GANDHAR
AND PAROPAMISUS
The
ancient province of Gandhar lay within what is now the easternmost
areas of modern Afghanistan and the north of Pakistan. Prior
to its late sixth century BC domination by the Achaemenid Persians,
the western parts of Gandhar seem to have formed part of a much
larger and more poorly-defined region known as Ariana, of which
the later province of Aria was the heartland. Barely recorded by
written history, its precise boundaries are impossible to pin down.
It may have encompassed much or all of Transoxiana, the region around
the River Oxus (the Amu Darya), and could have reached as far south
as the coastline of the Arabian Sea.
Paropamisus
of the Paropamisadae (the Paropamisadai people) seems to
have been very close by, but was seemingly not in the same precise
region as Gandhar. Gandhar was probably bordered by the River
Kokcha (now in Afghanistan), with the Indo-Aryan people of the Paropamisadae
on the other, western side of the river and immediately to the east
of the Hindu Kush mountains. The Khyber Pass, Kapisa (modern Bagram),
Charsadda, and Kabul were all located within this general area.
In fact, the region as a whole seems to have been known as Gadara
(Gandhar) to the Persians and Paropamisus to the Greeks, both using
the different names for the same satrapy.
The
city of Kabul may have been founded as a settlement as early as
1500 BC. There are references to it in the Indo-Aryan Rigved
scriptures (or Rig Ved - both are correct, and see the feature
link, right, for more on the ancient texts), which were probably
composed when Indo-Aryan migrants were drifting down into India.
During the Indo-Greek period in South Asia, the region was known
as Gandhar, and by the time it was conquered by Alexander the Great
it was already home to an old Indo-Aryan kingdom of which virtually
nothing is known (but see the Gandhari, below). Kabul later became
the centre of its own temporarily-powerful kingdom in the early
medieval period. Today the city is the largest and most highly-populated
city in modern Afghanistan, as well as being its capital.
The Gandhari were a people attested by the Rigved.
This was the earliest of the Indian texts to mention them, but later
texts also cover them in limited detail, including the Chandogya
Upanishad, the Srauta Sutras, and the Aitareya Brahmana.
Heinrich Zimmer places them along the River Kubha during India's
Vedic period, which is now in eastern Afghanistan, feeding into
the River Indus from the Hindu Kush mountains. This suggests that
they were amongst the earliest tribes of Indo-Aryans to settle,
close to the mountains rather than following the migratory push
south-eastwards into India. They are one of the border tribes in
the Atharved, along with the Balhikas, both outlying groups
(as far as Indo-Aryan settlement is concerned) which were useful
as retreats for the fever-stricken. It was here, in their retreat
at Gandhar, that they were conquered by the burgeoning Persian empire,
probably by Cyrus the Great in his wide-ranging campaigns of 546-540
BC. Their kings are largely legendary, taken from the Vedic texts,
and are therefore shown with a plum background.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information by Abhijit
Rajadhyaksha and Edward Dawson, from Epitome of the Philippic
History of Pompeius Trogus: Books 11-12, Volume 1, Marcus Junianus
Justinus, John Yardley, & Waldemar Heckel, from Foreign Impact
on Indian Life and Culture (c.326 BC to c.300 AD), Satyendra
Nath Naskar, from The Persian Empire, J M Cook (1983), from
Ancient India Part. 1: A Comprehensive History of India,
P N Chopra & B N Puri (2005), from The Histories, Herodotus
(Penguin, 1996), from Coming into His Own, Heinrich Zimmer
(Margaret H Caseand, Ed), from the Vedic Index of Names and Subjects,
Vols 1 & 2, Arthur Anthony Macdonell & Arthur Berriedale
Keith (John Murray for the Government of India, 1912), from Yājñavalkya,
Sureshwar Jha, and from External Links: Encyclopĉdia Britannica,
and Encyclopaedia Iranica.)
c.4000
BC
:
From
around this date, proto-Indo-Europeans emerge in Central Asia to
form an homogenous people who all speak the same general language.
In the third millennium BC, groups begin to migrate west and south,
beginning a fragmentation that sees them occupy large swathes of
Europe, the Near East, and South Asia.
