its
+members became generally known. Constant changing,
+and the introduction of fresh members, were the sole
+effectual means of preserving the <i>incognito</i> of a large
+body of men, and women even, who preserved official
+communication only with the local governor or judge.</p>
+
+<p>The municipal police were subdivided into urban and
+suburban, and they present a complete contrast to the
+vague body we have just attempted to describe. Their
+functions were known and recognizable. They were
+the functionaries who put into practice the behests of
+the Kazi, and they maintained order in the streets and
+bazaars, much as our own do. The <i>Corbashi</i> is the head
+of this body, and his subordinates are styled <i>tarzagchi</i>.
+They wore a distinct uniform, and had drilling grounds
+attached to barracks, in which, however, they were not
+all compelled to reside. They were essentially military
+in their rules, and presented a powerful first front to all
+evil-doers and would-be rebels. It was they who accompanied
+the Kazi Rais in his daily circuit of the streets
+and market-place, and it was from their weapon, the <i>dira</i>,
+that the ordinary punishment was received. Their principal
+avocation seems to have been to maintain order in
+the towns during the night-time, for in the day we only
+hear of a few of them being detailed for personal attendance
+on the Dadkwah and Kazi. With sunset their
+true importance is more visible, for not only were they
+stationed in all main thoroughfares, squares, and other
+open places of the city; but until sunrise patrols at
+frequent intervals throughout the night visited all the
+chief quarters of the town. The power vested in their
+hands during these hours was very great, and it was
+dangerous for any stranger to venture out after prohibited
+hours. All persons found in the streets after
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+sunset were arrested and incarcerated until the morning,
+when, if they could give a satisfactory account of themselves,
+they were released, with a caution not to keep such
+unseemly hours for the future. If, however, they were
+unable to explain their business, a further term of
+imprisonment was imposed; and it was a matter of some
+difficulty for a stranger to obtain his complete liberty
+for some time afterwards. The suburban police fulfilled
+much the same duties, and on all the country roads
+patrols passed up and down during the night, while
+pickets were stationed at the cross-roads. In the same
+manner as in the towns all travellers, except those
+armed with a passport, were interned for a minute investigation
+into their affairs in the morning. And
+"thieves, beggars, and wanderers" were chastised at
+the discretion of the local magistrate. The vagrant laws
+were as much enforced, too, as they were in this country
+in the days of Queen Elizabeth, and in a general mode
+of interference with the thoughts and actions of its subjects,
+the Kashgarian government had attained a height
+of excellence that would entitle it to rank with the
+Inquisition. Still there was order. No riots occurred
+to distract the harmony of the public weal, and to an
+external observer, especially to one belonging to a country
+where order is considered the greatest <i>desideratum</i>,
+the government of the Athalik Ghazi seemed to be the
+perfection of an Asiatic state, and that order a reason for
+attributing all other virtues to its originator.</p>
+
+<p>Travellers, however, who were provided with a passport,
+were accorded privileges of transit, and were permitted,
+if they felt so disposed, to continue their journeys during
+hours interdicted to less privileged mortals. In each
+chief town there were offices for the issue of these permits
+to travel. Not many obstacles were thrown in the
+path of those, who left permanent guarantees in the
+shape of property behind them for their return, in
+accomplishing their desire for travel; but rarely was
+permission granted to any one, not blessed with these
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+worldly advantages, to proceed farther than the neighbouring
+district. Indeed in all cases leave to visit
+foreign states, other than Khokand or Bokhara, was a
+matter of difficulty to be obtained, and only in the most
+exceptional cases was it granted. But it appears that
+there were some evasions of this regulation by a simulation
+of religious zeal, for the Sheikh-ul-Islam had it in his
+power to grant permits to leave the country on pilgrimages
+to Bokhara the "holy," or to Mecca. In
+themselves the passports were simple in phraseology.
+They merely stated the name and address of the
+traveller, the nature of his business, and his destination.
+Having obtained the consent of the Dadkwah, and the
+authority of the Kazi, no difficulty was experienced
+in procuring the necessary slip of paper. Infractions
+of this permission, by too long an absence, or by proceeding
+in some forbidden direction, were visited on a
+first offence with a fine. On a repetition of it, however,
+the punishment became more severe. It would be
+interesting to know how these protectors of the
+public peace were paid, and by what means. But
+on this point there is little trustworthy information.
+We, however, know of one tax which was devoted to
+the support of the urban police, but of the funds from
+which the suburban were remunerated, we have no
+authority for any assertion. A weekly tax was levied
+from all the shop and booth owners, to go towards the
+payment of their protectors; but it is not supposed that
+this amounted to a sufficient sum to maintain the large
+force in the more important cities. The difference was
+probably paid out of the state coffers under the head of
+justice. Judging from this we cannot be far wrong in
+assuming that a similar tax was levied on the farmers
+and country residents for the support of the suburban
+police; and as the secret police required less outlay in the
+country than in the cities, it is possible that that tax more
+nearly defrayed the total cost, than it did in Yarkand
+or Kashgar. The police supervision and the military
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+terrorism, freely resorted to on all occasions offering an
+excuse for such an extreme measure, have not been without
+their effect in leaving traces of their existence and
+influence in the daily life of the Kashgari, and on the
+countenances and sentiments of the subject peoples.
+Where formerly lived a light-hearted and happy race
+there now seemed as if a never-to-be-removed gloom
+had settled down on the face of the land, and neither the
+assurance of security nor the irregular encouragement of
+the ruler to commerce could remove the blight that had
+fallen upon the energies and happiness of the people.
+As one of them expressed it, in pathetic language,
+"During the Chinese rule there was everything; there
+is nothing now." The speaker of that sentence was
+no merchant, who might have been expected to be depressed
+by the falling-off in trade, but a warrior and
+a chieftain's son and heir. If to him the military
+system of Yakoob Beg seemed unsatisfactory and irksome,
+what must it have appeared to those more
+peaceful subjects to whom merchandise and barter
+were as the breath of their nostrils? All the advantages
+of a perfect police system, heavily weighted
+by the incumbrance of a costly addition of spies and
+tale-bearers, would seem as nothing compared with the
+loss incurred by the fetters placed on individual motion
+and enterprise. Considered by itself, the police organization
+of Kashgar was, perhaps, the most perfect
+design achieved by Yakoob Beg, and his community of
+spies will rank with anything in effectiveness that has
+ever been accomplished by any potentate. But as a
+permanent addition to his strength it is permissible to
+doubt whether he really secured his rule by employing
+the latter, or obtained much more by the formation of
+the former than the services of a trained body of trustworthy,
+courageous men. The restrictions imposed on
+trade by the severance of all communications with the
+East by the Tungan wars and by the limited amount of
+liberty granted the native Kashgari, proved most deterrent
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+to all mercantile adventure, and placed in the
+hands of Khokandians or Russians on the north, and
+of Cashmerians and Punjabis on the south, most of the
+trade still carried on with Eastern Turkestan.</p>
+
+<p>The trade carried on by the Athalik Ghazi's state, if
+we are to judge solely by amount, with foreign countries,
+was greatest with Russia and her dependencies; but
+if we investigate the matter more closely we find that
+the result is a little more satisfactory to ourselves.
+The direct trade that was carried on by way of Leh with
+Khoten and Sanju was steadily increasing, while that of
+Russia by Khokand had for some time remained stationary,
+if it had not even decreased. And then much
+of the Russian trade has to be scored to this country,
+for in the marts of Kashgar, underneath Russian exteriors,
+were very often to be found English interiors, and
+the brand of well-known Manchester and Liverpool
+makers was discovered beneath some gaudy and brilliant-looking
+cover hailing from Moscow or Nishni Novgorod.
+Besides, recent investigations have proved that
+some of the goods exported from Shikarpore, in Scinde,
+through the Bholan Pass find their way through the
+mountainous districts that intervene into the territory
+of his late Highness the Ameer of Kashgar. Nor had
+Yakoob Beg totally neglected all means for inducing
+merchants to enter his state; indeed, his chief objection
+seemed to have been, not that they should have entered
+his state, but that they should leave it. Serais were
+built in all the chief towns for the accommodation of
+such merchants as might take up a temporary abode
+within his territory, and the Andijani Serai, or hotel,
+specially constructed for merchants from Khokand, was
+one of the largest and most striking buildings in the
+city of Kashgar. Yakoob Beg had even detailed off
+to take care of the serai and its occupants a large
+number of the old Khitay, or Yangy Mussulmans, who
+were generally employed throughout the city as domestic
+servants. When we come to the description of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+the relations of Yakoob Beg with England and with
+Russia we will speak more fully of the details of those
+treaties of commerce which were ratified on several
+occasions, and whose ostensible object was the promotion
+of trade and other friendly intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>We have now considered the army, the police, the administration
+of justice, and the court of Yakoob Beg,
+and the only chief subject that remains to be discussed are
+the principles of finance adopted by the Ameer. To keep
+any state, even an Asiatic state, in a fit condition for preserving
+its independence, a settled revenue is requisite,
+and Yakoob Beg, whose atmosphere was one of almost
+continual warfare, was on several occasions pressed for
+money in a manner difficult to be conceived by us.
+His military operations languished for the want of
+the sinews of war, and we are told on credible authority
+that many of his soldiers received only payment
+out of the spoil taken at the sack of Turfan and other
+places. So long as his ordinary expenditure was increased
+by the addition of an extraordinary war outlay,
+so long was he unable to make his receipts and
+expenditure balance. On the cessation of hostilities
+against the Tungani, and the partial revival
+of trade in consequence, his fiscal affairs assumed a
+brighter aspect, and it is possible that during the last
+few years of his reign his revenue showed a surplus.
+But to obtain that success, a most joyful one to every
+embarrassed potentate, Yakoob Beg had to resort to
+many strange expedients, and to manifest much patience
+and long-suffering; and in overcoming petty obstacles
+and minor details, he proved himself to be a man of more
+than average ability, no less than he had previously by
+the skilful manipulation of armies and intriguers. Here
+again he erected a structure distinct and separate from
+that handed down to him by the Chinese. Comparatively
+speaking, the Chinese had been wealthy to the
+Athalik Ghazi, and they received in moderate imposts
+on merchandise alone almost a sufficient sum to defray
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+the total cost of their administration. Yakoob Beg had
+no such certain source of revenue; he had to raise from
+an impoverished and only half-conquered state a sum
+almost as large as that required by the Chinese. That
+he did it remains the chief proof of his skill as a finance
+minister, and is another reason for our regarding this
+extraordinary ruler with admiration. We may feel sure
+that if we could follow closely the history of his fiscal
+efforts, and the numberless plans that proved abortive,
+we should have revealed one of the most instructive and
+interesting narratives of modern Asia. There are no
+materials out of Kashgar, if there are such there, for
+such an investigation however, and we can only follow
+as best we may be able, the thread of events by the light
+of such authorities as are at our disposal. In court and
+personal expenditure he set an example that might with
+advantage be followed by other rulers in Asia even at
+the present day, and in a strict economy and supervision
+of the petty sums that in the aggregate make all the
+difference in any state between a surplus and a deficit,
+were to be found the two guiding principles of his conduct.
+Kashgaria might be in a very backward state of
+cultivation, and years of commotion and warfare had
+undoubtedly thrown it back in the ranks of prosperity
+and civilization, but the Athalik Ghazi was persuaded
+of the truth of the Latin philosopher's saying, that
+"Parsimonia magna vectigalia est." It must be remembered
+that Yakoob Beg set himself a different task
+to accomplish than had the Chinese. Their idea was
+not so much to extend their empire, although there has
+always been a tendency with the Chinese to be aggressive
+against small neighbours, as to acquire a territory that
+could be made a paying thing: much as the pioneers of
+Anglo-Saxon conquest have made their impression in
+every quarter of the globe in search of wealth and adventure,
+did the Chinese by a seemingly irresistible impulse
+spread over the continent of Asia. In doing so they were
+actuated as much by calculation of possible profit as by
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+any desire for military renown. The Emperor Keen-Lung
+himself was flattered by the triumphs achieved
+beyond Gobi; but his lieutenants and viceroys aimed at
+more mercenary objects, and but for the golden promise
+held forth by a permanent conquest of Turkestan would
+have induced their master to direct his efforts to some
+more profitable undertaking. The Chinese, having
+acquired Kashgar, were far too sagacious to use up its
+resources by an organized system of pillage, and they
+accordingly, let it be granted chiefly with a view to their
+own personal aggrandizement, devoted their attention to
+the development of its natural wealth by means already
+detailed in a previous chapter. For three generations
+the officials grew rich on the prosperity of their dependency,
+and for the same period the people themselves
+were scarcely less flourishing. The Chinese had accepted
+no slight responsibility in undertaking the government
+of Kashgar on principles identical with those by which
+they held authority in Tibet; but, owing to wonderful
+perseverance and good management, they triumphed
+over every difficulty. The revenue raised for state and
+local purposes was very great, and it sufficed to preserve
+good order for many years, and to add permanent improvement
+to the state in every direction. The task
+voluntarily undertaken by the Chinese was far more
+onerous than that Yakoob Beg found he had to execute;
+but they came to it with many advantages that he
+wanted. They had a large and faithful army; he had
+only an uncertain gathering, which might flee or desert
+on the first symptom of disaster: they had the resources
+of a great and powerful empire at their back; he had
+nothing but his own energy and determination: and
+above all, they had a reputation that added to their
+strength and facilitated their undertakings, while he
+was regarded as a mere military adventurer, receiving
+the contempt of Tungan and Khoja alike. The very
+nature of things made the Chinese turn most of their
+attention to commerce, while for years Yakoob Beg's
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+sole thought was to consolidate his military strength
+and form a large standing army. For many years, then,
+Yakoob Beg only spent money on the drilling of soldiers
+and the purchase of weapons. Now and then,
+when some danger seemed to threaten him, either from
+Russia, Afghanistan, or the Tungani, he would devote
+considerable sums to the construction of forts in the
+line of the menaced position. But his chief expenditure
+was confined to his army, and the maintenance of his
+dynasty by his police system. The administration of
+justice required a certain sum of money, and the Church
+for its support came in for a fair share of the good
+things that were going. It is clear that his expenditure,
+if not very great in our eyes, would severely tax
+a population of 1,000,000 people in no very high state
+of prosperity. The chief source of wealth in the past
+had always been the trade with China, and when that
+was broken off, the slight increase in intercourse with
+Russia and India was not a sufficient compensation. In
+fact, the country was very poor, without the ingenuity
+and commercial instincts of the Khitay. During the
+days of the war under Buzurg Khan, the only means of
+obtaining the necessary revenue was by despoliation and
+enforced levies on the occupied portion of the territory.
+When the western portion of Kashgaria was subdued,
+Yakoob Beg found himself without any money in his exchequer,
+and no easy means of filling it presented itself
+to him. In these straits he had recourse to an expedient
+that, if not very novel, was at all events very effective.
+He issued a proclamation to his faithful subjects to the
+effect that as conqueror he was landowner of the whole
+state; but that he was willing&mdash;eager would have been
+the more correct expression&mdash;to sell it to them at a
+cheap rate. He, however, exempted from this the old
+possessions of the Chinese Wangs and Ambans, and
+distributed their extensive domains among the more
+prominent of his followers, who in return acknowledged
+their liability to military service. The system was an
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+exact copy of the old feudal régime, and Yakoob Beg was
+vested with all the rights and authority of the feudal
+lord of the Middle Ages. The parallel is still further
+maintained by the large reward that the Church received
+for its aid to the new ruler. The old revenues,
+devoted to the support of the temples and religious
+seminaries in the past, and which had miscarried during
+the troublous period of the war for the possession of
+Turkestan, were restored, and fresh possessions were
+added thereto, to demonstrate the generosity of the sovereign
+and his veneration for the religion of Mahomed.
+His old friend the Sheikh-ul-Islam was still more fortunate,
+and a large estate was set apart for his special enjoyment.
+Nor does it appear that the Mussulman priests
+abused the fresh power and advantages they thus secured;
+for among the toilers in Kashgaria none were more energetic
+than they in educating the people, and in extending
+their influence over their minds, both for the benefit of
+their religion and for the security of the power of the
+Athalik Ghazi. But in one respect, and it is impossible
+to exaggerate its importance, Yakoob Beg's endeavours
+to found a strong military class, bound to him by ties
+of past favours and others yet to come, were abortive; for
+with rare exceptions his followers refused to fill their
+new avocation of landed proprietors. Instead of devoting
+their attention to the questions arising from agriculture
+and other rural pursuits, they sub-let all their
+possessions to Andijani immigrants, and, residing in their
+city <i>ordas</i>, gave themselves over either to lascivious
+pleasures or to complete indolence. Even so distinguished
+a warrior as Abdulla Beg, the slayer of more
+than 12,000 persons, as his panegyrists boasted, suffered
+from the pervading effeminacy on the cessation of active
+hostilities; and in the lower ranks of the service such
+deterioration in energy was still more manifest. This
+change in the spirit of his earlier supporters, among
+other things, obliged Yakoob Beg to depend the more
+on the Andijani merchants and shopkeepers, and conduced
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+to his adopting more favourable views on foreign
+trade in the later years of his power.</p>
+
+<p>The sum of money which he immediately received by
+the sale of lands placed him in a condition to undertake
+those wars against the Tungani, which added so
+much to the extent of his territory and to the responsibilities
+of his position. Indeed, for several years after
+its first enforcement it continued to bring in a certain
+amount to the coffers of the State. But even this
+resource was transitory, and the sum of money received
+by this means and in the shape of spoil, from Yarkand,
+Kashgar, Khoten, and other places, was not sufficient to
+meet the expenditure caused by the formation of a large
+army. Neither of these practices could be regarded as a
+permanent means of obtaining a revenue, for the former
+would scarcely admit of a repetition, and the latter soon
+exhausted itself. So when his rule had become a little
+settled, and these modes of raising money, in addition
+to the still more reprehensible practice of robbing
+foreign merchants, had become out of date to a certain
+degree, the Athalik Ghazi had to place his fiscal arrangements
+on a more practical and honourable basis. While
+he laboured under some disadvantages, already enumerated,
+as compared with the Chinese, he had the great
+advantage over them that he strove for an object more
+easily accomplished than the restoration of Kashgar to
+its pristine welfare; and in his budget he had only
+steadily to keep in view how much he required to maintain
+so many <i>jigits</i>, and so many police in his pay, and
+to keep in his exchequer a small surplus for any untoward
+emergency. He left the roads to take care of themselves;
+the irrigation works, sadly wanted in various parts
+of the state, must be reserved for his successors; and all
+proposals for the amelioration of the people were shelved
+for a more opportune occasion. But so many thousand
+<i>jigits</i> must be in the ranks; so many fresh guns and
+cartridges must be placed in the arsenals; and so many
+adventurers must be induced by good pay to take service
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+in the army as non-commissioned officers, in order that the
+rank and file should be well drilled. The very necessities
+of his position compelled Yakoob Beg to make all these
+military preparations; but the cost was great, and the
+sacrifices thus imposed on ruler and on people were a
+terrible strain. Recent events make us inclined to believe
+that a less active military and foreign policy, and a more
+peaceable and domestic one, would have tended to have
+added more strength to the Athalik Ghazi's rule than the
+somewhat ostentatious military parade to which he had
+recourse. Be that as it may, Yakoob Beg instituted in
+1867 two taxes, which may be supposed to represent
+the two chief classes of receipts during his tenure
+of authority. The first of these was a tithe on all the
+cereal produce of the country; this tax was called the
+<i>Ushr</i>. The second, called the <i>Zakat</i>, was a customs
+due levied on all merchandise entering Kashgar. The
+<i>Ushr</i> was payable on all land except that occupied by
+the Church, or by those who owed military service to the
+crown instead of other payment; and even those who
+rented land from the noble classes were obliged to surrender
+a tithe to the ruler. It would appear, therefore,
+from this that it was not so much the land as its legal
+possessor who was exempt from liability to the usual
+obligations of citizenship. The danger contained in the
+acquisition of all the crown lands by Andijani merchants,
+and the gradual displacement of his more immediate
+followers through the energy of these people, was not
+imperceptible to Yakoob Beg, and he accordingly
+adopted measures for preventing his nobles selling
+their land without his sanction. The receipts from this
+<i>Ushr</i> were very considerable, and it was the main source
+of his revenue for years. We have some idea of the
+approximate value of land in Kashgar. The method of
+measuring land for sale, and consequently also for taxation,
+is peculiar. It is not by any given size that it is
+computed, or, indeed, strictly speaking by the amount
+of crop it produces; but at a rate in accordance with
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+the amount of wheat with which it had been planted.
+The average rate was about a pound for as much land
+as was sown with 20 lb. of wheat. The tenant, as
+has been said, paid the government dues and handed
+over three-fourths of the net produce to the landlord
+as rent, receiving for his portion only the one-fourth
+remaining. Under this system it was only in very prosperous
+years that any but very large tenants made sufficient
+to earn a competent livelihood. In bad years it is
+possible that the landlord had to satisfy himself with a
+smaller share, if he was not induced to surrender his
+claim altogether for the disastrous period. But the tax-farmers,
+entrusted with the collection of this rate, were
+eager to become rich, no less than to earn a good name
+with the authorities for bringing in a list with no defaulters.
+The unfortunate people were completely at their
+mercy, and without any means of ascertaining the accuracy
+of the claim, or of opposing extortionate demands
+on the part of the tax-collectors. They paid without a
+murmur, perhaps without a suspicion of the imposition
+that was being practised upon them, the sum demanded
+of them, if they were able; and as their dues were payable
+without delay and on demand before anything else
+was taken out of the total sum of the produce, the
+Athalik Ghazi received his share with regularity, and his
+tax-collector pocketed the excess sum for his own satisfaction.
+In many cases it is known that the amount
+claimed by the official exceeded by threefold the legal
+demand. Such a system was no less hurtful to the
+ruler than it was ruinous to the people. That in one
+tax alone a larger sum should be extracted from the
+people for the benefit of the officials than was contributed
+for the necessities of the state, exhibited a very
+loose system of supervision on the part of the sovereign,
+and is a strong piece of evidence that in many ways
+Yakoob Beg was a mixture of contradictions. We can
+scarcely persuade ourselves that he was aware of these
+occurrences, and yet how could he be ignorant of them?
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In addition to the <i>Ushr</i> there was another tax on home
+produce, viz., the <i>Tanabi</i>, or tax on land devoted to the
+production of vegetables or fruit. The Tanab is, by the
+way, a lineal measure of forty-seven yards, and a Tanabi
+is a piece of land forty-seven yards square. On this
+extent of land cultivated for vegetables, or fruit, a small
+tax was raised. More than any other tax did this vary
+according to the character of the district, and to the
+quality of the year's crop. It was seldom less than a
+shilling a Tanabi, even in the least renowned district,
+whereas in some parts, in good years, it was five shillings,
+or even more. Here again, however, the middleman
+interfered, and exacted as much as he saw there was any
+possibility of his obtaining. This tax undoubtedly ought
+to have produced a large sum, as a larger portion of the
+soil is laid out as fruit and vegetable gardens than for
+crops; but whether it was more difficult to raise, or there
+was more peculation <i>in transitu</i> from the tax-payer to the
+imperial exchequer, it is certain that we hear much less of
+this tax than we should be disposed to imagine. The two
+great taxes on home productions were therefore a corn due
+and a fruit due. The rate was not in itself excessive, and
+could be paid by any community without embarrassment.
+It is uncertain to what extent the avarice of the officials
+had made the conditions of these two taxes more
+onerous, although, on the most favourable supposition,
+the citizen was mulcted in no inconsiderable sum. A more
+serious question for the ruler was, how did it affect
+his own position with regard to his subjects? Did
+Yakoob Beg appear in the eyes of the Kashgari as an
+exacting and oppressive tyrant on account of these heavy
+impositions?</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to speak on this point with any degree
+of certainty, but it is only natural to expect that such
+was the case. No tiller of the ground can feel grateful
+to a sovereign who required him to hand over almost
+one-third of his receipts before he made use of one penny
+of them, even for the payment of his rent. It is scarcely
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+probable that Yakoob Beg approved of such enormous
+profits going to his officials; but, that having tolerated
+petty exactions in his earlier days, he found himself unable
+to attempt the task of coping with the evil when
+it had assumed such alarming proportions. It is impossible
+to believe that he remained in ignorance of what
+was occurring under his very eyes, and there is some
+evident foundation for the accusation that he participated
+in the division of the profits of his tax-gatherers.
+We should be loth to admit the accuracy of such a
+charge, and yet the arguments in its favour are too
+plausible to admit of a very confident contradiction. It
+would not speak well for the efficiency of his secret
+police if he had remained in ignorance of a fact which
+was losing him the sympathy of his subjects.</p>
+
+<p>The gold mines at Khoten were worked after the fall
+of that city in 1868, and continued productive down to
+the present time. There is no information on the quantities
+of the precious metal that are there turned out in
+the year, but it is probable that they are not very great.
+The coal mines near Aksu and Kucha are no longer
+made use of, except by a few individuals, and the copper
+mines in that district have, since the departure of the
+Chinese, only been very partially explored. The jade
+that used to come in great quantities from Aksu and
+Khoten, is still to be found throughout Kashgar; but
+although it is probable that it still nearly all comes from
+those cities, the Kashgari themselves tell a hesitating
+tale as to its place of production. A visitor to Kashgar,
+on going the round of the bazaars, soon found that the
+people's tongues were tied by the presence, in his train,
+of a number of the secret police, who had been specially
+told off to prevent the Feringhee obtaining any troublesome
+information on the state of the people, or the
+resources of the state. A striking instance was given
+him of the close attention paid by these guardians of
+order to the veriest trifles. The traveller inquired in
+one stall where the jade, which was the chief commodity
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+of the merchant in question, came from, and received
+the reply, Aksu. Proceeding to another shop in the
+street, he repeated the question, when he was informed
+that it was imported from Khokand. But the traveller
+said, your neighbour told me it came from Aksu. The
+shopkeeper, taken aback by this abrupt remark, became
+confused, and admitted that it came from Aksu. Warned
+by a look from the official, he then repeated his original
+assertion that it came from Khokand. The use of all
+this absurd shuffling, and attempt to throw dust in
+strangers' eyes, is impossible to discover; for it was a
+matter of little moment whether jade came from Aksu,
+or Khokand, so long as we knew that it formed an
+important commodity, both in the rough and in the
+chiselled state, in the cities of Kashgaria.</p>
+
+<p>The customs tax, or <i>Zakat</i>, is sanctioned by the
+Shariát, and was levied at all the border posts on the
+various roads leading into the state. Up to the ratification
+of the treaties with Great Britain and Russia, its
+regulations were vague and elastic in the extreme. In
+fact, any merchant who might have been so foolhardy
+as to venture into Kashgar would have had reason, before
+these events, to think himself fortunate if he escaped
+the penalty of his rashness; for assuredly his luggage
+would not, but would have been confiscated for the
+special benefit of his Highness the Ameer. So late as
+1869, Russian merchants were robbed of their baggage,
+and personally ill-treated, and only after long years of
+negotiation did the Russian Government obtain any
+satisfaction for the injuries and loss inflicted on one of
+their subjects. And then how did the Athalik Ghazi
+send the sum of money he agreed to pay for the loss
+the merchant had incurred?&mdash;why in a depreciated
+Chinese currency, part of a large number of coins that
+he had found in a disused temple in Kashgar! Before
+this, all the external trade had been carried on with
+Khokand and Bokhara, Afghanistan and Badakshan, and
+the receipts from <i>Zakat</i> were quite insignificant, barring
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+such treasure trove as the spoliation of a merchant
+from Tashkent, or from Leh. But with the persistent
+efforts on the part of the Russians on the north, and of
+the English native merchants on the south, to pierce the
+gloom hiding the country of Eastern Turkestan, it became
+impossible for Yakoob Beg to maintain much
+longer the incognito he was so jealous in maintaining.
+Perhaps also the prospect of deriving an income from
+<i>Zakat</i>, that should smooth down many of his difficulties,
+was not without some influence on his mind when he
+came into direct contact with civilized empires. His
+expectations were far too sanguine, and he seems to
+have once more, during the last twelve months of his life,
+become indifferent to the advantages or disadvantages of
+trade with his neighbours. In fact, when he placed
+his customs on a fair footing, he found that it would
+require many years to recoup him for the excessive
+exactions he surrendered. The merchants who first
+attempted to commence intercourse with Kashgar became
+speedily discouraged by the dangers of the route,
+and the small opening for a large remunerative trade in
+a country whose wealth and population had been magnified
+tenfold. In a country where the richest merchant
+in the chief town possessed only a capital of £8,000, not
+much could be expected in the way of fortune; and
+although the legal dues on all merchandise were fixed
+at an <i>ad valorem</i> rate of 2&frac12; per cent., it was soon
+discovered that if the ruler happened to be in want
+of cash he would not scruple to take what he could from
+the stranger. Both to the ruler, and to the foreign
+merchant, the new arrangement contained distasteful
+matter. The former perceived that he had surrendered
+some of his imperial rights, and that he was not to be
+recompensed by his receiving more money, and the latter
+knew that the treaty stipulation would not save him from
+having to pay excess fees.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Zakat</i>, far from showing the expected disposition
+to increase, seemed rather inclined to remain stationary,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+if not to decrease; and the foreign merchant had
+obtained some promise on the part of the ruler of personal
+protection, and of assistance in the disposal of his
+wares. His discontent at the stagnation in the customs
+soon showed itself by his exacting excess dues, sometimes
+on British, sometimes on Russian, but more often
+on Khokandian and Afghan merchants. Instead of
+increasing his receipts, these strong measures only
+threw them back, and left him in a worse plight than
+he was in before. He had not the patience necessary
+to enable him to wait with confidence the fuller development
+of trade, nor had he the perseverance or tact to
+place fresh inducements in the path of merchants to
+renew their intercourse with him and his state. Many
+visited Kashgar with merchandise a first time; but few,
+indeed, repeated the visit. The ruler was off-handed in
+his reception of them. They were scarcely accorded
+any liberty in their movements, and the profit of their
+journey was greatly reduced by the payment of a due
+of 5 per cent. instead of the stipulated condition of
+2&frac12; per cent. It is a pure fiction, therefore, to say that
+trade with Kashgar had increased during the rule of
+the Athalik Ghazi through his friendly inclination. If
+the amount of merchandise imported into his state had
+increased, it was owing only to the necessities of its inhabitants,
+and was a fact that must have taken place either
+by intercourse direct, or through native states, with the
+two great providers of Central Asia. The exaggerated
+enthusiasm that it was endeavoured to raise up in this
+country about this same mythical ruler of Yarkand
+never spread far, and there was always some scepticism,
+if there could be no disproof, of the reports of the formidableness
+of this new kingdom. Looking calmly at the
+real state of Yakoob Beg's position, even at the height
+of his power, we find him to have always been a pecuniarily
+embarrassed ruler, glad of the smallest windfall in
+the shape of the spoil of a single merchant. The <i>Zakat</i>,
+his advisers pointed out to him, might be made a most
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+productive source of revenue, if foreign merchants could
+be induced to bring their wares into the country. The
+loss the people had felt in the departure of the Chinese
+might be amply repaired by the appearance of Russian
+and English merchants to supply the same place that
+they filled. If his aspirations were disappointed, and
+the <i>Zakat</i> did not show any signs of possessing that
+elasticity which had been predicted, it is probable that
+in his impatience, heightened by the perception that
+foreign trade might lead to foreign complications, he
+did not give the scheme a sufficient time for a fair trial.
+His other sources of revenue, <i>Ushr</i> and <i>Tanabi</i>, and the
+gold mines of Khoten, brought in a sum enough to
+meet the current expenses of the government and to
+maintain in his service as many soldiers as his recruiting
+officers were able to secure. But there was little if any
+surplus; and local improvements, and all outlay that
+might have been reproductive and for the benefit of the
+people, were strictly forbidden. The only works we can
+find constructed by him, with a view to the advancement
+of the interests of his subjects, were the merchants' <i>serais</i>,
+built in each city, and these were self-supporting.
+Yakoob Beg has no claim to being considered as a
+beneficent ruler. He was a military dictator, who had
+shown a rare power for inaugurating a rough system of
+government, and whose campaigns had always been
+singularly successful. As a ruler, showing a full appreciation
+of the wants of his people, and adopting the
+best possible measures to obtain them, he had no claims
+to consideration. Indeed, he could not be compared
+with the Chinese, who, however personal may have been
+their motives, certainly raised the state to a high
+pitch of material prosperity, and left many enduring
+marks of their past occupation. These two dominations,
+foisted on the Kashgari by the strong arm, while
+each immeasurably superior to the Khoja claimants,
+represented two distinct modes of governing a subject
+race. The Chinese endeavoured to conciliate, and to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+make the necessity for their presence felt by the people;
+the Athalik Ghazi was supremely indifferent to the
+prosperity of his subjects, so long as they were willing
+to pay him the tribute money, and to serve in his army.
+An exactly opposite result might have been expected,
+for there was far more kinship between the Khokandian
+adventurer and the Kashgari, than there was between
+the Khitay and the Andijani. Admirers of Yakoob
+Beg may, of course, plead that his rule had not acquired
+sufficient consistency to justify him in tasking his
+strength by great undertakings, such as the construction
+of roads and canals. In one respect he had not the labour
+at his disposal, and he was, consequently, hampered by
+a difficulty that the Chinese were free from. Still when
+we remember that all these works ought to have been
+remunerative, and to have strengthened Yakoob Beg's
+individual power, instead of taxing his resources, the
+excuse cannot be admitted as entitled to our consideration.
+Yakoob Beg has claims only to be admired for
+having given us something better than a repetition
+of the depravity of the Khoja rulers, and of course
+among his coevals he is entitled to far the highest
+place. If it is only asked for him that he should be
+placed above them, no one can raise the slightest objection
+to it; for beyond the shadow of a doubt, he was the
+most energetic and talented ruler that had appeared
+among the Khanates for several centuries. But it
+would be affectation to deny that a higher place than
+this has been claimed for him; and before according his
+right to occupy it, the evidence on which his claim rests
+must be sifted with the greatest care. Even now I do
+not say that his claims are unproven; but that it is open
+to doubt whether his work has not been exaggerated, I
+think must be admitted by every one who has studied
+the course of his life in Kashgar. It is absurd to talk
+of Yakoob Beg having been an equal of Genghis
+Khan or of Timour, in any other way than that of
+showing that his personal abilities were of a transcendent
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+order. As a legislator and public benefactor, it is fair
+to compare him with the Chinese, who possessed some
+advantages over him, but who laboured under some
+disadvantages in religion, and other conditions, as compared
+with him. And when we do this, after impartial
+consideration we find that the balance is greatly in
+favour of the Chinese. What can we judge from this,
+but that the rule of Yakoob Beg, while presenting
+some striking features, was inferior in degree to that of
+the Chinese? It is only fair to remember that the difficulties
+in his path were great, and that he overcame
+many of them. Before closing this chapter some
+description of the chief men who assisted him to
+conquer the country, and then to govern it, may be
+not without interest to the reader.</p>
+
+<p>First among these, by right of his position as well as
+by his high abilities, comes the Seyyid Yakoob Khan,
+or Hadji Torah, as he has more conveniently been
+called, the prince who has recently visited several of
+the principal courts of Europe. He is a near relative
+of the Athalik Ghazi, although, strange to say, there
+is no consanguinity between them. He is a son of
+Nar Mahomed Khan, the governor of Tashkent, who
+married as his second wife Yakoob Beg's sister, and
+who was instrumental in advancing the interests of
+Yakoob Beg during the earlier days of his career in
+Khokand. The Seyyid was almost as old as his uncle,
+the Ameer of Kashgar, having been born in Tashkent in
+1823; but despite this near connection Hadji Torah
+played no part in the conquest of Kashgar. Until
+Yakoob Beg achieved complete success in his enterprise
+in Eastern Turkestan he was considered by Khokandians
+of high rank a simple adventurer. The
+Seyyid Yakoob Khan was of the best lineage in
+Turkestan, and it is very possible that until the year
+1867 he regarded his uncle with a considerable amount
+of indifference. Certain it is that Hadji Torah was
+far otherwise employed than in assisting his relative
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+when the latter was engaged in some of the desperate
+encounters of his not uneventful career. In the civil
+administration of Khokand he filled, under Alim Kuli,
+high posts, such as Principal of the Madrassa of Tashkent,
+and then he was appointed Kazi, or Judge. It
+was after the fall of Ak Musjid that he commenced
+that career of activity as a traveller and a negotiator
+which brought him to the shores of the Bosphorus and
+to the banks of the Neva and the Thames. That was
+in the year 1854, and he was appointed as a sort of
+secretary to the embassy of Mirza Jan Effendi, the ambassador
+sent by Mollah Khan to Constantinople for
+aid. On a subsequent occasion he again visited Constantinople
+in a similar capacity, after the death of
+Mollah Khan, and during the brief tenure of power
+by his successor, Mahomed Khan, the nominee of Alim
+Kuli. This was in 1865, and during the troubles that
+ensued in Khokand and the final success of Khudayar
+Khan, the legal ruler of Khokand and antagonist of
+Alim Kuli, Hadji Torah resided quietly at Constantinople,
+where Abdul Aziz entertained him with sumptuous
+hospitality. It would appear that he obtained
+some kind of reputation among the numerous visitors
+from either Turkestan who came to Turkey, and apart
+from his sacrosanct character few could fail to be impressed
+favourably by his cheerful yet dignified manner.
+His uncle in 1870 had indeed overcome all opposition
+to his rule, and it might at a first glance appear strange
+why he should desire to secure the services of a man of
+whom he could have seen or known little for many
+years. But Hadji Torah possessed abilities and experience
+rare among the inhabitants of Central Asia, and
+to Yakoob Beg the very talents his nephew possessed
+were those he was most in need of.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870 the Athalik Ghazi was anxious to draw close
+the bonds of alliance with the Porte; who could assist
+him better than the man who had resided in Constantinople
+for several years, and who had formed a friendly
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+intimacy with the Sultan? In 1871 Yakoob Beg first
+recognized the imminence of danger to his state from
+Russia, then put in possession of Kuldja; who could
+instruct him in the most effectual way of warding off
+that danger, either by an alliance with England or by
+propitiating the Russians, than the travelled Hadji
+Torah? The very qualities that the Seyyid Yakoob
+Khan possessed were those the Ameer Yakoob Beg stood
+most in need of. He might search among all his followers,
+those who had shared every vicissitude of his
+strange fortunes, and he could not find one other with
+an identical capacity. The overtures to his nephew are
+thus easily intelligible, and the nephew himself gladly
+greeted his entry into a wider career than was that of
+an honoured guest on the hospitality of the Porte.
+His subsequent embassies in the service of Kashgar to
+St. Petersburg, Calcutta, Constantinople, and London
+are too recent and too well known to require mention
+here. When he settled in Kashgar he married a
+daughter of Mahomed Khoja, the Sheikh-ul-Islam of
+Kashgaria. His weight with the people was consequently
+very great, and his judgment was greatly
+valued by the Ameer. Even over Beg Bacha, the
+turbulent and ferocious heir-apparent, Hadji Torah
+had acquired some influence by his ready tact and
+<i>bonhomie</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two chief personages, Mahomed Khoja and
+Abdulla Pansad, the priest and the soldier, who assisted
+Yakoob Beg, it is unfortunately impossible to discover
+much, and that little has already been stated in the
+preceding pages. There can be no doubt, however,
+that they were the principal instruments in promoting
+the aggrandizement of Yakoob Beg, and the two who
+enjoyed more than any other the confidence and
+friendship of the man they had supported so faithfully.
+But of another well-tried follower we know more,
+chiefly through the pages of Dr. Bellew. Mahomed
+Yunus seems to have been the most educated and well
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+informed among the governors of Yakoob Beg. He
+had the reputation of being quite the best-informed
+man in Kashgar, but as the <i>curriculum</i> of instruction
+did not include modern languages, it is difficult to
+guage the exact degree of that reputation. He was an
+old and trusted follower of the Athalik Ghazi, for when
+he was in the service of Khokand Mahomed Yunus
+officiated as his scribe. He, however, as a civilian,
+took no part in the expedition of Buzurg Khan, and it
+was not until after the death of Alim Kuli and the
+success of Khudayar Khan that he joined his firm
+friend and master in Kashgar. So high an opinion
+had Yakoob Beg of his talents, and so pressed was he
+for skilled rulers, that Mahomed Yunus was at once appointed
+Dadkwah of the recently conquered district of
+Yarkand, the richest, the most populous, and the most
+turbulent of all the governorships in Kashgaria. The
+skill with which he brought the troublesome Yarkandis
+into complete submission to the new ruler, and the
+rare ability he manifested in his administration of his
+province down almost to the present time, justify the
+selection of his whilome comrade in Khokand. At first
+it seems that the governor ruled with a high hand, and
+that the slightest symptom of insubordination was
+checked by an immediate arrest and a not long-delayed
+execution. During the last seven years, however,
+his government had become milder, chiefly because all
+evil-doers had been got rid of. Among some of the
+minor followers may be mentioned Alish Beg, Dadkwah
+of Kashgar; Ihrar Khan Torah, the first envoy despatched
+from Kashgar to India; and Mahomed Beg of
+Artosh: but we have no sufficient information of them
+to give an account of them that would be interesting
+to the general reader.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_X"></a><span>CHAPTER X.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">YAKOOB BEG'S POLICY TOWARDS RUSSIA.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Yakoob Beg</span> had in the earlier days of his career come
+into contact with the Russians, and although, in the
+long interval between the fall of Ak Musjid and his
+departure from Khokand, the Russians, chiefly owing
+to the prostration resulting from the Crimean War, did
+not press on with the energy that their first advance on
+the Syr Darya seemed to promise, there is no doubt
+that the possibility of its occurrence was the foremost
+thought in the minds of Yakoob Beg and his contemporaries.
