
**SOLD** RARE PRE WW1 BRITISH ARMY TIBET EXPEDITION 1903 CAMPAIGN MEDAL WITH GYANTSE BAR
$1,195.00
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***SOLD***
Offered is an original 1903-04 Tibet Expedition Campaign Medal. 36mm wide circular silver medal with affixed claw and ornate scroll swivel ribbon bar suspension, RETAINING THE CAMPAIGN BAR 'GYANTSE'; the face with the head and shoulders of King Edward VII facing left in field marshal’s uniform, showing some staining to face, circumscribed ‘EDWARDUS VII KAISAR-I-HIND’ (Edward VII Emperor of India); the reverse with a view of the city of Lhasa, circumscribed below ‘TIBET 1903-4’; with sloped engraved naming to rim: 112 Saddler Hayat Khan Fakir Khan 12th Mule Corps; on correct ribbon with old collectors reference tag. The 12th Mule Corps were designated with the task of carrying supplies and equipment for the expedition, with British officer's and NCO's and native carriers. The expedition saw large numbers of casualties due to the extreme weather and conditions encountered by the expedition. A good example of this can be seen in the following extract from the book: Bayonets to Lhasa: The British invasion of Tibet.
"In mid-March a convoy of the 12th Mule Corps, escorted by two companies of the 23rd Pioneers, were overtaken by a blizzard on their march between Phari and Tuna, and camped in two feet of snow with the thermometer 18 degrees below zero. A driving hurricane made it impossible to light a fire or cook food. The officers were reduced to frozen bully beef and neat spirits, while the sepoys went without food for thirty six hours.....The drivers arrived at Tuna frozen to the waist. Twenty men of the 12th Mule Corps were frost-bitten, and thirty men of the 23rd Pioneers were so incapacitated that they had to be carried in on mules. On the same day there were seventy cases of snow-blindness among the 8th Gurkhas".
The medal was instituted in February 1905 and awarded to participants in the Tibet Mission and accompanying troops who served at or beyond Siliguri, North Bengal, between 13 December 1903 and 23 September 1904 in the punitive expedition that following Tibetan rejection of British attempts to gain political influence and trade links. Most examples were awarded to Indian forces, as this example shows.
Weight | 0.3 kg |
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Dimensions | 10 × 6 × 3 cm |