Following
the climate-change-induced collapse of indigenous civilisations
and cultures in Iran and Central Asia between about 2200-1700 BC,
Indo-Iranian groups gradually migrated southwards to form two regions
- Tūr (yellow) and Ariana (white), with westward migrants forming
the early Parsua kingdom (lime green), and Indo-Aryans entering
India (green)
Naganajit
: King of the Gandhari (mentioned in Aitareya Brahman).
King
Naganajit of the Gandhari is mentioned in the Vedic text, Aitareya
Brahman, as a contemporary of King Janak of Videh (not to be
confused with the later Janak of the Sunik dynasty Magadh).
Aruddha
: Ruler of the Druhyus on the seven rivers.
The
Gandhari or Gandhars are also included in the Uttarapath
division of Puranic and Buddhistic traditions. The Purans
mention the Druhyus being driven out of the land of the seven rivers
(immediately to the east of the River Indus) by Mandhatr. The next
king of the Druhyus is Gandhar (a convenience to provide an origin
for the name of the Gandhari people). He settles his followers to
the north-west, on the other side of the Indus, in a land which
becomes known as Gandhar, one of the Janapadas (kingdoms) of the
Vedic period. In reality, his warband probably enters the region
and dominates the Gandhari natives, adding a new ruling elite to
their number.
Gandhar
: Son and ruler of the Druhyus. Took over the Gandhari.
Pracetas
: Later Druhyu successor to Gandhar.
The
sons of the later Druhyu king, Pracetas, occupy territory around
the Gandhar region and in what is now northern Afghanistan, as mentioned
in several of the Puranas - Bhagavat, Brahmand,
Matsya, Vayu, and Vishnu. The Gandhars and
their king figure prominently as strong allies of the Kurus in their
fight against the Pandavs in the Mahabharat war. The Gandhars
are apparently a furious people, well-trained in the art of war.
Ancient
Gandhar is slowly being explored by archaeologists who constantly
unearth relics from several millennia of habitation, possibly including
signs of early Indo-Aryan domination here
c.546
- 540 BC
:
The
defeat of the Medes opens the floodgates for Cyrus the Great with
a wave of conquests, beginning in the west from 549 BC but focussing
towards the east of the Persians from about 546 BC. Eastern Iran
falls during a more drawn-out campaign between about 546-540 BC,
which may be when Maka is taken (presumed to be the southern coastal
strip of the Arabian Sea). Further eastern regions now fall, namely
Arachosia, Aria, Bactria, Carmania, Chorasmia, Drangiana, Gandhar
(including the Gandhari people and their Druhyu rulers), Gedrosia,
Hyrcania, Margiana, Parthia, Saka (at least part of the broad tribal
lands of the Sakas), Sogdiana (with Ferghana), and Thatagush - all
added to the empire, although records for these campaigns are characteristically
sparse.
Persian
Satraps of Gadara / Paruparasana (Gandhar) :
Conquered
in the mid-sixth century BC by Cyrus the Great, the region of Gandhar
was added to the Persian empire. Before that it was populated
by tribal groups, most of whom - by the first millennium BC - would
probably have been dominated by Indo-Aryan people, or at least an
Indo-Aryan warrior elite which governed an indigenous group. Under
the Persians it was formed into an official satrapy or province
which, according to the Behistun inscription of Darius the Great,
was called Gadara (Gandāra) or Gandara and/or Paruparasana
(Gandhar and Paropamisadae are Greek manglings of the name).
These
eastern regions of the new-found empire (at least to the north and
west of Gadara where Indo-Iranians dominated) were ancestral homelands
for the Persians. Those lands formed a melting pot of tribes
from which the Parsua had migrated west in the first place to reach
Persis. There would have been no language barriers for Cyrus' forces
and few cultural differences. Although details of his conquests
are relatively poor, he seemingly experienced few problems in uniting
the various tribes under his governance. He was the first to exert
any form of imperial control here, although his campaign may have
been driven partially by a desire to recreate the semi-mythical
kingdom of Turan in the land of Tūr, but now under Persian
control. Curiously the Persians had little knowledge of what lay
to the north of their eastern empire, with the result that Alexander
the Great was less well-informed about the region than earlier Ionian
settlers on the Black Sea coast had been.