+In 1865, when the Russians threatened and
+eventually occupied Tashkent, and brought their frontier
+halfway on its journey to the Oxus, Yakoob Beg was
+far too much occupied with his own affairs in Kashgar
+to attempt any interference in Khokand. With, however,
+the dismemberment of Khokand and the rout of the
+Bokhariot army in the spring of 1866, his attention
+was forcibly claimed by a fact that seemed in the future
+to involve him as the next victim of Russian aggrandizement.
+In that year, too, he had not only overcome
+all resistance in the more important districts of Kashgaria,
+but he had to a greater extent than before, become
+responsible for the political actions of the people of this
+state through the deposition of Buzurg Khan. As early as
+1866, it may be assumed that the new ruler of Kashgar
+had his attention directed to the movements of his old
+antagonist, by their successes against the Khokandians
+and Bokhariots; but it is clear that the Russians were
+not equally interested in his doings at this period.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+With the occupation of the northern portion of Khokand,
+the rule of Russia was brought into nearer proximity
+with that of the new power of Kashgar, and it
+became only a question of time whether the two
+governments were to attain a harmonious agreement, or
+whether a series of petty disputes was to result in a
+further extension of the Russian Empire, towards both
+India and China. The independent portion of the
+Khanate of Khokand still intervened, and the difficult
+country of the Kizil Yart mountains served the useful
+purpose of giving the Athalik Ghazi breathing time,
+ere he should arrive at a decision about his future
+relations with Russia. Indeed, up to this point the
+interest of Russia in the affairs of Kashgar had been
+very slight, for it does not appear that much, if any,
+intercourse had been carried on between the two territories
+in the past. Far otherwise was it in Ili, where
+the Russians had for many years been located as
+merchants or as consuls. Their station at Almatie or
+Vernoe, an important town and fort situated about 50
+miles north of Issik Kul and 250 west of Ili itself,
+had in a few years become a large and flourishing city,
+instead of preserving its original character of a small
+mountain fort. Russian merchants carried on a very
+extensive trade by this road with Ili, Urumtsi, Hamil,
+and Pekin, and their relations with the Chinese merchants
+had attained a very satisfactory basis. It was,
+therefore, with no friendly feeling, that the Tungan
+rising in Ili was regarded by a very large section of
+the Russians in the neighbourhood. The disturbances
+that thereupon broke out, effectually put a stop to all
+trade in this quarter for some time, and the old traffic,
+or such of it as continued, with China had to be conducted
+along the less direct route through Siberia. For
+six years, the Russians tolerated the uncertain state of
+affairs in Ili, where the Tungani and the Tarantchis
+disputed between themselves as to which should be
+the ruling party; but their dissatisfaction was scarcely
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+concealed at the substitution of a native government
+for that of China. When, therefore, Yakoob Beg, having
+conquered the country south of the Tian Shan,
+seemed to threaten the provinces north of that barrier,
+it is not surprising that the Russians availed themselves
+of excuses for forestalling him, and for placing their
+commercial relations on an equally good footing as they
+had been in the past with the inhabitants of Ili, by a
+forced occupation of that territory. But the Russians
+were resolved to give as little umbrage as possible to
+the Chinese. Ili was formally acknowledged to be
+Chinese territory, and the Czar voluntarily promised,
+through his representative at Pekin, to restore it as soon
+as the Emperor of China was able to despatch a sufficient
+force to preserve order therein. This tact secured
+the permanent goodwill of the Chinese, and Russia
+obtained, in several important trade concessions, a very
+gratifying reward for her skilful diplomacy. Her
+friendly action to the Celestials was also heightened in
+its effect by a piece of unfortunate policy on our part.
+The Panthays had erected in Yunnan a Mahomedan
+power, which seemed to have broken off completely
+from Pekin, and report brought such tales to our
+frontier of the power and goodwill of the Sultan of
+the Panthays ruling in Ta-li-foo, that in an ill-advised
+moment we entered into negotiations with this potentate.
+The Chinese authorities very naturally took umbrage at
+this tacit support of a rebellious vassal, and all our
+subsequent efforts have been unable to remove the
+suspicions produced by our vacillating attitude on that
+occasion. The Russians still further preserved the
+appearance of friendship for China by their refusal,
+maintained during several years, to acknowledge the
+government set up in Kashgar by Buzurg Khan and
+Yakoob Beg. This action was however the less worthy
+of approval, because at that period the Russians had no
+immediate concern in Kashgaria. Their sole interest lay
+in the course of events in Jungaria, with which they
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+were intimately connected by trade and political associations,
+stretching back for almost a century. Undoubtedly
+Jungaria was much affected by commotions in
+Kashgaria, and we accordingly see, when the march of
+events in the latter province assumed an aspect menacing
+to the future independence of Jungaria, the Russians
+taking prompt measures to secure the possession of
+that province for themselves. When Ili passed into
+the hands of Russia, the old trade revived along
+this route to a certain degree, and some intercourse
+ensued with the Tungani of Urumtsi, Manas and
+Hamil. Measures seem to have been taken to impress
+on the rulers of those cities the prudence of not interfering
+with merchants or travellers, and matters became
+to a certain degree satisfactory for Russian tranquillity.
+The city of Ili never, however, recovered its former
+prosperity, for Vernoe still remains the most important
+town in this region. Originally a fort constructed in
+1854, as a small mountain post, to defend the road from
+the marauding Kirghiz, it has increased from its insignificant
+origin into a large settlement of Cossacks and
+Calmucks, and is now a very thriving community. It
+was, therefore, it must be remembered, primarily with
+Jungaria that Russia was interested. So far as the
+internal affairs of Kashgar were concerned, she could have
+disregarded the dispute between the rivals, Yakoob Beg
+and the Chinese; it was only when a powerful Mahomedan
+state was erected in Eastern Turkestan, and
+threatened both the independence of Ili, and also to
+raise up disunion in Khokand, that Russia was compelled
+to consider what policy it would be wise to
+adopt towards the recently proclaimed Athalik Ghazi.
+Whether it was absolutely necessary or even prudent to
+annex Ili, may be doubted with some reason, but it is
+impossible to find fault with the Russians for that step.
+Probably it was the most excusable of all their conquests,
+none the less may the decision have been founded on a
+misapprehension of circumstances, or it may have been
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+premature to shut Yakoob Beg out from advancing into
+a region where he would have been at the complete
+mercy of the Russians. Nor is it clear even that
+Yakoob Beg had the intention, so generously attributed
+to him, of committing what would certainly have
+resulted in political extinction, viz., an advance to the
+northern side of the Tian Shan. The reader will, we
+hope, perceive that as little interest was felt by the
+Russians in the events transpiring in Kashgar as there
+was in India, and this indifference continued down at
+all events to the end of 1866. At that date Yakoob
+Beg's enterprise had been crowned with complete success
+and the Russian Government, far more promptly
+and accurately apprised of the course of events than our
+Government in India, was obliged to devote some attention
+to this new power, whose appearance was already
+beginning to raise a ferment in the Mahomedan
+states lying to the west of Kashgar.</p>
+
+<p>In 1866, however, some indefinite agreement was
+arrived at by the commanders of forces along the Naryn
+borders, to abstain from interfering with each other's
+actions. The Russian forces were permitted to follow
+refugees from Khokand and predatory Kirghiz within
+the nominal frontier of Kashgar, and when occasion
+arose a similar right was accorded to the Kashgarian
+officials. By some good fortune, perhaps caused by a
+feeling of mutual respect, no collisions of any consequence
+occurred between the representatives of the two
+powers during these early and vague negotiations. Although
+the Russian governors of Siberia and Turkestan
+refused to acknowledge either Buzurg Khan or Yakoob
+Beg, they seem to have done their best to make use of
+these conciliatory measures along the northern frontier as
+a lever for inducing Yakoob Beg to make overtures to
+them for their support. If such was their intention
+the firmness of Yakoob Beg thwarted all their designs,
+as will be seen in the sequel. To obtain, however, some
+advantage out of the apparent apprehension of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+Kashgarian ruler for Russian power was absolutely
+necessary, if only to demonstrate the perfection to which
+Muscovite diplomacy had attained. So, while refusing
+to acknowledge the new state in Eastern Turkestan and
+deeply deploring the departure of the Chinese, orders
+were given to the frontier officers to obtain the sanction
+of the Kashgarian officials in the neighbourhood to the
+construction of a bridge across the Naryn and of a
+military road over the Tian Shan into Kashgar. This
+was in 1867, and it is not to be wondered at that
+the Kashgarian authorities replied with a categorical
+refusal. To have acquiesced in this demand would have
+been to have placed the city of Kashgar at the complete
+mercy of the Russians. The position of that city is
+most disadvantageous in a military point of view, and
+the only obstacle an army advancing from Issik Kul has
+to encounter is the difficulty of the road from the Naryn
+torrent, and the general impracticability of the passes
+through this portion of the Tian Shan range. The
+Russian government was much disappointed at this
+rebuff experienced at the hands of a native ruler, and
+accordingly in great haste it was resolved that a fort
+should be constructed on the Naryn just within their
+frontier. In 1868 this fort was completed, but by that
+time a fresh change had taken place in the state of
+affairs, and hopes were entertained that an agreement
+might yet be arranged by peaceful means with Kashgar.
+During these two years there had been continual disturbances
+and fighting in Western Turkestan. Bokhara,
+instigated, according to Russian assertions, by Yakoob
+Beg, had joined with Khokand and Khiva in a combined
+uprising against Russia; but in so far as that uprising
+was combined it never occurred, for both Bokhara and
+Khokand fell an easy prey in detail to the armies of the
+Czar. The punishment of Khiva was reserved for a future
+occasion, and indeed of all the confederates Khiva was
+the only one which obtained any successes in the field.
+The most palpable result of that campaign was the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+acquisition of Samarcand by Russia, and for a time all
+opposition seemed to be stamped out. No sooner, however,
+had the main Russian army returned to Tashkent
+than a large force invested the small garrison left in
+Samarcand, and the whole country rose in arms again.
+The Russian garrison held tightly on to its post, and,
+although in comparison to its strength its loss was most
+severe, the town was preserved until the arrival of
+General Kaufmann with reinforcements. Bokhara then
+sued for peace, which, after some delay, was concluded
+with the unfortunate Ameer Mozaffur Eddin. By that
+treaty the Russians obtained the right to place military
+cantonments at Kermina, Charjui, and Karshi. Kermina
+is situated about fifty miles east of the town of Bokhara,
+on the road from Katti Kurgan and Samarcand; Karshi
+about sixty miles south of Katti Kurgan, and half way
+to the Oxus; while Charjui is on the Oxus and some
+eighty miles west of Bokhara. Of all these the last is
+the most important, for thence a direct caravan route
+leads to Merv and Meshed. Once more, in 1870&ndash;71,
+Bokhara entered the field, but the enterprise collapsed
+through the unconcerted measures of the allies and the
+weakness of Khokand. During these five eventful years
+of rebellion amongst the races of Western Turkestan,
+Yakoob Beg preserved his neutrality. If the assertion
+is correct that he had played an underhand part in the
+formation of the league against Russia, assuredly he
+endeavoured to make his actions contradict his diplomacy.
+Not a Kashgarian soldier participated in the
+efforts made so repeatedly by Bokhara and Khokand to
+shake off the bonds of Russian vassalage. Like Shere
+Ali of Cabul, he devoted his attention exclusively to the
+affairs of his immediate province, and wars in the
+extreme east of his dominions against co-religionists
+were a preferable alternative to the risks attending a
+<i>jehad</i> against the most formidable enemy of Islam!
+Russia had indeed little to complain of in Yakoob Beg's
+interference in their possessions. His instigation of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+premature rebellions, or, if he did not instigate them, the
+approval extended to them by some of his chief ministers,
+was the very kindest act he could have conferred on the
+ruling power of Turkestan, for Russia never has had
+anything to fear from any isolated risings among the
+people of this part of Central Asia. Nothing less than
+an unanimous and concerted rising in Western Turkestan,
+aided with a nucleus of regular troops and officers, such
+as, to go no farther, either Afghanistan can supply, or
+Kashgar could at one time have supplied&mdash;nothing less
+than this will ever produce a complete catastrophe to the
+Russian arms, and in a short campaign of a few months
+send the Russian legions back to their old quarters of
+thirteen years ago. Whether Yakoob Beg ever was
+strong enough to risk the independence of his state on so
+important an enterprise may fairly be doubted, and he
+showed a commendable prudence in abstaining from hostilities
+when he had sufficient matters to occupy all his
+attention, and to task all his resources within his own
+borders; but assuming such to have been the case, his
+indifference to the suffering thereby inflicted on the Khokandians
+must remain a blot on his fair fame. If the part
+he played in these earlier plots was scarcely honourable,
+how much less so was his action in the last rebellion of
+1875. But it may be as well to postpone considering that
+event until later on in this chapter. Yakoob Beg most
+probably took a very selfish view of the state of affairs.
+His own extremely uncertain tenure of power made him
+anxious lest any storm from beyond his frontier should
+wreck the frail bark in which he had asserted his claim
+to independence, and the whole object of his policy
+was simply to divert attention from himself to other
+quarters. The Russians above all must have their work
+cut out for them in repression of continual sedition in
+their possessions; while each day of respite witnessed
+Yakoob Beg in a better position for making a strenuous
+resistance when the time should come, according to Russian
+ideas, for an attempt to be made to crush his power.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+Viewed from this standpoint, the conduct of Yakoob
+Beg towards his fellow-countrymen appears in a slightly
+more favourable aspect, although his policy of expediency
+has little in it to command admiration. Yet the result
+answered his expectations. In 1868 the construction of
+Fort Naryn was the avowed preliminary measure to an
+occupation of Kashgar; from that danger this policy of
+compromise saved him. Again, in 1870, was he pronounced
+an incorrigible enemy of the Czar, and an
+expedition was prepared which was to bring him to his
+senses; once more a revolt in Khokand intervened to
+distract Russian attention and Russian arms from the
+Naryn to Ferghana. The expedition against Khiva in
+1873 also served the purpose of diverting to another
+quarter the blow which should, according to many, have
+descended on the offending head of the Athalik Ghazi;
+and lastly, in 1875 the insurrection in Khokand, the
+most serious and the most nearly successful of all the
+native wars against Russia, saved him from an invasion
+for which every preparation had been made.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the year 1868, when the Russian government
+had constructed the fort on the Naryn, and had
+openly proclaimed its intention of punishing the slight
+put upon it by Yakoob Beg's refusal to permit the
+construction of a road over the mountains to Artosh.
+Up to that year the intercourse had been of a semiofficial
+character between the officers on either side of
+the frontier. We have now come to a phase of the
+question of a slightly different import. The Russian
+officials endeavoured to obtain from Yakoob Beg concessions
+that would be advantageous to their country, at
+the same time that they categorically declined to recognize
+his official <i>status</i> as an independent prince. Their
+antagonist was far too astute to permit himself to be
+out-man&oelig;uvred by so simple a device, and his officials
+were quite unauthorized to enter into any arrangement
+without its being brought before their master in the
+manner consistent with his dignity. We have seen that
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+the Russians, failing in their diplomatic chicane, had
+recourse to threats, although the irony of fate prevented
+those threats ever being put into execution. But concurrently
+with these efforts on the part of the Russian
+government, others of a different kind were being made
+by individuals. The Russian merchants of Kuldja
+contained in their ranks several men whose enterprise
+and courage had been remarkable in the manipulation
+of trade with the Chinese and the Tungani. They were
+not easily deterred from any undertaking which promised
+them brilliant remuneration, even though the
+risk and uncertainty might be great. The pioneers of
+commerce were free from the fetters that hampered
+official movements. It was of little moment to them who
+ruled in Kashgaria so long as he extended his protection
+to their goods and their persons whilst they were within
+his territory. The Russian government viewed with
+favour the efforts that were made to cross the Tian Shan,
+for on the individual fell the greatest portion of the
+risk, while the government profited much by the fruits
+of his experience. The Russian merchants were, therefore,
+not discouraged by their authorities when they laid
+their proposals before General Kolpakovsky, as English
+merchants would have been under similar circumstances
+by the authorities at Calcutta&mdash;nay, it is tolerably certain
+that they received many inducements to persist in their
+intention; both their patriotism and desire for advancing
+their own worldly concerns were appealed to, to urge them
+to attempt to obtain admission into Kashgar. When,
+therefore, it became evident in 1868 that nothing was
+to be obtained from Yakoob Beg by indirect means, and
+when it was also decided that a military remedy would
+not be convenient, the field was fairly cleared for another
+kind of performers to begin operations.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the year 1868 a Russian merchant, named
+Kludof, collected at Vernoe a small caravan. His chief
+commodities consisted of those gewgaws, which, prepared
+in Moscow, have been found, according to Russian
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+experience, the most marketable articles in Western
+Turkestan; but, in addition to these trumpery packages,
+more useful necessaries, such as cotton goods and cutlery,
+were taken as specimens of some of the real advantages
+that would come in the wake of Russian trade. Kludof
+set out with the intention of crossing the Tian Shan
+by the Naryn, and making for the border town of Ush
+Turfan, whence Kashgar is easily reached by the high
+road. But he had not proceeded far beyond Fort Naryn,
+then in course of construction, when he was attacked
+by a band of marauders. With the loss of all his
+possessions he must still be considered fortunate in
+having escaped without any serious personal injury.
+Perhaps the robbers were inspired with some respect
+for the person of a Russian subject, or, as the indictment
+against Yakoob Beg affirms, by the express orders
+of that ruler, who wished to deter, without causing any
+serious complication with the government, Russian
+subjects of any kind whatever from entering his
+kingdom. As it happened, however, Kludof was a
+very determined fellow, one not easily balked when
+he had set his mind on accomplishing anything. The
+government viewed his case with commiseration, and he
+was assisted in collecting together another caravan of
+larger proportions than its predecessor. But before
+setting out on the same road he determined to make an
+effort to reach the ear of Yakoob Beg himself, and by a
+singular piece of good fortune he was able to do so
+through a Kashgarian subject residing in Kuldja. The
+presents, judiciously selected, with which he accompanied
+his letter complaining of the injury he had
+received at the hands of Kirghiz subjects of the ruler
+of Kashgar, yet only demanding as a reparation permission
+to come into that state as a peaceful subject of
+the Czar, fully propitiated Yakoob Beg, who sent a safe
+conduct to Vernoe for Kludof and his caravan. This
+merchant made a most favourable impression on the
+ruler of Kashgar, and it seemed at one moment as if he
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+would achieve what all the diplomacy of the two previous
+years had failed in accomplishing. Even Yakoob Beg
+was induced to take a slight step towards a better
+agreement with his neighbour, for in the summer of
+1868, he sent Shadi Mirza, one of his nephews, to
+Vernoe, requesting that he might be permitted to go
+on to Tashkent, to place before the governor of Turkestan
+certain proposals from his master for a complete
+understanding with Russia. Simultaneously with the
+despatch of Shadi Mirza by Yakoob Beg, a Russian
+officer, Captain Reinthal, was commissioned by General
+Kolpakovsky, the governor of Kuldja, to proceed to
+Kashgar and demand the surrender of some Kirghiz
+robbers, who, from within Yakoob Beg's dominion, had
+sallied forth to pillage Russian merchants. They had
+also seized several inhabitants of Khokand and the
+Naryn district; and the Russian government demanded
+the unconditional surrender of these individuals as her
+subjects. Captain Reinthal was instructed to make
+these two demands in a peremptory way, and to convince
+the new government that Russia would not permit
+any infraction of the spirit of the treaties concluded
+with the old government under the Chinese. Captain
+Reinthal was received in a sufficiently hospitable
+manner, but his movements were scrupulously restricted
+to the city. He did not, on this occasion, learn much
+of importance about the country, but he was impressed
+favourably by the appearance of such of the army as
+he saw. The Kirghiz robbers were captured by the
+order of Yakoob Beg, but he stoutly refused to surrender
+them. The Russian prisoners were also kept in
+honourable confinement as a guarantee for the safe return
+of Shadi Mirza. They were, however, permitted to
+return to Russian territory when it became known that
+Shadi Mirza was progressing favourably with his
+mission to Tashkent. Captain Reinthal accomplished
+little or nothing on this embassade, and had to report,
+on his return to his superior, the strange tidings that
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+the new power was resolved to play an independent part
+in Asia, and to answer defiance with defiance, and
+threat with threat. This report must have seemed
+scarcely credible, but there is no doubt that Captain
+Reinthal advised, as the result of his experience, the
+adoption of a lenient and friendly policy towards the
+new-comer. This concession to a Central Asian despot
+was not agreeable at head-quarters, and the question
+was shelved for the time. Shadi Mirza, who had been
+detained at Vernoe, was at last permitted to continue
+his journey to Tashkent, where he found General Kaufmann
+absent in Europe. Instructions were then issued
+to send him on to St. Petersburg, where he arrived in
+the last days of 1868. He had several informal interviews
+with the governor of Turkestan, but he was not
+received by the Czar or any of the higher officials. In
+fact, he was only treated as an ordinary traveller, and
+not as the representative of a neighbouring state.
+Nothing up to this had been done by the Russian
+government, showing that they recognized Yakoob Beg
+as ruler of Kashgaria. The Chinese were still, in their
+eyes, the <i>de jure</i> owners of that province, whoever might
+be the temporary owners <i>de facto</i>. On the return of
+Shadi Mirza to Kashgar, in January, 1869, the relations
+between Russia and Yakoob Beg may be said to have
+returned to the exact <i>status quo ante</i>. All the Russian
+demands for trade had been unsuccessful, and, except the
+brilliant journey of Mr. Kludof, no one had broken
+through the mystic charm that shut out the Garden
+of Asia from all foreign spectators. Their envoy, Captain
+Reinthal, had been treated in a precisely similar
+manner to that in which Shadi Mirza had been received
+at Vernoe and St. Petersburg; and a firm and dignified
+attitude had effectually checked the Russian officer when
+he attempted to express those threats which formed the
+principal part of his instructions. There was something
+imposing in the quiet way in which Yakoob Beg
+asserted his equality in rank with the Czar of All the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+Russias. His invariable reply, when the great power
+of Russia was made use of as an argument to overcome
+his refusal to accede to the trade concessions demanded,
+was, "My brother, the White Czar, is a most powerful
+monarch, and rules over the greater portion of the
+earth, and I am only an insignificant prince in comparison
+to him. But none the less can I encounter the
+danger like a true man, and esteem it a happiness to
+die in defence of my country and my faith." To so
+courageous and so honourable a reply what rejoinder
+could be made by the abashed officers? It is impossible
+to refuse Yakoob Beg the highest admiration for his
+stanchness in his opposition to Russia. If for his own
+narrow interests it may have been imprudent to throw
+down the gage of battle so freely, all the more does that
+attitude claim respect when we see him trampling on
+purely selfish motives, and asserting his claim to leadership
+in that wider question of Asiatic against Muscovite,
+of Mahomedan against Greek. Had he only been
+consistent throughout his career, had he only been as
+firm in his convictions and as prompt in carrying them
+into practice as he generally was, when the occasion
+came for a great effort against Russia, how different
+might have been his own fate and the present aspect of
+affairs in Central Asia!</p>
+
+<p>For some time after these abortive proceedings the
+Russians abstained from any direct interference in Kashgar,
+but the conferring of the title of Athalik Ghazi, or
+Commander of the Faithful, on Yakoob Beg by the Ameer
+of Bokhara had roused the susceptibilities of Russia too
+much to be allayed. It seemed, indeed, as if this acknowledgment
+of the orthodoxy of Yakoob Beg by the Head of
+Islam in Central Asia heralded forth some understanding
+between the two states, and that a menace was directed
+against the Russian government. Whether there was any
+agreement between Mozaffur Eddin and Yakoob Beg it
+is not possible at present to say, but that such should
+have been brought about by their mutual antipathy to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+Russia would not have been very wonderful. However,
+in the disturbances of 1870 Yakoob Beg took no active
+part. While the Russian arms were triumphing over
+every opponent in their newly acquired province of
+Ferghana and its vicinity, Yakoob Beg was busily engaged
+with the Tungani, who at that time were causing
+trouble to him along his far eastern frontier. The revolt
+collapsed in Khokand, and Yakoob Beg, apparently
+unconcerned with the events transpiring in the West,
+was carrying his victorious arms to new conquests in
+the East. During the year 1870, when murmurs of the
+approaching storm were becoming audible, the Russian
+government endeavoured to obtain the alliance of Khudayar
+Khan, of Khokand, for the purpose of bringing
+Yakoob Beg within their influence. This Khan had, as
+has been already mentioned, been betrayed by Yakoob
+Beg, who had followed the example of the ambitious Vizier
+Alim Kuli, and was now mainly dependent on the Russians
+for support against his rebellious subjects. He could
+not be considered in any way, therefore, as likely to be
+favourably disposed towards his neighbour of Kashgar,
+or as lukewarm in the cause of his protectors and benefactors.
+The Russians felt assured of his hearty support
+in advocating their plan, which was as follows. From
+time immemorial, as has been seen in the sketch of the
+history of Kashgar, there have been two rival elements
+in Kashgaria&mdash;the Chinese and the Khokandian. The
+Chinese was triumphant in modern times for a little
+more than a century, while the Khokandian has, more
+or less, at all other times been paramount. But whenever
+a native dynasty had attained a certain degree of
+security therein, it was always threatened by the ambitious
+designs of the Khan of Khokand, who had
+generally contributed most towards its successful establishment.
+The Russian government resolved to avail
+themselves of this historical fact to pour into the ear of
+Khudayar Khan insidious counsels as to his claims as
+feudal lord over Eastern Turkestan. There once more, so
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+they argued, had a Khokandian subject formed an independent
+and rival administration, and all his victories
+had been won by Khokandian sympathies, and by the
+good right arms of Khokandian subjects. And how had
+this soldier of fortune acted towards his own country
+when he had received everything from her that he
+needed? By offering an asylum to all those who had
+participated in the plots against Khudayar Khan himself,
+by encouraging sedition in the state itself against
+the Russians and their nominee, Khudayar, the legal
+ruler of the state. As if these crimes were not sufficiently
+serious, he had added thereto the insult of having
+refused to recognize in Khudayar his liege lord; and
+Khudayar's own personal fears were worked upon to
+yield that acquiescence to the Russian proposal that was
+necessary to secure its success. It was pointed out to
+him that a strong military power in Kashgar might give
+an impetus to the plots then fermenting in the active
+brain of Aftobatcha, the ambitious son of Mussulman
+Kuli, the prime minister and vizier of thirty years ago.
+The arguments were specious, and it cannot be doubted
+that they made some impression on Khudayar Khan.
+This much-to-be-pitied ruler, forced by the necessities of
+his position to humour his Russian advisers, still had
+the courage to refuse to assert his claims as lord over
+Kashgar. With a gentle irony he pointed to the map,
+and showed how Khokand's frontier should extend
+farther to the west than it did, and that a conquest over
+the barren regions of the Kizil Yart would be but a
+sorry equivalent for the loss of Tashkent and Hodjent.
+He, however, promised to make use of his best means
+for inducing Yakoob Beg to make overtures to the
+Russian government for the ratification of a treaty of
+commerce. So Khudayar Khan indited a letter to
+Yakoob Beg, at the dictation of his Russian friends, to
+this effect; but he silvered the pill by a private message
+giving information of the Russian intentions in the
+future. The tenor of that communication was that the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+Russians were less eager than might have been supposed
+to bring matters to a final crisis with Yakoob
+Beg, and that they were most desirous of settling the
+question without any flagrant loss of dignity by being
+the first to recommence negotiations. Both publicly
+and privately Khudayar Khan advised that the Athalik
+Ghazi should make some concessions in form to the
+Russian government. The Russians themselves, having
+failed to induce Khudayar Khan to put pressure on
+Yakoob Beg, appear to have arrived at the same conclusion
+as that set out in the letters of Khudayar.
+Yakoob Beg must make the sign, and they would meet
+him half way in his desire to share in the great benefits
+accruing from a Muscovite alliance. The authorities at
+Tashkent went so far as to flatter themselves that they
+had attained a solution of one of their chief annoyances.
+They had, by making use of the mediation of Khudayar,
+gone so far as to open the door for Yakoob Beg to abase
+himself. Such condescension was unheard of, and no
+doubt was entertained but that this proud Mahomedan
+ruler would gladly hasten to avail himself of the last
+chance accorded him by the clemency of the Czar.</p>
+
+<p>But they were reckoning without their host. Yakoob
+Beg quickly perceived that the bold exterior of the Russian
+demands concealed a vacillating purpose, and that
+a power which would go out of its way so far to bring
+about an arrangement, would yield much more when
+the discussion became directly carried on. He had
+evidently impressed the few Russians who had visited
+him with a belief in his strength, and rumour had
+magnified his resources, and converted his small and
+heterogeneous following into a regular and trained army.
+He was not the man to destroy, when the game was
+almost in his hands too, all the favourable impressions,
+that stood him in such good stead during his career,
+which his policy for four years had succeeded in creating
+about his personality. After a suitable delay his formal
+reply to the official letter of Khudayar arrived, and its
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+contents must have been eminently displeasing to the
+Russians. In general terms he refused to enter into
+negotiations with the Russians, because they had refused
+to acknowledge his own government, and had ever supported
+the cause of his enemies the Chinese. But, not
+content with this blunt refusal to the offer made from
+Tashkent, he went on to minor matters and dealt with
+the question of Russian policy in specific language.
+The common enemy of him and all his co-religionists was
+not worthy of any consideration from him or his allies,
+the rulers of Khokand and Bokhara. "The Russians
+that have come here, into my state of Kashgar, look at
+these localities and become acquainted with the state
+of the country, and therefore it is better to forbid their
+coming, for they are a treacherous and crooked-minded
+people." In such plain terms did Yakoob Beg speak of
+a power which could without any serious risk have
+crushed him at any moment. Yet in one sense his
+boldness was the height of prudence, and succeeded
+when perhaps a less decided attitude would have completely
+failed. The Russians were fairly deluded in their
+estimate of their new antagonist, and all means having
+been exhausted for inducing Yakoob Beg to abandon his
+indifferent attitude towards themselves, it began to be
+seriously discussed at Tashkent whether, if simply for
+the purpose of obtaining accurate information of his
+country, it would not be prudent to acknowledge the
+existence of a ruler who had for nearly six years been
+established as responsible sovereign of a very large portion
+of Asia. The path was smoothed, too, for the
+Russian diplomatists by Yakoob Beg sending a letter to
+the governor of Turkestan, stating that it was useless
+for the Czar to attempt the establishment of diplomatic
+relations through the good offices of Khudayar Khan; but
+that if the Russians really desired to enter into alliance
+with him they could send an embassy to him, when formal
+steps could be commenced for securing the trade and
+other agreements that were desirable. The letter was a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+very dignified piece of writing, such as one European
+sovereign would have sent to another in the Middle Ages.
+"He did not deny," he said, "either the power or the
+resources of Russia, but as a brave man he placed his
+trust in God, and he would never shirk the contest,
+because all he aspired to was to die for his faith."
+This letter produced a great impression at Tashkent,
+and it was resolved to send an ambassador to Kashgar.</p>
+
+<p>Before pursuing the narrative, it may be as well to
+sum up what had passed between Russia and Kashgar up
+to this period, for henceforth these two states were to
+stand in a completely different relationship towards each
+other. The Russians strove to induce Yakoob Beg to
+make the most favourable commercial and political concessions
+to them, while they refused to grant him any
+equivalent, except the dubious one, "advantage from the
+produce of Russian manufactures." They even added
+insult to injury by openly proclaiming that they only
+recognized the Chinese as the rulers of Kashgar, and
+refused to discuss the arguments advanced by Shadi
+Mirza in favour of his uncle's claim to be considered <i>de
+facto</i> sovereign. They adopted an attitude of bullying
+towards this Asiatic prince, and loudly proclaimed in
+their practice the truth of the aphorism, that might is
+right. They backed up their verbal threats on several
+occasions by a show of military preparations, but not
+once did they put those threats into execution. On the
+other hand, Yakoob Beg's policy was consistent throughout
+and dignified. While studiously avoiding any aggressive
+measures, even under the excuse of defensive precautions,
+he was always firm in his refusal to recognize
+any of the semi-official overtures that were repeatedly
+made to induce him to show his hand. Instead of
+appearing in the light of a suppliant, as according to
+all precedent he should, he assumed the position of a
+dictator. "Acknowledge me as legally constituted ruler
+of Kashgaria, or else there is an end to all negotiation.
+Send a properly accredited ambassador to me, and he
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+shall be honourably received. A representative of
+recognized rank shall then convey my token of friendship
+to your master. Refuse to grant me these just
+considerations, and my kingdom is closed to your
+merchants and officials without exception. Admission
+shall only be obtained over my own body and that of
+my devoted army." For the first time in the annals
+of Russian history an Asiatic ruler had tired out the
+finessing and intrigue that had become customary
+with that empire as the means for infinite conquest.
+Yakoob Beg was the only sovereign who refused to
+be subservient to the Czar, and eventually achieved a
+diplomatic triumph over his representatives. In the
+spring of 1872, Yakoob Beg was at the very acme of
+his prosperity. Not yet had he commenced those later
+campaigns against the Tungani, which more than anything
+else tended to weaken his power and to raise discontent
+against his administration; and, fresh from his
+diplomatic success over the Russians, he appeared in the
+eyes of many Asiatics as a fit champion to redeem their
+fortunes in a conflict with Russia. Excusable as their
+enthusiasm undoubtedly was, it is tolerably certain that
+the power of Yakoob Beg was exaggerated both by the
+adulation of his friends and by the nervous susceptibilities
+of the Russians. It is noteworthy that Russia
+proved herself on one occasion to be quite as liable to
+this latter disease as England is assumed to be.</p>
+
+<p>To Baron Kaulbars, the explorer of the sources of the
+Syr Darya, was entrusted the delicate mission of representing
+the Russian government for the first time at the
+court of the Athalik Ghazi, and to no better diplomatist
+could it have been consigned. He set out from Kuldja
+early in May, 1872, carrying with him a large collection
+of presents for the ruler and his chief advisers, and
+arrived in Kashgar without any mishap in June of the
+same year. Here he was received in the most cordial
+manner, and the consideration and hospitality exhibited
+towards him by the ruler were beyond all expectation. In
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+the picturesque phraseology of the East, the Athalik
+Ghazi, at his first audience with Baron Kaulbars, said,
+"Sit upon my knees, on my bosom, or where ye like; for
+ye are guests sent me from heaven." The most complete
+freedom of action was accorded, for the first time, to all the
+members of the embassy, and two merchants who had
+accompanied it for the purpose of exploring the country
+received a safe-conduct to go on to Yarkand and Khoten.
+Yakoob Beg scarcely attempted to conceal his gratification
+at the presence of the Russians; possibly his pleasure
+chiefly arose from such an unmistakable admission of his
+skill as a diplomatist. But in every way facilities were
+afforded his visitors for seeing all objects of interest
+round Kashgar. Reviews were held in honour of the
+occasion, and as there happened to be a considerable
+number of troops in the vicinity, passing through to
+operate against the Tungani beyond Kucha, the show
+was imposing enough. The Russians were favourably
+impressed by what they saw, and Baron Kaulbars
+expressed himself surprised at the military exactitude
+with which the man&oelig;uvres were carried out. Yakoob
+Beg, always open to flattery, exclaimed in an enthusiastic
+moment, "I look upon the Russians as my dearest
+friends; if I had not, should I have shown you my
+military power? Assuredly it is not usual even with
+you to make known one's actual condition to an
+enemy." Matters were now in a fair way to a pleasant
+solution. Baron Kaulbars and Yakoob Beg were
+mutually delighted; but, after the time for pleasant talk
+had expired, it was necessary that some definite arrangements
+should be drawn up for the political and commercial
+relations of the two countries in the future.</p>
+
+<p>The chief objects the Russians had in view when they
+sent Baron Kaulbars to Kashgar were three. In the first
+place they wanted to acquire general information about
+that state, and to discover whether Yakoob Beg was as
+powerful as report had asserted. In the second, they
+wished to put their relations on such a recognized basis
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+with him that they might know what policy he was disposed
+to adopt in Turkestan and Kuldja; and in the
+third they desired to secure the monopoly of the trade
+of his state, so that they might forestall British enterprise,
+already beginning to direct its attention to this
+quarter, since the journeys of Messrs. Shaw and Forsyth.
+The last of these was the easiest to obtain, and the Athalik
+Ghazi considered all the Russian proposals with regard
+to trade in a very amicable spirit; but with regard to the
+second <i>desideratum</i> nothing but the vaguest generalities
+could all the tact and ingenuity of Kaulbars succeed in
+obtaining from his host. The first object was amply
+secured, in so far as geographical and scientific information
+was concerned; but the precautions taken by the
+Athalik Ghazi to deceive the Russians as to his power
+and hold on the country appear to have been successful.
+Baron Kaulbars certainly confirmed much that had previously
+rested on mere hearsay; the question is rather,
+did he not vouch for more than his experience justified
+him in doing? The result of his mission was, that the
+Athalik Ghazi was elevated to a position on a level with
+the Ameer of Cabul, and there is no doubt whatever that
+such a comparison was not warranted by the facts. A
+treaty was signed by the Athalik Ghazi and Baron
+Kaulbars, on the 2nd of June, 1872, but according to
+the Old Style, still adopted by the Russians, this was
+the 21st of May, St. Constantine's day. There are two
+stories with respect to this coincidence, and there is as
+much evidence for one version as there is for the other.</p>
+
+<p>It was said at the time that Yakoob Beg was so
+desirous of showing his goodwill to the Russians that he
+had insisted on signing it on that day in honour of the
+Grand Duke Constantine. Now there were two or three
+improbabilities in this statement that struck several
+observers. In the first place it was extremely improbable
+that Yakoob Beg knew it was St. Constantine's
+day at all; and again, in the second place he was quite
+as probably ignorant of the existence of a Grand Duke
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+Constantine. At all events, there was no valid reason
+why a Central Asian ruler should conceive that his politeness
+to that Grand Duke in particular would demonstrate
+his desire to be on good terms with Russians in general.
+The other version, which, like many other circumstances,
+has only leaked out in the pages of Mr. Schuyler, is
+altogether more probable, and is not open to the same
+objections. According to this, it was Baron Kaulbars,
+who of course was aware of the saint's day, who demanded
+that the treaty should bear that date, and who, as soon
+as it was signed, sent off a message to General Kaufmann
+saying that the Athalik Ghazi, out of friendship to that
+general, had specially requested that the treaty should
+be signed on that day in honour of General Kaufmann's
+patron saint. However flattered that distinguished general
+and governor may have felt at the delicate attention
+of his ambassador, he had to decline the proposed
+honour; and in the despatch that was sent to St. Petersburg,
+describing the event, the name of the Grand Duke
+Constantine was substituted for his own. There is little
+doubt that this is the correct statement, and it certainly
+suggests quite a revelation as to the system in
+Russian Asia of making things pleasant and agreeable
+to one another, always, however, assuming that there be
+an exceptional degree of power and pomp reserved for
+his Excellency General Kaufmann.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the signature of this treaty, which bears
+the name of its framer, Baron Kaulbars took his departure,
+with many expressions of friendship and goodwill
+from the Athalik Ghazi. Arrangements were, however,
+made, before he left, for an envoy to visit Tashkent from
+Yakoob Beg. This ambassador took with him the
+signed stipulations to be ratified, and was received at
+Tashkent with every demonstration of amity and respect.
+So certain did the Russian government appear that their
+relations with Kashgar would, if only for a short period,
+be satisfactory, that special care was taken to make a
+favourable impression on the Kashgarian envoy, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+after a short residence in the capital of Turkestan, the
+nephew of Yakoob Beg, Hadji Torah, who had followed
+the train of the treaty on a special mission, went on to
+St. Petersburg, where he was entertained by the Czar,
+taken to the reviews, and treated in a most hospitable and
+princely fashion. The contrast between the reception
+accorded to him in 1873 and that to Shadi Mirza in
+1869 clearly marks the difference that was considered in
+well-informed official circles to have taken place in their
+relations with Kashgar.</p>
+
+<p>We have now to consider whether the Russian Government
+was justified in assuming so confidently that it
+had secured the permanent friendship of the Mahomedan
+ruler of Eastern Turkestan. On concluding his visit at St.
