Milakatong La or Menlakathong La is a historic mountain pass along the trade route between Tawang in India's Arunachal Pradesh and Tsona Dzong in Tibet's Shannan province via the valley of Tsona Chu.
Milakatong La Pass | |
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Elevation | 16,500 feet (5,000 m) |
Location | Tawang district, Arunachal Pradesh, India |
Range | Himalaya |
Coordinates | 27°41′N 91°57′E / 27.683°N 91.950°E[1] |
Location
editThe Ludlow–Sherriff expedition to Tibet identified the location of Milakatong La at 27°41′N 91°57′E / 27.683°N 91.950°E, at the top of a branch valley of the Tsona Chu valley, leading down to the Tsechu village.[1] Following the valley upstream along Tsona Chu leads one to Tsona Dzong. Following it downstream leads one to the Tawang Chu river.
Other sources suggest a location near the 'Bum La' pass of Ludlow-Sherriff (27°43′N 91°55′E / 27.717°N 91.917°E), described as being between "Tulung La and the Bhutan border".[2][a] The McMahon Line map of 1914 places the Indo-Tibetan border along the mountain range on this axis (labelled "Menlakathong La range"):
the boundary line ... follows the crest of the mountain range which runs from peak 21431 through Tu Lung La and Menlaka-thong La to the Bhutan border. This is the highest mountain range in this tract of country. To the north of it are people of Tibetan descent, to the south the inhabitants are of Bhutanese and Aka extraction. It is unquestionably the correct boundary.
This pass also leads to another branch valley of the Tsona Chu valley, which lies north of the border. Both the passes were likely used for trade between Tawang and Tsona Dzong. This perhaps explains the confusion among sources.
Trade
editAccording to F. M. Bailey, there were two trade routes between Tawang and Tsona Dzong, one via Milakatong La and other via the Nyamjang Chu valley. On each of these roads, a Tsukang (Chukang) or a customs house was placed by the Tibetans and a tax of 10 per cent was collected on all merchandise brought from Tawang. However, there was no tax on articles carried from Tsona Dzong to Tawang.[3]
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Stearn, William T. (1976), "Frank Ludlow (1885–1972) and the Ludlow–Sherriff Expeditions to Bhutan and South-Eastern Tibet of 1933–1950", Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Botany, 5 (5): 262 – via archive.org
- ^ a b Mehra, The McMahon Line and After (1974), p. 232.
- ^ Bailey, F. M. (1914), Report on an Exploration on the North-East Frontier, 1913, Simla: Government Monotype Press, p. 32 – via archive.org
Bibliography
edit- Mehra, Parshotam (1974), The McMahon Line and After: A Study of the Triangular Contest on India's North-eastern Frontier Between Britain, China and Tibet, 1904-47, Macmillan, ISBN 9780333157374 – via archive.org