REPORT: HISTORICAL HEGEMONY, TRIBAL LINEAGE, AND MODERN DISUNITY IN CHINLAND by Salai Tluang Kip Thang I. Historical Expansion and the Rise of the Tlaisun Hegemony (18th–19th Centuries) The roots of today’s geopolitical and tribal tensions in Chinland can be traced to the expansion of the Tlaisun (Tashon) chiefdoms during the 18th and 19th centuries. Centered in present-day Falam, the Tlaisun established one of the most influential powers in the Chin Hills through aggressive military expansion, tribute systems, and slave-raiding economies. At the height of their influence, Tlaisun authority extended beyond modern Falam into the Lushai Hills (present-day Mizoram), parts of Manipur, and the Chindwin River lowlands, including areas such as Minkin and Mawlaik. This expansion transformed Falam into the dominant regional power long before British colonial intervention. The old Fahlam dynasty, prior to the British arrival in the Chin Hills, was governed through a political council led pri...
I linghnak le ruathnak thu le la hetah zapui in siar thil in ngan ing.