+Petersburg, Hadji Torah turned south, and after stopping
+for a brief delay at Moscow and Odessa, he arrived in
+Constantinople, where he already had many friends and
+connections. Without inquiring too deeply into his actions
+at the Imperial City&mdash;for of them the reader will
+be able to judge best by the sequel&mdash;we will here simply
+observe, that having also concluded his residence on the
+Golden Horn, he took passage by the Suez Canal for India,
+and arrived there in time to join the mission of Sir Douglas
+Forsyth, then on its way to Kashgar. Hadji Torah therefore
+brought to his uncle a vast amount of information
+concerning the three Powers chiefly concerned in the fortunes
+of Kashgar&mdash;Russia, Turkey, and England. But
+even before his return home, fresh disagreements had
+broken out between Russia and Yakoob Beg. The year 1872
+had not closed, before the Athalik Ghazi concluded some
+secret negotiations that had been pending for some time
+with the Sultan, and this champion of Islam appeared in
+a new and holier light to Asiatics as Emir, or Ameer.
+He acknowledged the suzerainty of the Porte; and, not
+content with this formal declaration, gave an extra significance
+to the event by issuing a fresh coinage, bearing
+on one side the head of Abdul Aziz. The Russians
+were, it can well be imagined, displeased at this alliance
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+between two Mahomedan states which might both be
+considered hostile to their interests, and a very large
+party in military circles clamoured for an expedition to
+be sent at once against the insolent Mussulman. At one
+moment it seemed as if this bellicose party was to gain
+the day, for the testimony of all the officers and merchants
+who had visited Kashgar showed that each day
+Yakoob Beg was becoming more formidable. Prompt
+measures were pressed on the government of Tashkent,
+and General Kaufmann seemed half disposed to acquiesce
+in the proposal to inflict summary chastisement on the
+Athalik Ghazi. Fortunately for Kashgar, the Khan of
+Khiva had been an older offender in the eyes of the
+Russians, and the Home Government peremptorily forbade
+any steps being taken in the regions bordering on
+the Chinese Empire. It is sufficiently clear that the
+moderation of the home authorities was a wiser policy
+than the impulsive demands of certain officers in Tashkent;
+but it is not so evident why Yakoob Beg abstained
+from appearing in the <i>rôle</i> of the liberator of Khokand,
+at so opportune a moment as that afforded by the great
+expedition against Khiva in 1873. The treaty of Baron
+Kaulbars had stipulated for the free admission of Russian
+merchants into the state on the payment of a 2&frac12; per
+cent. <i>ad valorem</i> duty. Not only was there to be no
+further exaction, but good treatment was guaranteed to
+such Russian subjects as desired to travel in Kashgar,
+and who came provided with a passport, and permission
+to travel, from a Russian governor. During Baron
+Kaulbars' residence in the country, nothing could be
+more considerate than the treatment extended towards
+the members of his suite, and the merchants who went
+on to Yarkand were afforded facilities for disposing of
+the small stock of merchandise which they had brought
+with them on this journey. This friendly reception of
+such merchants as came to Kashgar was maintained
+during the period over which these negotiations extended
+down to the departure of Yakoob Beg's own ambassador
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+from Russian territory; but with the arrival of Hadji
+Torah at Constantinople, and the proclamation of the
+fact that Yakoob Beg had been elevated to the dignified
+position of Emir by the Sultan of Roûm, a change came
+over the spirit of his policy towards Russia. Indeed,
+Yakoob Beg saw himself menaced by an unforeseen danger
+in this treaty of commerce. He had formerly been
+averse to the presence of Russian merchants in his state
+because he regarded them as spies; but now that the
+necessities of his position had to some extent compelled
+him to enter into a formal treaty with their government,
+he perceived that his little state literally ran the risk of
+being invaded by the Russian merchants and traders who
+flocked to Kuldja for the purpose of participating in the
+spoils to be obtained by trafficking with the inhabitants
+of Eastern Turkestan. He had always been averse to
+trade. He was a warrior, and inclined to feel and to
+express contempt at the juggling tricks of Muscovite
+or Khitay.</p>
+
+<p>But as the former could provide him with better
+weapons for his army, and warmer clothes for his people,
+in addition to trinkets for his <i>serai</i>, their presence, if only
+they came in limited numbers, and at stated intervals,
+could be tolerated; but when he perceived they were
+about to descend on his state, like so many birds of prey
+on an abandoned carcase, and when he surmised that in
+all likelihood they would endeavour to mix themselves
+up in the political divisions of Kashgar as they had in
+Bokhara and Khokand, he determined to impose some
+other check on their visits besides that insignificant 2&frac12;
+per cent. on goods that returned a profit of cent. per
+cent. He had given his plighted word, however, that
+merchants should receive fair treatment, and how could
+he find a loophole to avoid fulfilling what he had promised,
+and yet at the same time escape bringing about an
+open rupture with the Russian Government. The matter
+required most delicate manipulation, but Yakoob Beg
+proved himself equal to the occasion. It was not to be
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+expected, however, that Yakoob Beg could accomplish
+his task of discouraging Russian enterprise without
+giving some umbrage to the government.</p>
+
+<p>Despite the friendly reception of Baron Kaulbars,
+there still remained some uncertainty in the minds of
+individuals, whether the Athalik Ghazi was as sincere
+in his protestations as he would have it believed.
+There was, consequently, some disinclination among the
+merchants of Kuldja to be the first to send a caravan
+to Kashgar. They were all willing enough to share
+the profits, but it was a risky experiment all the same;
+and each would prefer that his neighbour should inaugurate
+the enterprise. In commercial circles, there was
+much discussion on the new state, and the prospects of
+trade therewith, and there was much talk as to "who
+should bell the cat." The hesitation, if indeed so
+natural a sentiment deserves to be specified here, soon
+passed off, and Mr. Pupyshef, a merchant, who had
+had very large business connections with most parts
+of Central Asia, resolved to send the first consignment
+of merchandise to Kashgar. Mr. Pupyshef was,
+however, unable to go in person, so his caravan set
+out under the charge of his clerk Somof. It arrived
+without "let or hindrance" in Kashgar, where Mr.
+Somof was provided with accommodation in the Caravanserai
+specially set apart for foreign merchants. But
+a change was at once perceptible in the sentiments of
+the ruler, as the personal freedom of the members of
+the expedition was curtailed, and all their movements
+were watched with the most exacting surveillance; and
+the residence of Mr. Somof was brief in the extreme,
+for the Athalik Ghazi himself bought up the whole of
+his stock of merchandise. Viewed as a commercial
+speculation, this result should have been eminently
+satisfactory; the Russian merchant had to experience
+no loss from delay in finding a purchaser for his articles.
+There was, however, another matter to be taken
+into consideration, and that was the mode of payment
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+by the purchaser. Mr. Somof received so many Chinese
+coins at a value fixed by the Ameer himself, and Mr.
+Pupyshef, on the return of his representative, estimated
+the loss at 15,000 roubles. The Russian government
+took up the case of their subject, and presented a
+remonstrance at Kashgar, demanding the immediate
+restitution of the loss incurred by the Russian merchant.
+Yakoob Beg's reply to this summary request
+was a model of courtesy and tact. He denied altogether
+that Mr. Somof had in any way been interfered
+with. That gentleman was always at perfect liberty to
+do what, and to go where, he pleased, and he was
+quite mistaken in supposing that he, the Ameer, had
+purchased his goods. The Badaulet had nothing whatever
+to do with trade, which he left entirely to his
+subjects. He was simply a warrior and a follower of
+the Prophet. He had nevertheless instituted inquiries
+into the matter, and he had discovered that some of his
+officers, who should be punished, had purchased the
+merchandise in his name, hoping thereby to obtain it at
+a cheaper rate. The Athalik Ghazi expressed his
+regret at the occurrence, and would be most happy
+to refund whatever sum the Russian government considered
+their subject had lost by the transaction. A
+commission was appointed at Tashkent, to inquire into
+all the circumstances of the case, and after some discussion
+the demand of Mr. Pupyshef was reduced from
+15,000 to 12,000 roubles. The Ameer acquiesced in the
+decision, but many months elapsed before Mr. Pupyshef
+received his money, and then it was again in a depreciated
+Chinese coinage. We are justified in assuming
+that this was all planned, and that the obstacles thrown
+in the path of Mr. Pupyshef were part and parcel of a
+systematic attempt to disgust Russian merchants with
+Kashgar. The Russian government, too, was afforded
+no clear case for complaint, as Yakoob Beg expressed
+his regret without reserve for the occurrence, all the
+responsibility of which he shifted on to the shoulders
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+of some of "his officials whom he had ordered to be
+punished." He paid without a murmur the fair
+demands of Mr. Pupyshef, and if there was some delay
+in the refunding of the money, it must be attributed to
+the poverty of his exchequer, and not to any want
+of goodwill. The burden of his complaint was, "I am
+a poor prince; my country is impoverished by the wars
+that have occurred since the departure of the Chinese;
+and you will find little therein to repay you for your
+trouble and expense in entering it. Why therefore will
+you persist in coming to it? You can do neither yourselves
+nor my people any good by doing so, and you
+only cause me anxiety and trouble in preserving your
+countrymen from insult and injury, which you must
+admit I have ever done." There was an under-current
+of truth in this statement of the case, although it was
+not credited in Kuldja, where everything that went amiss
+was set down to the hostility of the Ameer. Yakoob
+Beg had, however, succeeded in throwing cold water on
+the enthusiastic preparations that were being made for
+exploiting Eastern Turkestan, and his mode of doing so
+had been quite original and characteristic. Few rulers
+would have foreseen that the best way to get rid of a
+troublesome visitor was to purchase what he had brought
+to sell to the people; and that the simple remedy of
+paying in a questionable currency would suffice to deter
+hundreds from following the example of Mr. Somof.
+Yakoob Beg, however, was not satisfied with leaving
+well alone. Having paid the claim of Mr. Pupyshef, it
+might have been supposed that he would maintain a
+discreet silence on his intentions in the future with
+regard to Russian merchants. He might have let the
+question, indeed, find, as it would have found, its own
+solution; but, in a weak moment, to place his own
+<i>bona fides</i> beyond suspicion, he desired the Russian
+government to send another merchant to Kashgar, and
+then it could judge by his reception whether the Ameer
+was not amicably disposed towards his "close allies,"
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+the Russians. The Russian authorities took him at his
+word, and after an interval of more than twelve months,
+during which Kashgar had been unvisited by a Russian
+merchant, another, a Mr. Morozof, came to put Yakoob
+Beg's assertions to the test. True to his word, the
+reception of this gentleman was most cordial. Facilities
+were placed in his way for getting purchasers of his
+articles, and the Ameer bought for his arsenals such
+of them as seemed suitable. Mr. Morozof returned to
+Kuldja, narrating how cordially he had been welcomed
+by the ruler himself, and how the enterprise had commercially
+been a success. Others followed his example,
+and during the last two and a half years of his rule
+Russian merchandise, either through Russian or native
+agents, found its way in considerable quantities into
+Kashgar. But this trade was always liable to periods
+of depression through the clouds that frequently darkened
+the political horizon, and the Russians did not
+derive the advantages from trade with this state, that
+they had previously convinced themselves they were to
+do. Indeed, English manufactures, after the year 1873,
+entered into keen competition with theirs in the cities of
+Kashgar, and had driven their goods out of the market of
+Yarkand at all events before the close of the year 1876.
+But this fact only served to impress more forcibly on
+the Russians the necessity either for annexing Kashgaria
+or establishing on its throne some puppet, who would
+be content with the post of deputy of the Czar. Indeed,
+many suggested that the Chinese should be brought
+back; but then they were so far off, and apparently so
+weak. The party advocating the absorption of Kashgaria
+every day became stronger and more pronounced;
+and all observers agree that it was only a question of
+time when the imperial fiat should go forth for the
+extinction of the rule of Yakoob Beg. Colonel Reinthal
+was sent in 1874, to endeavour to place matters on a
+more hopeful footing, but with little success. In addition
+to the question of trade privileges, the Russians,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+in negotiating with native states, or securing treaties
+at the point of the sword, always demanded the right of
+having consular agents in the chief cities of the state.
+The ostensible duty of these official representatives
+was to look after the interests of their government, and
+to protect the lives and property of Russian subjects as
+best they might be able. So far as these very necessary
+functions were concerned, Russia had a perfect right in
+demanding these safeguards, when such were deemed
+to be required. But unfortunately for the reputation
+of that country, the experience of Asiatics had amply
+demonstrated that these declared duties were the least
+important part of their office.</p>
+
+<p>Their secret instructions were to lose no opportunity
+of discovering the drift of public sentiment in the state
+where they were stationed; to learn all the ramifications
+of the dynastic intrigues that unfortunately form the
+chief incidents in the history of these states, and to
+promote, by every means at their disposal, the interests
+of the great empire into whose service they had been
+admitted. When such latitude was allowed in their
+instructions, and so many private and public inducements
+were offered to raise their zeal, it cannot be
+matter of surprise if we find the government informed
+promptly of the shiftings of public opinion in the independent
+and semi-independent Khanates of Central Asia.
+Yakoob Beg was keenly alive to the dangers that would
+arise to him personally from the introduction of such a
+system into Kashgar, where the discordant elements
+out of which he had welded a military organization
+were far from being completely healed. If the presence
+of a mirza in Khokand and Bokhara had entailed a
+decade of troubles and of gradual subjection, what was
+he to expect, a mere military adventurer and a foreigner
+in the land, from their presence in Eastern Turkestan?
+But Baron Kaulbars had demanded this concession, perhaps
+more than any other, and Yakoob Beg had to yield
+something in form, if he did not surrender much in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+substance, to the importunities of his visitor. As a
+great favour he consented to the appointment of <i>caravanbashis</i>,
+or superintendents of the personal comforts of the
+merchants when they should arrive; but a <i>caravan-bashi</i>
+was an uneducated, unimportant personage, from whom
+nothing need be feared. This did not at all please the
+Russian administrators, and all their subsequent efforts
+were mainly devoted to the attempt to obtain an alteration
+of this unimportant personage into the prying and
+inquisitive <i>mirza</i>. To defeat their design Yakoob Beg
+was no less firmly resolved, and the history of the
+embassies, from that of Baron Kaulbars to that of Captain
+Kuropatkine, was one long course of fruitless efforts
+to force the hand of the Athalik Ghazi on this point.
+Colonel Reinthal was sent in 1874, after the successful
+journey of Mr. Morozof, to see if any better arrangement
+could be attained, but, although the Ameer entertained
+him very hospitably, he fared no better than any
+of his predecessors. In that year, too, Yakoob Beg's
+position had become firmer in his own state. The
+Tungani had been driven back north of the Tian Shan
+beyond Turfan, and into the regions east of Lake Lob;
+the disaffection, too, in the cities of Kucha and Korla
+was also, to all appearance, dying out; but, above all,
+the vast ægis of English protection had appeared to
+be thrown over the integrity of his state. However
+unjustified this supposition was by the treaty with Sir
+Douglas Forsyth, the Ameer made as much use as possible
+of his new-found ally; and the large section of Anglo-Indians,
+and authorities in this country on the affairs of
+Central Asia, who, either out of sympathy for the man,
+or from a belief in the identity of British interests with
+his cause, proclaimed the advisability of supporting him
+against Russian aggression, gave a colourable excuse to
+his declaration that England had extended for the first
+time in her Trans-Himalayan policy her protection to
+a native state lying north of her natural frontier. The
+Russian governments in Siberia and Turkestan, emphatically
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+cautioned by their Foreign Office to give this
+country no cause for umbrage, were at first inclined to
+make that assertion an excuse for pushing their friendly
+relations with the Ameer; but their advances were not
+reciprocated, and as it became more clear that the
+importance of the Forsyth mission had been greatly
+exaggerated by the representations of the Ameer, the
+language of the Russian authorities became once more
+peremptory and menacing. In short, matters after more
+than two years' discussion had retrogressed to the condition
+they were in before the Kaulbars treaty. The
+Russians had not obtained their chief desire, the establishment
+of consular agents in Kashgar, and Yakoob
+Beg, as in the past, boldly met threat with threat. Relying
+on his increased reputation as the most orthodox
+and the most puissant of Mahomedans in Central Asia,
+and confident that England would intervene between
+the Russians and the collapse of his state, he even went
+so far as to temper his defiant, and almost bellicose,
+attitude with such irony as the following incident is a
+characteristic specimen of. Early in the year 1874 the
+Duke of Edinburgh married Marie Alexandrovna, the
+only daughter of the Czar; and Yakoob Beg seized the
+occasion to send a message of congratulation to the
+Czar of All the Russias on the auspicious event&mdash;saying,
+that he had heard that the son of his good ally,
+the Queen of England and of India, was about to wed
+the daughter of his friend the Czar, and that he hastened
+to send him his congratulations upon the event. To this
+effusive epistle no reply was deigned, and it is doubtful
+whether it ever got farther than Tashkent. There is
+no difficulty in arriving at the conclusion that such
+exhibitions as this is an instance of <ins class="corr" title="original had: detracted">detraction</ins> from the
+otherwise great and striking characteristics of the ruler of
+Kashgar. His opposition to Russia was most laudable;
+his maintenance of his privileges as an independent ruler
+was prudent and worthy of our respect; but his petty
+insults to Russia were neither wise nor dignified. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+was clearly in the right in checking the aggressive
+instincts of Russia, clothed in the specious garb of
+commercial advantage; he commands not less our
+admiration for the energetic and persistent manner in
+which he thwarted every endeavour to introduce Russian
+espionage and intrigue into Kashgaria; but why should
+he have weakened the effect of these splendid achievements,
+why should he have risked all he had secured,
+by so senseless an insult as the message to the Czar that
+has been just referred to?</p>
+
+<p>The authorities in Tashkent, perceiving that it was
+doubtful whether English public opinion was ripe yet
+for an active interference in Central Asia, reverted,
+despite all orders from the home authorities to the
+contrary, to their original intention of coercing the
+ruler of Kashgar. In 1874, therefore, all preparations
+for commencing the campaign in the approaching spring
+were made ready. Provisions and munitions of war
+were despatched to Naryn, and an auxiliary division
+was to make a flank movement by the Terek Pass on
+the west. It has been laid to the charge of the Russian
+generals in Asia, that expeditions are arranged for their
+mutual advantage, both in obtaining higher rank and
+orders. So seriously bitten had every officer since
+Perovsky become by the desire for promotion and distinction,
+that the disease became generally known as the
+St. George or the St. Ann Cross fever. Now during
+the seven years previous to the date at which we have
+arrived, if there had been a fair share of distinction and
+spoil for the soldiers and the lower ranks of the officers,
+some of those in higher posts considered that they were
+aggrieved by the monopoly of supreme credit obtained
+by General Kaufmann. This, indeed, had shown itself
+very clearly after the fall of Khiva, a success for which
+Kaufmann obtained all the credit, and yet towards
+which the division under his command contributed little
+or nothing. The etiquette, too, maintained in the little
+court at Tashkent, and the semi-regal state observed by
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+the successful general, were irksome to officers more
+accustomed to the licence of a camp than to the punctilio
+of a palace. Nor were there wanting more sinister
+motives still among some of the chief general officers
+who filled the subordinate posts in the service of the
+Czar's representative. Prominent among them was
+the youthful Scobelef, who, burning to distinguish himself,
+clamoured loudly for some expedition which, when
+accomplished successfully, would be recompensed with
+the Cross of St. George. Strong as General Kaufmann
+may really be in the good opinion of his superiors, he
+was unable to resist, if he were inclined, the demands
+pressed upon him by Scobelef and his father, and the
+more warlike portion of his forces. It is said, that in
+addition to these palpable reasons there were others
+touching the family rivalries of the Kaufmanns and
+Scobelefs, who appear to have been at feud with each
+other when younger men in the service of the palace,
+when Nicholas was Czar. To remove these differences,
+and to satisfy the demands of his other subordinates,
+General Kaufmann consented that an expedition should
+be arranged against Kashgar, and entrusted to the
+command of the younger Scobelef. Towards the end
+of 1874 the war-cloud was drawing ominously over the
+Athalik Ghazi, and to all observers it seemed as if it
+were about to break with destructive violence on his
+devoted head. Loudly was it asserted that nothing but
+British intervention would save him, and it was only
+too clear that England's policy would be guided by
+events. The Viceroy had certainly not advised that
+an active participation should be undertaken in this
+question. The failure, too, of the Granville-Gortschakoff
+negotiations to define a neutral zone had convinced
+this country of the inutility of solving the question
+between the two countries by treaty. But it was not
+clear that, even if Kashgar were to fall into the power of
+Russia, our interests would suffer so much as to justify
+us in adopting an extreme remedy. The path being
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+thus left clear for Russia to strike, every precaution
+was taken by Generals Kaufmann and Scobelef that
+the blow should be sharp and decisive. Not fewer than
+20,000 Russian troops in all were to be directed against
+Yakoob Beg, who too late now attempted some concessions
+to his neighbours. Such troops as he could raise
+were massed in the neighbourhood of Kashgar, while
+another force under his son was stationed at Aksu.
+But of the result there could not be two opinions. Very
+few weeks' respite remained to the intended victim, when
+an event occurred which changed the whole current of
+Russian thought into a different channel. Yakoob Beg
+was saved by the outbreak of disturbances in Khokand,
+and, although the Russians never acknowledged that
+they were so serious as to prevent them persisting in
+their Kashgarian enterprise, still gradually the troops
+who had been despatched to the frontier were recalled,
+and those who had been ordered to set out for Naryn
+were retained in Tashkent and Hodjent, the two towns
+chiefly threatened. Although this event is not part of
+Kashgarian history, yet it performed so useful a function
+to that state, which indeed it may be said to have saved,
+that some brief account of it here may not be unwelcome.</p>
+
+<p>Khudayar Khan, after the death of Alim Kuli, his
+hostile minister, in 1865, had been reinstated in his
+possession of Khokand, partly by the efforts of his own
+faction, and partly by Russian assistance. From that
+year to the year 1875 he was <i>de facto</i> as he was <i>de jure</i>
+Khan of Khokand, and, although imbroiled on several
+occasions with Russia and with his own subjects in those
+ten years, he still maintained a nominal independence in
+the western half of Khokand, with his capital at the city
+of the same name. For some reason, however, this Khan
+never was popular. So far as we know concerning him,
+he does not appear to have been any way worse than
+his neighbours; but one party in the state accused him
+of being a tool of the Russians, while another, urged
+on by the agents employed by that government,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+declared that he was gradually drifting the country into a
+hopeless contest with that Power. Widespread throughout
+the state there was dissatisfaction at his rule, and
+the occasion afforded by a commotion among the Kirghiz
+was eagerly seized by his subjects to rise for the purpose
+of subverting his power. At first this movement
+seemed to possess no importance for the Russians, and
+was regarded as one of those dynastic squabbles that
+had become too ordinary an occurrence to occasion any
+surprise. The insurrectionary party, too, had put on
+the throne Nasruddin, the eldest son of the Khan, a
+youth who was supposed to be friendly to Russia, and
+who was not likely to prove in any way formidable,
+having become passionately addicted to <i>vodka</i> drinking.
+But behind this ostensible ruler there were others who
+aspired to greater eminence than the king-makers of a
+petty state like Khokand. Chief among these was
+Khudayar's brother-in-law, Abderrahman Aftobatcha,
+who was entrusted with the chief control of the military
+arrangements. This chief was the son of Mussulman
+Kuli, the Kipchak minister of Khudayar's earlier days.
+Either incredulous of the maintenance of a neutral
+attitude by Russia, or urged on by a patriotic impulse
+to free the enslaved portion of Khokand, these confederates
+issued a proclamation of war against General
+Kaufmann. The border districts rose in response to
+the proclamation, the communications between Tashkent
+and Hodjent were severed, and confusion for a
+time reigned supreme within the Russian possessions.
+The Khokandian forces hesitated to make any serious
+attack and wasted their time in useless depredations in
+the mountains. Had a prompt move been made on
+Tashkent, or even on Hodjent, the insurrection might
+have been successful. Bokhara might have struck in at
+the critical moment, and Yakoob Beg awoke from the
+lethargy into which his warlike spirit was sinking. Such
+was not to be, however; and gradually the Russian scare
+wore off. Colonel Scobelef scoured the country with
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+his Cossacks; telegraphic communication was restored
+between Hodjent and Tashkent; and the country was
+rapidly cleared of the rebels. The fugitives who had
+accompanied Khudayar in his flight were sent to the
+rear, and reinforcements were hastily summoned to take
+part in the necessary offensive measures against Khokand.
+It will be sufficient here to say that, having
+been defeated in the fight at Makhram and several
+other small engagements, the party of Nasruddin and
+Aftobatcha sued for peace. This was granted, but Khokand
+became the Russian province of Ferghana, Colonel
+Scobelef was raised to a major-general, and obtained his
+Cross of St. George by the battle of Makhram. This
+event, generally known as the revolt of the Khokandians
+against Russia of 1875, marks an important era, for it
+convinced the Khokandians and other Asiatics that any
+attempt to obtain their liberty, short of a concerted and
+organized movement, would be fruitless. There has
+been no renewal of the attempt that then failed, but
+which ought to have achieved more success.</p>
+
+<p>To the discord unhappily existent among its victims
+has Russia been chiefly indebted for the facility with
+which her Asiatic conquests have been acquired, and to
+the same ally it seems probable that she will be chiefly
+indebted for their preservation. There is no clearer
+evidence of this than the history of this last war with
+Khokand. But when we endeavour to divide the share
+of culpability for this dissension, we are on this occasion
+bound to admit that the chief blame attaches to Yakoob
+Beg. More than any other Asiatic ruler had he assumed
+to himself the title of general protector of his religion
+and his order, against the conquering strides of Russia;
+more than any other had he fostered, by his bold and
+defiant attitude towards that state, the belief that there
+still remained some hope of coping with the danger by
+a united league of Central Asian states; more than any
+other had he seemed to justify this aspiration; and more
+than any other must he be held culpable when he permitted
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+the moment that seemed most auspicious to slip
+by unutilized. Moreover, when this insurrection broke
+out in Khokand, he had made every preparation to defend
+himself against a Russian invasion. He saw the
+Russians compelled, by the very necessities of their
+position, to call off their forces to other quarters, and
+yet he abstained from striking a blow in defence of
+those interests which he had ever declared were most
+sacred to him. It is impossible to explain such apathy
+on so important an occasion as this was; and his refusal
+to strike in on the side of Aftobatcha must remain the
+greatest blot on an otherwise brilliant reputation. With
+the collapse of that effort, and the subsequent occupation
+of Ferghana, Russian attention seemed to become more
+occupied with the state of affairs on the Oxus and in
+Cabul, than with the fortunes or misfortunes of Kashgar.
+During the few months that intervened between
+the annexation of Khokand and the appearance of the
+Chinese north of the Tian Shan, Yakoob Beg adopted
+a more conciliatory policy towards Russia, and might in
+a short time have sunk into the position of a somewhat
+more important Khudayar or Mozaffur Eddin. Other
+events intervened, however, and gave a complete change
+to the question, as will be considered in a later chapter.
+We take our leave of this narrative of his dealings with
+Russia with an admiration that would be perfect but for
+the weakness he exhibited in 1875. Even that vacillation
+will scarcely destroy all the claim that his bold
+defiance and consistent opposition to all Russian pretensions
+to supremacy over Eastern Turkestan gives him to
+our respectful and admiring consideration.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_XI"></a><span>CHAPTER XI.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">YAKOOB BEG'S RELATIONS WITH ENGLAND.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> describing the relations that subsisted between England
+and Kashgar, while under the rule of Yakoob Beg,
+there will be no necessity for us to enter so deeply into
+the under-currents that guided those relations, as was
+necessary in the preceding chapter, where we detailed the
+rivalry of Russia and Kashgar. While England could
+hold out a hand of friendship to the Athalik Ghazi,
+because he sought to please us by making commercial
+concessions, Russia felt doubly piqued with the man who
+for long refused her a similar foothold, and who, for a
+brief space, went still farther in his defiance, secure&mdash;as
+he thought&mdash;under British protection. Our government
+could not fail to see, in the bold conduct of this ruler,
+the result of a mistaken notion of what it would do
+in the event of a war in Central Asia, and it strove to
+bring home to the mind of Yakoob Beg and his emissaries
+a sense of our determination not to interfere
+beyond the Karakoram. Looking back now on the
+old legends that successive travellers brought us from
+Eastern Turkestan, where such strange things had been
+wrought, where the Chinese had been expelled, and a
+new king from Khokand enthroned, and regarding them
+in the light of our greatly extended information, even
+since Mr. Shaw penned his interesting volume on High
+Tartary, it will not be without some interest to trace
+back the story of how Yakoob Beg's name first became
+known to us, and how, for eight or nine years, a large
+section of Englishmen wove a romance round his name,
+and converted "the land of the six cities" into a fertile
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+and populous region, which might serve as a barrier
+to Russian progress, and which, like Cabul elsewhere,
+should extend as another "cushion" from the mountains
+of Hindostan to the Celestial range of the Chinese.
+Those dreams have vanished now, and in their place has
+risen up the very unromantic and matter-of-fact spectacle
+of a Chinese triumph.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever has chanced to reside in the valleys of the
+Himalaya&mdash;Mr. Shaw is the authority&mdash;must experience
+a desire to know of the countries beyond that range.
+The desire is natural, but the obstacles of nature are
+stupendous. To enter Tibet has been the object of
+numerous Englishmen, from the time of Warren Hastings,
+yet that object has been only attained by three
+of our countrymen, the latest sixty-six years ago. There
+are forty or fifty passes of various degrees of practicability
+leading into Tibet from Nepaul, Sikhim, and
+Bhutan; and to act as a spur to the explorer there is a
+highly civilized and peaceable race just beyond our
+border of whom we know scarcely anything. Yet the
+vision of Warren Hastings and of Thomas Manning
+remains unfulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>North of the Karakoram there were no similar incentives.
+Mr. Moorcroft who, fifty years ago, resided
+in Ladakh, does not appear to have manifested any
+desire to pierce the iron barrier to the north, although
+towards Ruduk and Tibet he turned as if irresistibly
+fascinated. The character which the brothers Michell
+gave Little Bokhara, or Eastern Turkestan, expressed
+a fact, which long deterred any traveller from attempting
+to explore it. "Little Bokhara," they said, "was a
+country where every man carried his life in his hand,
+and there were indubitable excuses for each successive
+traveller who recoiled before the hardships and dangers
+of a journey through that country." But although no
+Englishman traversed the dizzy passes of the Karakoram
+and the Kuen Lun, now and then the people from
+Sanju, Khoten, and the neighbourhood came to Ladakh,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+where they brought intelligence of the political events
+that were taking place further north. Their intelligence
+was often completely false, it was always vague and exaggerated,
+but it, at all events, told us whether peace or
+war, satisfaction or dissatisfaction, was the existing circumstance
+in Eastern Turkestan. It was known in a
+general sense that China was the nominal ruler of this
+vast region; but the exact relations China held there,
+how she conquered the country and when, and by what
+means she retained her conquest, all these were unascertained.
+There had, indeed, been one break in this state of
+darkness when the learned traveller, Adolph Schlagintweit, in
+1857, penetrated, with a few native followers, into
+Kashgar. The initial difficulties were successfully overcome,
+and fortune seemed at first disposed to smile upon
+his enterprise. Herr Schlagintweit had come, however,
+at a singularly inopportune moment. The Khoja Wali
+Khan had just invaded Kashgar, and his forces had
+spread as far south as Yarkand, when the traveller
+approached that city. He appears to have been able to
+report himself to the Aksakal, representing Cashmere
+at Yarkand, who, in turn, communicated with the Chinese
+Amban, for permission for him to enter the city; but
+while detained outside the walls he was captured by a
+roving party of Wali Khan's army. He was at once hurried
+off to Wali Khan's head-quarters at Kashgar, where
+that despot, in a fit of fury, brought about by excess in
+"bang," ordered him to be executed. His followers
+escaped, and brought back the tale of his death to
+Ladakh.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the untoward fate of the first explorer of
+Kashgar. In the course of the early summer of 1868,
+it became generally known that the Chinese had been
+driven out of Kashgar, and that Yakoob Beg was ruling
+the country, under the title, conferred upon him by the
+Ameer of Bokhara, of Athalik Ghazi. He had sent a
+sort of semi-official messenger, Mahomed Nazzar, in
+that year into the Punjab, to take notes, as it were, of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+our dominions. Mr. Shaw, in Ladakh, had heard of the
+recent changes in Eastern Turkestan, and mentioned to
+this envoy on his return the desire he had to visit
+Kashgar, and see the widely famed Athalik Ghazi. The
+envoy received the proposition with enthusiastic approval,
+but it was considered more prudent to await the formal
+assent of the ruler himself. After overcoming the difficulties
+that beset his task, with prompt resolution Mr.
+Shaw entered the dominions of the Athalik Ghazi in
+December, 1868, being the first Englishman who had
+ever entered Little Bokhara. His reception was singularly
+cordial, and everything that the officials could do
+to make his sojourn in the country pleasant to him was
+done. One and all of the Khokandian dignitaries received
+him as a friend and a brother; and even Mahomed
+Yunus, Dadkwah of Yarkand, the second man in the
+kingdom, treated him in a spirit of marked cordiality.
+It should be remembered that Mr. Shaw went there
+without any official <i>status</i> whatever, and simply as an
+English traveller. Of course, it was the best policy for
+the Kashgarian rulers to greet him hospitably, and prove
+that they had completely pacified Eastern Turkestan;
+but in pointing out the hospitable reception that was
+given to Mr. Shaw, it is impossible to detract from its
+merit by referring to such latent political motives as
+these. Yakoob Beg received the English traveller in
+special audience at Kashgar, and treated him in the
+most cordial manner. On Mr. Shaw offering him a few
+presents that he had brought from India, such as rifles,
+&amp;c., the ruler laughed, and said, "What need is there of
+presents between you and me? We are already friends,
+and your safe arrival has been sufficient satisfaction to
+me." During Mr. Shaw's residence in Kashgar, which
+extended over a period of three months, he had three
+interviews with the Athalik Ghazi, who on each occasion
+became, if possible, more friendly than on the previous
+one. Mr. Shaw was fairly treated on the whole,
+and has of all writers on Kashgar given us the most
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+graphic description of the people and the country. Mr.
+Shaw's position was to a certain extent compromised by
+the arrival of another Englishman, the lamented Mr.
+Hayward, who was murdered in a somewhat mysterious
+manner, three or four years afterwards, in the neighbourhood
+of the Cashmerian fortress of Gilgit. Both
+travellers were for a time detained in a sort of honourable
+confinement in Kashgar, but all ended happily, and
+the first two English explorers of Eastern Turkestan
+returned in perfect safety to Ladakh. The result of
+Mr. Shaw's interesting journey was not made known in
+England until 1871, after he had set out and returned
+from Kashgar a second time, in the first embassy of
+Mr., now Sir, Douglas Forsyth. The result of this
+visit to Yarkand and Kashgar was almost magnetic.
+Not only did the Indian Government promptly take
+into its consideration the question of what our political
+relations were to be with the Athalik Ghazi, but the
+whole Anglo-Indian community turned an attentive ear
+to the stories told of the new country. A new avenue
+for commerce had been opened up, and Eastern Turkestan
+might, after all, prove the true gateway to the marts of
+Bokhara and Kuldja. In our more immediate vicinity
+there was the jade trade of Khoten to be revived, and
+the wool of Tartary, of ancient fame, should alone form
+a staple article of commerce. For Manchester goods
+and Indian wares there was also a very inviting prospect
+in the thickly populated districts of Yarkand and
+Kashgar, which were at first supposed to contain a much
+larger population than as a matter of fact they did. At
+first it is probable that the main sentiment was one of
+satisfaction on commercial grounds alone; later on, the
+progress of events in Khokand and Kuldja made the
+political motives appear more prominently before English
+minds. A trading company was formed in conception,
+but it did not begin operations until several years later
+on, after the signature of the Forsyth treaty, for which,
+and the official regulations concerning the working of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+that company, the reader may be referred to the Appendix
+of this volume.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Shaw himself formed a very roseate estimate of
+the future of the trade between India and Kashgar, and
+participated with all his wonted activity in promoting
+the fortunes of the Yarkand Trading Company from his
+advantageous post at Lêh. Although the more sanguine
+expectations were never realized, the company itself was
+successful, and performed a very useful work under no
+easy circumstances. Its functions are suspended during
+the uncertainty that always follows a change in the
+ruling power of a state, until it is seen what steps are
+taken by the Chinese, or this country, to perpetuate,
+under the Chinese sway, those good feelings which first
+arose under Yakoob Beg. Many are sceptical of the
+possibility of living on terms of good neighbourship
+with the Chinese, and of carrying on an intercourse,
+which certainly does not exist anywhere along the whole
+extent of the Anglo-Chinese frontier. But these persons
+will scarcely admit that the Chinese are to blame in
+this respect if we neglect the subject, for Russia by
+right of several treaties, and by right also of diplomatic
+tact, has a commercial <i>status</i> in every northern mart of
+the Chinese Empire, from Ourga to Urumtsi, Manas,
+Chuguchak, Kuldja and Kashgar. If the Chinese were
+reinstalled in every one of their old possessions, yet
+Russia would have a legal foothold in all those outlying
+dependencies. English commerce must not by any
+means despair of success in opening up the interior of
+China from the direction of India and Cashmere. In
+most cases, political action generally follows upon commercial
+enterprise; but in our dealings with the Chinese
+the order is reversed, and political overtures and diplomatic
+arrangements must clear the way for the commerce
+that must infallibly spring up between Hindostan and
+not only Tartary and Tibet, but also the home provinces
+of Yunnan and Szchuen. The root of the difficulty is
+no doubt to be found in the fact that the Mantchoo
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+caste is in many respects as much a race apart from
+the mass of Chinamen as the Norman was in England
+during the twelfth century. The Mantchoo mandarin
+believes that in some undefined manner the introduction
+of European science and civilization into China
+would tend to lower his influence and political power.
+But if we are wise, we shall ignore this sentiment, and
+endeavour to reach the people through their legitimate
+authorities, the Tartar conquering race of two centuries
+and a half ago, and not by attempting to influence the
+rulers by a propagandist crusade among the people, as
+some advise.</p>
+
+<p>Some months after the return of Mr. Shaw to Lêh,
+the Athalik Ghazi, who had doubtless considered very
+attentively that gentleman's suggestion to maintain a
+representative at Lahore, despatched an envoy to India
+for the purpose of expressing his desire for the establishment
+of friendly relations with the British Government,
+for the development of trade between the
+countries, and for the visit of a British officer to his
+capital. He had fully realized by this time what Mr.
+Shaw meant by saying that he came in no official capacity.
+If he intended, therefore, to reap any reward for
+the manifestation of his friendship towards England, or
+to be able to play England's alliance off against Russia's
+hostility, he discovered that he must take the initiative.
+In consequence of that discovery, Ihrar Khan came to
+India, and was entertained by our Government in a
+very friendly manner. It was in response to Ihrar
+Khan's visit that Mr. Forsyth was sent as our first
+envoy to Kashgar, in the following year.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Forsyth was accompanied by Mr. Shaw, who had
+volunteered for the service, and by Dr. Henderson. He
+reached Yarkand, by the same route as that followed
+by Mr. Shaw, in safety, and without suffering any great
+amount of inconvenience. But the mission had reached
+the scene of its labours at a very inopportune moment.
+The Athalik Ghazi had just been summoned away to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+far eastern frontier to repress hostile movements on the
+part of the Tungan cities of Turfan and Urumtsi, and
+it was very uncertain for how long a time he might be
+detained there. Mr. Forsyth accordingly left Yarkand
+in the month of September on his return journey,
+without having had an opportunity of settling the
+future of the relations between India and Kashgar.
+Dr. Henderson, in his "Lahore to Yarkand," chronicled
+the events of this journey to the region north of the
+Himalaya.</p>
+
+<p>The very next year, 1871, Yakoob Beg sent Ihrar
+Khan once more to India to renew his protestations of
+friendship, entrusting him with letters, not only for the
+Viceroy but also for Her Majesty the Queen. But there
+was no immediate result from this later overture.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile Russia had broken ground more
+firmly in Eastern Turkestan. The treaty of commerce
+between Russia and her neighbour, which had been for
+several years on the carpet, had at last been signed at
+Kashgar on the 8th of June, 1872. That treaty conceded
+no inconsiderable trade privileges to Russia, for,
+as will be seen from a perusal of its clauses, Russian
+goods entering the country could not be subjected to a
+higher tax than 2&frac12; per cent. <i>ad valorem</i>. In fact, but for
+Yakoob Beg's prudence in restricting the appointment
+of Russian commercial agents in the cities to the inferior
+<i>caravan-bashi</i>, a far different personage to the Aksakal,
+that treaty would have placed Kashgar virtually in the
+possession of General Kaufmann. Even as it was,
+Russia, regarded as a foe, had out-distanced England,
+who was held to be a friend; and for a considerable
+time afterwards, English commerce, which had no status
+there, hesitated to seek admission into the dominions of
+the Athalik Ghazi.</p>
+
+<p>But the treaty of Baron Kaulbars was in its essence
+a sham, for no good feeling sprang up between the
+countries; and where there was distrust on either side,
+trade languished, as was to be expected. Two months
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+after this treaty, Yakoob Beg sent his nephew, the Seyyid
+Yakoob Khan, on a special embassy to Russia, whence
+he went on to Constantinople, and returned <i>viâ</i> India.
