Historical Background

For
close on 900 years from the middle of the 10th century, Ladakh was an
independent kingdom , its dynasties descending from the king of old Tibet.
Its political fortunes ebbed and flowed over the centuries, and the kingdom,
was at its greatest in the early 17th century under the famous king Sengge
Namgyal, whose rule extended across Spiti and western Tibet up to the
Mayumla beyond the sacred sites of Mount Kailash and Lake Mansarovar.
And gradually, perhaps partly due to the fact that it was politically
stable, in contrast to the lawless tribes further west, Ladakh became
recognized as the best trade route between the Pubjab and Central Asia. For
centuries it was travered by caravans carrying textiles and spices, raw silk
and carpets, dyestuffs and narcotics.
Heedless of the land's
rugged terrain and apparent remoteness, merchants entrusted their goods to
relays o fpony transporters who took about two months to carry them from
Amritsar to the Central Asian towns of Yarkand and Knotan. On this long
route, Leh was the half-way house, and developed into a bustling entreport,
it bazaars thronged with merchants from far countries.
The
famous pashm (better known as cashmere) also came down from the
high-altitude plateaux of eastern Ladakh and western Tibet where it was
produced, thorough Leh to Srinagar, where skilled artisans transformed it
from a matted oily mass of goat's underfleece into shawls known the world
over for their softness and warmth.
Ironically, it was this
lucrative trade, that finally spelt the doom of the independent kingdom. It
attracted the covetous gaze of Gulab Singh, the ruler of Jammu in the early
19th century, and in 1834, he sent his general Zorawar Singh to invade
Ladakh.

Ther followed a decade of war and turmoul, which ended with the emergence of
the British as the paramount power in north India.
Ladakh,
together with the neighbouring province of Baltistan, was incorporated into
the newly created State of Jammu & Kashmir. Just over a century later,
this union was disturbed by the partition of India, Baltistan becoming part
of Pakistan, while Ladakh remained in India as part of the State of Jammu &
Kashmir.