Definition of "Amdo"
Amdo
proper noun
One of the three traditional regions of Tibet, the other two being Ü-Tsang and Kham.
Quotations
Rgyal-sras is said to have explained to him in a prophetic manner what he was destined to achieve and how he should proceed to Amdo, for the purpose of founding monasteries and temples there, and also for diffusing Buddhism in China.
1889, Sarat Chandra Dás, “Life of Sum-pa Khan-po, also styled Yeśos-Dpal-hbyor, the author of the Reḥumig (Chronological Table)”, in Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, volume LVIII, number II, Calcutta, page 38
When the new reincarnation of the Dalai Lama was discovered in 1938 in Amdo Province a new reincarnation of the Panchen Lama was found in that same year and in the same province.
1979 March 8, “Tibetan Discontent Grows”, in Congressional Record, volume 25, number 4, Washington, D.C.: Government Publishing Office, page 4329
The inmates of this vast prison were mostly Chinese. We heard that there used to be 300 Tibetans, all from the Amdo region of Tibet, who were imprisoned for taking up arms against the Chinese around 1956-57. Of the 300 Tibetan prisoners only two were alive in the prison when we arrived.
1981, Tenzin Chodrak, “Seventeen Years in A Chinese Prison”, in SPEARhead, number 11, page 11
The Nhasangs themselves are from Ngaba, which is in the Amdo region of northeastern Tibetan, a cultural borderland where Tibetan and Sichuan traditions meet. China has decreed that Ngaba is within Sichuan Province.
2022 November 8, Pete Wells, “Restaurant Review: Why Does This Tibetan Kitchen Also Cook Sichuan Food?”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 2022-11-08, Food