+He then had several long discussions with our authorities
+relative to the measures that should be adopted
+to place everything on a friendly footing between
+Kashgar and ourselves. The Sultan had conferred
+upon the ruler of Kashgar the high title of Emir ul
+Moomineen, and shortly afterwards Yakoob Beg proclaimed
+himself in consequence of that decree Emir or
+Ameer of Kashgar, under the title of Yakoob Khan. It
+is appropriate here to say something of these two titles,
+Khan and Beg. In this work the ruler of Kashgar has
+been consistently called Beg or prince, and not Khan or
+lord; and for the following reasons. The title of Khan
+is much higher than that of Beg; it is, moreover,
+hereditary. Gibbon, whose authority in these Central
+Asian matters stands higher than many modern
+scholars will admit, defines it as the distinguishing
+mark of the descendants of Genghis Khan. His
+heirs and their children became the Khans of Western
+Asia. The Mongol who grafted himself on the
+Turk and the Usbeg, brought with him the unique
+authority that was vested by public voice in the house
+of Genghis, the Khan of Khans. Now, although in his
+later days Yakoob Beg, or his admirers, invented a
+lineage for himself back to Timour, consequently making
+him of Mongol descent, it is highly improbable that this
+mythical descent was based on any reliable <i>data</i>, nor
+can we admit any other claim to according Yakoob Beg
+that higher title than one that will stand the criticism of
+history. Yakoob Beg was not free from some of that
+craving that haunts the minds of rulers "born out of
+the purple" to claim cousinship with the select caste
+of former sovereigns; and the visible embodiment of
+temporal sovereignty in Turkestan was this very title of
+Khan, which has been so much abused in its application.</p>
+
+<p>It is wrong, in a strict sense, to apply the title of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+Khan to Yakoob Beg, although he undoubtedly made
+use of it during the last three years of his reign; but
+as a matter of mere convenience, it is also misleading.
+On the stage of Asiatic politics there is another Yakoob
+Khan, who is, by descent, a Khan, and possesses qualities
+not less eminent than did his namesake in Eastern
+Turkestan. Confusion was often caused by the confounding
+of one of these personages with the other,
+whereas if each had been defined by his legitimate title,
+there would have been no misunderstanding. Towards
+the close of the year 1873, the Seyyid Yakoob Khan,
+who, by descent, could claim the title which was not his
+uncle's, returned to India, where he found that the
+English mission was a few days ahead of him on its
+journey to Kashgar.</p>
+
+<p>The Indian government had, in the meanwhile, appointed
+Mr. T. Douglas Forsyth as their envoy to
+Kashgar once more, and, during the summer of 1873,
+preparations were busily in progress for the important
+embassy that was to counteract the adverse effects of
+Baron Kaulbars' treaty. As this is the turning-point
+in Anglo-Kashgarian relations, it is necessary to follow
+it in considerable detail. Upon Mr. Forsyth's embassy
+depends the whole fabric of our policy in, and intercourse
+with, Eastern Turkestan during the past four years. In
+fact, but for Sir Douglas Forsyth's Report and Treaty,
+even Mr. Shaw's interesting volume and intrepid journey
+would have failed to have preserved the vitality
+of our interest in Kashgar and its ruler.</p>
+
+<p>By the month of July, everything was in readiness
+for a forward movement, but owing to the delay in the
+arrival of Seyyid Yakoob Khan, or Hadji Torah as he
+was more usually termed, Mr. Forsyth still lingered
+at Murree. Captains Biddulph and Trotter, and Dr.
+Stoliczka, in the meanwhile set out for Lêh to explore
+the routes between that town and Shahidoola. These
+three gentlemen explored the country beyond Ladakh
+very carefully, although it had already been described
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+by Messrs. Shaw and Hayward, and Dr. Cayley. Mr.
+Forsyth and the headquarters, after a short stay at
+Srinagar in Cashmere, arrived at Lêh on the 20th of
+September. It may be useful to give here the names of
+those who comprised this important embassy. In the
+first place there was the envoy himself, Mr., now Sir,
+T. Douglas Forsyth, C.B., and now K.C.S.I. His second
+in command was Lieut.-Colonel T. E. Gordon, C.S.I.,
+who, after the prime object of the mission had been
+accomplished, explored a very considerable portion of
+the Pamir, the result of whose investigations is to be
+found in his work "The Roof of the World." Then
+came Dr. Bellew, C.S.I., Surgeon-Major, entrusted with
+the medical control of the expedition. The three military
+men&mdash;Captains Chapman, Trotter, and Biddulph&mdash;held
+various functions; the first as secretary, the latter
+two in scientific capacities. In addition to these there
+were the learned Dr. Stoliczka, who died from the effects
+of the rarefaction of the atmosphere; an English corporal
+of a Highland regiment, and six native officers and skilled
+assistants. There was also an escort of ten sowars, one
+naick, and ten sepoys furnished by the Corps of Guides.</p>
+
+<p>The appointments of the embassy were also most
+carefully selected, and with special regard to the difficulties
+that lay before it in the obstacles of nature, and
+the inconveniences attending complete dependence on
+natives for the means of transporting the large quantity
+of <i>impedimenta</i>. One hundred mules "of a fair stamp"
+were accordingly purchased in India by Tara Sing, a
+merchant, and the treasurer to the embassy. And these
+were equipped with saddles and trunks of a special
+pattern, made in the government workshops at Cawnpoor.
+Altogether, then, this English embassy to Kashgar
+was a very formidable undertaking, and in its proportions
+assumed something of the appearance of a small
+army; in camp there were "300 souls and 400 animals."
+The day had gone by when English travellers entertained
+doubts of entering Kashgar in company at the same
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+time, lest they should arouse the apprehensions of the
+people. Mr. Forsyth came vested with all the authority
+of his Sovereign and the Viceroy, to negotiate a treaty of
+amity with the ruler of Kashgar, and the people generally
+saw in that fact a guarantee of the preservation of
+their liberties and independence.</p>
+
+<p>So far as Shahidoola, the journey was in a well known
+region, and outside the frontier of Yakoob Beg. At
+that place the first sign of that ruler's power was encountered
+in the same way as Mr. Shaw, five years
+before, had witnessed the advanced limit of the power of
+the Athalik Ghazi in a southerly direction. A captain
+of the Kashgarian army, Yuzbashi Mahomed Zareef
+Khan, had been deputed to receive our envoy at the
+frontier, and to give him a hearty welcome. After a
+rest of four days, the whole expedition, advancing in two
+bodies over the Grim Pass, Sanju Devan, entered the inhabited
+territory of Sanju. Here Hadji Torah, who had
+been travelling "post" after them from India, caught
+them up, and by his tact and real friendship for this
+country, contributed greatly to the complete success of
+the mission. The passage of the Grim Pass, although
+accomplished with success, was no easy task. Dr.
+Bellew, in his book "Kashmir and Kashgar," gives the
+following graphic description of it, which may be quoted
+with advantage as showing some of the "obstacles of
+nature" to the advance either of an army or a caravan
+in this quarter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The scene which now burst upon our view is one
+not easy to describe, still less to forget. Immediately
+on either hand, like the portals of a gate, stood bare
+banks of silver grey slate, which gently spread away
+on each side into the slopes that, inclining together,
+formed the theatre of the spectacle they limited. And
+immediately in front commenced that gentle rise over
+slabs of slate <i>débris</i>&mdash;the natural dark hue of which
+was lost in the bright sparkle of its abundant mica&mdash;which
+led at once on to the field of our vision. Here,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+at the foot of the ascent, one step took us from the
+tiresome monotony of the bare rocks behind, with all
+their dulness of hue, on to the snow, which overspread
+all before with a white sheet of the most dazzling
+brilliance. On the left and on the right it spread with
+uniform regularity to the crests of the bounding ridges
+in those directions; whilst in front, it rose up as a vast
+wall, whose top cut the sky in a succession of sharp
+peaks with a clearness of outline rarely witnessed.
+And above all, stretched the wide expanse of heaven,
+with a depth unsearchable, in the speckless purity of
+its azure, and with a calm such as often precedes the
+storm. Wonderful was the scene!"</p>
+
+<p>Such is the description of an eye-witness of this
+striking scene, which in its solemnity approached the
+sublime, in its grandeur the terrible. The last hundred
+feet of the ascent was a sheer wall of ice, like
+the Matterhorn, and up this the troopers' horses, and
+the baggage mules and ponies, had to be lifted by
+human force. More than a whole day was occupied
+in surmounting this obstacle alone, but it was surmounted
+with the small loss of eight mules and three
+ponies. With the crossing of the Grim Pass, the
+difficulties of nature disappeared, and henceforth the
+course of the mission lay in the more sheltered plains
+of Kashgaria.</p>
+
+<p>After leaving Sanju, the country had, for some days'
+journey, an appearance of barrenness, that was only
+relieved by the avidity with which patches of more
+promising soil had been cultivated, a fact which testified
+alike to the beneficence of the ruler and to the assiduity
+of his people. There is good reason for believing that
+in the Yarkand and Khoten districts, Yakoob Beg's
+administration was most successful. This may have
+been caused by the superior qualities of the people over
+the Tungani, and mixed populations farther east; but
+it must also be attributed to the absence of those
+desolating wars which went on without any long
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+intervals down to the year 1874, in the country held by
+the Tungani. The treachery of Yakoob Beg in murdering
+the Khan Habitulla of Khoten had aroused
+suspicions as to his good faith that only lay dormant
+during the days of his power; but the people of Khoten,
+Sanju, Karghalik, and Kilia were far too thrifty
+and too prudent to sit down supinely and dwell upon
+their wrongs. They neither forgot nor forgave, but they
+suppressed all trace of seditious opinions against the
+new ruler.</p>
+
+<p>The next city which Mr. Forsyth reached, Karghalik,
+showed still further signs of prosperity and civilization.
+"An eating-house, with its clean table, and forms, and
+piles of china plates and bowls, at once took us back
+across the seas to the recollection of many a country
+restaurant in France." Special preparations had in
+every way been made for the reception of the representatives
+of England, and Mr. Forsyth expressed his
+surprise at finding fire-places, like our own, ventilators,
+and rich carpets from Khoten, famous in days of yore
+for its manufacture of those articles, in the quarters
+that had been set apart as his residence. Similar
+preparations had been made at every stopping place,
+and the people not less than the sovereign did their
+best, and spared no exertion, to make the stay of the
+Feringhees as pleasant as possible for them. More than
+that, even at the resting places during the daily march,
+the headman or local magnate, without exception, always
+entertained them at a "dastarkhwan," that is to say, at
+a course of refreshments. The "dastarkhwan" literally
+means table-cloth, and consists of any number of
+distinct dishes, sometimes as many as a hundred, held
+by as many attendants. This is a national custom,
+from which there is never any deviation. It is incumbent
+upon the guest to break bread first, and then
+present it to his host. One of their customs is refreshing
+to any one who has come fresh from India, with all its
+troublesome caste distinctions. "Be the host Turk or
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+British, he and his guests eat alike from the same dish,
+and hand food to the surrounding attendants, who are
+troubled with no scruples of caste to interfere with their
+hearty appetite."</p>
+
+<p>The mission was now drawing close to Yarkand,
+politically and commercially the most important city in
+the state, and accordingly preparations were made for a
+formal entry. At a village called Zilchak a chamberlain,
+or Yasawal-Bashi, came out with a party of the
+royal body-guard, Yakoob Beg's favourite <i>jigits</i>, in
+their buff leather uniform, to act as an escort, and the
+party was swollen <i>en route</i> by numerous influential
+citizens and merchants, who advanced to give an early
+welcome to the new arrivals. By these additions quite
+an imposing cavalcade drew nigh to the walls of
+Yarkand. The quarters set apart for the Englishmen
+were in the fort, which lies to the north of the city,
+so that Yarkand had to be ridden through before
+their halting place was reached. The people who
+thronged to witness the sight seemed very well
+disposed, and altogether there was every reason to
+feel well satisfied with these mutual first impressions,
+which, some had asserted, would be far from pleasant.</p>
+
+<p>The following day there was an interview of ceremony
+with the Dadkhwah of Yarkand, Mahomed Yunus Jan,
+for whose history the reader is referred to Chapter IX.,
+and then the visitors were permitted to go wherever
+they liked. On Mr. Forsyth's former visit a similar
+freedom had not been accorded him. Their first appearance
+in the streets was the occasion for a great deal of
+bustling on the part of the curious, but of friendly goodwill
+also. All the principal streets and bazaars were
+visited in turn, such as the butchers' street, or market,
+where the varieties of meat were clearly to be seen, and
+their quality tested by their tails or heads being left untouched.
+It appears to be the fashion in Yarkand to
+purchase the necessaries of life during the morning, and
+the luxuries in the evening. There is a special evening
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+bazaar, called Shám, where hats and other clothes, in
+addition to various other articles, are put up for sale in
+the afternoon. This, when lit up with Chinese lamps,
+must have presented a stirring sight, very similar to a
+country fair in our country. Sir Douglas Forsyth does
+not tell us whether under Yakoob Beg it was customary
+to illuminate this bazaar with the gaudy lamps of the
+Chinese, or whether our imagination of such a scene
+must be referred back to the days of the old domination.</p>
+
+<p>Nor were these harmonious relations confined to the
+lower people and ourselves alone. Their rulers set an
+example that all strove to imitate. Between the officers
+of the mission and the Dadkhwah something more
+cordial than a chivalrous sentiment of guest towards
+host sprang up, and was heartily reciprocated; while
+Hadji Torah smoothed down all difficulties by his ready
+tact and never-failing resource. The latter did not
+remain the whole time of the three weeks that the
+mission remained at Yarkand, but set out for the capital,
+in order to put the Ameer <i>au courant</i> with English
+affairs, and the exact objects our authorities had before
+them with regard to his country.</p>
+
+<p>Mahomed Yunus had placed at the disposal of the mission
+a considerable number of the carts of the country,
+which proved very serviceable. These carts are strongly
+built, with two wheels, six feet in diameter, and are
+drawn by four or six ponies, as the case may be. They
+are not permitted to carry a greater weight than ten
+hundredweight, but with that load it is quite customary
+for them to perform journeys of twenty and twenty-five
+miles a day. In carts of this kind the heavier baggage
+was carried from Yarkand to Kashgar, while the members
+of the mission with a lighter camp followed on
+some days afterwards. While mentioning these carts,
+so superior to the Indian modes of conveyance, we will
+remark that they also are used as omnibuses and stage
+coaches. They ply frequently between the fort and
+city of Kashgar, a distance of five miles, and they are
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+also used as a stage coach doing the whole distance
+from Yarkand to Kashgar in five stages. But no company,
+with its regulations and bye-laws has a monopoly
+of this branch of locomotion, and there is a tariff fixed
+by law which cannot be departed from.</p>
+
+<p>On the 28th of November the mission set out from
+Yarkand, and for a certain distance high officials, by
+order of the Dadkwah, bore it company to speed
+it on its journey. From Yarkand to Yangy Hissar the
+country was equally prosperous-looking, but there was
+much desert land as well. The villages of Kok Robat
+and Ak Robat (names meaning Blue and White Post-house
+respectively) wore a flourishing look, and the
+appearance of Yakoob Beg's soldiery, still <i>jigits</i>, who
+looked prim on parade, and yet could play the part of
+waiter, carpenter, or what not, with equal facility, added
+a sense of order and cohesion to the whole display. The
+appearance of Yangy Hissar was made more imposing
+to the view by the proximity of the formidable fort
+Yakoob Beg had erected there; but in itself, owing to
+the houses being surrounded by mud walls, with crenellated
+tops, it closely resembled a fortification. There
+was only a brief stay here, and the mission then commenced
+its last stage of all. The 4th of December,
+1873, was the eventful day which first saw an English
+envoy enter that capital, which Mr. Shaw had visited
+four years before in a non-official capacity. Special
+quarters had been prepared, at a short distance from
+the fort, where is also the royal palace, for the envoy,
+and these Elchi Khana had been fitted up in a very comfortable,
+if not luxurious style. Ihrar Khan Torah, who
+had visited India as envoy twice before, was the
+first to pay a visit to the new arrivals, and to request
+that they would come at once to see the Athalik Ghazi.
+The following description is Sir Douglas Forsyth's own
+account of his first interview with the Ameer:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"According to etiquette we dismounted at about forty
+paces from the gateway, and walked slowly along with
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+Ihrar Khan, the Yasawal-Bashi, or head chamberlain,
+with white wand in hand going ahead. In the outer
+gateway soldiers were seated on a dais with their firearms
+laid on the ground before them, their arms folded,
+and their eyes on the ground. We then crossed obliquely
+an empty court-yard, and passing through a second gateway
+filled with soldiers, crossed another court, on all
+sides of which soldiers in gay costumes were ranged
+seated. From this court we passed into the penetralia, a
+small court, in which not a soul was visible, and everywhere
+a deathlike stillness prevailed. At the further
+end of this court was a long hall, with several window
+doors. Ihrar Khan then led us in single file, with
+measured tread, to some steps at the side of the hall,
+and, entering almost on tiptoe, looked in, and, returning,
+beckoned with his hand to me to advance alone. As I
+approached the door he made a sign for me to enter, and
+immediately withdrew. I found myself standing at the
+threshold of a very common-looking room, perfectly
+bare of all ornament, and with a not very good carpet on
+the floor: looking about I saw enter at a doorway on
+the opposite side a tall stout man, plainly dressed. He
+beckoned with his hand, and I advanced, thinking that
+it must be a chamberlain who was to conduct me to
+'the presence.' Instinctively, however, I made a bow
+as I advanced, and soon found myself taken by both
+hands, and saluted with the usual form of politeness,
+and I knew that I was standing before the far-famed
+ruler of Eastern Turkestan. After a few words of welcome
+the Athalik led me across the room and seated me
+near him, by the side of a window. At this moment a
+salute of fifteen guns was fired. His Highness asked
+in an eager tone after the health of Her Majesty, and
+of the Viceroy, and soon afterwards called, in a low voice,
+to Ihrar Khan to bring in the other officers. They
+came in one by one, and each was shaken by the hand,
+and made to sit down by my side. Then there was a
+long and somewhat trying pause, during which the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+Athalik eyed each one of us with intent scrutiny. I had
+been told that etiquette forbade the guest to speak much
+on the first interview, and that it was a point of good
+manners to sit perfectly still with downcast eyes....
+After this silent ordeal had been undergone for some
+time, at a sign from the Athalik, sixteen soldiers came
+in with the dastarkhwan, and the Athalik breaking a
+loaf of bread shared it with us. After the cloth was
+removed, we, remembering our lesson in manners, rose
+up, and stroking our beards, said, 'Allah o Akbar;' soon
+after which the Athalik said, 'Khush, amadeed' ('You
+are welcome')."</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended this imposing interview, imposing not for
+any magnificence or barbaric splendour that appertained
+either to the court or person of the ruler, but by reason
+of the mysterious character of the Ameer himself, of his
+vague power and influence, and of the hold he had acquired
+over such of his subjects as comprised his court
+and his body guard. All his Khokandian friends and
+relations, whose fortunes, indeed, depended on his power,
+were stanchly attached to his person. It could not be
+given to envoys to possess such complete prescience as
+to foresee that the jarring elements, that still existed
+beneath the surface would suffice to overthrow his rule
+still more irretrievably when it received its first shock
+from external foes. To the observer, the appearance of
+Yakoob Beg and his military following was the highest
+evidence of latent power. Order was supreme, and discipline
+was as apparent in the palace of the Ameer as in
+the barrack yards of his fortresses.</p>
+
+<p>The formal interview took place on the 11th of
+December, when the presents from our government to
+the Ameer, carried by over 100 men, were delivered to
+His Highness. There were guns of all kinds, including
+two small cannon, vases, &amp;c., &amp;c.; but the token of
+friendship at which the ruler showed most symptoms
+of pleasure was the autograph letter of Her Majesty.
+This letter was enclosed in a "magnificent casket of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+pale yellow quartz, clamped with gilt bands and handles,
+and bossed with onyx stones." The Ameer received
+this with unconcealed satisfaction, several times repeating,
+"God be praised." And then he made those
+declarations of friendship which, taken in conjunction
+with our admiration for the man, were the means of
+riveting England and Kashgar into a closer alliance
+than any that has as yet subsisted between ourselves
+and any other Central Asian ruler. "Your Queen is a
+great sovereign. Her government is a powerful and a
+beneficent one. Her friendship is to be desired, as it
+always proves a source of advantage to those who
+possess it. The Queen is as the sun, in whose genial
+rays such poor people as I flourish. I particularly
+desire the friendship of the English. It is essential to
+me. Your rule is just. The road is open to every one,
+and from here to London any one can come and go with
+perfect freedom."</p>
+
+<p>On the 13th of December our representatives paid
+their first visit to the city of Kashgar. The country
+round Kashgar is very fertile, highly cultivated, and
+thickly populated, and the mission was not less struck
+by the air of prosperity prevalent here than it had been
+at Yarkand. In addition, the people had a healthier
+appearance, mainly through the absence of goitre. The
+Dadkhwah of Kashgar, Alish Beg, who was a Kashgari
+and not a Khokandian, was not less friendly than the
+Governor of Yarkand had been, and a very pleasant day
+was passed in his company. On the 18th a grand
+review was held, but for some reason, far from clear,
+only of the old Chinese troops who had taken service
+under the new ruler when Kashgar citadel fell. The
+description of the man&oelig;uvres which this force performed
+reads more like the display of an itinerant circus than
+of a disciplined army, but, nevertheless, these Khitay
+troops were excellent material for an army. Their
+practice with the <i>tyfu</i>, an awkward weapon, being a sort
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+of gun-cannon, carried by two men and served by three,
+was pronounced very good up to 250 yards.</p>
+
+<p>It is proper to state here, very clearly, that while the
+English mission was on Kashgarian soil it lived and
+travelled free of all expense, and as the Ameer paid his
+subjects in hard cash for whatever service they rendered,
+it is obvious that for a small state such as his was this
+was no trivial expense. It is only fair that this fact
+should be as widely known as possible, for some discontent
+was aroused by a similar hospitality being extended
+to the Seyyid Yakoob Khan last year. That discontent
+arose from ignorance; for it is hardly to be imagined
+that any Englishman would grumble at reciprocating
+the courteousness of a Central Asian potentate. The
+mission remained at the capital almost four months,
+and altogether the time passed very pleasantly. The
+weather was certainly rigorous; but then there was
+much to be done in the way of business, sight-seeing
+and amusement.</p>
+
+<p>On the 2nd of February Yakoob Beg placed his seal
+to the treaty of commerce, and this act concluded the
+business portion of the English mission. On the 16th
+of March formal leave was taken of the Athalik Ghazi,
+and the mission returned to India. It had accomplished
+its task with pre-eminent success, and the Forsyth Embassy
+deserves long to be remembered as the most ably
+conducted and practically useful embassy that ever set
+out from India.</p>
+
+<p>Since the signature of that treaty the Turkestan
+Trading Company has been very actively engaged in
+despatching several caravans annually into Kashgaria;
+but now, whether temporarily or permanently remains
+to be seen, its operations have come to a standstill. In
+these later years, Mr. Shaw, in his old post as Commissioner
+in Ladakh, had been as quietly performing his
+useful work as ever before; and there were rumours
+that he was to receive his reward in being sent as
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+another envoy, or rather as a resident agent, into Kashgaria,
+last year. If the appointment were made, it has
+at this date (October 1st) been for the time suspended;
+and such entirely new considerations have come into
+play that it may be postponed for an indefinite period.
+Hadji Torah's visit to this country, in June and July,
+1877, when the Turko-Russian war had rendered the
+Eastern Question once more acute, revived our interest,
+which had been flagging, in Eastern Turkestan. But
+he came at an unfortunate moment, for June brought
+us tidings of reverses round Turfan, and July did not
+pass away without the intelligence of the death of the
+Athalik Ghazi himself.</p>
+
+<p>There had, before the receipt of this definite intelligence,
+been absurd rumours of the part Yakoob Beg
+was resolved to play in Central Asia as the ally of the
+Porte, while he, poor man, was opposing with despair,
+and at the cost of his life, a relentless and irresistible
+foe. Such is the irony of circumstance! The vanquished
+in Asia was by some freak of imagination converted
+in Europe into the arbiter of a great question,
+and the guide of all those peoples of either Turkestan
+who chafe at the bit because of Russian rule. But in
+reality, with the return of Sir Douglas Forsyth, our
+relations with Kashgar, which at one time promised
+to have been most cordial, languished for want of a
+motive. No amount of admiration would suffice to
+make us permanently guarantee Kashgar against Russia,
+for the bare facts concerning the intervening country
+at once chilled the sympathy at our hearts. The Grim
+Pass, and the road lined with desiccated travellers and
+animals, effaced the bright picture of the orchards of
+Kashgar and the busy streets of Yarkand. There was
+a sigh of profound relief, that would not be suppressed,
+when Sir Douglas Forsyth's report made the fact clear,
+that wherever else India might be menaced she was safe,
+at least, from attack north of Cashmere. It is true that
+there is a feasible route from Khoten to Ruduk, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+thence to India; but Yakoob Beg did not hold it, and
+its consideration was considered to be beside the
+question. In fact, after 1874, we entertained much the
+same opinion towards Kashgar and Yakoob Beg that
+we did towards Poland and Kosciusko; and we were
+beginning to reconcile ourselves to a Russian installation
+in that state, when the returning Chinese made us
+reflect more deeply on Central Asian matters, and
+discover that after all has been said against the assertion
+there exists a third, and hitherto neglected, great Power
+in Central Asia. There was never anything save a
+kindly feeling between the two countries, and all who
+could admire bravery and justice and hospitality and
+frank courtesy were attached to the individual who had
+proved that he possessed all these attributes in no mean
+degree. But there was no deeper sympathy than this,
+or rather there was no stronger connecting link. The
+Indian government felt that it would be championing
+an unrecognized cause in supporting Yakoob Beg
+against all comers, and in the press of more urgent
+matters our relations with the Athalik Ghazi became
+lost sight of.</p>
+
+<p>The effect of this treatment upon the Ameer was not
+unapparent, and during the last twelve months of his
+rule he had become more Russian and less English in
+his policy. But we preserved "the even-tenor of our
+way." Yakoob Beg had no hold over us such as must
+always be possessed by the ruler of Afghanistan. Practically
+speaking, his state was more inaccessible to us
+than Tibet, and the Russians at Yarkand would be a
+source of far less danger to us than warlike and hostile
+Chinese might become at Lhasa. To sum up, England
+and Kashgar were friends because they had no reason
+to be foes; but they were indifferent friends. The tear
+might be shed for mutual misfortunes, and condolences
+might be uttered when cause for grief arose; but that
+was all. There was no alliance in the true sense, nor
+was there firm and unswerving friendship. There was
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+a brief space occupied by sympathy and goodwill; then
+ensued an unbroken period of unvarying indifference.
+Before 1877, the spark that had been kindled by Mr.
+Shaw, and fanned to the dimensions of a flame by Sir
+Douglas Forsyth, had gone out, and with its extinction
+passed away the solid fabric that many had hoped to
+rear upon the base which the enterprise of a few intrepid
+men had diligently prepared. Whether we were prudent
+or imprudent, true or false, kind or unkind, Yakoob
+Beg leaned on a broken reed when he bade defiance to
+Russia, trusting on our support. This chapter of our
+policy in Central Asia may be closed as speedily as
+possible; if we do not come out of it with much glory,
+it is to be hoped that a lenient posterity may judge our
+demerits with a merciful consideration for the preservation
+of a strict and irresponsible neutrality.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_XII"></a><span>CHAPTER XII.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">YAKOOB BEG'S LAST WAR WITH CHINA, AND DEATH.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Until</span> the close of the autumn of 1876 Yakoob Beg
+had not devoted much personal attention to his eastern
+frontier. After the first Tungan war and the capture
+of Kucha he had confided to his son and his lieutenants,
+the charge of maintaining order in the annexed districts,
+and of protecting his dominions against any hostile
+attempt on the part of the Chinese. About the month
+of September in that year couriers arrived with strange
+tidings in Kashgar. The message, we can well imagine,
+was terrible in its brevity. The Chinese had appeared
+north of the Tian Shan. They had sacked Urumtsi,
+and were laving close siege to Manas. Their numbers
+rumour had magnified to almost a hundred thousand
+combatants, and they came armed with all the auxiliaries
+Western science could supply.</p>
+
+<p>Before following the movements of the ruler of
+Kashgar upon the receipt of this intelligence, it will
+be necessary to consider what had been the history of
+this Chinese army which had so suddenly appeared
+in Jungaria. When in the natural course of events the
+Chinese government, having solved the Taeping and
+Panthay difficulties, having restored order where disorder
+had been supreme, and having created an army where
+there had been only a disorganized rabble, turned its
+attention to the question, which it had never lost sight
+of, of chastising the Tungan rebels beyond Kansuh,
+the victorious soldiers of Yunnan, instead of being
+disbanded, were invited to participate in a fresh campaign
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+in the regions beyond Gobi. It requires no great
+stretch of imagination to realize the scene when the
+imperial edict came before these veterans, calling on
+all true soldiers to vindicate their country's honour and
+their outraged religion against the Tungan outcasts;
+how the generals, such as Chang Yao, set an example of
+enthusiasm which the main body of their soldiers
+speedily followed. In the presence of such military
+enthusiasm we are transported back to the days of
+imperial Rome, when the subjection of one province
+was only the prelude to some fresh triumph, and when
+every campaign found in the ranks of the army the
+veterans of the last. So it was that the victors of
+Talifoo, by long marches through Szchuen and Shensi,
+reached Lanchefoo, the capital of Kansuh, where the
+viceroy of that province was gathering together the
+munitions of war, and the recruits who were to swell
+the nucleus of trained soldiers to the proportions
+suitable to an invading army. Some have considered,
+and we are far from denying that there is much to
+support such a view, that there was a political motive
+at the root of this enterprise, the motive being a desire
+on the part of the ruling family to give employment to
+a large disciplined body of men, who if retained in
+China proper would be at the service of any powerful
+conspirator or presumptuous aspirant to imperial
+honours. Whether there is any foundation or not for
+this supposition, it is certain that those troops who
+were not required for garrison work in Yunnan were
+taken by a round-about route at a great distance from
+the capital to the north-west frontier town of Lanchefoo,
+there to prepare for the most arduous military
+enterprise China had undertaken since her conquest of
+Eastern Turkestan in the last century.</p>
+
+<p>It is not certain when these movements began to be
+carried out, but there appears to be no reason to doubt
+that the advanced portion of the Chinese army had commenced
+its march westward before the end of the year
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+1874. In the barren region between Lanchefoo and
+Hamil, a tract of country some 900 miles as the crow
+flies, but probably nearer 1,200 by the road followed by
+the Chinese, such difficulties were encountered that one
+if not two winters were occupied in overcoming these
+preliminary obstacles to the advance of the main force.
+The interval was not passed in complete idleness at
+headquarters, where magazines of arms and stores were
+being collected, recruits enlisted and drilled, and the
+plan of campaign that was to astonish Asia, if not Europe
+also, was being drawn up by the Viceroy of Kansuh
+in person and his able lieutenants. At last, with the
+break of spring upon the desert plains of Gobi, the
+Chinese army, which numbered in its entirety some
+50,000 men, set out on the long road across the desert
+to the more fertile regions lying north and south of the
+Celestial Mountains. Of the details of this portion of
+the enterprise the <i>Pekin Gazette</i> is strangely reticent.
+The most profound secrecy was observed, and, although
+it was known that military events were in progress in
+the north-west, their object and their extent were mysteries.
+After the delay experienced by the advanced
+guard, which had to form fixed encampments, or rather
+settlements, in the desert, and plant the corn that was
+to enable it to advance in the following spring, no
+serious check was experienced by the Chinese until they
+appeared before the walls of Urumtsi, which the Tungan
+leaders had resolved to defend.</p>
+
+<p>Although several officers in the service of Yakoob
+Beg happened to be in the city, and several of the leading
+Tungani resided there, the defence was not prolonged,
+and after a few days Urumtsi surrendered to the Chinese.
+Many of the inhabitants had fled to the neighbouring
+city of Manas, but the garrison was massacred by order
+of the Chinese generals. There is no mention in this
+case of what fate befell those of the inhabitants who
+remained.</p>
+
+<p>Urumtsi surrendered towards the close of August,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+1876, and on the 2nd of September the Chinese sat
+down before the fortifications of Manas, a much more
+strongly situated city, and defended with the whole force
+of the Tungan people. The first panic at the appearance
+of the Chinese had passed off, and the defenders of
+Manas recognized that they were not only fighting for
+their cause and independence, but also for their lives
+and the honour of their families. The terrible lesson
+of Urumtsi was not without its effect upon the resolute
+but despairing garrison of Manas. The capture of
+Urumtsi was a creditable performance in a military sense,
+but the campaign had to be decided before the ramparts
+of Manas. On the 2nd of September the Chinese batteries
+commenced to play on the north-east portion of
+the wall, and for two months the bombardment was
+carried on on all sides with more or less vigour. Several
+assaults were repulsed, and the Tungani, in face of
+superior odds and weapons, had behaved like brave men.
+But the Chinese were as persistent in their attack after
+an eight weeks' siege as they had been on the first day
+of their arrival, and the provisions of the Tungani were
+almost exhausted. With their supplies ebbed also their
+courage, and, after an unsuccessful sortie, the Tungan
+general, Hai-Yen, presented himself to the Chinese outposts
+begging to be accorded an honourable capitulation.
+Ostensibly, terms were granted&mdash;or, rather, to put the
+matter as it is expressed in the official Chinese report,
+everything was left vague&mdash;and on the 6th of November
+Hai-Yen and the main body of his fighting men came
+forth from the city towards the Chinese camp. The subsequent
+events are not clear, but it seems that the attitude
+of this body was suspicious. The men were armed,
+they were in a well-ordered phalanx, and to the Chinese
+on the hills around it looked as if they were about to
+attempt to cut their way through. Once the Chinese
+generals entertained the suspicion, they proceeded to
+act promptly upon it, as if it were an incontestable fact,
+and the Tungani, attacked from all sides, by artillery,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+horse, and foot, were in a short time annihilated. Such
+of their chiefs as were not slain were brought before the
+Chinese generals, and forthwith executed "with the
+extreme of torture." Every able-bodied man found in
+the city or its vicinity was massacred; but the report
+distinctly states that the women, children, and old men
+were spared, and there is no reason to doubt the veracity
+of the Chinese. There would, in their eyes, be no need
+to palliate such strictly just acts of retribution as these.</p>
+
+<p>Not content with having chastised the living Tungani,
+by annihilating them, as a race capable of self-defence
+for a generation to come, the bodies of some of
+the prime movers in the Tungan movement in its
+infancy, such as To-teh-lin, Heh-tsun, and Han-Hing-Nung,
+were exhumed and quartered, as an example to
+all traitors to the Chinese Empire. The fall of Manas
+struck a blow that resounded throughout Central Asia,
+and at the intelligence a panic spread among all the
+peoples of Chinese Turkestan and Jungaria. The enterprise
+had been conducted with such astonishing secrecy,
+and the blow had been struck with such rapidity and
+skill, that the effect was enhanced by these causes, new
+alike in the annals of China and Central Asia. Not
+only had the Khitay returned for revenge, but they had
+brought with them all the auxiliaries that make
+England and Russia the dominant powers in that
+continent. The Khitay no longer advanced in the
+clumsy formation of a long-forgotten age, but in
+obedience to orders based on the models of France
+and Germany. Their artillery was not a source of
+danger to the artillerists alone, but as effective as the
+workshops of Herr Krupp can supply. But, above all,
+their generals had made still more astonishing progress.
+In the sieges of Urumtsi and Manas they had proved
+themselves to be no mean tacticians; in their next and
+more extended enterprise they were to show that they
+must be ranked still higher as strategists.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of 1870 the Tungani had ceased to be
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+an independent people. The great majority of them
+had fallen either in the field or by the hand of the
+executioner; and with their disappearance the first
+portion of the task of the Chinese army was completed.
+The blood of the Khitay massacred in 1862 and 1863
+was atoned for, and Chinese prestige restored to as
+great a height as at any time it had been in the present
+century. More remained to be accomplished, in its danger
+as in its result more important, which we have now to
+consider, before their full task should be consummated;
+but the Chinese army and its generals had done, even
+up to this point, a feat of which any country might be
+proud.</p>
+
+<p>These events appear sudden and strange to us
+who are far removed from their influence, and who
+only entertain a languid kind of supercilious interest
+in matters in which the Chinese are the guiding spirit.
+But what must they have appeared to Yakoob Beg in
+his palace at Kashgar, although that palace was 1,000
+miles removed from the spot where his victorious
+enemies lay encamped? It is impossible for us to
+gauge the feeling of apprehension with which these
+first triumphs of the Chinese were viewed throughout
+Eastern Turkestan; and if the bold heart of the
+Athalik Ghazi did not misgive him, it was not through
+any light spirit as to the gravity of the danger.</p>
+
+<p>Intelligence of the fall of Manas reached Yakoob
+Beg, probably, before the end of November, and in
+consequence of the lateness of the season he had the
+whole of the winter before him to make his preparations
+for defence. The surrender of these cities was not
+generally known in this country until April, 1877,
+when we also heard of Yakoob Beg's march eastward
+to protect his menaced frontier. There is very little to
+be learnt of the internal affairs of Kashgar between
+March, 1876, and March, 1877; that is to say, between
+the close of the revolt in Khokand, with the surrender
+of Abderrahman Aftobatcha, and the mustering of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+Yakoob Beg's army round the city of Turfan, or
+Tarfur. There can be no doubt that in that period
+some important changes had taken place in the sentiment
+of the Kashgarian people; these changes may
+not have been very perceptible to a casual observer,
+yet in their consequences they were as important as
+manifest sedition. It is not difficult to suggest what
+some of these modifications may have been; of what
+they resulted in there can be no doubt&mdash;the weakening
+of the power of the Athalik Ghazi.</p>
+
+<p>Yakoob Beg's over-caution in November, 1875, when
+the last rising broke out in Khokand, damaged his
+prestige more than a lost battle. It damped the
+ardour of the Khokandian element among his followers,
+and when we remember that these were his ablest and
+most devoted partisans, this alone was a serious blow.
+But there are many tokens that the disaffection was
+not confined to any special party among his people,
+but was spread amongst them all. The Tungan wars
+had never been popular, and had been costly and
+sanguinary operations. The old trade with Russian
+territory, that once had been so lucrative, languished
+for want of a fostering hand, and the difficulties of
+that northern range of mountains, which the patience
+and care of the Chinese had for a time pierced through,
+were made the most of to prevent intercourse with
+Kuldja and Vernoe. More than all, too, all Yakoob
+Beg's skill as a "manipulator of phrases" could not
+conceal the fact that his treaty with England was a
+failure. It did not give him that British protection
+which alone he cared for, and it did not provide, through
+the greater obstacles of nature, his people with that
+new trade outlet which was the sole object worth
+securing in their eyes. The Forsyth treaty seemed to
+bring the relations of England and Kashgar to a
+sudden termination; and the Kashgari were quite
+shrewd enough to perceive that the Athalik Ghazi
+would not be buttressed by English bayonets against
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+Russian aggression, if that instrument was to be held,
+as in their eyes it could not be otherwise than held,
+the only connecting link between the countries. The
+consequence of this belief was a resignation to a
+Russian subjection at no distant date.</p>
+
+<p>Yakoob Beg's tenure of power would be morally
+weakened by the existence of these causes for discontent
+among his people, and it was at such a moment, when
+they had perhaps only slightly become clear to his
+eyes, that the return of the Chinese was heralded. In
+the face of a great and common danger a well-affected
+people would have rallied round their head, and in the
+crisis have found a joint necessity to produce a better
+understanding than existed before among their component
+parts. The country east of Kucha, where it was
+inhabited at all, was inhabited by the few survivors of
+the massacres ordered by Yakoob Beg's representatives.
+Amongst these there could be no great amount of affection
+towards his cause. The garrison of the city of
+Kashgar consisted in the main of the pardoned Khitay
+soldiers&mdash;Yangy Mussulmans, as they were called&mdash;and
+from them no stanch support could be expected against
+their Buddhist countrymen (see Appendix). The Tungani
+of Kucha and Aksu and the neighbourhood were the
+most numerous recruits in the army, and from them at
+least it might have been supposed that the Athalik
+Ghazi would obtain faithful service. Even among
+them, however, there was discontent. They had
+everything to dread at the hands of the Chinese.
+It was they who had massacred the helpless Khitay,
+a deed from the stain of which Yakoob Beg at least
+was free; and it was they against whom the wrath of
+China would in the first place be directed. But they
+had also their grudges against the ruler. He had
+beaten them in the field of battle, and had compelled
+more than he had induced them to join his army.