There is no information about Gadara prior to the arrival
of Alexander. This central minor satrapy was presumably governed
by an indigenous family for much of the Achaemenid era, and Arrian
provides much of the limited detail on them. Astis is the name of
the last governor to be installed by the Persians, the only one
known from the sources. Various local dynasts mentioned in the sources
were presumably subordinates to the satrap himself during the late
Achaemenid and early Greek years: Sisicottus, satrap of the Assaceni,
Assacanus and his brother who controlled the area around the towns
of Massaga and Dyrta, and also Cophaeus and Assagetes.
Two centres of power gravity can be discerned in Gadara upon the
arrival of Alexander. One is in the west, in Paruparasana
(Paropamisus), which is where Alexander 'founded' the city of Alexandria
on the Caucuses and installed a satrap. The other is in the east,
where he appointed a second governor who probably had his official
seat in Peucelaotis. Paropamisus can be reconstructed as Old Persian
*Paraupārisainā (Purushapura, modern Peshawar). This region
is not attested in OP texts, where the province is referred to as
Gadara. The western part of the satrapy became the more important
at the time of Alexander and gave its name to the entire province
while it was under Greek rule. This development was dictated by
the course of the conquest. After the capture of Paropamisus and
an apparent campaign down the southern stretches of the Indus, Alexander
turned against Bakhtrish and then, only two years later, continued
the conquest south of the Hindu Kush. When the empire was divided
up by Alexander's generals at Babylon and Triparadisus, the name
was retained: Paropamisadae, so Persian-era Gadara and Paruparasana
are essentially east and west halves of the same thing.
The Paropamisadae people themselves were an especially numerous
group in their land immediately to the west of Gadara, while Buddhist
literature, especially the Jatakas, mentions Taxila as the
capital of the 'kingdom of Gandhar'. Under the Persians, the region
which encompassed Taxila was formed into an official satrapy or
province called Thatagush, but Taxila, on the eastern bank of the
River Hydaspes (the modern Jhelum) may have broken away from Gandhar
at some point during Persian governance and formed itself into a
small but powerful independent kingdom.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information from
The Persian Empire, J M Cook (1983), from The Histories,
Herodotus (Penguin, 1996), from Anabasis Alexandri, Arrian
of Nicomedia, and from External Links: The Geography of Strabo
(Loeb Classical Library Edition, 1932), and Encyclopaedia Britannica,
and Encyclopaedia Iranica.)
522
- 521 BC :
Immediately after Darius I secures the throne he faces several rebellions,
stretching from Babirush to Media and Armina to Parthawa, and Verkâna.
The responses to all of these are handled well by Darius and all
are crushed in turn. Another major rebellion in Mergu happens towards
the end of 522 or 521 BC and that is also put down. In Harahuwatish
and Thatagush, the satrap, Vivâna, faces opposition from a rival
who has been appointed by the 'usurper'.
The
central relief of the North Stairs of the Apadana in Persepolis,
now in the Archaeological Museum in Tehran, shows Darius I (the
Great) on his royal throne (External Link: Creative Commons Licence
4.0 International)
Gadara,
perhaps uniquely, seems to be untouched by any of these rebellions.
However, there may still be rebel elements in Thatagush, as Darius
conducts a campaign there, during which he also seems to secure
a new satrapy by the name of Hindush. Some of this territory
is already likely to have been part of the conquests of Cyrus the
Great, but it is possible that Darius now extends and completes
the conquest.
fl
c.510s BC :
Bagabadush / Megabazus : Darius I's cousin. Satrap, with
Harahuwatish & Thatagush?
516
- 515 BC :
Achaemenid ruler Darius embarks on a military campaign into the
lands east of the empire. He marches through Haraiva and Bakhtrish,
and then to Gadara and Taxila. By 515 BC he is conquering lands
around the Indus Valley to incorporate into the new satrapy of Hindush
before returning via Harahuwatish and Zranka. Along the way the
Sakas are largely defeated and conquered, but probably only along
the borders.
