We Tibetans, A fascinating account of Tibetan Life and culture written by a Tibetan woman who settled in turn of the century London, by Rinchen Lhamo

Softcover, 228 pages, bw illustrations, New York 1985, very good

In 1919, Rinchen Lhamo married a British diplomat at Dartsedo, Louis Magrath King (1886-1949); theirs is often described as "probably the first Tibetan-British marriage". King was born in China, the son of writer Margaret Williamson King and the grandson of Scottish missionary Alexander Williamson. King had to retire from the consular service to make their marriage official, and they traveled to England in 1925 on a Japanese ship, to avoid being separated.

In 1926, possibly in response to the John Noel film The Epic of Everest (1924), Lhamo published We Tibetans: An Intimate Picture by a Woman of Tibet, of an Interesting and Distinctive People, a guide to Tibetan culture, religion, and folklore, in English, with an introduction by her British husband."We are neither primitive nor bizarre," she explained of Tibet to English-speaking newspaper readers. "We are like yourselves, a people with a highly developed culture, spiritual, social, and material. Our minds are no less active, our wits are no less keen, than yours." She particularly objected to how Tibetan women and gender roles were portrayed in Western accounts. Her opinions about Western beauty, culture, and wealth were reported in many newspapers.

She and her husband gave Tibetan objects to the British Museum in the 1920s.

Rinchen Lhamo and Louis Magrath Tindal King had four children together, including Paul Henry Tindal King (1923-2016), Yudre Louise King (the oldest, died as a child), and Martha Rolfe nee King(1922-2003) and Alec King. Rinchen Lhamo moved to England in 1925 with her husband, their children, and her brother. The family lived in Kensington and Hildenborough, and Rinchen Lhamo died at the latter town in 1929, aged 28 years, from tuberculosis.

 

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