+They hated the Mahomedan Andijani only one degree
+less than the Buddhist Chinaman, and their ambitious
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+game had been foiled by the military talents of their
+present ruler. They had run, in the years 1862&ndash;65,
+all the risk attaching to a revolt against China, and
+when they had accomplished their task they found
+themselves defrauded of their reward. Therefore, in
+the face of a Chinese invasion there was disunion in
+the ranks of the very Mahomedan rebels who had
+originated all these troubles. The nucleus of Yakoob
+Beg's army, when these have been struck out as non-efficient,
+was small indeed; but it was only on that
+nucleus he could depend in fighting for his crown
+and his religion.</p>
+
+<p>During the winter of 1876, when he was busy in
+collecting arms, ammunition, and stores at Yarkand and
+Kashgar, he must have discovered many of these discordant
+elements; yet he pushed his preparations resolutely
+on. He conceived that under the circumstances
+the boldest policy would be the most prudent, and that
+if he could but beat the Chinese in the field by superior
+tactics he might ride triumphant over all his difficulties
+and dangers. With these views uppermost in his mind
+he concentrated all his forces, Tungan included, along
+the southern slopes of the Tian Shan, with his headquarters
+at Turfan. The Russian officer, Captain
+Kuropatkine, who had been sent to Kashgar on a
+mission, and who had journeyed through the whole
+extent of Kashgaria to meet the Ameer at Turfan,
+computed Yakoob Beg's army at the following strength,
+and supplied the accompanying information concerning
+its disposition along the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>The fort of Devanchi, guarding the principal defile
+through the mountain range, was garrisoned by 900
+<i>jigits</i>, armed with muskets and two guns&mdash;one a breech-loader.
+At Turfan there were with the Ameer 3,500
+<i>jigits</i> and 5,000 <i>sarbazes</i>, with 20 guns, mostly of
+ancient make. Toksoun, a fortified place, some miles
+nearer Korla, on the main road, was occupied by
+4,000 <i>jigits</i> and 2,000 <i>sarbazes</i> with five guns. Hacc
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+Kuli Beg had command here. At Korla there were
+also about 1,500 men, who were brought up to the
+front shortly after Captain Kuropatkine's departure.
+With these 17,000 men, scattered over a widely
+extended area, Yakoob Beg had to defend himself
+against an enemy superior in numbers, and, as the
+result showed, in generalship as well.</p>
+
+<p>The Russian officer gave, on his return, a very gloomy
+account of Yakoob Beg's affairs, predicting the speedy
+disintegration of his state. He also asserted that the
+Tungani were deserting in great numbers, and that
+everywhere east of Kucha there was discontent and
+distrust of the Kashgarian rulers. This disparaging
+account was confirmed by Colonel Prjevalsky, some
+months afterwards, upon his return from his adventurous
+journey to Lob Nor. In a letter, dated from
+Little Yuldus, May 28, 1877, he said he had been very
+kindly received, but also suspiciously watched by
+Yakoob Beg. "All the way from Hoidu Got to Lob
+Nor he was escorted by a guard of honour, who
+officiously endeavoured to satisfy his smallest wishes,
+but would not allow him, or any of his people, to come
+in contact with the inhabitants. Yakoob Beg somewhat
+peremptorily asked Colonel Prjevalsky to explain
+why the Russians had provisioned the Chinese forces
+arrayed against him; but, in an interview at Korla, he
+again and again assured the Russian traveller that he
+was a friend and well-wisher to Russia. Notwithstanding
+these precautions, Colonel Prjevalsky and the
+other members of the expedition succeeded in making
+the natives tell them that they were disgusted with the
+military despotism of Yakoob Beg, and that they hoped
+the Russians would soon be coming."</p>
+
+<p>The information contained in this letter refers to the
+end of April, 1877, or to a time after the first defeat of
+Yakoob Beg by the Chinese, and his withdrawal to
+Korla; but it is <i>à propos</i> in this place as confirming
+Captain Kuropatkine's remarks.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In addition to the 17,000, more or less, disciplined
+soldiers whom Yakoob Beg had mustered at the frontier,
+Captain Kuropatkine mentioned 10,000 Doungans&mdash;that
+is, the Tungani inhabitants of this eastern region.
+Not only were these notoriously untrustworthy, but
+they were also badly armed, and were, on the whole, a
+source of weakness rather than of strength. Before
+the close of the month of February the Athalik Ghazi
+was at Turfan, constructing forts at Toksoun and
+towards the Tian Shan, and endeavouring to inspire
+his followers with his own indomitable spirit.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the Chinese had not been idle.
+They had, after their triumph over the Tungani,
+established their headquarters at Guchen, near Urumtsi,
+and had so far secured their communications with
+Kansuh that a regular service of couriers was organized,
+and a continual supply of arms, military stores, and
+men flowed across Gobi to the invading army. For
+instance, a large arsenal for the storage of arms was
+erected at Lanchefoo, and on one occasion as many as
+10,000 rifles of the Berdan pattern were sent in a
+single convoy. While Tso Tsung Tang, the Viceroy of
+Kansuh and Commander-in-Chief, was making these
+preparations north of the Tian Shan, for forcing the
+range with the melting of the snow, another Chinese
+general, Chang Yao, was stationed at Hamil for the
+purpose of seconding the main attack by a diversion
+south of the range. In estimating the total number of
+the Chinese army at 60,000 men&mdash;that is, 50,000 round
+Guchen and 10,000 at Hamil&mdash;we would express only
+what is probable. The total number may have been
+more or less, but in estimating it at 60,000 men we
+believe we are as close to exactitude as is possible under
+the circumstances. In the month of March the Chinese
+generals had made all their preparations for attacking
+Yakoob Beg. So far as our geographical information
+goes there is no direct road from Guchen to Turfan,
+and consequently the chief Chinese attack was made
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+from Urumtsi against Devanchi, where Yakoob Beg had
+constructed a fort. But, although the larger army was
+man&oelig;uvring north of the Tian Shan, the decisive blow
+was in reality struck by the smaller force advancing
+from Hamil. If we are to judge from the disposition
+of the Kashgarian army, the movements of this brigade
+had not obtained that attention from the Athalik Ghazi
+which they merited.</p>
+
+<p>General Chang Yao captured the small towns of
+Chightam and Pidjam in the middle of April without
+encountering any serious opposition. And from the
+latter of these places, some fifty miles east of Turfan,
+commenced that concerted movement with his superior,
+Tso Tsung Tang, which was to overcome all Kashgarian
+resistance. A glance at the map will show that
+Yakoob Beg at Turfan was caught fairly between two
+fires by armies advancing from Urumtsi and Pidjam,
+and if defeated his line of retreat was greatly exposed
+to an enterprising enemy. Upon the Chinese becoming
+aware of the success of their preliminary movements a
+general advance was ordered in all directions. It is
+evident that the Chinese were met at first with a
+strenuous resistance at Devanchi, and that the forcing
+of the Tian Shan defiles had not been accomplished
+when news reached the garrison that their ruler had
+been expelled from Turfan by a fresh Chinese army. It
+was then that confusion spread fast through all ranks of
+the followers of Yakoob Beg; in that hour of doubt and
+unreasoning panic the majority of his soldiers either
+went over to the enemy or fled in headlong flight to
+Karashar. In this moment of desperation the Athalik
+Ghazi still bore himself like a good soldier. Outside
+Turfan he gave battle to the invader, and though driven
+from the field by overwhelming odds he yet once more
+made a stand at Toksoun, forty miles west of Turfan, and
+when a second time defeated withdrew to Karashar to
+make fresh efforts to withstand the invading army.
+Yakoob Beg probably lost in these engagements not less
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+than 20,000 men, including Tungani, by desertion and
+at the hands of the enemy. He consequently conceived
+that it would be prudent to withdraw still farther into
+his territory, and accordingly left Karashar, after a few
+days' residence, for Korla.</p>
+
+<p>Some weeks before the occurrence of these striking
+events Yakoob Beg had sent an envoy to Tashkent to
+solicit the aid of the Russians against the advancing
+Chinese. But the Russians only gave his messenger
+fair words, and did not interfere with Mr. Kamensky's
+commercial transactions with the Chinese army. At the
+moment, too, Russia was so busily occupied in Europe
+that she had no leisure to devote to the Kashgarian
+question.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese had for many years been good friends
+with Russia, and Yakoob Beg had all his life been a
+scarcely concealed enemy. Between two such combatants
+the sympathies of the Russian government must at
+first have certainly gone with the former; nor had
+Yakoob Beg's attitude towards Russia of late been as
+discreet as it might have been. His nephew, the Seyyid
+Yakoob Khan, was notoriously an agent for some
+indefinite purpose at Constantinople. His protection of
+the Bokharan prince, Abdul Melik, or Katti Torah, the
+most bitter enemy of Russia in Central Asia, was also
+ill calculated to attract Russian sympathy to his side.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover there was little or nothing to arouse
+Russian susceptibilities in Chinese victories so far
+distant as Urumtsi or Turfan. In many respects, too,
+this Chinese invasion was a relief for Russia. It freed
+her hands in Central Asia in a manner that perhaps
+will never be sufficiently appreciated. Buddhist victories
+in Eastern Turkestan struck a severe blow at Mahomedan
+vigour throughout the Khanates, and the waning
+prestige of the Badaulet, or the "fortunate one," acted
+as a warning of strange significance to all the neighbouring
+princes.</p>
+
+<p>It is not difficult, therefore, to discover valid reasons
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+why the Russians declined to negotiate between the
+combatants, and although Yakoob Beg endeavoured to
+come to terms with the Chinese, on the understanding
+that his personal safety should be guaranteed, all his
+diplomatic overtures were met by categorical refusals.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese after entering Toksoun came to a sudden
+halt, for which the causes are not evident. But the
+terror of their name had gone before them, and the
+country east of Karashar was hurriedly abandoned by
+its inhabitants. The Chinese delay may have been
+caused by the necessity for collecting provisions to
+enable them to advance further, or perhaps it may have
+arisen from the outbreak of some epidemic, as asserted
+by one of the Indian journals. On this point the
+<i>Pekin Gazette</i> is profoundly silent. The number for the
+23rd of June contained a narrative of the operations
+round Turfan, and also a list of the honours and rewards
+given to the successful generals; but it and its subsequent
+issues are silent as to the causes for the Chinese inactivity
+that then for many months ensued. The most
+striking sentence in this report is that which says that
+"the Mahomedans who submitted themselves were
+permitted to revert to their peaceful avocations;"
+and if this be true, this is one instance, at all events, of
+the Chinese exercising moderation. Strange as it may
+seem, with this preliminary success the vigour of the
+Chinese invasion appeared to die away, and for five
+months nothing more was heard of the whereabouts of
+the Chinese army. In that interval the most important
+events occurred in Kashgaria, but with these, the
+Chinese, although the originators of them, had nothing
+to do. In the closing scene of all of the eventful life
+we have been in these pages considering the invading
+Khitay had no part. They were probably not aware of
+what was taking place some 300 miles from their camp
+until many weeks after it had happened; and then
+conceived that their best policy would be to give time
+for the disintegrating causes at work within the state to
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+have their full effect before they advanced westward<ins class="corr" title="Missing period added">.</ins>
+When Colonel Prjevalsky saw Yakoob Beg it must have
+been within a very short period of his death. The
+shadow of approaching events may have been upon the
+defeated conqueror, who from recent disaster could
+only presage worse yet to come.</p>
+
+<p>Of the exact manner of Yakoob Beg's death there
+are various accounts. The most probable is that he was
+murdered by a party of conspirators, who were led by
+Hakim Khan Torah. The date given is the 1st of
+May. That Yakoob Beg should meet with a violent
+death, considering that he was surrounded by such
+doubtful followers as the Tungan chiefs, is not to be
+marvelled at, and that the first reverse in his career
+should be the signal for fresh disturbances is only what
+we should expect from a consideration of his country and
+its peoples in the light of past history. So far, then, as
+the assertion goes, that Yakoob Beg was murdered, there
+is nothing improbable about it. But there are many
+discrepancies in the accompanying narrative. The first
+intelligence of the death of the Ameer of Kashgar was
+contained in a telegram published in the <i>Times</i> of
+July 16 last year. It stated that his death occurred
+at Korla, after a short illness, and that he had
+nominated as his successor Hakim Khan Torah, to the
+express disregard of his own sons. The telegram went
+on to say that Hakim Khan had declined to accept the
+gift, and that the Ameer's eldest son, Beg Kuli Beg, had
+succeeded to the throne. A few days after this telegram
+Hakim Khan Torah was identified with the
+ancient dynasty of Kashgar, which Yakoob Beg had
+first seated on the throne, and then displaced in the
+person of Buzurg Khan. All this intelligence came
+from Tashkent. On the 23rd of July we learnt in this
+country, from the same source, that Beg Kuli Beg had
+notified his father's death and his own accession to the
+throne to General Kaufmann. There no longer
+remained any doubt that Yakoob Beg was really dead.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For some reason or other Beg Kuli Beg does not
+appear to have been a favourite with the Russians; but
+this aversion to him was based on some mistake, for
+Beg Kuli Beg was certainly unfriendly to England, and
+was scarcely civil to our envoy, Sir Douglas Forsyth.
+Moreover, he at once placed himself in communication
+with the Russian government, asking for advice as to
+the course he should pursue with regard to the Chinese
+invasion, and renewing his father's request that Russia
+should stop the supplies sent to Urumtsi and Turfan
+from Kuldja. It was reported, but not confirmed, that
+his latter demand was complied with.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was heard of the history of these
+events until the end of August, when news reached
+India through Ladakh and Cashmere that Yakoob Beg
+"had been assassinated by Hakim Khan Torah, the son
+of Buzurg Khan." This was the first hint that Yakoob
+Beg had fallen by the hands of discontented partisans.
+In itself so natural, it threw fresh light on the strange
+deed he was reported to have done of disinheriting his
+own family, and it speedily became the accepted version.
+The question then was, who was Hakim Khan Torah?
+Two versions were put forward; one was that he was
+the son of Buzurg Khan, the other that he was a Khoja
+chief of Kucha. The former was the more plausible,
+but as his name does not occur in Sir Douglas Forsyth's
+exhaustive report, it is open to some objection, more
+particularly when we are told that he bore a principal
+part in the conquest of Kashgar by Yakoob Beg. The
+latter suggestion was much more difficult to prove, but
+was not open to the same objection. Grant that
+Hakim, or Aali, Khan Torah was a pardoned Kucha chief
+when that city fell into the hands of the Athalik
+Ghazi, and there was nothing extraordinary in his
+having proved a traitor. Assume that he still conceived
+he had claims upon the governorship of that city, of
+which the <i>Turkestan Gazette</i> asserts he had been
+Dadkwah, and there is nothing inconsistent in his
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+having sought to realize his own ambitious schemes
+the moment fortune frowned upon his conqueror. That
+Hakim Khan, if son to Buzurg Khan, should seek to
+revenge his father's deposition and life of exile is
+not in itself strange we admit; but if he were a subjected
+ruler, who regarded Yakoob Beg as an adventurer
+from Khokand with no claims to his fealty, his
+plot against and murder of the Kashgarian prince at
+once appears not only possible, but the true story. As
+a leading Khoja of Kucha he would also have claims
+to represent one branch of the old reigning family of
+Kashgar. In the face, too, of a great and pressing
+danger from the Chinese, his hereditary enemies, a son
+of Buzurg Khan would scarcely make confusion worse
+confounded by murdering the <i>de facto</i> sovereign; whereas
+a Kucha leader might aspire to play in such a crisis
+the same part that Amursana did in the last century.
+It was said that Hakim Khan entered into some
+negotiations with the Chinese, who gave him little
+encouragement.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Turkestan Gazette</i> still adhered to its original
+statement that Yakoob Beg had died of fever on the
+1st of May, after an illness of seven days' duration, and
+that on the 13th of May the body was brought in
+state from Korla to Kashgar for the purpose of being
+deposited in the mausoleum of Appak Khoja. Then,
+according to the <i>Turkestan Gazette</i>, there ensued one of
+those atrocious deeds which have so often marked the
+history of Central Asian states. The second son of the
+dead Ameer, Hacc Kuli Beg, who had been with
+him during his last moments, escorted the funeral
+cortége, and was met at a short distance from the city
+by his elder brother, Kuli Beg. The elder son at once
+knelt before his father's coffin, and then rising, without
+a moment's delay fired a pistol at his brother, who
+dropped down dead. Not content with this fratricide,
+Kuli Beg had the whole of the escort put to the sword,
+and returned to Kashgar with his own followers escorting
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+the coffin. We know nothing whatever of the
+reasons for this atrocious act, but the fact of Kuli Beg
+being in Kashgar, and not in the east, shows how
+Hakim Khan was able to establish his authority in
+Kucha and Korla. It will be more convenient to
+consider in another chapter the further course of these
+internal troubles, and also the final triumph of the
+Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>There are, therefore, two versions of how Yakoob
+Beg met his death, and in support of each view there
+is a certain amount of evidence. All the information
+on the subject has been recorded, and it is conflicting.
+The Chinese reports in the <i>Pekin Gazette</i> ignore the
+subject altogether. Their personal hatred was directed
+more against Bayen Hu, a Tungan leader who had fled
+from Hamil some years before, than against the
+Athalik Ghazi. Of the main fact that Yakoob Beg
+died at Korla in May, 1877, there is no doubt, and
+that the most eventful career that has marked its track
+in the history of Central Asia for several generations was
+then brought to a close.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever opinion may be formed of the man from his
+varied fortunes, there will be few who will deny that he
+possessed great mental qualities; some will be found, no
+doubt, to question his action in deposing Buzurg Khan,
+and with more justice may his earlier life be blamed
+for his repeated desertion of his friend and patron
+Khudayar. Others will call to mind his vacillating conduct
+in 1875, and deny that he possessed that decision
+of character which is the salient feature in all truly
+great men. His unnecessary wars with the Tungani,
+and the short-sighted policy he pursued of extending
+his empire up to the vicinity of China, were also calculated
+to lower his claims to be considered a general or a
+statesman. In extenuation of these acts, which decidedly
+undermined the fabric of his rule, it may be mentioned
+that there is one side of Yakoob Beg's character that
+has never received sufficient attention. It is what was
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+the secret to his foreign policy. He certainly did not
+aspire, as many thought, to contest unaided the palm of
+superiority with Russia in Central Asia. He was far too
+well informed to dream of that. Nor could he expect
+to be able to extend his power to the south, where both
+Afghanistan and Cashmere would resent his presence.
+The only option left to him as a conqueror was to
+continue aggrandizing himself at the expense of China.
+We know not what dreams may have entered the mind
+of the stanch Mussulman in his palace at Kashgar of
+uniting in one crusade against China all the followers of
+the Prophet in Central Asia and of emulating the deeds
+of some of his predecessors who had carried fire and sword
+into the border provinces of China, and whom even the
+Great Wall could not withstand. Over these bright
+imaginings, arising from tales told of the decadence of
+China, we know not how much Yakoob Beg may have
+brooded as he saw his power spread eastward through
+fifteen degrees of longitude, through Aksu to Kucha,
+Kucha to Korla, Korla to Karashar, and Karashar to
+Turfan, until from his far outpost at Chightam he could
+almost see the rich cities of Hamil and Barkul, cities
+which are the key to Western China and Northern Tibet,
+and imagine them to be within his grasp. But the
+policy of Yakoob Beg will not be clearly appreciated,
+unless we bear in mind that these ambitious longings
+were held in check by fear of Russia, and by the
+hostility of the Tungani, who continued to plot even
+when subdued. His keen spirit must have chafed
+greatly under the inability to accomplish that which
+he conceived to be possible, and despite his numerous
+triumphs he was at heart a disappointed man.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, during these later years, when the task he
+had set before him had been nearly accomplished, and he
+had leisure to look around, he was no longer young or as
+energetic as he had been. He was entering, for an Asiatic,
+upon the evening of life, and had no longer the physical
+power to essay any protracted and desperate enterprise.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+For a "forlorn hope" he was as eager and as effective as
+ever, but for those undertakings which require not only
+desperate courage but also forethought and patience he
+was no longer fit. But the Chinese invasion dispelled
+all these, and many other illusions. In their eyes and
+before their power, he was only another Sultan of Talifoo.
+His great qualities, which attracted sympathy
+and a certain amount of respect, in India and England
+were vain in the eyes of a people whose "empire has,"
+in their own tongue, "been planted by heaven." Before
+Chinese viceroys and Mantchoo chivalry Khokandian
+soldiers and Mussulman pride must be held vain. So
+thought the Chinese, if they thought upon the subject
+at all. And so must we think who view past history
+by the aid of Yakoob Beg's overthrow. Yakoob Beg's
+rule in Kashgar was for twelve years a visible fact; it
+was recognized by England and by Russia. The Central
+Asian Khans gladly acknowledged the admission of
+another to their fast dwindling ranks. Even Shere Ali,
+an ostensibly powerful ruler, honoured Yakoob Beg not
+so much with his friendship as with his jealousy. Yet
+it was all fleeting fast away.</p>
+
+<p>In comparison with Chinese power his was as nothing;
+in comparison with Chinese perseverance his was weakness;
+in comparison with Chinese tactics, his tactics were
+those of a school-boy; and even in comparison with
+Chinese courage his courage had to confess an equal.
+There was not only the dead weight of numbers against
+him, but there was also the quick weight of superior intellect.
+There were superior strategy and superior weapons;
+greater force and greater determination; no
+hesitation in action, and perfect <ins class="corr" title="original had: unaminity">unanimity</ins> in council; all
+combined to crush one poor forlorn man, fighting with all
+the desperation of despair for life, if not for liberty.
+Worthier of a better fate, and meeting destiny with the
+calm that is natural to brave men, Yakoob Beg's defeat
+and death may serve to "point a moral and adorn a tale."
+The tale has been told in these pages with as close a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+regard for fact as the meagre records will supply, and
+for the personage whose name is the pivot round which
+the main facts concentrate, it may be claimed that he
+deserved attention even from Englishmen. It may well
+be that some future generation may recur to this career
+with interest as marking the only real break in the
+Chinese domination in Eastern Turkestan. When the
+massacres and other atrocities that marked the Khoja
+invasions and the Tungan outbreak on both sides shall
+have been forgotten or condoned, then it will be
+admitted that, despite the great benefits conferred by
+China on the people in the way of trade-fostering and
+good government, there was some merit in the administration
+which a Khokandian soldier had unaided created
+in this region. High credit, then, let us, who view the
+subject from an impartial stand-point, pay this departed
+warrior, who as a soldier met few equals, as a governor
+none in his long career. Much as we may marvel at,
+and perhaps impugn, Chinese strength, let us not judge
+Yakoob Beg harshly, because Chinamen out-man&oelig;uvred
+him, and overthrew him in fair fight. It is an easy
+gauge to apply, and one which would dispel all the
+reputation the Athalik Ghazi had secured, if we deny the
+Chinese the great qualities those who know them best
+will accord them without hesitation. But in applying
+so shallow a test to the case before us, we should be
+wronging our own understanding quite as much as its
+victim. However much we may blame Yakoob Beg for
+going out to encounter an enemy whom he ought to
+have awaited either at Kucha or Aksu, his valour, and
+also his mistaken contempt for the Chinese, are made
+all the more clear. We may fairly claim for him that he
+was the most remarkable man Central Asia in its fullest
+extent has produced since Nadir Shah; and that he
+accomplished with insignificant means a task which
+ordinary men, though born in the purple and ruling a
+prosperous and thickly populated state, might have
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+failed to do. What better epitaph could be placed over
+a courageous and just ruler?</p>
+
+<p>The moral of his career is a short one, but for us full
+of significance. Those independent rulers who establish
+themselves for a space on the confines of China
+are mere ephemeral excrescences; birds of passage who
+must betake themselves away, if they can, when their
+little hour has struck. English governments have never
+understood the vitality of Chinese institutions. They
+should appreciate it better in the future.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a><span>CHAPTER XIII.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE CHINESE RECONQUEST OF KASHGAR.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Yakoob Beg died at Korla the task of reconquering
+Kashgar had barely commenced. The Chinese army,
+victorious at Turfan, was lingering in idleness round
+that city, exhausted, as some believed, by the greatness
+of the effort. It was not clear even that the Chinese
+aspired to achieve any greater triumph than that they
+had already won, viz., the subjection of the Tungani, a
+subjection which could not be considered accomplished so
+long as Yakoob Beg remained in the neighbourhood at
+the head of a large army; and that with the withdrawal of
+the Kashgarian army to Karashar the Chinese generals
+might call a halt of an indefinite duration. Nor did it
+follow as a matter of necessity that because the Chinese
+had <ins class="corr" title="original had : aken">taken</ins> Turfan they could capture Kashgar or
+Yarkand. Distance alone was no slight obstacle, and
+when added to the barrenness of the country, which
+would be made more desolate by the retreating army
+of the Mussulmans, an impartial observer might have
+hesitated to predict any very speedy triumph for the
+Chinese. But besides these, there were other impediments,
+of which a prudent general had to take careful
+cognizance. To seize Karashar or Korla only needed a
+bold attack; but to subject Kucha might have been a
+more arduous undertaking than was even the siege of
+Manas. A delay of two months in the heart of Eastern
+Turkestan must have strained the resources of the
+Chinese very much, and might have ruined their whole
+enterprise. And even if Kucha fell there still remained
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+Aksu, and afterwards Ush Turfan in the north, and
+Maralbashi in the south, barring the way to the vital
+portion of the state round Kashgar and Yarkand. Now
+the death of Yakoob Beg did not remove any one of
+these defences, and for a time it was believed that his
+son, who had always the repute of being a good soldier,
+would make the best of the very strong line of defence
+that he undoubtedly possessed. As a matter of fact, the
+death of Yakoob Beg was an irretrievable disaster, for
+it destroyed whatever cohesion and unity there were in
+the country. He himself might have been unable to
+avert a final overthrow, but the contest would have
+been made more protracted. Therefore in the months of
+May and June, 1877, immediately after the death of the
+Athalik Ghazi, it is strictly true to say that the Chinese
+reconquest of the country had barely commenced.</p>
+
+<p>The hesitation shown by the invading generals after
+the victory of Turfan was at first caused by a belief in
+the formidableness of their antagonist, and, when that
+antagonist died, by a prudent resolve to permit the
+disintegrating causes that speedily manifested themselves
+in Kashgaria to have full time to work in their
+favour. Meanwhile they formed their plans in secret,
+laid in large stores of supplies from Russian territory,
+and explored the little-known passes of Tekes and
+Yuldus. A large number of fresh troops was received
+from the Calmucks north of Chuguchak, who during the
+worst period of the Tungan revolt had preserved that
+city for the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>But before following the forward movement of the
+Chinese it is necessary to say something of the internal
+disturbances in Eastern Turkestan, more especially of the
+rivalry of Beg Bacha and Hakim Khan for supremacy.
+In the first place, it is necessary that it should be
+distinctly understood that of the events that occurred
+in Kashgaria between the death of the Athalik Ghazi
+and the final advance of the Chinese army we are really
+without any definite intelligence at all, and it is not
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+probable that we shall ever be accurately informed of
+the course of events during those five months. In the
+absence of exact <i>data</i>, we must assume the events to
+have taken place which are most in accordance with
+probability. On Yakoob Beg's death, his eldest son,
+Beg Kuli Beg, was either in the city of Kashgar or
+somewhere on the road thither. It is probable that he
+had been despatched to the rear, to bring up reinforcements
+after the defeat at Turfan, and in his absence
+Hacc Kuli Beg, the Ameer's second son, assumed the
+command of the army when his father died. It is certain
+that he accompanied the funeral cortége of Yakoob
+Beg back to Kashgar, and that he was murdered outside
+the walls by his brother. It was during this
+time that Hakim Khan Torah appeared upon the
+scene. It should be remembered that tidings of the
+death of Yakoob Beg travelled very slowly to this
+country, and that almost immediately after it arrived we
+received intelligence of events that had occurred many
+weeks after the death of the Ameer. We were therefore
+hearing at the same time the particulars of the circumstances
+of Yakoob Beg's death, and of those commotions
+which broke out some weeks after that event.</p>
+
+<p>When Hacc Kuli Beg left Korla no personal representative
+remained there of the dynasty of the Athalik
+Ghazi, and during that interval the occasion arose for
+the intriguing elements that a mixed court, such as
+that of Yakoob Beg, could never be free from. Hakim
+Khan seized that opportunity, and established his
+authority in Karashar, Korla, and, probably, Kucha
+also; and during a short time Kashgaria was accordingly
+divided into three hostile camps. It appears that
+Beg Bacha, lulled into a false sense of security by the
+inactivity of the Chinese, resolved to chastise the
+insolence of his rebellious governor, a task which he
+should have left for the Chinese. A war then broke
+out between Beg Bacha and Hakim Khan, which
+exhausted the few resources that still remained to a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+ruler of Kashgar. The contest appears to have been of
+a desultory nature, and although the final result was in
+favour of Beg Bacha, he never appears to have recovered
+possession of Karashar and Korla. In the neighbourhood
+of Aksu the battle of this war took place, and
+Hakim Khan was defeated, "by the overwhelming
+numbers of his enemy." Beg Bacha's chief loss was the
+death of Mahomed Yunus, the Dadkhwah of Yarkand,
+his ablest and most faithful adviser. Hakim then fled
+to Russian territory, with 1,000 <i>sarbazes</i>, who were
+promptly interned by order of General Kolpakovsky,
+and there he sought to restore his shattered fortunes
+by carrying on intrigues with the Russian government.
+It is scarcely necessary to say that these came to nothing,
+and that Hakim Khan has sunk into that insignificance
+which, to judge from his acts when called into public
+life, is his most befitting atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>While engaged on this successful campaign east of
+Aksu, an event occurred of singular significance, as
+illustrating the condition of Kashgar under Beg Bacha.
+The Kirghiz chief Sadic Beg, who had disappeared
+from the scene since his old rivalry with Yakoob Beg
+thirteen years before, seized the opportunity afforded by
+Beg Bacha's embarrassment to attack the city of Kashgar,
+denuded of the greater portion of its garrison. He
+plundered the suburbs, and only withdrew when the
+young Ameer hastened back from Aksu to defend his
+capital. The Kirghiz, true to their nature, at once
+sought the desolate regions of Kizil Yart. They had,
+however, made the confusion arising from the death of
+the Ameer and the disaffection of Hakim Khan worse
+confounded, and completed those elements of weakness
+and discord which had always proved an invaluable ally
+to the Chinese. By themselves both Hakim Khan and
+the Kirghiz depredator were beneath contempt; but
+with an enemy established on the soil of the country,
+they assumed a too clear and mischievous importance.
+The minor seditions that manifested themselves in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+Sirikul and at Khoten completed the round of dissension
+that, combined with external force, shattered the
+fair show of Yakoob Beg's empire. We are completely
+ignorant of the details of the disturbances that were
+reported to have taken place round Tashkurgan or
+Sirikul; but it is plausible to suppose that these were
+caused either by inroads on the part of the Wakhis
+or Badakshis, or by some fresh Kirghiz attack. The
+inhabitants of Tashkurgan being Yarkandi settlers, it
+is not probable that the rising, or whatever form the
+commotion assumed, originated with them; at Khoten
+the rising was more tangible, and more easily understood.
+The people of that city never forgave Yakoob
+Beg his treachery towards their ruler, and the instant
+he disappeared they hastened to take their revenge.
+When the Kashgarian garrison was withdrawn the
+towns-people simply deposed their <i>dadkwah</i>, and nominated
+a ruler of their own, who retained authority until
+the triumph of the Chinese made it politic for them
+and him to bow to the rising sun. The example of
+Khoten had been followed by Sanju and the vicinity;
+and thus the whole southern portion of the state
+acquiesced in the Chinese conquest, after the fall of
+Kashgar, without the necessity for a single Chinese
+soldier to be advanced south of Yarkand. It seems
+probable that at this very moment the Chinese troops
+have remained content with the submission of these
+districts, and have not garrisoned those important towns
+which skirt the Kuen Lun range with their own
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>When Beg Bacha returned post haste to Kashgar, to
+encounter the Kirghiz, we said that Sadic Beg fled to
+the Kizil Yart; but he did not remain there long, for
+soon we find him back again at the capital in high favour
+with the Ameer, with whom he had come to terms. His
+Kirghiz followers were taken into the pay of the state,
+and just as this alliance had been struck up, tidings
+came of events that made that alliance, however futile
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+and insignificant, a matter of the first necessity, both to
+Kirghiz and Kashgar. The Chinese army was at last
+advancing. The danger that had for five months been
+hanging in suspense over the devoted heads of a Mussulman
+people was close upon them. The long-feared
+and long-expected Khitay were drawing nigh to the
+capital, in irresistible strength; and the apprehensions
+of a cowed people made them know, too surely, that their
+end was at hand. The dissensions among the people
+themselves, the discord in the ruling house, and the
+dissentient elements in every effort towards unity, had
+all operated in favour of the invader. While the Chinese
+had plotted and prepared in the deliberate manner of a
+great nation, the people of Kashgar had entered into
+cabals and schemes of party tactics that were well nigh
+ludicrous. And all the time that the sap of their vigour
+was being expended, the Chinese generals were drawing
+the noose more closely together that was to strangle the
+newly erected state beyond all chance of recovery. It
+would almost seem as if the Kashgari and their rulers had
+recovered from their first shock at the Chinese invasion,
+and were becoming reconciled to their presence east of
+Korla, when they experienced a second, more severe, and
+more lasting shock, in the announcement that the Chinese
+were again advancing. Their brief contentment passed
+away, and all their old terror revived in tenfold force.
+Hope died within their bosoms, and the resignation of
+despair only nerved them to bear a fate which their own
+valour should have striven to avert. It is time for us
+now to return to the Chinese army, and to follow its
+decisive operations.</p>
+
+<p>North of the Tian Shan the supreme command was
+vested in the hands of Tso Tsung Tang, generalissimo of
+the army operating against Kashgar, and Viceroy of the
+province of Kansuh. South of it the commanders were
+Generals Kin Shun and Chang Yao, the former the hero
+of the siege of Manas, the latter of the diversion against
+Turfan from Hamil. The base of the former was Manas,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+of the latter Turfan. Their sources of supply were
+Hamil, Barkul, and Chuguchak, within the Chinese
+frontier, and Kuldja, Semiretchinsk, and Semipalatinsk,
+without. Their weapons and ammunition were transported
+across the desert from Lanchefoo, and their ranks
+were swollen by recruits from the Calmuck and other
+tribes. It does not appear that the Chinese were very
+eager to enlarge their army in size; they rather aimed at
+increasing its efficiency by the distribution of Berdan
+rifles and Krupp's cannon; and during the heat of the
+summer months they remained at rest in their recently
+acquired possessions. Nor is it probable that those
+epidemics broke out in their ranks which it was asserted
+had appeared amongst them. A sensational paragraph
+was published in the <i>Tashkent Gazette</i>, which was copied
+by some of the London newspapers, asserting that a
+species of cholera, known in Kashgar by the name of
+<i>vuoba</i>, had decimated the Chinese army, and that in
+consequence of that calamity its advance was permanently
+checked. Certainly, this was a piece of gross
+exaggeration, even if there were a substratum of fact for
+the assertion. Then, again, we were apprised, on high
+authority, that the Russian government had put a stop
+to the despatch of provisions to the country occupied by
+the Chinese army, at the request of its new-found friend,
+Beg Bacha. Yet there is no question that the caravans
+of Mr. Kamensky continued to pass between Kuldja
+and Manas, and that the chief caterers for the Chinese
+army were the Russian merchants of Central Asia. In
+the course of their intercourse the best feelings do not
+appear to have prevailed between the Russians and
+Chinese. The latter, flushed with their triumph, had
+become arrogant, and were too fond of referring to the
+question of Kuldja to be agreeable to the actual possessors
+of that province. On one or two occasions these
+verbal disputes assumed a more dangerous aspect, and
+from words the disputants proceeded to blows. Whether
+this collision was magnified or not, the Russian government
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+took no diplomatic steps to secure reparation for
+injury to their subjects, and continued to wink at, if they
+did not actually approve of, their merchants supplying
+the Chinese. The clearest proof of this is that the moment
+Aksu fell a large caravan was despatched there
+by Mr. Kamensky. Still there was no little bad blood
+between the two people, and for a long time it was
+doubtful whether Russia would preserve her attitude of
+neutrality until Kashgar had been finally subdued. Beneath
+all this doubt, and the uncertainty of the strength
+and of the ultimate intentions of China, there existed a
+sentiment of dissatisfaction in the minds of the Russians
+at the renown China was acquiring, as well as at the prospect
+of having to restore a rich and paying province.</p>
+
+<p>In short, beneath the Tungan and the Kashgarian
+questions there smouldered the Kuldja question. Having
+now shown how well prepared the Chinese were at every
+point, how well armed, and how well fed was the tactical
+unit, and how Russia, although far from indifferent as to
+the results, was really abetting the side of China, we
+may pass on to those more active movements which
+proved that the Chinese generals possessed the ability
+and military knowledge necessary to make full use of
+the very powerful weapon which they had created, and
+which was capable of accomplishing the most arduous of
+enterprises.</p>
+
+<p>The first move was made south of the Tian Shan.
+So far as we know, Tso Tsung Tang did not break up
+from Manas until many weeks afterwards. A brigadier-general,
+by name Tang Jen-Ho, left Toksoun on the
+25th of August, 1877, with the advanced guard, to occupy
+the outlying villages of Subashi and Agha Bula. He
+does not appear to have had under him more than a few
+hundred men. A fortnight later, on the 7th of September,
+Generals Tung Fuh-siang and Chang Tsun followed
+after him with 1,500 troops, all infantry. They advanced
+through Agha Bula, Kumush, and Usha Tal to Kuhwei.
+At this place the troops were concentrated.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chief duty of these detachments was to prepare
+the road for the advance of the main body, to lay in at
+stated places stores of fuel and water, and to erect temporary
+fortifications. So thoroughly was this portion of
+the task performed, that General Kin Shun, now known
+as Liu Kin-Tang, gave the order for a general forward
+movement on the 27th of September.</p>
+
+<p>The infantry followed the main road, while the
+cavalry, under the immediate orders of the general,
+proceeded by by-paths in the same direction. On the
+2nd of October the Chinese army south of the Tian
+Shan was assembled at Kuhwei. Its numbers were
+probably about fifteen thousand men all told. On the
+24th of September a small force of Kashgarian troops
+threatened General Tang Jen-Ho's communications, but
+on the appearance of the Chinese they "turned tail and
+dashed away." The very next day after his arrival at
+Kuhwei General Kin Shun continued his forward movement.
+Two brigadier-generals, whose names it is not
+necessary to mention, were entrusted with one division,
+6,000 strong, with which to perform a flanking movement
+against Korla. The commander in person led his
+main body against Korla, arriving at the River Kaidu,
+which flows into Lake Bostang, half-way between Karashar
+and Korla. But his advance was here checked,
+as Bayen Hu, the rebel leader, had flooded the country
+by damming up the course of the river. The depth of
+the inundation was said to be in the deepest parts over
+a man's head, and in the shallowest it came up to the
+horses' cruppers. The Chinese march was then changed
+to a northerly direction, in order to strike the river
+higher up, where the obstruction raised by the enemy
+would be more easily overcome. A cart-road was carefully
+constructed along these alkaline plains, and the
+Kaidu was dammed to stop the flow from the upper
+course, and a bridge was erected over it. This détour
+had caused some delay, yet Karashar was reached on the
+7th of October, four days after Kin Shun had set out in
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+person from Kuhwei. The inundation from the Kaidu
+had spread as far as here, and the town was several feet
+under water. All the official and private residences had
+been destroyed alike, and the Turki-Mussulman, as the
+<i>Pekin Gazette</i> styles them, population had been compelled
+by Bayen Hu to follow him in his retreat. It
+would be interesting to know whom the Chinese meant
+by Bayen Hu, but it is almost impossible to say.
+As it was not Hakim Khan, the most probable personage
+would be one of the Tungan leaders, either of
+Urumtsi or Hamil, who had been mediatized by Yakoob
+Beg and placed in command of the Turfan region. He
+appears to have been the commander of that portion of
+the Kashgarian army which was left round Korla.</p>
+
+<p>Not only was Karashar deserted by its inhabitants,
+but so was the whole country round about. Some,
+indeed, had fled to the mountains, but these were afraid
+to return when they saw the Chinese established in
+their homes. And then the conquerors followed out
+their usual plan by settling fresh colonists in the town.