In the Behistun inscription's list of satrapies of the empire prior
to the accession of Darius, but which are now ruled by him, Gadara
is omitted. It has been suggested (by Cook) that this could be for
reasons of symmetry in the list's presentation. The Megabazus who
governs here could also be the same Megabazus who commands the Persian
forces in the west and later becomes satrap of Daskyleion.
fl
c.500s BC :
Megabates : Son. Satrap, with Harahuwatish & Paricania.
c.500s BC :
Megabates, son of Megabazus, is father to another Megabazus who
in 480 BC is one of the Persian fleet commanders during the campaign
against the Greek states. While Herodotus appears not to know where
to place Paricania (attributing it to 'Asiatic Ethiopians'), Arrian
links it with the Ichthyophagi and Oritans of Gedrosia.
360s/350s
BC :
Artaxerxes II is occupied fighting the 'revolt of the satraps' in
the western part of the empire. Nothing is known of events in the
eastern half of the Persian empire at this time, but no word of
unrest is mentioned by Greek writers, however briefly. Given the
newsworthiness for Greeks of any rebellion against the Persian king,
this should be enough to show that the east remains solidly behind
the king. It seems that all of the empire's troubles hinge on the
Greeks during this period.
?
- 329 BC :
Astis : Satrap.
?
- 329 BC :
Bagabādus?
: Minor satrap? Otherwise unknown.
?
- 329 BC :
Sisicottus
: Satrap of the Assaceni. Retained by Alexander.
?
- 329 BC :
Assacanus
: Satrap (with brother) of Massaga & Dyrta towns. Retained.
?
- 329 BC :
Cophaeus
: Minor satrap within Gadara. Retained.
?
- 329 BC :
Assagetes
: Minor satrap within Gadara. Retained.
329
- 327 BC :
Persia is conquered by the Greek empire under Alexander the Great.
Persian King Darius III retreats into his eastern territories where
he is murdered by Bessus, the satrap of Bakhtrish. Bessus attempts
to create a national focus of resistance which soon falls apart,
but it takes Alexander two more years to fully conquer the region.
Barsaentes,
satrap of Thatagush, Harahuwatish, and Zranka, turns tail when Alexander
appears at the border of Zranka and does not wait for him to reach
Harahuwatish. Instead he takes refuge in the region of the 'Mountain
Indians'. These facts (probably) indicate that Barsaentes is also
responsible for the province of Hindush, the home of the Mountain
Indians. Alexander campaigns briefly there in 329 BC prior to entering
Bakhtrish via the Hindu Kush, crossing Gadara in the process. Barsaentes
is eventually captured and handed over to Alexander in 327 BC by
King Taxiles in the northern Indus.
Argead
Dynasty in Gandhar & Paropamisus :
The Argead were the ruling family and founders of Macedonia who
reached their greatest extent under Alexander the Great and his
two successors before the kingdom broke up into several Hellenic
sections. Following Alexander's conquest of central and eastern
Persia in 331-328 BC, the Greek empire ruled the region until Alexander's
death in 323 BC and the subsequent regency period which ended in
310 BC. Alexander's successors held no real power, being mere figureheads
for the generals who really held control of Alexander's empire.
Following that latter period and during the course of several wars,
Gandhar and neighbouring Paropamisadae were left in the hands of
the Seleucid empire from 312 BC.
There is no information about Gandhar prior to the arrival
of Alexander, and Arrian provides much of the limited detail on
it. Astis is the name of the last governor to be installed by the
Persians, the only one known from the sources. Various local dynasts
mentioned in the sources were presumably subordinates to the satrap
himself during the late Achaemenid and early Greek years: Sisicottus,
satrap of the Assaceni, Assacanus and his brother who controlled
the area around the towns of Massaga and Dyrta, and also Cophaeus
and Assagetes. They all appear to have been retained under Alexander.
At this time, two centres of power gravity can be discerned. One
is in the west, in Paropamisus, which is where Alexander
'founded' the city of Alexandria on the Caucuses and installed a
satrap. The other is in the east, where he appointed a second governor
who probably had his official seat in Peucelaotis. Paropamisus
can be reconstructed as Old Persian *Paraupārisainā. This
region is not attested in OP texts, where the province is referred
to as Gadara (Gandāra). The western part of the satrapy
became the more important at the time of Alexander and gave its
name to the entire province under Greek rule. This development was
dictated by the course of the conquest. After the capture of Paropamisus
and an apparent campaign down the southern stretches of the Indus,
Alexander turned against Bakhtrish and then, only two years later,
continued the conquest south of the Hindu Kush. When the empire
was divided at Babylon and Triparadisus, the name was retained:
Paropamisadae, so Gandhar and Paropamisus are essentially one and
the same thing.
