Ganden Phodrang

The Ganden Phodrang or Ganden Podrang (Tibetan: དགའ་ལྡན་ཕོ་བྲང, Wylie: dGa' ldan pho brang, Lhasa dialect: [ˈkɑ̃̀tɛ̃̀ ˈpʰóʈɑ̀ŋ]; Chinese: 甘丹頗章; pinyin: Gāndān Pōzhāng) was the Tibetan system of government established by the 5th Dalai Lama in 1642, after the Oirat lord Güshi Khan who founded the Khoshut Khanate conferred all temporal power on the 5th Dalai Lama in a ceremony in Shigatse in the same year. Lhasa again became the capital of Tibet, and the Ganden Phodrang operated until the 1950s. The Ganden Phodrang accepted China's Qing emperors as overlords after the 1720 expedition, and the Qing became increasingly active in governing Tibet starting in the early 18th century. After the fall of the Qing empire in 1912, the Ganden Phodrang government lasted until the 1950s, when Tibet was annexed by the People's Republic of China. During most of the time from the early Qing period until the end of Ganden Phodrang rule, a governing council known as the Kashag (established by the Qing in 1721) operated as the highest authority in the Ganden Phodrang administration.

Ganden Phodrang
དགའ་ལྡན་ཕོ་བྲང
甘丹頗章
1642–1959
StatusProtectorate of the Khoshut Khanate
(1642–1717)
Protectorate of the Dzungar Khanate
(1717–1720)
Protectorate of the Qing dynasty
(1720–1912)
Protectorate of the People's Republic of China
(1951-1959)
CapitalLhasa
Common languagesTibetan
Religion
Tibetan Buddhism
GovernmentTibetan Buddhist Sacerdotal state
Spiritual and Secular
lugs gnyis
Dalai Lama 
 1642–1682
5th Dalai Lama (first)
 1950–1959
14th Dalai Lama (last)
History 
 Established
1642
 Disestablished
1959
CurrencyTibetan currency
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