+The Mongol noble, Cha-hi-telkh, was directed to move
+up some hundreds of the members of his tribe to occupy
+this important post, to restore the homes and to retill
+the fields; and while this work of restoration was proceeding
+on territory conquered by the Chinese, that
+through which they passed in hostile guise was subjected
+to far other treatment. On the 9th of October the
+Chinese marched against Korla from two sides, and on
+that day a cavalry skirmish took place, in which fifteen
+of Bayen Hu's horsemen were slain, and two taken
+prisoners. From the evidence of these, who were dressed
+in the Khokandian garb, but were Mussulman subjects
+of China, being natives of Shensi, it was learnt that
+Bayen Hu had withdrawn with all his forces to Kucha,
+taking with him the produce of the country and the
+majority of the people. They affirmed that the small
+detachment to which they belonged was only a scouting
+party, sent out to learn what the Chinese army was doing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+When the Chinese had exhausted their stock of information
+they beheaded them. The same day they entered
+Korla, which they found to be completely deserted,
+although not flooded. The walls remained, but many
+of the houses had been thrown down. Here the general
+was nearly reduced to a desperate plight, as the provision
+train, which was transported by cart and camel, did not
+come up, and there was the prospect of starvation compelling
+the victorious army to retreat. But happily the
+thought struck the able general, or perhaps some one
+gave him a hint, that there might be some stores concealed
+in the city which the Kashgari had been unable
+to carry away with them. Accordingly the whole army
+set to work to search the houses, and to dig into the
+ground in all likely places for hidden stores. Their toil
+was soon rewarded, and "several tens of thousand
+catties' weight of food" were discovered. As a catty
+weighs 1&frac34; lb., this was no slight supply for an army of
+men which was probably under 10,000 strong. These
+concerted movements of the army south of the Tian
+Shan placed the country as far west as Karashar in the
+possession of the invader. Their next advance, which
+they could not expect to be as unopposed as their late
+one, would bring them into the plain of Kashgar. No
+sooner had Karashar and Korla fallen into their possession
+than an edict was issued inviting the Mahomedan
+population to return to their homes, and many of them
+accepted the invitation. In this quarter the arms of
+China were not disgraced by any excesses, and moderation
+towards the unarmed population extenuated their
+severity towards armed foes.</p>
+
+<p>While halting some days at Korla, Kin Shun heard
+that Bayen Hu was coercing the people east of Kucha
+at Tsedayar and other places, and compelling them to
+withdraw to Kucha and to destroy their crops. He at
+once resolved to frustrate the plan, and set out in person
+at the head of 1,500 light infantry and 1,000 cavalry to
+protect the inhabitants. By forced marches, sometimes
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+carried on through the better part of the night, he
+reached Tsedayar on the 17th of October, when he learnt
+that Bayen Hu had driven off the whole of the population,
+and was already at Bugur, on the road to Kucha.
+At the next village to Tsedayar, a fortified post known
+as Yangy Shahr, he found that Bayen Hu was still
+ahead of him, and that he was setting fire to the villages
+on his line of march. Kin Shun left a portion of his
+infantry behind to put out the conflagration, and resolutely
+pressed on with the remainder of his force to
+Bugur. This small town had also been set on fire, but
+here the rapidity of the Chinese general's advance was
+rewarded with the news that the enemy's army, with a
+large number of the inhabitants, was only a short distance
+ahead. The rear-guard, composed of 1,000 cavalry,
+was soon touched, and the Kashgari, emboldened by the
+small numbers of the Chinese, came on to the attack in
+gallant fashion. Their charge was broken, however, by
+the steadiness of the Chinese infantry, armed with excellent
+rifles, and the cavalry performed the rest. The
+Kashgari left 100 slain on the field of battle and twelve
+prisoners. From these latter it was discovered that the
+main body of 2,000 soldiers was some distance on the road
+to Kucha, with the family of Bayen Hu and the villagers
+under its charge. It was too late to advance further
+that day, but on the next the forward movement was
+resumed. A large multitude&mdash;"some tens of thousands
+of people"&mdash;was speedily sighted by the advanced guard,
+but on examining these through glasses it was discovered
+that scarcely more than a thousand carried arms.
+All the troops were then brought to the front, and Kin
+Shun issued instructions that all those found with arms
+in their hands should be slain, but the others spared.</p>
+
+<p>The armed portion of the Kashgarian army drew
+off from the unarmed, leaving in the midst the large
+assemblage of Mussulman villagers who were being
+carried off to Kucha. These were sent to the rear by
+order of Kin Shun, and distributed in such of the villages
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+as were most convenient. In the meanwhile a
+sharp fight took place a few miles in the rear of the old
+position, near a village called Arpa Tai. The action
+appears to have been well contested, but the superior
+tactics and weapons of Kin Shun's small army prevailed;
+and the Mussulman army retreated with considerable
+loss and in great disorder. Kin Shun followed up his
+success with marvellous rapidity and restless energy,
+while the Kashgarian troops fled incontinently to Kucha,
+abandoning the people and the country to the invader.
+The unfortunate inhabitants implored with piteous entreaties
+the mercy of the conqueror, and it is with
+genuine satisfaction we record the fact that Kin Shun
+informed them of their safety, and bade them have no
+further alarm.</p>
+
+<p>By this time it is probable that the Chinese army had
+been largely reinforced from the rear, for we have now
+come to a more arduous portion of the enterprise, the
+attack against Kucha. When the Chinese appeared
+before its walls they found that a battle was proceeding
+there between the Kashgarian soldiers and the townspeople,
+who refused to accompany them in a further
+retreat westward. On the appearance of the Chinese
+army, the Kashgarian force evacuated the city, and
+joined battle with it on the western side of Kucha. The
+Chinese at once attacked them, at first with little success;
+and a charge of the cavalry, numbering some four or five
+thousand men, was only repulsed with some difficulty.
+But the cannon of the Chinese were playing with remarkable
+effect upon the Mahomedans, and the Chinese
+reserves were every moment coming upon the ground.
+The infantry were at last ordered to advance, under
+cover of a heavy artillery fire, and the cavalry made a
+charge at a most opportune moment. The whole army
+then broke and fled in irretrievable confusion, leaving
+more than a thousand of their number on the ground.
+Their general, Ma-yeo-pu the Chinese called him, was
+wounded early in the day, but, although stated to be a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+noted man, it is impossible to recognize his identity under
+the Chinese appellation. This was certainly the most
+sanguinary and the best-contested action of the whole war.
+The numbers on each side were probably about 10,000
+men, and it was won as much by superior tactics and
+skill as by brute force and courage. All the movements
+of the Chinese were characterized by remarkable forethought,
+and evinced the greatest ability on the part of
+the general and his lieutenants, as well as obedience,
+valour, and patience on the part of his soldiers. The
+rapid advance from Kuhwei to Karashar, the forced
+march thence to Bugur, the capture of Kucha, the forbearance
+of the conqueror towards the inhabitants, all
+combine to make this portion of the war most creditable
+to China and her generals, to Kin Shun in particular.
+The reason given in the Official Report for the Kashgarian
+authorities attempting to carry off the population
+was that the rebels wished in the first place to deprive
+the invading force of all assistance, thus making further
+pursuit a work of difficulty, and in the second place, to
+ingratiate themselves with the new Pahia (probably
+Bacha) of Kashgar, Kuli Beg, by delivering this large
+mass of Turki-Mussulmans into his hands. Bayen
+Hu was, therefore, certainly not Hakim Khan. It is
+tolerably clear that he must have been either a Tungan
+refugee or a subordinate of Beg Bacha's.</p>
+
+<p>A depôt was formed at Kucha, and a large body of
+troops remained there as a garrison; but the principal
+administrative measures were directed to the task of
+improving the position of the Turki-Mussulman population.
+A board of administration was instituted for the
+purpose of providing means of subsistence for the destitute,
+and for the distribution of seed-corn for the benefit
+of the whole community. It had also to supervise the
+construction of roads, and the establishment of ferry
+boats, and of post-houses, in order to facilitate the movements
+of trade and travel, and to expedite the transmission
+of mails. Magistrates and prefects were appointed
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+to all the cities, and special precautions were taken
+against the outbreak of epidemic or of famine. All these
+wise provisions were carried out promptly, and in the
+most matter-of-fact manner, just as if the legislation
+and administration of alien states were the daily avocations
+of Chinamen. There is no reason to believe that
+in the vast region from Turfan to Kucha the Chinese
+have departed from the statesmanlike and beneficent
+schemes which marked their re-installation as rulers;
+and whatever harshness or cruelty they manifested towards
+the Tungani rebels and the Kashgarian soldiers
+was more than atoned for by the mildness of their treatment
+of the people.</p>
+
+<p>On the 19th, or more probably the 22nd of October,
+Kin Shun resumed his forward movement, encountering
+no serious opposition. His first halt was at a village
+called Hoser, where he halted for one night, which he
+employed in inditing the report to Pekin, which described
+the successes and movements of the previous three weeks.
+At the next town, known as Bai, Kin Shun halted to
+await the arrival of the rear-guard, under General Chang
+Yao. This force came up before the close of October,
+and the advance against Aksu was resumed. Up to this
+point the chief interest centred in the army south of
+the Tian Shan, and in the achievements of Kin Shun.
+Our principal, in fact our only, authority for this portion
+of the campaign is the <i>Pekin Gazette</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We have now to describe the movements of the
+Northern Army, which was under the immediate command
+of Tso Tsung Tang, and which was operating
+in the north of the state, in complete secrecy.
+That general had under him, at the most moderate
+computation, an army of 28,000 men. By some it was
+placed at a higher figure; but a St. Petersburg paper,
+on the authority of a Russian merchant, who had been
+to Manas, computed it to be of that strength. It was
+concentrated in the neighbourhood of Manas, and along
+the northern skirts of the Tian Shan; and also on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+frontier of the Russian dominions in Kuldja. To all
+appearance this army was consigned to a part of enforced
+inactivity, since it was impossible to enter Kuldja,
+and thus proceed by their old routes through the passes
+of Bedal or Muzart. But it was not so; the travels of
+Colonel Prjevalsky in the commencement of 1877 had
+not been unobserved by the Chinese, and it was assumed
+that where a Russian officer with his Cossack following
+could go, there also could go a Chinese army. By those
+little-known passes, which are made by the Tekes and
+Great Yuldus rivers, the Chinese army, under Tso Tsung
+Tang, crossed over into Kashgaria; and it is probable
+that the two armies joined in the neighbourhood of Bai.
+It was by this stroke of strategy on the part of Tso Tsung
+Tang that the Chinese found themselves before the walls
+of Aksu, with an overwhelming army, at the very sight
+of which all thought of resistance died away from the
+hearts of the Mussulman peoples and garrisons. Tso
+Tsung Tang appeared before the walls of Aksu, the bulwark
+of Kashgar on the east, and its commandant, panic
+stricken, abandoned his post at the first onset. He was
+subsequently taken prisoner by an officer of Kuli Beg,
+and executed. The Chinese then advanced on Ush Turfan,
+which also surrendered without a blow. As we said, the
+Chinese have not published any detailed description of
+this portion of the war, and we are consequently unable
+to say what their version is of those reported atrocities at
+Aksu and Ush Turfan, of which the Russian papers have
+made so much. There is no doubt that a very large
+number of refugees fled to Russian territory, perhaps
+10,000 in all, and these brought with them the tales of
+fear and exaggerated alarm. We may feel little hesitation
+in accepting the assertion as true, that the armed
+garrisons were slaughtered without exception; but that
+the unarmed population and the women and children
+shared the same fate we distinctly refuse to credit. There
+is every precedent in favour of the assumption that a more
+moderate policy was pursued, and there is no valid reason
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+why the Chinese should have dealt with Aksu and Ush
+Turfan differently to Kucha or Turfan. The case of
+Manas has been greatly insisted upon by the agitators
+on this "atrocity" question; but there is the highest
+authority for asserting that only armed men were massacred
+there. This the Chinese have always done; it is
+a national custom, and they certainly did not depart from
+it in the case of the Tungani and Kashgar. But there
+is no solid ground for convicting them of any more
+heinous crime, even in the instances of Manas and Aksu,
+which are put so prominently forward.</p>
+
+<p>Early in December the last move of all began against
+the capital, and on the 17th of that month the Chinese
+took it by a <i>coup de main</i>. Beg Kuli Beg, according to
+one account, fought a battle outside the town, in which
+he was defeated; according to another report, he had
+withdrawn to Yarkand, whence he fled to Russian territory,
+when he heard of the fall of Kashgar. It is more
+probable that he resisted the Chinese attack on Kashgar,
+for he certainly reached Tashkent, in company with the
+Kirghiz Chief, Sadic Beg, who was wounded in that
+battle. With the fall of Kashgar the Chinese reconquest
+of Eastern Turkestan was completed, and the
+other cities, Yangy Hissar and Yarkand, speedily shared
+the same fate. Khoten and Sirikul also sent in formal
+promises of subjection. But the capture of Kashgar
+virtually closed the campaign. No further resistance
+was encountered, and the new rulers had only to begin
+the task of reorganization. When Kashgar fell the
+greater portion of the army, knowing that they could
+expect no mercy at the hands of the Chinese, fled to
+Russian territory, and then spread reports of fresh
+Chinese massacres, which probably only existed in their
+own imagination. There can be no doubt that the
+Chinese triumph has been thorough, and that it will be
+many years before the people of Eastern Turkestan will
+have again the heart to rebel against their authority.
+The strength of China has been thoroughly demonstrated,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+and the vindication of her prestige is complete.
+Whatever danger there may be to the permanence of
+China's triumph lies rather from Russia than from the
+conquered peoples of Tian Shan Nan Lu; nor is there
+much danger that the Chinese laurels will become faded
+even before an European foe. Tso Tsung Tang and
+his lieutenants, Kin Shun, who has since fallen into disgrace,&mdash;perhaps
+he had excited the envy of his superior&mdash;and
+Chang Yao, accomplished a task which would reflect
+credit on any army and any country. They have given
+a lustre to the present Chinese administration which
+must stand it in good stead, and they have acquired a
+personal renown that will not easily depart. The
+Chinese reconquest of Eastern Turkestan is beyond
+doubt the most remarkable event that has occurred in
+Asia during the last fifty years, and it is quite the most
+brilliant achievement of a Chinese army, led by Chinamen,
+that has taken place since Keen-Lung subdued the
+country more than a century ago. It also proves, in a
+manner that is more than unpalatable to us, that the
+Chinese possess an adaptive faculty that must be held
+to be a very important fact in every-day politics in
+Central Asia. They conquered Kashgar with European
+weapons, and by careful study of Western science and
+skill. Their soldiers marched in obedience to instructors
+trained on the Prussian principle; and their generals
+man&oelig;uvred their troops in accordance with the
+teachings of Moltke and Manteuffel. Even in such
+minor matters as the use of telescopes and field glasses
+we find this Chinese army well supplied. Nothing was
+more absurd than the picture drawn by some over-wise
+observer of this army, as consisting of soldiers fantastically
+garbed in the guise of dragons and other hideous
+appearances. All that belonged to an old-world theory.
+The army of Eastern Turkestan was as widely different
+from all previous Chinese armies in Central Asia as it
+well could be; and in all essentials closely resembled
+that of an European power. Its remarkable triumphs
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+were chiefly attributable to the thoroughness with which
+China had in this instance adapted herself to Western
+notions.</p>
+
+<p>With the flight of Beg Kuli Beg to Tashkent
+closed the career of the house of the Athalik Ghazi in
+Kashgar. Whatever turn events may take in this portion
+of Central Asia, whatever schemes there may be
+formed in Khokand, or elsewhere, of challenging anew
+the Chinese domination, it will not be round the banner
+of Kuli Beg that the ousted Khokandian officials will
+rally. By his flight in the hour of danger, by the hesitation
+which marked all his movements, and by the
+murder of his brother in cold blood, this prince, of
+whom much at one time was expected, has irretrievably
+ruined both his career and his reputation. If on any
+future occasion Russia should seek to play the part
+played of old by Khans of Khokand in the internal
+history of Kashgar, it will not be Kuli Beg whom they
+will put forward as their puppet. His old rival, Hakim
+Khan, stands a much better chance than he, more especially
+if it be true that he is the representative of the
+Khojas, being the son of Buzurg Khan, as many have
+asserted. But the fact remains clear, that all the dreams
+of Yakoob Beg of founding a personal dynasty in
+Eastern Turkestan are now dispelled beyond all prospect
+of realization.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a><span>CHAPTER XIV.</span>
+<span class="chapsub1">THE CHINESE FACTOR IN THE CENTRAL ASIAN
+QUESTION.</span></h2>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> overthrow of the Tungani, and the reconquest of
+Kashgaria, have not completed the task that lay before
+Chinese generals and soldiers in Central Asia. Great
+and remarkable as those triumphs were, the Chinese are
+not satisfied with them, because there yet remains more
+work to be done. They have restored to the Emperor
+Tian Shan Nan Lu, but so long as the Russians
+hold Kuldja, Tian Shan Pe Lu is only half won back.
+Moreover, so long as a great military power is domiciled
+in Kuldja, China's hold on the country west of Aksu
+must be only on sufferance. As of old, the Chinese so
+often reconquered Kashgar, when it had shaken off the
+Chinese rule, from Ili, so might the Russians at their
+good pleasure play the same part against the Chinese.
+In short, the Russians remaining in Ili would neutralize
+all the advantages that China had secured by her recent
+military success. But, although there is a foundation of
+well grounded apprehension at the strategical advantages
+of Russia, at the root of China's demand for the
+surrender of Kuldja, that is not the only cause, or
+even the principal one, for the Chinese making it. Of
+all their Central Asian possessions, Ili was the most
+cherished, and it was to recover that region more especially
+that Tso Tsung Tang undertook those arduous
+campaigns which have so far ended in triumph, and
+which were designed for, among other purposes, the
+purpose of giving that Viceroy a prestige and influence
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+that would enable him to play the rival to Li Hung
+Chang. Ili was their metropolis in Central Asia, and its
+fall marked the wide difference that there was between
+the Tungan-Khoja rising of 1862&ndash;63 and all its predecessors.
+The fall of Ili meant the fall of Chinese
+power, and Chinese power cannot be held to be completely
+restored so long as Ili remains in alien hands.
+On this point the Chinese are very keen.</p>
+
+<p>Russia, on the other hand, hesitates to hand over Ili
+for various reasons. In the first place, it is not certain
+that China has <i>permanently</i> reconquered Eastern
+Turkestan, nor is it clear that the Imperial exchequer
+will be able to bear a continual strain upon it for
+Central Asian expenditure. Moreover there is the unknown
+quantity of the rivalry of Li Hung Chang and
+Tso Tsung Tang, and whatever influence the latter may
+have with the army and the ruling caste on account of
+his Mantchoo blood, the former holds the purse in his
+hands, and can at any <ins class="corr" title="original had: momet">moment</ins> paralyse Chinese activity and
+strength in Central Asia. The Russians also, whatever
+rash promises they may have given at Pekin&mdash;and they
+certainly did promise to retrocede Kuldja to China,
+whenever the Chinese should be strong enough to
+return to Central Asia&mdash;formally (<i>teste</i> General Kolpakovsky's
+proclamation) annexed Kuldja "in perpetuity."
+In the eyes of the people of Central Asia, that proclamation
+defines Russia's tenure of Kuldja, and not the
+vague promise that was uttered in the ears of the
+authorities at Pekin. Now Russia knows this as well
+as we do; and she is aware that no strict adherence to
+her word of honour will induce the people of Western,
+as well as of Eastern, Turkestan to believe that she
+retrocedes Kuldja for any other cause than fear of the
+Chinese. The Khokandians, the Bokhariots, as well
+as the Kirghiz, the Calmucks, and the Kashgari, will
+all argue that Russia restores Kuldja not through any
+desire to fulfil her engagements, but simply because she
+cannot decline to fulfil them without engaging in a war
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+with China, and her compliance with the demand would
+then be construed as an admission of her disinclination to
+encounter China in the field. In fact, even if Russia had
+promptly restored Kuldja, she would not have secured
+the credit she might have claimed for her good faith,
+and she would have had no guarantee that the Chinese
+would have rested content with the cession of Ili proper
+and not gone on to claim, in a moment of military
+arrogance, the restoration of the Naryn district, which
+China at a period of weakness had herself ceded to
+Russia more than twenty years ago. Then, besides these
+objections to the surrender of Kuldja on political
+grounds, there are commercial and fiscal reasons why
+Russia should be loth to restore this province. Not only
+has it become highly prosperous and thickly populated
+under Russian rule, but it has also been raised into one
+of the most fiscally remunerative portions of the
+Russian possessions in Central Asia, and then there is its
+admirable frontier in the Tian Shan, which places the
+future trade with the western parts of China more at
+its disposal, than it is through the Semipalatinsk and
+Chuguchak route, and, above all, it effectually dispels all
+sense of real danger from attack. The Chinese would
+find that to force the Tian Shan range into Kuldja would
+be a task almost impossible for them, and they would
+be compelled to enter the province from the north by
+Karkaru. By so doing, they would leave the whole
+of their flank and line of communication exposed to an
+attack with telling effect both at Manas and in Kashgar,
+and with a scientific foe such as Russia, no sane
+Chinaman could dream of attacking Kuldja except in
+the most overwhelming force. It may be as well to
+sketch here the history of Russia's rule in Kuldja from
+1871 to the present time, before proceeding with the
+consideration of the questions aroused by the difficulty
+between Russia and China.</p>
+
+<p>When an independent government had been founded
+in Kuldja in 1866, a ruler of the name of Abul Oghlan
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+was placed upon the throne. He appears to have been
+a Tungan, and he certainly was a truculent and self-confident
+potentate. He refused to abide by the stipulations
+of the Treaties of Kuldja and Pekin, and in
+petty matters as in great, set himself in direct opposition
+to Russia. For five years he pursued his career
+undisturbed by exterior influences, and during that
+period he tolerated the inroads of his subjects into
+Russian territory, urged the Kirghiz tribes beyond his
+frontier to revolt, and forbade Russian merchants to
+enter his dominions. On a small scale, he aped the
+manners subsequently adopted by Yakoob Beg. But
+he was only a minor and insignificant despot. His
+people groaned under his tyranny, and the 75,000
+slaves within his dominions were only too anxious to
+be relieved from their bondage by any deliverer whatsoever.
+The state of Kuldja, as administered by Abul
+Oghlan, was pre-eminently one that would fall to pieces
+at the first rude shock from outside. For five years, or
+thereabouts, the Russian authorities at Vernoe, Naryn,
+and in Semiretchinsk put up with his veiled hostility;
+but when it became evident that his state was on the
+eve of falling into divers fragments, of which Yakoob
+Beg would, probably, come in for the lion's share, the
+Russians, whose patience had become well-nigh exhausted,
+resolved not to be forestalled in Kuldja, either by the
+Athalik Ghazi, or the Tungani Confederation. A kind
+of <i>ultimatum</i> was presented to Kuldja, in which Abul
+Oghlan was given a last chance of retaining power, if
+he consented to ratify the terms of the past treaties
+with China. He does not appear to have distinctly
+refused to do so, when he was required to enter into
+this agreement with Russia. But he prevaricated and
+delayed, until at last the patience of the Muscovite
+authorities was quite exhausted. They resolved to
+destroy the government of Abul Oghlan, to annex
+Kuldja, and to bring their frontier down to the Tian
+Shan.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In May, 1871, Major Balitsky crossed the river
+Borodshudsir, which formed the boundary between
+the two countries, and, at the head of a small detachment,
+advanced some distance into the dominions of
+Abul Oghlan. His force, however, was small, and, after
+a brief reconnaissance, he retired within Russian territory.
+Six weeks afterwards the main body under
+General Kolpakovsky crossed the frontier into Kuldja
+and marched on the capital. That invading army consisted
+of only 1,785 men and sixty-five officers. At first
+the forces of Abul Oghlan offered a brave resistance,
+but the Russian cannon and rifles carried everything
+before them; and on the 4th of July the ruler presented
+himself at the Russian outposts. When taken
+before General Kolpakovsky, he said, "I trusted to the
+righteousness of my cause, and to the help of God.
+Conquered, I submit to the will of the Almighty. If
+any crime has been committed, punish the sovereign,
+but spare his innocent subjects." The next day the
+Russian general entered the capital after a campaign
+that had only lasted eight or nine days. Protection
+was promised to all who would lay down their arms,
+and the army of Abul Oghlan was disbanded. Abul
+Oghlan was pensioned, and Orel was appointed as his
+place of residence. Kuldja or "Dzungaria," as it is
+called in the proclamation, was annexed "in perpetuity,"
+and became the Russian sub-governorship of Priilinsk.
+There can be no doubt but that the Russian occupation
+of Kuldja was an unqualified benefit to the inhabitants
+of that region. The declaration of the abolition of
+slavery alone released seventy-five thousand human
+beings from a life of hardship and hopelessness. The
+return of trade, which had become stagnant, ensured
+the prosperity and advancement of the active portion
+of the community, and during the seven years Russia
+has ruled in Kuldja, the people have steadily progressed
+in moral and material welfare. The population has
+during the same period remarkably increased, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+valleys of the Ili teem with a population at once contented
+and prosperous. The rule of Russia in Kuldja
+is the brightest spot in her Central Asian administration.
+The Chinese in demanding the retrocession of
+Kuldja labour under the one disadvantage that they
+come to oust a beneficent rule. This disadvantage is
+made the greater by the bad name the Chinese have
+earned in Kashgar and the Tungan country, by the
+atrocities they are said to have committed. Those who
+will take the trouble to scan the matter carefully,
+and to consult the <i>Pekin Gazette</i>, as much as they do
+the <i>Tashkent</i>, will find that these atrocities are for the
+most part the creation of panic, and of malicious observers,
+and in the few cases where Chinese vindictiveness
+overcame military discipline, as at Manas and Aksu,
+we have clear evidence that women and children were
+spared. The <i>Tashkent Gazette</i> has laboured strenuously,
+and not in vain, to disseminate the report of Chinese
+atrocities; and one London paper has so far assisted
+the object of the Russian press in raising a feeling of
+indignation against China, on account of these reported
+massacres in Eastern Turkestan, that it has placed
+translations of these charges before the English reader,
+and, on the authority of the <i>Tashkent Gazette</i>, has
+indicted and summarily convicted the Chinese of the
+grossest acts of inhumanity. We would venture to
+suggest, that in common fairness to the Chinese this
+journal should place before its readers the temperately
+worded and dignified reports that have appeared in the
+<i>Pekin Gazette</i> of those events upon which the <i>Tashkent
+Gazette</i> has commented so indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>As we said, the Chinese are fully resolved to regain
+Ili. They may not be able to induce Russia easily to
+surrender it, yet they will not despair. In all probability
+they will fail altogether to re-acquire it by diplomatic
+means, yet they will not omit to employ all the
+artifices that are sanctioned by modern diplomacy.
+There have been rumours that China intended handing
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+over to Russia a strip of territory in Manchuria, which
+would give to the Russian harbour of Vladivostock a
+land communication with the forts on the Amoor. But
+this rumour had no solid foundation, and the latest
+intelligence goes to show that China's successes beyond
+Gobi, instead of making her moderate in the north, have
+given her confidence sufficient to arouse her into a state
+of opposition to further encroachments on the part of
+Russia in that direction. It is now said that Russia
+demands pecuniary indemnification for the money she
+has expended in raising Kuldja to its present highly
+prosperous condition; and at a first glance nothing
+could seem fairer, nor do we think that the Chinese
+would have raised objections to the payment of a moderate
+sum. But the sum demanded by the Russians is
+far from moderate. The exact amount has not been
+mentioned, but the Chinese declare that it exceeds the
+total cost of the campaign in the north-west, and that
+certainly was not less than two millions sterling. This
+is, of course, too exorbitant, and is only put forward as
+a reason for declining to abide by her former agreement,
+and to give her diplomatists a <i>locus standi</i> in their discussions
+with the Chinese representatives. A Chinese
+Embassy has been authorized to proceed to St. Petersburg,
+and to endeavour to effect an understanding with
+Russia upon the Kuldja question; but it does not
+appear to have started, and the real settlement lies in
+the hands of Tso Tsung Tang and General Kaufmann.
+The latest report is that the former has demanded afresh
+the restoration of Kuldja; the Russian reply is awaited
+with eagerness and some anxiety. In the meanwhile
+the Chinese have suffered a local reverse of no significance
+at the hands of a chief of Khoten, and their
+power does not seem to extend south of Yarkand. But
+they are hurrying up reinforcements, and 20,000 fresh
+troops had reached Manas some weeks ago. They have
+also an extensive recruiting ground amongst the Calmucks, and
+their position of Chuguchak might be of great
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+strategical importance. If the Kuldja question give
+rise to a Russo-Chinese war, the Chinese are sufficiently
+numerous and sufficiently prepared to task the capacity
+of an army of 20,000 Russians; and it is quite certain
+there are not 5,000 in Kuldja at present. But the
+Kuldja question, despite the prominence it has attained,
+is only one, if the most important and pressing, of
+those questions that are raised and suggested by the
+appearance of the Chinese in Central Asia. More
+especially is this the case if, as can scarcely be doubted,
+the Russians refuse to restore Kuldja; yet the Chinese,
+knowing the strength of their adversary, shall hesitate
+to attack where they cannot but recognize that the
+penalties of failure must be immense. In that event
+the Kuldja question will long remain unsolved, and for
+a time perhaps it will be forgotten. But the Chinese
+will not forget, nor will they condone the offence. But
+whatever may be the interval, and however great the
+delay, the Kuldja question will continue to remain a
+most important portion of Central Asian politics, and
+must, so long as it is unsettled, operate in a manner
+adverse to the interests of Russia. The Chinese need
+only maintain their camps at Chuguchak, Karakaru,
+Manas, Aksu, Ush Turfan and Kashgar, and slowly
+bring up reinforcements from Kansuh and from the
+Calmuck country, to render Russia's hold on Kuldja
+dangerously insecure. In fact, in this matter the Chinese
+have the game in their own hands, and can play a
+waiting game; whereas Russia can only hope to profit
+by precipitation on the part of Tso Tsung Tang. If
+the Chinese refuse to hold any intercourse with the
+faithless Russians, and simply content themselves with
+the declaration that they cannot re-enter into political
+or commercial relations with them until Kuldja is retroceded,
+Russia can never rest tranquil either in Kuldja,
+Naryn, or Khokand. Above all, so long as she is occupied
+in Western Asia as she is at present, she could
+never dare to cross the path of China, and enter upon a
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+war which would rage from Vladivostock and the Amoor
+to Kuldja and Kashgar. Therefore the settlement of
+the Kuldja question is not such an easy matter as might
+be supposed; nor does it find Russia so strong or China
+so weak as might have been expected. But after all,
+as we have just said, the Kuldja question is not the
+only one suggested by the appearance of the Chinese in
+Eastern Turkestan. There is the far wider one raised
+by the appearance of the Chinese as a factor in the great
+Central Asian question. The three great Asiatic Powers
+have now converged upon a point; what is to be the
+result?</p>
+
+<p>The only way to be in a position to venture upon a
+surmise as to the future, is to realize in its full significance
+the lessons of the past. What have been the
+mutual relations between England, Russia, and China?
+We have assumed throughout this volume, and we
+shall assume here, the irreconcilable hostility of England
+and Russia, in Asia at all events, veneered over
+as it is by a lacquer of politeness and civilization. We
+have only to consider the relations between England
+and China, and between Russia and China. To take
+the latter first, they have always been united by ties of
+friendship and reciprocity in commercial and political
+rights. Their intercourse has been on the whole singularly
+harmonious, and while we have been compelled to
+wage three wars to obtain a standing for our merchants
+in the seaports, Russia, without being compelled to
+resort to anything like the same extreme measures,
+has been able to secure all she, or her merchants,
+wanted in Middle and Western China. She has made
+the Amoor a Russian river; she dominates the Yellow
+and Japanese seas from Vladivostock; and she has
+acquired in her position among the Khalkas, and in
+Kuldja, two portals to various weak points in the
+Chinese Empire. Yet all the time she has been on
+terms of the closest amity with China. She has several
+commercial treaties of the most favourable character,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+and she has always been on the footing of "the most
+favoured nation." But she has been more than that;
+she has been the most favoured nation. But the
+Chinese have not failed to observe that this good
+understanding with Russia has, so far as advantages
+arising from it go, been a very one-sided affair. For
+all Russia's protestations of friendship and good-will,
+what advantages has China reaped from those high-flown
+promises? Whereas, the patriotic Chinaman
+has but to look to the Amoor, and to the attenuated
+province of Manchuria, to see what Russian friendship
+means. He can go farther still. He has only to
+enquire into the relations Russia has managed to
+conclude with the Taranath Lama; he has only to hear
+what the people of Ourga think of Russia's position in
+the vicinity of that important city; and he cannot fail
+to form a very clear and decided opinion as to what
+Russia's friendship signifies. The Chinese have, in the
+full extent of their northern frontier, a great question
+in discussion with Russia. So long as China was weak,
+and consequently unable to resent the patronage of her
+friend, so long was Russia able to play "my lady
+bountiful" with a good grace and perfect success.
+But the moment China became strong, and in a position
+to resent the condescension of her whilome ally, the
+Chinese took a different tone, and already we hear of
+the Chinese assuming a semi-hostile attitude in the
+Amoor region. But whereas China's apprehension&mdash;for
+it is apprehension that is at the root of her hostility
+to Russia, at Russia's designs in Manchuria and among
+the Khalkas is vague at present&mdash;her indignation is
+clear and easily defined at Russia retaining possession
+of Kuldja after she has demanded its restoration. In
+short, all her apprehension along the northern frontier,
+which has slumbered, but never died out, since the
+Russians seized the Amoor posts during the Crimean
+War, is reduced to a focus in Central Asia, where Russia
+appears inclined to throw herself in the path of, or at
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+least to retard, their victorious career. It is not so
+much the Kuldja question, which is of local importance,
+that is of pressing moment, as the rupture between
+Russia and China, that a crisis in the Issik Kul region
+will make complete. That rupture has already taken
+place, and no concession on the part of Russia will
+restore her good name with the Chinese. She may
+hand Kuldja over now, or she may keep it by the
+strong arm if she can; but she has forfeited all claim
+to consideration by the Chinese, through delaying to
+accede to that which those people consider in every
+sense their right and due. Had Russia at once said to
+China, "We will abandon Kuldja, and only require you
+to guarantee the safety of the population," there would
+have been not only the preservation of the good understanding
+between the countries, but there might have
+been, for fresh purposes, a Russo-Chinese alliance in
+Central Asia. That alliance must have been fraught
+with danger to this country, and for reasons that will
+best be described under the head of Anglo-Chinese
+relations.</p>
+
+<p>But the Russian authorities failed to grasp the
+situation in its full extent. They treated the Kuldja
+question as a mere local affair, and they trifled with
+the Chinese as if the latter had no very strong interest
+in the matter. They altogether ignored the terrible
+earnestness of the Chinese character, and they treated the
+demands of Tso Tsung Tang in a spirit of levity that
+must have roused the ire of that general. Their policy,
+regarded from any point of view, was shallow and
+unwise, but, bearing in mind the past tact and diplomatic
+skill shown by Russia in her dealings with China,
+it must appear more shallow and foolish. Of course
+this Kuldja question differs from all previous questions
+in the essential point of all, that here for the first time
+Russia had to go back instead of advancing, as always
+had been the case heretofore. The Russian authorities
+simply regarded the matter from the point of view of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+what effect it would have upon the peoples of Central
+Asia. They persuaded themselves that to hand over
+Kuldja would be to give an impetus to every hostile
+element in Western Turkestan, as well as to lower their
+prestige generally throughout Asia. As a leading
+Russian paper expressed it, "the retrocession of Kuldja
+would be an act of political suicide, for not only would
+it raise the prestige of China to a higher point than
+ever before, but it would also undermine our position in
+Eastern Asia, by giving the Chinese a strong military
+position within our natural frontier. For these reasons
+Kuldja cannot be restored." That paragraph sums up
+the arguments the Russians will employ in defence of
+their continuing to retain possession of Kuldja. They
+add something to their effect in the popular mind by
+diatribes against the Chinese for rumoured barbarities,
+by drawing comparisons, flattering to themselves and
+to their administrative capacity, between the present
+condition of Kuldja, and what it would become under a
+restored Chinese rule. In depicting what this would
+be, they entirely ignore the prosperous condition of
+Kuldja before the Tungan revolt, and they appear to
+assume that the anarchy existing there, when they
+entered it in 1871, was due to the Chinese, instead of
+being caused by the ingratitude and fickleness of its
+own people. And they shut their eyes to the great
+benefits China conferred upon Central Asia during the
+century that she was paramount therein. They would
+like us, and every other observer of the crisis, to do the
+same. That is impossible, for the teaching of history
+is clear, and points to a diametrically opposite conclusion.
+We do not dispute the beneficence of Russia's
+government of Kuldja. We freely admit it. That is
+no reason for maligning the Chinese, and asserting that
+they are utter barbarians; nor is it a reason, in the eyes
+of Chinamen, for a refusal to restore Kuldja. By
+refusing to entertain the overtures of Tso Tsung Tang,
+which were made, there is reason to believe, before the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+attack on Yakoob Beg, the Russians huffed the Chinese;
+and by procrastinating ever since, when questioned upon
+the subject, they have still further displeased them.
+The Russians are aware of this, and feel convinced that,
+no matter how obliging they might be disposed to be,
+the Chinese will now no longer appreciate their moderation.
+If we admit this, as can scarcely be gainsaid,
+what becomes of the Kuldja question, and of its
+peaceful solution that many claim to see? How can it
+be peacefully solved, if Russia will not accede to the
+terms from which China is resolved not to budge?
+Surely not by a fresh commotion on the part of the
+Mussulman population, which some persons have pretended
+to forecast by magnifying a petty success that
+has been obtained by the insignificant ruler of Khoten
+over a Chinese detachment. Surely not by such trivial
+circumstances as the hostility of an outlying dependency,
+will China be either expelled from Kashgar, or
+induced to forego her claims on Kuldja. The success of
+the Khoten chief is but a minor incident in the campaign,
+and for that district and its people it must be
+pronounced a great misfortune. The Chinese will exact
+a terrible revenge. The Kuldja question will not be
+solved by such means, English readers can feel assured;
+and the hostility of Russia and China towards each other
+will become more pronounced every day. Already petty
+disturbances are reported to have taken place along the
+border. Russian merchants have been molested by parties
+of brigands, among whom the assailed assert there were
+Chinese soldiers; and no satisfaction could be obtained
+from their generals. Representations have been made
+to Tso Tsung Tang upon the subject, and his reply
+has not been very amicable. Russian caravans, which
+were always welcome during the progress of the war at
+Manas, Karakaru, and Urumtsi, are now no longer
+greeted with the same cordiality, and the Chinese are
+evincing an intention to close their frontier to Russians.
+Few caravans, the <i>Tashkent Gazette</i> informs us, now care
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+to leave Kuldja for the territory occupied by the Chinese
+army; and slowly, but none the less surely, is the old
+alliance between Russia and China departing to join the
+things that were, but are not. But, although so much
+is clear, it is almost impossible to predicate the future
+course of the Kuldja question. It is not probable that
+Tso Tsung Tang will openly attack the Russians, yet
+his hand may be forced by the home authorities, and
+he may be left no alternative between that and the
+abandonment of his enterprise. It must be always
+remembered that Russia's best weapon is intrigue at
+Pekin, and a skilful envoy might so far manipulate the
+rivalry between Tso and Li Hung Chang as to induce
+the latter to paralyze the ambition of the former by
+withholding supplies and reinforcements from the army
+of Central Asia. So unpatriotic a course would, we
+believe, be hateful to Li Hung Chang, and it, certainly,
+would be attended with great danger, sure to recoil
+upon his guilty head, if for a personal rivalry he debased
+himself so far as to become the tool of his country's
+foe. But yet it is in vain to deny that there is danger
+to the preservation of China's most cherished interests
+in the rivalry of some of her chief statesmen. The
+Kuldja question, which scarcely admits of peaceful
+solution in Central Asia, might be solved in the palace
+at Pekin more easily and more effectually than by a
+campaign on a large scale in Jungaria and Turkestan;
+and there is a possibility that Russia may by this means
+seek to nullify the danger from Tso Tsung Tang, and
+to stultify the recent Chinese successes. It is very
+doubtful whether they would succeed, for Chinese
+opinion runs high upon the topic, and the Mantchoo caste
+is united in its support of its member Tso Tsung Tang.
+Even if they did, it would only be shelving the Kuldja
+question, for so long as the Chinese remain in Kashgaria,
+and at Manas and Karakaru, they must regard the presence
+of Russia in Kuldja as a slight to themselves, as
+well as a menace to their line of communications.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But every probability is against their succeeding. Li
+Hung Chang's position is not so secure that he can dare
+to put himself in face of those who champion a national
+cause, as is the re-absorption of Chinese Turkestan. The
+return of Tso Tsung Tang with his veterans would be
+the least danger that the adoption of an unpatriotic
+policy would entail. If this home danger, then, does
+not arise, the Kuldja question will be settled between
+Tso and the Russian authorities in Khokand and Kuldja.
+The result of that discussion cannot be doubtful. The
+advocates on either side are soldiers, each equally confident
+in their own abilities and power, and each flushed
+by a long tide of success. They will come to the discussion
+of the question with heated blood and excited
+nerves; reason will not be the presiding goddess at the
+council board. There will be accusations and recriminations
+bandied from one side to the other. If such be
+the case, the Kuldja question will not be long in discussion,
+and before the close of the present year perhaps,
+but more probably early next spring, there will be war
+between Russia and China along the Tian Shan range.