Buddhist literature, especially the Jatakas, mentions Taxila
as the capital of the 'kingdom of Gandhar'. Under the Persians,
this region was formed into the official satrapy or province of
Thatagush, while Taxila, on the east bank of the River Hydaspes
(the modern Jhelum) seems to have broken away from Gandhar at some
point during Persian governance, and formed a small but powerful
independent kingdom. Its eastern neighbour, Paurav, may also have
formed part of Hindush and was now also independent. Both states,
in the Northern Indus region, would have to be conquered by Alexander
from 327 BC.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information from
the Mudrarakshasa, Vishakhadatta (Playwright), from the Parishishtaparvan,
Acharya Hemachandra, from Anabasis Alexandri, Arrian of Nicomedia,
from The Generalship of Alexander the Great, J F C Fuller,
from the Historical Dictionary of Ancient Greek Warfare,
J Woronoff & I Spence, from Alexander the Great and Bactria:
The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia, Frank Lee
Holt, and from External Links: The Geography of Strabo (Loeb
Classical Library Edition, 1932), and Encyclopaedia Britannica.)
330
- 323 BC :
Alexander
III the Great : King of Macedonia. Conquered Persia.
323
- 317 BC :
Philip
III Arrhidaeus : Feeble-minded half-brother of Alexander
the Great.
317
- 310 BC :
Alexander
IV of Macedonia : Infant son of Alexander the Great and
Roxana.
329
- ? BC :
Sisicottus
: Persian satrap of the Assaceni. Retained by Alexander.
329
- ? BC :
Assacanus
: Persian satrap (with brother) of Massaga & Dyrta.
Retained.
329
- ? BC :
Cophaeus
: Persian minor satrap. Retained.
329
- ? BC :
Assagetes
: Persian minor satrap. Retained.
327
- 326 BC :
Alexander's army enters western India through the passes of the
Hindu Kush, aided by King Ambhi of Taxila on the eastern bank of
the River Indus and by the Sakas under Omarg. In support of Ambhi,
Alexander fights King Porus of the neighbouring Paurav kingdom,
defeating him at the Battle of Hydaspes and then raising both kings
as satraps of their respective northern Indus regions. Presumably
both are under the administrative gaze of the Greek satrap of northern
Indus, Eudamus.
The
route of Alexander's ongoing campaigns are shown in this map, with
them leading him from Europe to Egypt, into Persia, and across the
vastness of eastern Iran as far as the Pamir mountain range
326
- 321 BC :
Oxyartes
: Sogdian satrap of Paropamisus. Father of Roxana.
326
BC :
Oxyartes is the father of Roxana, the new bride of Alexander himself.
Against the vehemently strong opinions held by his generals, Alexander
had proceeded to marry Roxana in 327 BC, while Oxyartes is a Sogdian
warlord who had supported Bessus in his attempt to resist Alexander
in the east in 329 BC. Oxyartes had subsequently been one of the
defeated defenders of the fortress known as the 'Sogdian Rock' in
328 BC, close to the Sogdian capital at Marakanda. In reward for
a quick capitulation and for being Alexander's father-in-law, Oxyartes
now becomes the satrap of Gandhar.
315
- 305 BC :
Proof of the growing independence of the Greek commanders in the
east of the empire is provided by numismatic (coin) evidence. Several
local issues of gold, silver, and bronze are struck in the names
of independent satraps, including Sophytes (probably of Bactria)
and Vakshuvar (sometimes equated with Oxyartes of Paropamisus but
possibly his successor instead) between 315-305 BC. It is impossible
on the basis of the available evidence to say whether this Sophytes
has replaced Stanasor as satrap of Bactria, while the few known
coins of Vakshuvar are Persian in style on one side and Greek on
the other.
?
- 305? BC :
Vakshuvar
: Satrap of Paropamisus? Oxyartes himself?