+Even if Tso is content to permit his arguments to be
+clothed in diplomatic language, there will be no solution
+of the difficulty, so long as Russia remains where she is;
+and consequently the difference will be as great between
+Russia and China as if there were open hostilities between
+the countries. And this, after all, is the main
+point, for the destruction of all friendly sentiment
+between Russia and China means the addition of
+another element to "the great game in Central Asia,"
+and that element, as an adverse one to Russia, is a
+beneficial circumstance for this country. The difference
+over the Kuldja question magnifies the previously existing
+discordant points between the countries, and irretrievably
+wrecks whatever prospect there once was of
+Russia and China pursuing an identical policy towards
+Baroghil and Cashmere. We have now to consider the
+past relations between England and China, in order that
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+we may be in a position to appreciate the full significance
+of China's reappearance in Central Asia, and
+also what is to be the probable outcome of the gradual
+approximation of the three Great Powers, and the slow
+extinction of the once innumerable petty states of
+Asia.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, have been the mutual relations between
+England and China in the past? There is no necessity
+to enter into the question of the footing we are on along
+the sea-coast, for that is really beside the question; nor
+need we recapitulate the wars which we have at various
+times been compelled to wage in Eastern China. The
+result of those wars, those treaties, and that constant
+inter-communication has been, that Englishmen have
+secured a foothold in many of the principal cities, and
+that English trade is supreme there. But the relations
+along the land frontier are quite the opposite of those
+obtained on the sea-board, and they are influenced by
+entirely different considerations. During the last century,
+and for a considerable portion of the present, we
+were not, strictly speaking, neighbours of the Chinese;
+for between the two empires there intervened a belt of
+semi-independent states, who nominally owned allegiance
+to China. Some of these were Nepaul, Sikhim,
+Bhutan and Birmà, with its dependency of Assam. It
+was in the days of Lord Cornwallis that we first realized
+the significance of the fact that Chinese prestige had
+penetrated south of the Himalaya. The Ghoorka rulers
+of Nepaul had, on several occasions, molested the peaceable
+Tibetans, and at last had grown so bold, that on
+one expedition they advanced as far as Lhasa, which
+they plundered. At that moment the aged Keen-Lung
+was meditating the retirement from public life, which a
+few years afterwards, like the Asiatic Charles the Fifth
+that he was, he adopted; but, on the news of this insult
+to his authority, his warlike spirit fired up, and he vowed
+that the marauders of Khatmandoo should dearly pay
+for their audacity. A large army, of the reputed strength
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+of 70,000 men, was collected, and the Chinese generals
+advanced by the Kirong Pass upon the Nepaulese capital.
+A desperate battle was fought along this elevated road,
+resulting in victory to the Chinese. Several other
+encounters took place with the same result, and the
+Ghoorkas were compelled to sue for terms. The Chinese
+showed no disposition to stay their advance, until Lord
+Cornwallis mediated between the foes, and peace ensued.
+Nepaul acknowledged its suzerainty to China, and agreed
+to send tribute every five years to Pekin. For more
+than half a century this was regularly sent, but during
+the last thirty years it has been either discontinued, or
+has grown irregular. But for us the main point is,
+after all, that the Chinese, although yielding to the
+remonstrance of Lord Cornwallis, really did so with a
+bad grace. We had stood between them and their
+prey.</p>
+
+<p>But this was not the full extent of the mistake we
+had actually committed. We had annoyed the Chinese;
+but we had absolutely offended the people and the ruling
+Lamas of Tibet. Warren Hastings had sent two missions&mdash;one
+under Mr. George Bogle, the other under
+Captain Turner&mdash;to the Teshu Lama, and by means
+of these embassies had broken ground very happily in
+Tibet. He had also conferred an obligation upon him
+by dealing leniently with the intractable Bhutanese or
+Bhuteas; and he had followed up that sense of obligation
+by the despatch of two successful missions. When
+Lord Cornwallis threw the <i>ægis</i> of British protection
+over Nepaul, it is true that we had no diplomatic relationship
+with Tibet, but we were on a good footing with
+the people generally, having a native representative at
+Lhasa named Purungir Gosain, and being in high repute
+at Shigatze, the chief city of the southern portion of
+Tibet. The Tibetans, the instant the Ghoorkas raided
+their country, notified the same to our government, and
+requested its good offices to prevent the Ghoorkas invading
+their country. The Chinese, their lawful protectors,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+were so far away that much damage could be
+inflicted upon them before the Chinese could have time
+to despatch a vindicating army; therefore they appealed
+to their friends the English, whom they had always
+found so just, for assistance in their extremity. Their
+appeal was evidently made with the impression that it
+would be granted. Therefore it was with double regret
+they saw the English remain indifferent while the
+Ghoorkas were pressing on against Lhasa, and ravaging
+the fertile districts watered by the Sanpu. But their
+regret and surprise at our government remaining indifferent
+were as nothing compared with their indignation
+when they learnt that we were actually interfering on
+behalf of the marauding Ghoorkas. We saved the
+Ghoorkas from condign chastisement, and we of course
+prevented the establishment of a Chinese garrison at
+Khatmandoo, which we could whenever we chose have
+easily expelled; but we offended the Tibetans and the
+Chinese, and induced them to unite in a policy of hostility
+against ourselves. After that war (1792) the
+Himalayan passes were closed against us, and the Chinese
+block-houses have effectually barred the way to
+Tibet and Northern Asia ever since. Mr. Thomas Manning,
+one of the most intrepid and highly gifted of
+English travellers, penetrated into Tibet in 1812, and
+resided there some time. But that is the only instance
+in which an English traveller overcame Bhutea and
+Ghoorka indifference and Chinese hostility. Tibet
+remains a sealed book, and, despite treaty rights to enter
+it, no Englishman goes thither, although the attraction
+is great, and the prize to be secured far from vague
+or trivial. The assumed reason is the covert hostility
+of the Chinese.</p>
+
+<p>If we turn farther to the east, to Assam&mdash;which we
+have absorbed&mdash;to Birmà, and even to Siam, we find the
+same causes in operation. We recognized in Yunnan
+the Panthay Sultan of Talifoo; we have always striven
+to treat the kings of Birmà and Siam as independent
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+princes, whereas they are only Chinese vassals; and we
+are believed to have carried on intrigues with the Shans
+and other tribes beyond the Assamese frontier. These
+steps may be prudent or they may not for other reasons;
+but they certainly are imprudent for the reason that
+they offend the Chinese. As a policy intended to conciliate
+the Chinese, our frontier policy on the north and
+the east has been the worst possible, and a tissue of
+blunders from beginning to end; and the result is that
+for the last half-century we have lived on the very worst
+terms with the Chinese. We should have conciliated
+them, but we aroused instead all their latent suspicion
+and dislike. We should have become friendly neighbours,
+and, on the contrary, we are neighbours who, if
+not decidedly hostile to each other, shun each other's
+presence. And the real base of our sentiment towards
+the Chinese is to be seen in the fact that one of the
+first articles in the creed of Indian state policy is "to
+keep China as far off as possible." That precept, which
+may have been very useful, has served its turn, and it
+is time that our Indo-Chinese policy should be set upon
+a new basis. With China once more supreme upon
+our whole northern frontier, and with her presenting
+ultimatums at Bangkok, and coercing the ruler of
+Mandalay as she esteems fit, it is high time for us,
+apart from the Central Asian question altogether, to set
+our house in order with the Chinese. The mistakes we
+made in championing the Ghoorkas, in acknowledging
+the Panthays, and in a general policy of indifference to
+Chinese opinion, have all tended to bring about the
+present deadlock in our relations with China. Our
+acknowledgment of the Athalik Ghazi cannot have conduced
+to the creation of any very friendly sentiment
+among the Chinese towards us, and, therefore, at the
+present moment we must assume that the state of feeling
+existing among the Chinese in Tibet and Yunnan towards
+us exists in Kashgaria also; and that feeling is a
+veiled hostility. Therefore, while the Chinese are beginning
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+to regard Russia with the hostile feelings that
+once were reserved for England, they have by no means
+altered their old sentiments towards us. We have done
+nothing whatever to induce them to do so. We have not
+helped them in any way to regain Kashgar, and on the
+whole English opinion may be said to have been more adverse
+to, than in favour of, their claims. They have found
+in the arsenals of Kashgar and Yarkand many proofs of
+England's alliance with, and friendship for, Yakoob Beg;
+and, on the other hand, they certainly owe much to the
+assistance of Russian merchants, and the forbearance
+of the Russian government. Nor should we for an
+instant delude ourselves with the fallacy that the Chinese
+will look to us for aid against Russia, as Yakoob Beg
+did. They have conquered Eastern Turkestan without
+us&mdash;in fact, despite of our moral opposition; and they
+will retain it if they can by their own right arms. It
+will not enter their head for an instant to play the old
+game of Yakoob Beg, of setting England off against
+Russia. But, although they will play a perfectly independent
+game, it by no means follows that they will be
+hostile to this country, if by some fortunate stroke of
+diplomacy we could bring home to their minds the fact
+that England is glad at the result of the war in Central
+Asia, however much she may have failed during its
+progress to recognize which was the rightful cause.
+But what is that fortunate stroke of diplomacy to be?
+and how is it to be brought to pass? To each of these
+questions it would be rash to give any confident reply.
+In dealing with the Chinese we are not only treating
+with a people whom we very imperfectly understand,
+but also with a government the secret springs of whose
+policy we neither know nor appreciate. The action we
+might therefore adopt, founded though it should be on
+the experience of some Englishman versed in the mysteries
+of China, might fail to accomplish what it seemed
+calculated to secure. It might be crowned with success,
+it might be condemned with failure. Of course the first
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+thing to decide is, how are we to take official cognizance
+of China's reconquest of Kashgaria, and how are we to
+bring home to the minds of Tso Tsung Tang and his
+lieutenants the knowledge that we have repented of our
+shortsighted policy towards Yakoob Beg, and are willing
+to atone for it in so far as we are able by an ample
+recognition of the change in affairs north of the Karakoram?</p>
+
+<p>The Che-foo Convention gave us the right to send an
+embassy to Tibet, on the condition that it should be
+acted upon within a given space. We did not avail
+ourselves of that concession, and the Chinese, we are
+informed, consider that the right has lapsed. We may
+have been wise or we may have been foolish&mdash;in my
+opinion we have been foolish&mdash;in declining to enforce
+the only real concession China made, in reparation for
+the murder of Mr. Margary. Does this concession,
+which we never made use of, entitle us to send a mission
+to the Chinese in Kashgar? Acting upon this precedent,
+are we justified in supposing that the Chinese would
+hold out a hand of friendship to an English envoy
+coming from Leh to Yarkand? It is much to be
+feared that it would not. At the present moment, too,
+the country must be in such a disturbed state, that the
+Chinese would have a ready excuse if any accident
+befel our envoy. Moreover, at the present moment an
+envoy would have no definite object before him. A
+few years hence, when the Chinese rule shall be completely
+restored throughout Eastern Turkestan, it may
+be reasonable to expect a revival of trade in this direction;
+but at present it would be premature to agitate
+for it. Nor would a simple embassy of congratulation
+look well. We have too recently befriended the Athalik
+Ghazi to make our congratulations to his conqueror
+anything but a mockery. The Chinese would be puffed
+up with vanity, and think that we were only worshipping
+their rising sun. Whatever action we do take
+in Central Asia, to effect an understanding with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+Chinese, we must be very careful that it has been well
+considered, and that it is as cautious as it must be
+clearly defined. Any mistake would be simply fatal to
+the preservation of good relations with China. Therefore,
+we must do nothing. <i>Quieta non movere</i> must be
+our motto, and we must only look forward to some
+auspicious occasion when it may be possible to enter
+into cordial relations with China.</p>
+
+<p>But, although our hands are tied in Central Asia,
+they are not fettered at Pekin, and we certainly should
+congratulate, if we have not done so already, the Chinese
+on their remarkable successes in the Tian Shan regions.
+That step might be pregnant with beneficent results,
+and our desire to be on good terms with our new, yet
+our old, neighbour might be met in a cordial manner by
+the Chinese. The Chinese will not stoop to propitiate
+us in order to preserve their rule in Eastern Turkestan;
+but it is against common sense to suppose that they
+will be eager to embroil themselves with us at the same
+moment that they are quarrelling with the Russians.
+The Kuldja question must throw China into our alliance,
+if we are not precipitate, and do not offer her any slight
+by meddling with this semi-independent chief of
+Khoten, who is said to have overthrown a Chinese
+detachment. And, in negotiating with the rulers of
+Kashgaria, we must remember that commercial advantages
+are all very well, but that political are infinitely
+more important. It has been tersely said that we
+patronized Yakoob Beg in order to make a market for
+Kangra tea; but the very trivial advantages we secured
+in a commercial sense were far more than counterbalanced
+by the political disadvantages we derived from
+a recognition of the Athalik Ghazi. In dealing with
+the Chinese we must not set before us, as our guiding
+star, the privilege of supplying the good people of
+Kashgar and Yarkand with tea and other necessaries.
+What we aspire to is to be on terms of amity with
+China, as a power in Central Asia, which will possess
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+everything it desires when Ili has been restored, and
+which most accordingly be inclined to resent with us
+the undue aggrandizement of Russia. These are the
+future advantages that may accrue from an understanding
+between England and China. But at the
+present juncture there are others similar in kind, but
+immediate in effect. The Afghan question, which now
+clamours for solution, and which will scarcely pass
+through this crisis without finding our hold on Cabul
+made more assured, is in many respects connected with
+the Kuldja.</p>
+
+<p>In each case the ambition of Russia is the motive
+power, and in each she seeks to play her game with as
+little risk, and as much gain, as possible. In neither
+will she fight, if she can avoid the necessity, yet in each
+there is a point beyond which her honour and her
+interests alike refuse to permit her to remain concealed
+and neutral. The solution of the two questions
+is being worked out simultaneously, and the progress
+of the Afghan question will at least very seriously affect
+the later stages of the Kuldja. If Russia has to fight to
+defend Shere Ali, then we may be sure that Tso Tsung
+Tang's legions will not remain inactive, and that General
+Kolpakovsky will either have to beat a retreat to Vernoe,
+or engage in a war out of which, on his own resources
+alone, it will be impossible for him to issue victorious.
+If Russia interfere openly in defence of Shere Ali,
+Kuldja must be restored to the Chinese, otherwise
+Russia's flank would be exposed to a crushing blow,
+which the Chinese would not be slow to take advantage
+of. Present events on the Ili and on the Cabul have,
+therefore, this much in common, that they both aim,
+directly or indirectly, at the fabric of Russian supremacy
+in Central Asia. The occupation of Afghanistan by
+England, or even a partial occupation of it as is very
+probable, would seriously weaken Russian prestige in
+Western Turkestan. A Chinese occupation of Kuldja
+would undermine her position in Vernoe and Naryn and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+among the Kirghiz. Admitting these, is it not natural
+to suppose that in each case Russia will fight, or that,
+even if she does not fight in each case, she will fight
+in the one that she may deem of the most importance?
+But we need not pursue the subject farther. The
+Chinese are face to face with Russia in the heart of
+Central Asia, just as a few short months ago they were
+opposed to Yakoob Beg and the power of the Tungani.</p>
+
+<p>Their army is drawn up in hostile array; it is each
+day becoming more numerous and more perfectly prepared.
+Its generals are the same who have led it to
+constant victory; its main body is the veterans of
+three campaigns. The Chinese are persuaded, and it is
+impossible to say not justly persuaded, of the righteousness
+of their cause. The Russians can have no equal
+confidence either in their strength, or in their moral
+position. They are not exactly championing a bad
+cause, or a lost one, but, in comparison to the Chinese,
+they have no legal position. It remains to be seen
+whether by force of arms, or by diplomatic superiority,
+they can make up for the flaw in their tenure of Kuldja.
+Farther on, in the vista of the events yet to come, there
+looms the prospect of an Anglo-Chinese alliance, that
+must be most beneficial to the peoples of Asia generally.
+But, before it will be possible for Englishmen to count
+upon the presence of the Chinese as a favourable "factor
+in the Central Asian question," our relations with China
+must be placed upon a firmer and a more friendly basis
+than any which has yet existed. We have it in our
+power to do this, and the ever-widening breach between
+Russia and China simplifies our task in no slight degree.
+The day will come when Russia will discover that the
+Kuldja question was no trivial matter at all, and that
+to it can be traced many important events in Central
+Asia. England may also recognize in it one of the most
+useful circumstances that have ever operated in her
+favour in her long rivalry with Russia. At the very
+crisis of our border history, when we are on the eve of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+dealing out well merited chastisement to an Ameer of
+Cabul, Russia finds herself weakened by being compelled
+to discuss a question with China, when her attention is
+required elsewhere. She will not yield what the Chinese
+demand, yet she dare not refuse; and the latter will
+simply bide their time until she is hampered elsewhere.
+It is no rash prophecy to say that China will be reinstalled,
+either by peaceful means or by force, in Kuldja
+before the close of next year, probably long before. An
+alliance between any two of the three great Asiatic
+Powers must then be conclusive in all Central Asian
+matters, and, before that alliance, the third will have the
+prudence to submit. It behoves us to learn our lesson,
+when that day comes, thoroughly and in good time.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="APPENDIX"></a>APPENDIX.</h2>
+<hr />
+
+<h3><span>THE POSITION OF LOB-NOR.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lake Lob-Nor</span> is placed in the map accompanying this
+volume in accordance with the explorations of Colonel
+Prjevalsky in 1876&ndash;77; the result of which was published
+in Dr. Petermann's <i>Mittheilungen</i> as an extra number
+during the spring of the present year. The accuracy of
+the gallant explorer in identifying Lob-Nor with his
+lake of Kara Koshun had not been challenged when
+this map was drawn, and when the following good
+reasons for doubting its accuracy were published on
+the 14th of September, it was too late to make the
+necessary alteration.</p>
+
+<p>The quotation of Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen's
+strictures on Colonel Prjevalsky's lakes is taken from
+the <i>Athenæum</i> of the 14th of September, 1878:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It would appear that the Russian traveller Prejevalsky,
+in his last remarkable journey in the heart of
+Central Asia, did not explore Lob-Nor at all, as he
+claims to have done. Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen,
+one of the first comparative geographers of the day, has
+examined the account of the journey, more especially
+by the light of Chinese literature, and proves, almost
+incontestably to our thinking, that the true Lob-Nor
+must lie somewhere north-east of the so-called Kara
+Kotchun Lake discovered by Prejevalsky, and that, in
+all probability, it is fed by an eastern arm of the Tarim
+river. This, at all events, would account for the remarkable
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+diminution in bulk undergone by the waters
+of that stream as they proceed southward, which could
+not but strike an attentive reader of the Russian explorer's
+narrative. We have not space to reproduce all
+the arguments which Von Richthofen adduces, but the
+more important are these:&mdash;Prejevalsky's lake was
+fresh, whereas Lob-Nor has been called <i>The</i> Salt Lake,
+<i>par excellence</i>, in all ages; Shaw, Forsyth, and other
+authorities, report that the name Lob-Nor was known
+in those regions, whereas Prejevalsky found no such
+name applied to his lake; the Chinese maps, of the
+accuracy of which Von Richthofen has had repeated
+proofs, represent Lob-Nor as lying more to the north-east,
+and call two lakes lying nearly in the position of
+those discovered by Prejevalsky, Khasomo, Khas being
+the Mongolian for jade, a famous product of Khotan of
+which mediæval traders from China went in quest, passing
+by these very lakes <i>en route</i>. Another important
+argument is, as we have mentioned, based on the bulk
+of water discharged by the Tarim at its mouth. Von
+Richthofen's theory presupposes that the Tarim River
+has altered its course, and that the main rush of water
+is now south-east instead of due east as formerly. The
+whole question is well worthy of further investigation,
+and it is possible that Prejevalsky, whom a recent
+telegram from St. Petersburg reports about to return
+to Central Asia, may be enabled to elucidate it. He
+will return to Zaissan, the Russian frontier post, and
+thence endeavour to make his way into Tibet by way
+of Barkul and Hami.</p>
+
+<p>"It is, however, certain that he will encounter great,
+if not insuperable, obstruction, for we learn from private
+advices from India, that the ill-advised publication in
+the Chefoo Convention of the then proposed mission to
+Tibet has resulted in the issue of the most stringent
+orders to the Tibetan officials at all the various routes
+and passes to allow no European traveller to enter into
+the country on any pretext whatever."
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Having stated the view of Baron Ferdinand von
+Richthofen, which is endorsed by the high authority of
+the <i>Athenæeum</i>, and which bears, moreover, conviction
+upon its face, it is but fair to give the vital portion of
+Colonel Prjevalsky's own description. The <i>Geographical
+Magazine</i>, for May, 1878 Contains <i>in extenso</i> the report,
+and the sentences here quoted are from that translation.</p>
+
+<p>"At a distance of fifteen versts from the smaller
+lake, Kara Buran, the party diverged southward to the
+village of Charchalyk, built about thirty years ago by
+outlaws from Khotan, of which there are at present 114
+engaged in tilling fields for the state.... Where
+Charchalyk now stands, and also at the distance of two
+days' journey from it, are the ruins of two towns, called
+Ottogush-Shari (from Ottogush, a former ruler) and
+Gas-Shari respectively. Close to Lob-Nor (Kara
+Koshun) are the ruins of a third and pretty extensive
+town called Kune-Shari. From inquires, Prejevalsky
+ascertained that about 1861 or 1862 a colony of Russians
+numbering about 160 or 170 people, including
+women and children, with their pack-horses and armed
+with flint-lock muskets, settled on the Lower Tarim
+and at Charchalyk, but that they made no long stay, and
+soon returned to Urumchi, via Turfan.... Turning
+to the Lob-Nor Lake (Kara Koshun), which the travellers
+reached in the early days of February, it should be
+observed that the Tarim discharges itself first into a
+smaller lake (from thirty to thirty-five versts in length,
+and between ten and twelve versts in breadth) called
+Kara Buran (<i>i.e.</i> black storms) into which the Cherchendaria
+flows as well. A great part of the Kara Buran,
+as of Lob-Nor, is overgrow with reeds, the
+river flowing in its bed in the centre. The name Lob-Nor
+is applied by the natives to the whole lower course
+of the Tarim, the larger lake being called Chok-kul or
+Kara Koshun. This lake, or rather morass, is in the
+shape of an irregular ellipse running south-west and
+north-east.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Its major axis is about 90 or 100 versts in length,
+its minor axis not more than twenty versts. This information
+is derived from the natives, as Prejevalsky
+himself explored only the southern and western end,
+and proceeded by boat down the river for about half
+the length of the lake, further progress being rendered
+impossible by the increasing shallowness of the water
+and the masses of reeds in every direction. The water
+itself is clear and sweet, though there are salt marshes
+all round the lake, and beyond them a strip of ground
+parallel with the present borders of the lake and
+overgrown with tamarisks. It is probable that this
+strip was formerly the periphery of the lake, and this
+conclusion is corroborated by the natives, who say
+that thirty years ago the lake was deeper."</p>
+
+<p>It is clear that the true position of Lob-Nor has yet
+to be defined by modern exploration, but we may safely
+assume with the <i>Athenæum</i> that Colonel Prjevalsky's
+Kara Koshun is <i>not</i> Lob-Nor. The accompanying map
+then, in this particular, is unfortunately erroneous.</p>
+
+<p>There is every reason for believing that Lob-Nor will
+be found in the position assigned to it on the Chinese
+chart, the <ins class="corr" title="original had: accurracy">accuracy</ins> of which has been so strikingly
+proved by the correct position given to the two lakes
+Khas-omo, which are identical with the Kara Koshun
+and Kara Bunar of Prjevalsky.</p>
+
+<p>It would be most interesting to obtain a diary or
+other account of those Russian settlers mentioned by
+Prjevalsky, who entered the <i>terra incognita</i> of Central
+Asia during the halcyon days after the signature of the
+Treaty of Kuldja, and just before the outbreak of the
+Tungan revolt. It is possible that they may have
+solved during their return journey to Urumtsi the
+enigma of Lob-Nor without knowing what they had
+achieved. The reader will, therefore, have the kindness
+to bear in mind that Lob-Nor is really (probably about
+three-quarters of a degree) north-east of where it is
+placed on the map, and that the lake represented there
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+is only the Kara Koshun, or Chok Kul of Colonel
+Prjevalsky.</p>
+
+<p>The most recent information is, that Colonel
+Prjevalsky adheres to his view as to the position of
+Lob-Nor, and is preparing a reply which will be published
+in a few weeks from this date (October 1st).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND CHINA.</span>
+
+<span class="chapsub2">Treaty of Commerce concluded between Russia
+and China, at Kuldja, on the 25th Day of
+July, 1851, and ratified on the 13th Day of
+November, 1851.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> plenipotentiary of His Majesty the Emperor of
+All the Russias, and the plenipotentiaries of His
+Majesty the Bogdokhan of Tatsing, hereby declare; the
+Governor General of Ili, and its dependent provinces,
+as well as his deputy, have, after consulting together,
+concluded in the city of Ili (Kuldja), in favour of the
+subjects of both empires, a Treaty of Commerce, which
+establishes a traffic in the cities of Ili (Kuldja), and of
+Tarbagatai (Chuguchak). This treaty is composed of
+the following articles:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h4>Article I.</h4>
+
+<p>The present Treaty of Commerce, concluded in the
+interests of both powers, by demonstrating their mutual
+solicitude for the maintenance of peace between, as well
+as for the well-being of, their respective subjects, ought
+to draw still closer together those links of friendship
+which at the present moment unite the two Powers.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article II.</h4>
+
+<p>The merchants of the two Empires will regulate
+between themselves the interchange of commerce, and
+arrange the various charges at their own will, and without
+any extraneous pressure. On the part of Russia a
+consul will be appointed to superintend the affairs of
+all Russian subjects; and on the part of China, a
+functionary of the superior administration of Ili. In
+the event of any collision between the subjects of either
+Power, each of these agents will decide, in accordance
+with justice, the affairs of his own countrymen.</p>
+
+<h4>Article III.</h4>
+
+<p>This commerce being opened in consideration of the
+mutual friendship of the two Powers, it will not be in
+contravention of existing rights on either side.</p>
+
+<h4>Article IV.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian merchants going either to Ili (Kuldja) or to
+Tarbagatai (Chuguchak) will be accompanied by a
+syndic (caravanbashi). When a caravan going to Ili
+(Kuldja) shall arrive at the Chinese picket of Borokhondjir,
+and when that destined for Tarbagatai
+(Chuguchak) shall reach the first Chinese picket, the
+syndic shall present to the officer of the guard the
+certificate of his government. The said officer, after
+having noted the number of men, of beasts, and of loads
+of merchandise, shall permit the caravan to pass, and shall
+furthermore cause it to be escorted from picket to picket
+by an officer and soldiers. During the march, all disturbance,
+or cause for such, shall be interdicted to soldiers
+and merchants alike.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article V.</h4>
+
+<p>In order to facilitate the task of officers and soldiers,
+Russian merchants shall be obliged, in virtue of the
+present treaty, to follow the route chosen by their body
+guard, both going and returning.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VI.</h4>
+
+<p>If, whilst Russian caravans follow their route outside
+the limit of the guard of Chinese soldiers, bands of
+brigands from the outer clans (Kirghiz) shall commit
+acts of pillage, of assault, or other crimes, the Chinese
+government shall not be required to interfere in the
+matter. When the caravan shall have arrived on
+Chinese territory, similarly also during its residence in
+the factories where merchandise is stored, Russian merchants
+must themselves guard and defend their property.
+They will be expected still more carefully to look after
+their animals when out at pasturage. If, despite all
+precaution, something should happen to go astray, notice
+of such loss must be promptly given to the Chinese
+official; who conjointly with the Russian consul shall
+trace out with all possible diligence the lost article. If
+traces of it are discovered, and those in a village held
+by Chinese subjects, and the thief be captured, the
+punishment shall be prompt and severe. If the thing
+lost be recovered, or any portion of it, it shall be restored
+to the person to whom it belonged.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VII.</h4>
+
+<p>In the event of disputes, litigations, or other trivial
+incidents, between the respective subjects, the Russian
+consul and the Chinese official, of whom mention has
+previously been made, shall use all their efforts to settle
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+the affair satisfactorily. But if, despite every effort to
+avoid such, a criminal case or one of general importance
+should arise, it shall be decided conformably with the
+regulations actually in force on the Kiachta frontier.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VIII.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian merchants shall arrive each year with their
+merchandise between the 25th day of March and the
+10th day of December (of our style, or according to the
+Chinese calendar between the day Tchin-ming and the
+day Tong-tchi); after the latter of these dates, the
+arrival of caravans shall cease. If the merchandise
+imported during that period (8&frac12; months) should not be
+sold, it shall be permissible to the merchants to remain
+a longer space in China, in order to complete their sale;
+after which the consul shall take charge of their departure.
+It is moreover understood that Russian merchants
+shall not obtain an escort of officers and soldiers,
+neither for going nor for returning, if they have not at
+the least twenty camels laden with merchandise. If
+a merchant or the Russian consul has need for some
+special matter to send an express message, every facility
+shall be accorded him for doing so. But in order that
+the service of officers and soldiers should not become
+too onerous, there shall only be twice in the same month
+these extraordinary expeditions outside the line of the
+advanced guards.</p>
+
+<h4>Article IX.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian and Chinese merchants can see each other
+without restriction about matters of business; but
+Russian subjects, finding themselves in the factory under
+the care of the Russian consul, may not walk about in
+the suburbs and the streets, unless provided with a
+"permit" from the consul; without such permit, they
+must not go out of their enclosure. Whoever shall
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+go out without permission shall be led back to the
+consul, who will proceed against him according to law.</p>
+
+<h4>Article X.</h4>
+
+<p>If a criminal belonging to either of the two Empires
+should flee to the other, he shall not be afforded
+sanctuary; but, on the part of each Power, the local
+authorities shall take the most severe measures, and make
+the most searching enquiries to arrest him. There
+shall be reciprocal extradition of fugitives of this class.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XI.</h4>
+
+<p>As it is to be foreseen that the Russian merchants,
+who shall come to China on commercial matters, will
+have with them carriages and beasts of burden, there
+shall be assigned for their use, near the city of Ili,
+certain places on the banks of the river Ili, and also near
+the city of Tarbagatai other places where there is both
+water and pasturage. In these encampments the
+Russian merchants shall confide their animals to the
+charge of their own people, who shall take care that
+neither cultivated lands nor cemeteries shall be in any
+case injured or desecrated. Those who may contravene
+this enactment shall be brought before the consul to
+be punished.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XII.</h4>
+
+<p>In the exchange of articles of merchandise between
+the merchants of the two Empires, nothing shall be left
+on credit on either side. If, notwithstanding this clause,
+some one should purchase his merchandise on credit,
+the Russian and Chinese officials shall on no account
+interfere, and shall admit of no complaint, even if cause
+for such might exist.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4> Article XIII.</h4>
+
+<p>As Russian merchants arriving in China for commercial
+reasons should necessarily have special places for
+their warehouses, the Chinese government shall assign
+them, in the two commercial cities of Ili and Tarbagatai,
+plots of land near the bazaar, so that the Russian subjects
+may be able to construct there, at their own expense,
+dwelling-houses and factories for their wares.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XIV.</h4>
+
+<p>The Chinese government shall not interpose obstacles
+in any case where Russian subjects celebrate, within their
+own buildings, divine service according to the rite of
+their religion. In case a Russian subject in China
+should happen to die either at Ili or at Tarbagatai, the
+Chinese government shall set apart an empty space outside
+the walls of those cities, to serve as a cemetery.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XV.</h4>
+
+<p>If Russian merchants should take to Ili or Tarbagatai
+sheep for the purpose of exchanging them, the
+local authorities shall take, on account of the government,
+two sheep out of every ten, and shall give in
+exchange for each sheep a piece of linen cloth (<i>da-ba</i>, of
+the legal measure); the remainder of the animals and
+every other kind of merchandise shall be exchanged
+between the merchants of the two Empires at a price
+mutually agreed upon, and the Chinese government
+shall not intermeddle in any manner whatsoever.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XVI.</h4>
+
+<p>The ordinary official correspondence between the two
+Empires shall be made, on the part of the Russian
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+government, through the medium of the superior administration
+of Western Siberia, and under the seal of that
+administration; and on the part of the Chinese government
+through the medium, and under the seal, of the
+superior administration of Ili.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XVII.</h4>
+
+<p>The present Treaty shall be authenticated by the
+signatures and seals of the respective plenipotentiaries.
+On the part of Russia there will be prepared four copies
+in the Russian language, signed by the plenipotentiary
+of Russia; on the part of China, four copies in the
+Mantchoo language, signed by the Chinese plenipotentiary
+and his adjunct. The respective plenipotentiaries
+will each keep a copy in the Russian language, and a
+copy in the Mantchoo, for the purpose of putting the
+treaty into execution, and to serve for constant reference.
+A Russian copy and a Mantchoo copy shall be sent to
+the directing Senate of Russia; and a copy in each
+language to the Chinese Tribunal for Foreign Affairs, to
+be there sealed and preserved after the ratification of the
+Treaty.</p>
+
+<p>All the above articles of the present Treaty concluded
+by the respective plenipotentiaries of Russia and China
+are hereby signed and sealed. The twenty-fifth day of
+July, in the year 1851, in the 26th year of the reign of
+His Imperial Majesty the Emperor and Autocrat of All
+the Russias.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ml2">(Signed) Colonel in the corps of Engineers.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap ml12">Kovalevski.</span><br />
+<span class="ml13">I Chan,</span><br />
+<span class="ml14">Bovyantai.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>TREATY BETWEEN ENGLAND AND CASHMERE.</span>
+
+<span class="chapsub2">Treaty between the British Government and His
+Highness Maharaja Runbeer Singh, G.C.S.I.,
+Maharaja of Jummoo and Cashmere, His Heirs
+and Successors, executed on the one part by
+Thomas Douglas Forsyth, C.B., in virtue of the
+full powers vested in him by His Excellency
+the Right Honourable Richard Southwell
+Bourke, Earl of Mayo, Viscount Mayo of
+Monycrower, Baron Naas of Naas, K.P.,
+G.M.S.I., P.C., &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c., Viceroy and
+Governor-General of India, and on the other
+part by His Highness Maharaja Runbeer
+Singh aforesaid, in person.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Whereas</span> in the interest of the high contracting parties
+and their respective subjects it is deemed desirable to
+afford greater facilities than at present exist for the
+development and security of trade with Eastern Turkestan,
+the following Articles have with this object been
+agreed upon:&mdash;</p>
+
+<h4>Article I.</h4>
+
+<p>With the consent of the Maharaja, officers of the
+British Government will be appointed to survey the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+trade routes through the Maharaja's territories from
+the British frontier of Lahoul to the territories of the
+Ruler of Yarkand, including the route <i>viâ</i> the Chang
+Chemoo Valley. The Maharaja will depute an officer
+of his Government to accompany the surveyors, and
+will render them all the assistance in his power. A
+map of the routes surveyed will be made, an attested
+copy of which will be given to the Maharaja.</p>
+
+<h4>Article II.</h4>
+
+<p>Whichever route towards the Chang Chemoo Valley
+shall, after examination and survey as above, be declared
+by the British Government to be the best suited for the
+development of trade with Eastern Turkestan shall be
+declared by the Maharaja to be a free highway in perpetuity,
+and at all times for all travellers and traders.</p>
+
+<h4>Article III.</h4>
+
+<p>For the supervision and maintenance of the road in
+its entire length through the Maharaja's territories, the
+regulation of traffic on the free highway described in
+Article II., the enforcement of regulations that may be
+hereafter agreed upon, and the settlement of disputes
+between carriers, traders, travellers, or others using that
+road, in which either of the parties or both of them are
+subjects of the British Government or of any foreign
+State, two Commissioners shall be annually appointed,
+one by the British Government, and the other by the
+Maharaja. In the discharge of their duties, and as regards
+the period of their residence, the Commissioners
+shall be guided by such rules as are now separately
+framed, and may, from time to time, hereafter be laid
+down by the joint authority of the British Government
+and the Maharaja.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article IV.</h4>
+
+<p>The jurisdiction of the Commissioners shall be defined
+by a line on each side of the road, at a maximum width
+of two statute <i>koss</i>, except where it may be deemed by
+the Commissioners necessary to include a wider extent
+for grazing grounds. Within this maximum width the
+surveyors appointed under Article I. shall demarcate
+and map the limits of jurisdiction which may be decided
+on by the Commissioners as most suitable, including
+grazing grounds; and the jurisdiction of the Commissioners
+shall not extend beyond the limits so demarcated.
+The land included within these limits shall
+remain in the Maharaja's independent possession, and,
+subject to the stipulations contained in this Treaty, the
+Maharaja shall continue to possess the same rights of
+full sovereignty therein as in any other part of his territories,
+which rights shall not be interfered with in any
+way by the Joint Commissioners.</p>
+
+<h4>Article V.</h4>
+
+<p>The Maharaja agrees to give all possible assistance
+in enforcing the decisions of the Commissioners, and in
+preventing the breach or evasion of the regulations
+established under Article III.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VI.</h4>
+
+<p>The Maharaja agrees that any person, whether a subject
+of the British Government, or of the Maharaja, or
+of the Ruler of Yarkand, or of any foreign State, may
+settle at any place within the jurisdiction of the Commissioners,
+and may provide, keep, maintain, and let for
+hire at different stages the means of carriage and transport
+for the purposes of trade.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article VII.</h4>
+
+<p>The two Commissioners shall be empowered to establish
+supply depôts, and to authorize other persons to
+establish supply depôts, at such places on the road as
+may appear to them suitable; to fix the rates at which
+provisions shall be sold to traders, carriers, settlers, and
+others, and to fix the rent to be charged for the use of
+any rest-houses or serais that may be established on the
+road. The officers of the British Government in Kullu,
+&amp;c., and the officers of the Maharaja in Ladakh shall be
+instructed to use their best endeavours to supply provisions
+on the indent of the Commissioners at market
+rates.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VIII.</h4>
+
+<p>The Maharaja agrees to levy no transit duty whatever
+on the aforesaid free highway, and the Maharaja
+further agrees to abolish all transit duties levied within
+his territories on goods transmitted in bond through
+His Highness's territories from Eastern Turkestan to
+India and <i>vice versá</i>, on which bulk may not be broken
+within the territories of His Highness. On goods imported
+into or exported from His Highness's territory,
+whether by the aforesaid free highway or any other
+route, the Maharaja may levy such import or export
+duties as he may think fit.</p>
+
+<h4>Article IX.</h4>
+
+<p>The British Government agree to levy no duty on
+goods transmitted in bond through British India to
+Eastern Turkestan or to the territories of His Highness
+the Maharaja. The British Government further agree
+to abolish the export duties now levied on shawls and
+other textile fabrics manufactured in the territories of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+the Maharaja, and exported to countries beyond the
+limits of British India.</p>
+
+<h4>Article X.</h4>
+
+<p>This Treaty, consisting of ten Articles, has this day
+been concluded by Thomas Douglas Forsyth, C.B., in
+virtue of the full powers vested in him by His Excellency
+the Right Honourable Richard Southwell Bourke,
+Earl of Mayo, Viscount Mayo, of Monycrower, Baron
+Naas of Naas, K.P., G.M.S.I., P.C., &amp;c., &amp;c., Viceroy
+and Governor-General of India, on the part of the
+British Government, and by the Maharaja Runbeer
+Singh aforesaid; and it is agreed that a copy of this
+Treaty, duly ratified by His Excellency the Viceroy
+and Governor-General of India, shall be delivered to
+the Maharaja on or before the 7th of September, 1870.
+Signed, sealed, and exchanged at Sealkote on the second
+day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
+hundred and seventy, corresponding with the 22nd day
+of Bysack Sumbut, 1927.</p>
+
+<p><span class="ml2">Signature of the Maharaja of
+ Cashmere.</span><br /></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="signatories">
+<tr><td align="left">(Signed)</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">T. D. Forsyth</span>,</td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">Mayo</span>.</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>This Treaty was ratified by His Excellency the
+Viceroy and Governor-General of India at Sealkote on
+the 2nd day of May, 1870.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="signatory">
+<tr><td align="left">(Signed)</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">C. U. Aitchison</span>,</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">Officiating Secretary to the Government</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">of India, Foreign Department.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>TREATY BETWEEN RUSSIA AND KASHGAR.</span>
+
+<span class="chapsub2">The following Conditions of Free Trade were
+proposed and agreed upon between General
+Aide-de-Camp Von Kaufmann and Yakoob Beg,
+Chief of Djety-Shahr.</span></h3>
+
+<h4>Article I.</h4>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">All</span> Russian subjects, of whatsoever religion, shall have
+the right to proceed for purposes of trade to Djety-Shahr,
+and to all the localities and towns subjected to the Chief
+of Djety-Shahr, which they may desire to visit in the
+same way as the inhabitants of Djety-Shahr have hitherto
+been, and shall be in the future, entitled to prosecute
+trade throughout the entire extent of the Russian Empire.
+The honourable chief of Djety-Shahr undertakes to keep
+a vigilant guard over the complete safety of Russian
+subjects, within the limits of his territorial possessions,
+and also over that of their caravans, and in general over
+everything that may belong to them.</p>
+
+<h4>Article II.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian merchants shall be entitled to have caravanserais,
+in which they alone shall be able to store their
+merchandise, in all the towns of Djety-Shahr in which
+they may desire to have them. The merchants of Djety-Shahr
+shall enjoy the same privilege in the Russian
+villages.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article III.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian merchants shall, if they desire it, have the right
+to have commercial agents (caravanbashis) in all the
+towns of Djety-Shahr, whose business it is to watch over
+the regular courts of trade, and over the legal imposition
+of customs dues. The merchants of Djety-Shahr shall
+enjoy the same privilege in the towns of Turkestan.</p>
+
+<h4>Article IV.</h4>
+
+<p>All merchandise transported from Russia to Djety-Shahr,
+or from that province into Russia, shall be liable
+to a tax of 2&frac12; per cent. <i>ad valorem</i>. In every case this
+tax shall not exceed the rate of the tax taken from
+Mussulmans being subject to Djety-Shahr.</p>
+
+<h4>Article V.</h4>
+
+<p>Russian merchants and their caravans shall be at
+liberty, with all freedom and security, to traverse the
+territories of Djety-Shahr in proceeding to countries
+conterminous with that province. Caravans from Djety-Shahr
+shall enjoy the same advantages for passing
+through territories belonging to Russia.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>These conditions were sent from Tashkent on the
+9th of April, 1872.</p>
+
+<p>General Von Kaufmann I., Governor-General of
+Turkestan, signed the treaty and attached his seal to it.</p>
+
+<p>In proof of his assent to these conditions, Mahomed
+Yakoob, Chief of Djety-Shahr, attached his seal to them
+at Yangy-Shahr, on the 8th of June, 1872.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>This treaty was negotiated by Baron Kaulbars.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>TREATY BETWEEN ENGLAND AND KASHGAR.</span>
+
+<span class="chapsub2">Treaty between the British Government and His
+Highness the Ameer Mahomed Yakoob Khan,
+Ruler of the Territory of Kashgar and Yarkand,
+his heirs and successors, executed on the
+one part by Thomas Douglas Forsyth, C.B., in
+virtue of full powers conferred on him in that
+behalf by <ins class="corr" title=
+ "original had: his">His</ins> Excellency the Right Hon.
+Thomas George Baring, Baron Northbrook of
+Stratton, and a Baronet, Member of the Privy
+Council of Her Most Gracious Majesty the
+Queen of Great Britain and Ireland, Grand
+Master of the Most Exalted Order of the
+Star of India, Viceroy and Governor-General
+of India, in Council, and on the other part
+by Syud Mahomed Khan Toorah, Member of
+the 1st class of the Order of Medjidie, &amp;c.,
+in virtue of full powers conferred on him by
+His Highness.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Whereas</span> it is deemed desirable to confirm and strengthen
+the good understanding which now subsists between the
+high contracting parties, and to promote commercial
+intercourse between their respective subjects, the following
+Articles have been agreed upon:
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<h4>Article I.</h4>
+
+<p>The high contracting parties engage that the subjects
+of each shall be at liberty to enter, reside in, trade with,
+and pass with their merchandise and property into and
+through all parts of the dominions of the other; and
+shall enjoy in such dominions all the privileges and
+advantages with respect to commerce, protection or
+otherwise, which are, or may be, accorded to the subjects
+of such dominions, or to the subjects or citizens of the
+most favoured nation.</p>
+
+<h4>Article II.</h4>
+
+<p>Merchants of whatever nationality shall be at liberty
+to pass from the territories of the one contracting party
+to the territories of the other, with their merchandise
+and property at all times, and by any route they please;
+no restriction shall be placed by either contracting party
+upon such freedom of transit, unless for urgent political
+reasons to be previously communicated to the other;
+and such restriction shall be withdrawn as soon as the
+necessity for it is over.</p>
+
+<h4>Article III.</h4>
+
+<p>European British subjects entering the dominions of
+His Highness the Ameer, for purposes of trade, or
+otherwise, must be provided with passports certifying
+to their nationality. Unless provided with such passports
+they shall not be deemed entitled to the benefit of
+this treaty.</p>
+
+<h4>Article IV.</h4>
+
+<p>On goods imported into British India from territories of
+His Highness the Ameer, by any route over the Himalayan
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+passes, which lie to the south of His Highness's
+dominions, the British Government engages to levy no
+import duties. On goods imported from India into the
+territories of His Highness the Ameer, no import duty
+exceeding 2&frac12; per cent., <i>ad valorem</i>, shall be levied. Goods
+imported, as above, into the dominions of the contracting
+parties may, subject only to such excise regulations and
+duties, and to such municipal or town regulations and
+duties, as may be applicable to such classes of goods
+generally, be freely sold by wholesale or retail, and
+transported from one place to another within British
+India, and within the dominions of His Highness the
+Ameer respectively.</p>
+
+<h4>Article V.</h4>
+
+<p>Merchandise imported from India into the territories
+of His Highness the Ameer will not be opened for
+examination, till arrival at the place of consignment.
+If any disputes should arise as to the value of such
+goods, the customs officer, or other officer acting on the
+part of His Highness the Ameer, shall be entitled to
+demand part of the goods, at the rate of one in forty,
+in lieu of the payment of duty. If the aforesaid officer
+should object to levy the duty by taking a portion of
+the goods, or if the goods should not admit of being so
+divided, then the point in dispute shall be referred to
+two competent persons, one chosen by the aforesaid
+officer, and the other by the importer, and a valuation
+of the goods shall be made, and if the referees shall
+differ in opinion, they shall appoint an arbitrator whose
+decision shall be final, and the duty shall be levied
+according to the value thus established.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VI.</h4>
+
+<p>The British Government shall be at liberty to appoint
+a Representative at the Court of His Highness the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+Ameer, and to appoint a Commercial Agent, subordinate
+to him in any town or place considered suitable within
+His Highness's territories. His Highness the Ameer
+shall be at liberty to appoint a Representative with the
+Viceroy and Governor-General of India, and to station
+Commercial Agents at any places in British India considered
+suitable. Such Representatives shall be entitled
+to the rank and privileges accorded to ambassadors by
+the law of nations, and the Agents shall be entitled to
+the privileges of Consuls of the most favoured nation.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VII.</h4>
+
+<p>British subjects shall be at liberty to purchase, sell,
+or hire land, or houses, or depôts for merchandise, in
+the dominions of His Highness the Ameer, and the
+houses, depôts, or other premises of British subjects,
+shall not be forcibly entered or searched without the
+consent of the occupier, unless with the cognizance of
+the British Representative or Agent, and in presence of
+a person deputed by him.</p>
+
+<h4>Article VIII.</h4>
+
+<p>The following arrangements are agreed to for the
+decision of Civil Suits and Criminal Cases within the
+territories of His Highness the Ameer, in which British
+subjects are concerned:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>(<i>a.</i>) Civil suits in which both plaintiff and defendant
+are British subjects, and Criminal Cases
+in which both prosecutor and accused are
+British subjects, or in which the accused is a
+European British subject, mentioned in the
+Third Article of this Treaty, shall be tried by
+the British Representative or one of his Agents,
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+in the presence of an Agent appointed by
+His Highness the Ameer;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b.</i>) Civil suits in which one party is a subject of
+His Highness the Ameer, and the other party
+a British subject, shall be tried by the Courts
+of His Highness, in the presence of the
+British Representative or one of his Agents,
+or of a person appointed in that behalf by
+such Representative or Agent;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c.</i>) Criminal cases in which either prosecutor or
+accused is a subject of His Highness the
+Ameer shall, except as above otherwise provided,
+be tried by the Courts of His Highness
+in presence of the British Representative, or
+of one of his Agents, or of a person deputed
+by the British Representative, or by one of
+his Agents;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>d.</i>) Except as above otherwise provided, Civil and
+Criminal Cases in which one party is a British
+subject, and the other the subject of a foreign
+power, shall, if either of the parties be a
+Mahomedan, be tried in the Courts of His
+Highness; if neither party is a Mahomedan,
+the case may, with consent of the parties,
+be tried by the British Representative or one
+of his Agents; in the absence of such consent,
+by the Courts of His Highness;</p>
+
+<p>(<i>e.</i>) In any case disposed of by the Courts of His
+Highness the Ameer to which a British subject
+is party, it shall be competent to the
+British Representative, if he considers that
+justice has not been done, to represent the
+matter to His Highness the Ameer, who may
+cause the case to be re-tried in some other
+Court, in the presence of the British Representative,
+or of one of his Agents, or of a
+person appointed in that behalf by such
+Representative or Agent.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>Article IX.</h4>
+
+<p>The rights and privileges enjoyed within the dominions
+of His Highness the Ameer by British subjects
+under the Treaty, shall extend to the subjects of all
+Princes and States in India in alliance with Her
+Majesty the Queen; and if, with respect to any such
+Prince or State, any other provisions relating to this
+Treaty or to other matters should be considered desirable,
+they shall be negotiated through the British
+Government.</p>
+
+<h4>Article X.</h4>
+
+<p>Every affidavit and other legal document filed or
+deposited in any Court established in the respective
+dominions of the high contracting parties, or in the
+Court of the Joint Commissioners in Ladakh, may be
+proved by an authenticated copy, purporting either to
+be sealed with the seal of the Court to which the
+original document belongs, or, in the event of such
+Court having no seal, to be signed by the Judge, or by
+one of the Judges of the said Court.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XI.</h4>
+
+<p>When a British subject dies in the territory of His
+Highness the Ameer his movable and immovable property
+situate therein shall be vested in his heir,
+executor, administrator, or other representative on
+interest or (in the absence of such representative) in
+the Representative of the British Government in the
+aforesaid territory. The person in whom such charge
+shall be so vested shall satisfy the claims outstanding
+against the deceased, and shall hold the surplus (if any)
+for distribution among those interested. The above
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+provisions, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>, shall apply to the subjects
+of His Highness the Ameer, who may die in British
+India.</p>
+
+<h4>Article XII.</h4>
+
+<p>If a British subject residing in the territories of His
+Highness the Ameer becomes unable to pay his debts
+or fails to pay any debt within a reasonable time after
+being ordered to do so by any Court of Justice, the
+creditors of such insolvent shall be paid out of his
+goods and effects; but the British Representative
+shall not refuse his good offices, if needs be, to ascertain
+if the insolvent has not left in India disposable
+property which might serve to satisfy the said creditors.
+The friendly stipulations in the present Article shall be
+reciprocally observed with regard to His Highness's
+subjects who trade in India under the protection of the
+laws.</p>
+
+<p>This treaty having this day been executed in duplicate
+and confirmed by His Highness the Ameer, one
+copy shall, for the present, be left in the possession of
+His Highness, and the other, after confirmation by the
+Viceroy and Governor-General of India, shall be delivered
+to His Highness within twelve months in exchange
+for the copy now retained by His Highness.</p>
+
+<p>Signed and sealed at Kashgar on the second day of
+February, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
+hundred and seventy-four, corresponding with the fifteenth
+day of Zilhijj, one thousand two hundred and
+ninety Hijree.</p>
+
+<div><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="signatory">
+<tr><td align="left">(Signed)</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">T. Douglas Forsyth</span>,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="left"><span class="ml4">Envoy and Plenipotentiary.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Whereas a Treaty for strengthening the good understanding
+that now exists between the British Government
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+and the Ruler of the territory of Kashgar and
+Yarkand, and for promoting commercial intercourse
+between the two countries, was agreed to and concluded
+at Kashgar, on the second day of February, in the year
+of our Lord eighteen hundred and seventy-four, corresponding
+with the fifteenth day of Zilhijj, twelve
+hundred and ninety Hijree, by the respective Plenipotentiaries
+of the Government of India and of His
+Highness the Ameer of Kashgar and Yarkand, duly
+accredited and empowered for that purpose: I, the
+Right Hon. Thomas George Baring, Baron Northbrook
+of Stratton, &amp;c., &amp;c., Viceroy and Governor-General
+of India, do hereby ratify and confirm the
+Treaty aforesaid.</p>
+
+<p>Given under my hand and seal at Government
+House, in Calcutta, this thirteenth day of April, in
+the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and
+seventy-four.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="signatory">
+<tr><td align="left">(Signed)</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">Northbrook</span>.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class="seal">
+<p class="center">Seal.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>RULES FOR THE GUIDANCE OF THE JOINT
+COMMISSIONERS APPOINTED FOR THE
+NEW ROUTE TO EASTERN TURKESTAN.</span></h3>
+
+<p>1. As it is impossible, owing to the character of the
+climate, to retain the Commissioners throughout the
+year, the period during which they shall exercise their
+authority shall be taken to commence on 15th May,
+and to end on 1st December.</p>
+
+<p>2. During the absence of either Commissioner, cases
+may be heard and decided by the other Commissioner,
+subject to appeal to the Joint Commissioners.</p>
+
+<p>3. In the months when the Joint Commissioners are
+absent, <i>i.e.</i> between 1st December and 15th May, all
+cases which may arise shall be decided by the Wuzeer
+of Ladakh, subject to appeal to the Joint Commissioners.</p>
+
+<p>4. The Joint Commissioners shall not interfere in
+cases other than those which affect the development,
+freedom, and safety of the trade, and the objects for
+which the Treaty is concluded, and in which one of the
+parties, or both, are either British subjects, or subjects
+of a foreign state.</p>
+
+<p>5. In civil disputes the Commissioners shall have
+power to dispose of all cases, whatever be the value of
+the property in litigation.</p>
+
+<p>6. When the Commissioners agree, their decision
+shall be final in all cases. When they are unable to
+agree, the parties shall have the right of nominating a
+single arbitrator, and shall bind themselves in writing
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+to abide by his award. Should the parties not be able
+to agree upon a single arbitrator, each party shall name
+one, and the two Commissioners shall name a third, and
+the decision of the majority of the arbitrators shall be
+final.</p>
+
+<p>7. In criminal cases the powers of the Commissioners
+shall be limited to offences such as in British territory
+would be tried by a subordinate Magistrate of the First
+Class, and as far as possible the procedure of the
+Criminal Procedure Code shall be followed. Cases of
+a more heinous kind should be made over to the
+Maharaja for trial, if the accused be not a European
+British subject; in the latter case he should be forwarded
+to the nearest British Court of competent jurisdiction
+for trial.</p>
+
+<p>8. All fines levied in criminal cases, and all stamp
+receipts levied according to the rates in force for civil
+suits in the Maharaja's dominions, shall be credited to
+the Cashmere Treasury. Persons sentenced to imprisonment
+shall, if British subjects, be sent to the nearest
+British jail. If not British subjects, offenders shall be
+made over for imprisonment in the Maharaja's jails.</p>
+
+<p>9. The practice of cow-killing is strictly prohibited
+throughout the jurisdiction of the Maharaja.</p>
+
+<p>10. If any places come within the line of road from
+which the towns of Leh, &amp;c., are supplied with fuel or
+wood for building purpose, the Joint Commissioners
+shall so arrange with the Wuzeer of Ladakh that those
+supplies are not interfered with.</p>
+
+<p>11. Whatever transactions take place within the
+limits of the road shall be considered to refer to goods
+in bond. If a trader opens his load, and disposes of a
+portion, he shall not be subject to any duty so long as
+the goods are not taken for consumption into the Maharaja's
+territory across the line of road. And goods left
+for any length of time in the line of road subject to the
+jurisdiction of the Commissioners shall be free.</p>
+
+<p>12. Where a village lies within the jurisdiction of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+the Joint Commissioners, then, as regards the collection
+of revenue, or in any case where there is necessity for
+the interference of the usual Revenue authorities on
+matters having no connection with the trade, the Joint
+Commissioners have no power whatever to interfere;
+but, to prevent misunderstanding, it is advisable that
+the Revenue officials should first communicate with the
+Joint Commissioners before proceeding to take action
+against any person within their jurisdiction. The Joint
+Commissioners can then exercise their discretion to
+deliver up the person sought, or to make a summary
+inquiry to ascertain whether their interference is necessary
+or not.</p>
+
+<p>13. The Maharaja agrees to give rupees 5,000 this
+year for the construction of the road and bridges, and
+in future years His Highness agrees to give rupees
+2,000 per annum for the maintenance of the road and
+bridges. Similarly for the repairs of serais a sum of
+rupees 100 per annum for each serai will be given.
+Should further expenditure be necessary, the Joint
+Commissioners will submit a special report to the Maharaja,
+and ask for a special grant. This money will
+be expended by the Joint Commissioners, who will
+employ free labour at market rates for this purpose.
+The officers in Ladakh and in British territory shall
+be instructed to use their best endeavours to supply
+labourers on the indent of the Commissioners at market
+rates. No tolls shall be levied on the bridges on this
+line of road.</p>
+
+<p>14. As a temporary arrangement, and until the line
+of road has been demarcated, or till the end of this year,
+the Joint Commissioners shall exercise the powers described
+in these rules over the several roads taken by
+the traders through Ladakh from Lahoul and Spiti.</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="signatory">
+<tr><td>(Signed)</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">Maharaja Runbeer Singh.</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#12291;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap ml2">T. D. Forsyth.</span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>(These rules were agreed upon in 1872, between the
+Indian Government and Cashmere, for the purpose of
+promoting trade with Eastern Turkestan and Central
+Asia, which had been sanctioned by the Treaty of Commerce
+of 1870.)</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p>
+<h3><span>A STORY FROM KASHGAR.</span></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mirza Mulla Rahmat</span>, of Kashgar, who arrived at
+Peshawur lately, on his way to Mecca, has told what he
+knows about events in Kashgar. The following is his
+story:&mdash;In the month of Jamadi-us-sani 1294 (June-July,
+1877), that Mahomed Yakoob Khan, the Badshah
+of Kashgar, collected a large army to fight the Chinese.
+He died near the town of Balisan (? Bai), and his army
+then recognized Hakim Khan Torah as his successor.
+The mullahs in Kashgar in the meantime appointed
+Beg Kuli Beg, Yakoob's eldest son, as their Badshah,
+according to Yakoob's will. Hakim Khan and the
+army which joined him then came to Aksu, where Beg
+Kuli Beg also arrived, meaning to capture the place
+and the person of the usurper. A battle was fought
+between Kuli Beg and Hakim Khan on the 26th and
+27th of Rajah (27th and 28th July, 1877), and Hakim
+Khan was defeated. Many of the soldiers belonging
+to Hakim Khan's force fell in the battle, and many
+others were starved, and some were drowned crossing
+a river. Hakim Khan then went into Russian territory
+with 1,000 chosen soldiers. Beg Kuli Beg now seized
+several towns and returned to Kashgar. In the meantime
+Naiz Hakim Beg, the Governor of Khoten, rebelled,
+and Kuli Beg met him in the field, and captured
+Khoten. The Beg was scarcely a week at that place
+when he heard that the Chinese had arrived at Aksu
+and had taken it. An officer (Kho Dalay?) of the
+Chinese army who had turned Mahomedan (but subsequently
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>
+recanted) attacked Yangy Shahr, the capital,
+and, capturing it, shut himself up there. The town was
+then besieged by the Governor of Kashgar, and the
+siege continued for fifty days. Then Kuli Beg came
+up, and, forcing his entry into the town, took possession
+of it, and destroyed the fort. But on the 10th of Zillhij
+(16th of December) a strong Chinese force entered the
+country, and rapidly reconquered the possessions of the
+late Yakoob Khan. Beg Kuli Beg then fled with his
+men to Tashkent, which he reached by Mingyol Osh and
+Marghilan, and put himself under the protection of
+the Russian Governor there. Mulla Yunus Jan, the
+Governor of Yarkand, and his son and brother fell into
+the hands of Hasan Jan Bai, Ikskal (? Aksakal).</p>
+
+<p>The above is taken from the columns of an Indian
+journal, and is inserted here for the purpose of showing
+that the converted Chinese, or Yangy Mussulmans, did
+revolt from their allegiance to Yakoob Beg the instant
+a Khitay force appeared in Altyshahr.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span></p>
+<h2>INDEX OF SUBJECTS.</h2>
+
+<ul class="index"><li class="ifrst">Aali, <i>see</i> <a href="#Hakim_Khan">Hakim Khan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ababakar, 34&ndash;<a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abderrahman Aftobatcha, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209-210</a><ins class="corr" title="Period replaced with comma">,</ins> <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abderrahman Khoja (King of Yarkand), <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdul Aziz, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdul Melik, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Abdullah"></a>Abdullah (Yusuf's son), <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdullah Pansad, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114-116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abdullah Zizad, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ablai (Kirghiz chief), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Acbash, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">&AElig;gis of British protection, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afak, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afghan Ameer sends embassy to Pekin, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afghanistan, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afghan settlers, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Afridun Wang, <a href="#Page_98">98-99</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Agha Bula, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Ahmad"></a>Ahmad, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ak Musjid, siege of, <a href="#Page_79">79-81</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ak Robat, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aksai Plateau, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aksakal, <a href="#Page_57">57-58</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aksakals (risings under), <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aksu, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">coal at, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">siege of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aktaghluc, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44-46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_52">52-53</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alaja "the slayer," <a href="#Page_35">35</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#Ahmad">Ahmad</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alim, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alim Kuli, <a href="#Page_83">83-85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alish Beg, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Almatie, <i>see</i> <a href="#Vernoe">Vernoe</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Alty_Shahr"></a>Alty Shahr, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Amban"></a>Amban, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">of Yarkand, or Khan Amban, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ameer, or Emir, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ameers of Central Asia, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Amoor, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Amursana, <a href="#Page_45">45-48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Andijani, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Andijani Serai, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Appak Khoja, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arabdan Khan, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arabs, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arpa Tai, battle of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Artosh, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aryan family, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Athalik Ghazi, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Azmill Khoja, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Babur, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Badakshan, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Badakshi settlers, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Badaulet, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bahanuddin (son of Sarimsak), <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bai, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barhanuddin, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baroghil, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Bartchuk"></a>Bartchuk, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>; <i>see</i> also <a href="#Maralbashi">Maralbashi</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bayen Hu, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bazandai, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bedal Pass, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beg, <a href="#Page_220">220-221</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beg Bacha, <i>see</i> <a href="#Kuli_Beg">Kuli Beg</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bellew, Dr., <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Benefits conferred by China on Kashgar, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berdan rifles, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bhots, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Biddulph, Capt., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Birlas, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Birma, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Black Sea, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bokhara, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">Russian treaty with, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">sack of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bolor, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bostang Lake, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buddhism, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buddhists, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bugur, fight at, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burac, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buzurg Khan, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">intrigues against Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">deposed by Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Cabul, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calmucks, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calmuck settlements, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Canals, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Candahar, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Caravanbashi, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Carts used in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_227">227-228</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cashmere, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Caspian, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cay Yoli, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chaghtai Khan, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cha-hi-telkh, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Champion Father, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chang Lung, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chang Tay, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chang Yao, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chapman, Capt., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charjui, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chightam, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">China, <a href="#Page_41">41-43</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinaz, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese and Khokand, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese army, character of, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese at Lhasa, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese Empire in Central Asia, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese, first reverse of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54-75</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese merchants, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese moderation, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese north of Tian Shan, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese overthrow Tungani, <a href="#Page_236">236-237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese pay Khokand annual sum, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese principle in ruling Kashgar, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese reconquer Kashgar, <a href="#Page_258">258-276</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese revindicating army, strength of, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese rule, benefits and disadvantages of, <a href="#Page_74">74-75</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese, strategical advantages of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chinese Turkestan, <i>see</i> Eastern Turkestan.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chitral, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Christians, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chuguchak, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chuntche, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Coal mines, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cochin China, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Comparison between rule of Chinese and Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_168">168-169</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255-257</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Constantinople, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Corbashi, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Corps of artillerymen, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crusade, propagandist, against Khitay, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Czar, the, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Dadkwah, <i>passim</i>, functions of, <a href="#Page_144">144-145</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Danyal, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Darius, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Darwas, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dastarkhwan, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dava Khan, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Davatsi"></a>Davatsi, <a href="#Page_45">45-46</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Delhi, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Destruction caused by Genghis Khan, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Devanchi, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Devan defile, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Difference between Eastern and Western Turkestan, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dihbid, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Disunion in Central Asia, <a href="#Page_120">120-121</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210-211</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">in China, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_259">259-263</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Djinghite, <i>see</i> <a href="#Jigit">Jigit</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dolans, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dungani, <i>see</i> <a href="#Tungani">Tungani</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dungans, <i>see</i> <a href="#Tungani">Tungani</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Durani, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dylon Yulduc, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst"><a id="Eastern_Turkestan"></a>Eastern Turkestan, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38-42</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Edinburgh, Duke of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Effects of Khoja risings on China's prestige, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Effects of past misrule in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elchi Khana, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eleuthian, or Eleuth princes, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Emir, or Ameer, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">England's policy towards China, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;<i>see</i> <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">chapter 14</a> also.</li>
+<li class="isub1">towards Kashgar, <a href="#Page_212">212-235</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">trade with Kashgar, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">trans-Himalayan policy, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">chapter 14</a> also.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">English mission guests of Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eshan Khan, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ferghana, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">First outbreak against China in Eastern Turkestan, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Forsyth, Sir T. D., <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218-219</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Forsyth's report, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">interview with Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_228">228-230</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">second mission to Kashgar, <a href="#Page_221">221-232</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Galdan, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Garden of Asia," <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Genghis Khan, <a href="#Page_25">25-20</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">code of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ghizni, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gibbon, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Glacier, <i>see</i> <a href="#Muzart_Pass">Muzart Pass</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gobi, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Goes Benedict, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Goitre, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gordon, Col., <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gorkhan, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Granville-Gortschakoff negotiations, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Great road from Kashgar to Hamil and Kansuh, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Great_Yuldus"></a>Great Yuldus, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gregorieff, Professor, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grim Pass, <a href="#Page_223">223-224</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Guchen, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gulbagh, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Guoharbrum, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Hacc Kuli Beg (Khokandian general), <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hacc Kuli Beg (Yakoob Beg's son), <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252-253</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hadayatulla, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Hadji_Torah"></a>Hadji Torah, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169-171</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Haft Khojagan, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hai Yen, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hakim Beg, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Hakim_Khan"></a>Hakim Khan, <a href="#Page_250">250-253</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259-261</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hamil, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Han Hing Nung, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hastings, Warren, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hayward, Mr., <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hazrat Afak, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Heh Tsun, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Henderson, Dr., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Her Majesty, autograph letter of, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"High Tartary," <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Himalaya, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Himalayan passes, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hindoo Koosh, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hodjent, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hordes, Kirghiz, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hoser, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Houchow, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Houtan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Husen, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hwang Tsang, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hydar Kuli, Hudaychi, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><ins class="corr" title="original had: Hyder">Hydar</ins>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ihrar Khan Torah, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ilchi, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ili, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">chapter 14</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ili, Viceroy of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irjar, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Isa Dadkwah, <a href="#Page_65">65-66</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Ishac_Wang"></a>Ishac Wang, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Islamism, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ismail Shah, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Issik Kul, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Jade, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163-164</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jallab, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jattah Ulus, or Jattahs, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jehangir (Ababakar's son), <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jehangir (Sarimsak's son), <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65-68</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jehangir (Timour's son), <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Jigit"></a>Jigit, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jungaria, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Kabil Shah, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kafiristan, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kafirs, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kaidu River, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><ins class="corr" title="original had: Kalkhalu">Khalkhalu</ins>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kamaruddin, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kamensky, Mr., <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kamschatka, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kana&aacute;t Shah, <a href="#Page_82">82-83</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kanghi, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kansuh, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kara Khitay, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kara Kirghiz, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karakoram, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karakoram (city), <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karanghotagh, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karashar, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karataghluc, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_52">52-53</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karatakka mountains, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karategin, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karghalik, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Karshi, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgar River, <i>see</i> <a href="#Kizil_Su">Kizil Su</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgari resigned to Chinese conquest, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgar, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">history of, <a href="#Page_22">22-40</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgaria, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgarian valley, description of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgarian scenery, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kashgari not fanatics, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">dress of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Kashmir and Kashgar," <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Katti Torah, Khoja, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kaufmann, General, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kaulbars, Baron, <a href="#Page_192">192-195</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kaulbars Treaty, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kazalinsk, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kazan Ameer, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kazi, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kazi Rais, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Keen-Lung, <a href="#Page_43">43-45</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kermina, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khalkas, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khan, <a href="#Page_220">220-221</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khan Amban, <i>see</i> <a href="#Amban">Amban of Yarkand</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khan Khoja, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khans of Central Asia, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khaton, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khitay, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khitay merchants, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khiva, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khivan desert, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khize Khoja, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kho Dalay, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Ahmad, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja family, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja invasion, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Ishac, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Kalan, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Kalar, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Kings, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Kulan, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoja Padshah, <i>see</i> <a href="#Abdullah">Abdullah</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khojam Beg, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Khokand"></a>Khokand, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khokand pays tribute to China, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63-64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khokand, rising in, <a href="#Page_209">209-210</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khokandian intrigues, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khokandian tax-gatherers, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoten, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121-123</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224-225</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">rising at, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoten gold mines, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khoten jade, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khudadar, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khudayar Khan, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81-86</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187-189</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208-209</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Khwaresm, <i>see</i> Khiva.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kiachta, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kichik Khan, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Kin_Shun"></a>Kin Shun, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266-272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kipchak, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kirghiz, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">nomads submit to China, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kish, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Kizil_Su"></a>Kizil Su, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kizil Yart, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kludof, <a href="#Page_182">182-185</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kohistan, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kok Robat, battle of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kolpakovsky, General, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kooda Kuli Beg, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Koosh Bege, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Korla"></a>Korla, description of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Koshluk, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kouralia, <i>see</i> <a href="#Korla">Korla</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kouroungli, <i>see</i> <a href="#Korla">Korla</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kucha, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127-130</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">battle at, <a href="#Page_270">270-271</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kucha coal mines, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kucha Khojas, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuen Lun, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuhna Turfan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#Turfan">Turfan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuhwei, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuldja, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuldja question, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Kuli_Beg"></a>Kuli Beg, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252-253</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260-263</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kumush, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kunar, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kurama, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kuropatkine, Capt., <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244-245</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kurtka Fort, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kutaiba, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ladakh, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lahore, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Lahore to Yarkand," <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Lake_Lob"></a>Lake Lob, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lanchefoo, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Laws in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_145">145-146</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leaoutung, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">L&ecirc;h, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lhasa, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Little Bokhara, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Liu Kin Tang, <i>see</i> <a href="#Kin_Shun">Kin Shun</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lob Nor, <i>see</i> <a href="#Lake_Lob">Lake Lob</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Mah Dalay, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomedanism in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomedanism, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Ali Khan (ruler of Khokand), <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Arif, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Beg of Artosh, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Khan, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Khoja, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>; <i>see</i> also <a href="#Sheikh-ul-Islam">Sheikh-ul-Islam</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Kuli, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Latif, <i>see</i> <a href="#Pur_Mahomed">Pur Mahomed</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Nazzar. <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Seyyid Wang, of Kashgar, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahomed Yunus Jan, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171-172</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Makhram, battle of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Manas, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">siege of, <a href="#Page_239">239-240</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Manchuria, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Manning, Thomas, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mansur, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mantchoo, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Maralbashi"></a>Maralbashi, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>; <i>see also</i> <a href="#Bartchuk">Bartchuk</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marco Polo, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Maulana Khoja Kasani, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ma-yeo-pu, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mecca, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Merv, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Meshed, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Michell, Messrs, opinion on Kashgar, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Military settlers, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mines in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ming dynasty, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mingyol, battle at, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mir, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mirza, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mirza Jan Effendi, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mollah Khan, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mongols, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mongols, murder of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moorcroft, Mr., <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moral of Yakoob Beg's career, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morozof, Mr., <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moscow gewgaws, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Moses in the land," <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mourad Beg, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mozaffur Eddin, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mufti, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mufti Habitulla, <a href="#Page_122">122-123</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">murder of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mughol <i>see</i> Mongol.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mugholistan. <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Muhtasib, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mussulman Kuli, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81-82</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Muzart_Pass"></a>Muzart Pass, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mysoka Bahadur, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Nadir Shah, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Naiman tribe, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nankin, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nar Mahomed Khan, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Naryn, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nasruddin, <a href="#Page_209">209-210</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nestorian Christians, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">New Turfan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nur Ali (Kirghiz), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ogdai Khan, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oigur princes, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Oigurs"></a>Oigurs, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Old saying in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Olja Turkan Khaton, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Opinion of Chinese rule, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orda, or palace, at Kashgar, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orda, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oxus, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Pamere, <i>see</i> <a href="#Pamir">Pamir</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Pamir"></a>Pamir, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Panjkora, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Panthays, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pekin, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><i>Pekin Gazette</i>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Perovsky, General, <a href="#Page_79">79-81</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Perovsky Fort, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Persia, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Piskent, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Population of Kashgaria, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">of city of Kashgar, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">of city of Kucha, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">of city of Yarkand, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Powers interested in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Presents to Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_230">230-231</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prester John, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prince of Kashgar, <i>see</i> <a href="#Ishac_Wang">Ishac Wang</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prjevalsky, Col., <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pupyshef, Mr., <a href="#Page_199">199-200</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Pur_Mahomed"></a>Pur Mahomed Mirza, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Rashid, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reinthal's, Capt., mission to Kashgar, <a href="#Page_184">184-185</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202-204</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rising against Russia, folly of, if not combined, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Risings in Khokand, <i>see</i> <a href="#Khokand">Khokand</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Road between Ili and Kashgar, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Road Board," <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Romanoffski, General, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Roof of the World," <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Royal Body Guard, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ruduk, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia at Vernoe, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia demands Consuls in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia in Central Asia, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia in Kuldja or Ili, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174-177</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279-282</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia invades Kuldja, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia promises to restore Ili, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russian attitude towards Chinese, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russian merchants, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russian policy towards Kashgar, <a href="#Page_177">177-209</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russian trade with Kashgar, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Sadic Beg, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">embassy to Tashkent, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">truce with, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sahib Khan, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Said, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Salara, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Samarcand, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saniz, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sanju, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sanju Devan, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sarbaz, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sarimsak Khoja, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Satuk Bughra Khan, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schlagintweit, Messrs., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schuyler, Eugene, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scobelef, Gen., <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scobelef, Col., <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scourges of God, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seistan, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seven Khoja princes, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seyyid Ali, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seyyid Yakoob Khan, <i>see</i> <a href="#Hadji_Torah">Hadji Torah</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shadi Mirza, <a href="#Page_184">184-185</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shahidoolah, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shahrisebz, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sham, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shari&agrave;t, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shaw, Robt., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Sheikh-ul-Islam"></a>Sheikh-ul-Islam, <a href="#Page_116">116-117</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sheikh Nizamuddin, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shensi, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shere Ali (Cabul), <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shere Ali Khan (Khokand), <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Siberia, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sirikul, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Six Cities, <i>see</i> <a href="#Alty_Shahr">Altyshahr</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sobo tribes, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Somof, Mr., <a href="#Page_109">109-200</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. George and St. Anne Cross Fever, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Petersburg, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stoliczka, Dr., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Story of St Constantine's day, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Subashi, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Sublimely Pure," <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sule, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sultan Mourad, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sultan Seyyid, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suranchi Beg, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Syr Darya, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Swat, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Szchuen, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Taepings, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tagharchi, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tajik, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Talifoo, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tamerlane, <i>see</i> <a href="#Timour">Timour</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tanab, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tanabi, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tang dynasty, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tang Jen Ho, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tangut, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tarantchis. <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124-125</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tarfur, <i>see</i> <a href="#Turfan">Turfan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tartar, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tarzagchi, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tash Balik, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tashkent, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">battle of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">etiquette at, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><i>Tashkent Gazette</i>, <i>see</i> <a href="#Turkestan">Turkestan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tashkurgan, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tatsing, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tawats, <i>see</i> <a href="#Davatsi">Davatsi</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Taxes in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151-160</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tay Dalay, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tchernaief, <a href="#Page_84">84-85</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tchimkent, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tekes, river and pass, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tenure of land in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Terek Pass, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tian Shan, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tian Shan Nan Lu, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tian Shan Pe Lu, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tibet, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">Cashmerian, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tibetan table-land, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Timour"></a>Timour, <a href="#Page_32">32-34</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Timour Khan (Chinese Emperor), <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Timour, Yakoob Beg's descent from, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tobolsk, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Toghluc Timour, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Toksoun, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">battle at, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">To Teh Lin, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trade, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trade privileges, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trade with China, <a href="#Page_217">217-218</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">chapter 14</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trade with Kashgar, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216-217</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Treaty between England and Kashgar, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Treaty between Russia and Kashgar, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Treaty with Khokand, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trotter, Captain, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tsedayar, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Tso_Tsung_Tang"></a>Tso Tsung Tang, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">army of, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Tungani"></a>Tungani, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93-94</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tungan rising proper, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123-124</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Kuldja, <a href="#Page_124">124-125</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tungani desert Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tungani unorthodox, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">defend Kucha, <a href="#Page_127">127-130</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turanian family, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turcomans, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Turfan"></a>Turfan, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">battle at, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turfan Ush, <i>see</i> <a href="#Ush_Turfan">Ush Turfan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turghay, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turkestan, Eastern, <i>see</i> <a href="#Eastern_Turkestan">Eastern Turkestan</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">Western, <i>see</i> <a href="#Western_Turkestan">Western Turkestan</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><i><a id="Turkestan"></a>Turkestan Gazette</i>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Turkestan Trading Company, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tyfu, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Uigurs, <i>see</i> <a href="#Oigurs">Oigurs</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Uman Sheikh, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Urumtsi, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">siege of, <a href="#Page_238">238-239</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Usbeg, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Usha Tal, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Ushr" tax, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Ush_Turfan"></a>Ush Turfan, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">rising at, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Vagrants, laws against, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Value of land in Kashgar, <a href="#Page_160">160-161</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Vernoe"></a>Vernoe, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Viceroy of Ili, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Viceroy of Kansuh, <a href="#Page_237">237-238</a>; <i>see also</i> <a href="#Tso_Tsung_Tang">Tso Tsung <ins class="corr" title="original had: Tung">Tang</ins></a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Vodka," <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">"Vuoba," <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Wakhan, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wali Khan, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">character of, <a href="#Page_72">72-73</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wangs, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wanleh, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wealth of Kashgar merchants, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Western_Turkestan"></a>Western Turkestan, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Yahya, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a id="Yakoob_Beg"></a>Yakoob Beg, birth of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">early career, <a href="#Page_78">78-91</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">character of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">charges against, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sets out against Kashgar, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">expedition against Kashgar, <a href="#Page_103">103-118</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fails to take Yarkand, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defeats Tungan army near Yangy Hissar, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marries Kho Dalay's daughter, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attacks Yarkand again, <a href="#Page_113">113-116</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reverse at Yarkand, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">takes Yarkand, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reasons for wars with Tungani, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">wars with Tungani, <a href="#Page_126">126-127</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127-130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132-136</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">retrospect of his invasion of Kashgar, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his army, <a href="#Page_134">134-135</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142-144</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">policy towards Tungani, <a href="#Page_135">135-136</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">internal policy, <a href="#Page_137">137-139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">foreign policy, <i>see</i> chapters <a href="#CHAPTER_X">10</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">11</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">court of, <a href="#Page_138">138-139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">police system of, <a href="#Page_146">146-152</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">principles of finance of, <a href="#Page_154">154-167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">expenses of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">revenue of, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reply to Russian threats, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191-192</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reply to Khudayar Khan'sovertures, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sends envoy to Tashkent, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">arrangement with Sultan, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his opinion of trade, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">out-man&oelig;uvres Russia, <a href="#Page_199">199-201</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">congratulates Czar on marriage of his daughter, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">prepares to defend himself against Russia, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">weakness of his foreign policy, <a href="#Page_210">210-211</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">policy towards England, <a href="#Page_218">218-233</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">decline of friendship towards England, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">prepares to defend himself against China, <a href="#Page_244">244-246</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">comparison with China, <a href="#Page_241">241-249</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_250">250-253</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">r&eacute;sum&eacute; of career, <a href="#Page_253">253-257</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yakoob Khan, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>; <i>see</i> <a href="#Yakoob_Beg">Yakoob Beg</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yakoob Khan, of Cabul, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yangabad, battle of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yangy Hissar, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">fort surrenders to Yakoob Beg, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yangy Mussulmans, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yangy Shahr, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <i>passim</i>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Yarkand, gallant defence of, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Kashgar, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111-112</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yarkand, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">embassy to, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">river, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
+<li class="isub1">Tungan rising in, <a href="#Page_99">99-102</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105-106</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yuldus, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>; <i>see also</i> <a href="#Great_Yuldus">Great Yuldus</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yung Ching, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yunus, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yusuf (son of Galdan), <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yusuf (son of Sarimsak), <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yuzbashi Mahomed Zareef Khan, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">"Zakat" tax, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164-167</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Zilchak, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Zuelik, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Zuhuruddin, <a href="#Page_70">70-72</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">Woodfall &amp; Kinder, Printers, Milford Lane,
+Strand, London, W.C.</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="notebox">
+<a id="TN"></a>
+
+<h2>Transcriber's note:</h2>
+
+<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been retained as
+in the original.</p>
+
+<p>A few typographical errors have been corrected. They are
+shown in the text with <ins class="corr" title=
+"like this">mouse-hover popups</ins>. Position your mouse over
+the word to see the correction.</p>
+
+<p>The following corrections have been made to the text:</p>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li>Page 205: detracted replaced with detraction.</li>
+
+<li>Page 250: Missing period added at the end of
+sentence.</li>
+
+<li>Page 255: unaminity replaced with unanimity.</li>
+
+<li>Page 258: Missing t added, aken replaced with taken.</li>
+
+<li>Page 278: momet replaced with moment.</li>
+
+<li>Page 306: accurracy replaced with accuracy.</li>
+
+<li>Page 337: Period replaced with comma after
+209-210.</li>
+
+<li>Page 339: Hyder replaced with Hydar.</li>
+
+<li>Page 340: Kalkhalu replaced with Khalkhalu.</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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