305
- 303 BC :
Following
the failure of Seleucus Nicator's Seleucid reconquest of India,
the Indo-Greek regions of Paropamisadae, Arachosia, Gandhar, northern
Indus, and southern Indus are ceded to the Mauryan empire as part
of an alliance agreement. This territory also includes the former
kingdoms of Taxila and Paurav in northern Indus. Subsequent relations
between the Greeks and the Mauryans appear to be cordial. Seleucus
even appoints Megasthenes as his ambassador to Chandragupta's court.
The former Indo-Greek territories remain a Mauryan possession until
the early years of the second century BC, after which they can be
regained by the Greeks.
Macedonian
& Mauryan Gandhar & Paropamisus :
The unexpected death of Alexander in 323 BC changed the situation
dramatically within his vast empire. Immediately his generals divided
the empire between them. During the subsequent war, General Seleucus
was able to expand his holdings with some ruthlessness, building
up his stock of Alexander's far eastern regions as far as the borders
of India and the River Indus. Appian's work, The Syrian Wars,
provides a detailed list of these regions, which included Arabia,
Arachosia, Aria, Armenia, Bactria, 'Seleucid' Cappadocia (as it
was known) by 301 BC, Carmania, Cilicia (eventually), Drangiana,
Gedrosia, Hyrcania, Media, Mesopotamia, Paropamisadae, Parthia,
Persia, Sogdiana, and Tapouria (a small satrapy beyond Hyrcania),
plus eastern areas of Phrygia.
By
305 BC Seleucus was fully in charge of the former Greek empire's
eastern provinces from his capital at Babylon. In that year he launched
a campaign to reconquer India which lasted for two years but which
came up against the might of the Mauryan empire and failed to achieve
its objectives. Strabo records that Seleucus conceded the later
Indo-Greek provinces to the Mauryans as part of an alliance agreement.
This included the regions of Arachosia, plus Gandhar and Paropamisadae
(essentially the same thing but perhaps divisible into east and
west regions respectively), along with northern Indus, and southern
Indus. Subsequent relations between the Greeks and the Mauryans
were generally cordial, with a Seleucid ambassador appointed to
Chandragupta's court.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information by David
Kelleher, from Life of Apollonius Tyana, Philostratus, from
King of the Seven Climes: A History of the Ancient Iranian World
(3000 BCE - 651 CE), Khodadad Rezakhani (Touraj Daryaee, Ed,
Ancient Iran Series Vol IV, 2017), from The Fragmentary
Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire, R C Blockley
(Francis Cairns, Oxford, 1983), from Epitome of the Philippic
History of Pompeius Trogus: Books 11-12, Volume 1, Marcus Junianus
Justinus, John Yardley, & Waldemar Heckel, and from External
Links: Ancient History Encyclopaedia (dead link), and Appian's
History of Rome: The Syrian Wars at Livius.org. Where information
conflicts regarding the Indo-Greek territories, Osmund Bopearachchi's
Monnaies Gréco-Bactriennes et Indo-Grecques, Catalogue Raisonné
(1991) has been followed.)
fl
206 BC :
Sophagasenos : King in the Kabul Valley (in Paropamisus?).
206
BC :
Seleucid
ruler Antiochus III marches from Bactria, across the Hindu Kush,
and into the Kabul Valley where he renews ties of friendship with
an Indian king by the name of Sophagasenos (alternatively shown
as Sophagasenus or Sophagasenas). This king is otherwise completely
unknown and cannot be matched with any more certain Indian rulers.
Instead, given the location it seems that he may be a local ruler,
perhaps in post-Mauryan Paropamisadae before it is seized by the
Indo-Greek kingdom around twenty-six years later.
The
kingdom of Bactria (shown in white) was at the height of its power
around 200-180 BC, with fresh conquests being made in the south-east,
encroaching into India just as the Mauryan empire was on the verge
of collapse, while around the northern and eastern borders dwelt
various tribes that would eventually contribute to the downfall
of the Greeks - the Sakas and Greater Yuezhi
185
BC :
Much
shrunken since the days of Ashok, the Mauryan empire is overthrown
by General Pusyamitra Sunga. The Macedonian kings of Bactria
annexe the western half of the empire, including Paropamisadae and
Arachosia, advancing as far as the Ganges and the capital at Pataliputra
(modern Patna) to form the Indo-Greek kingdom.
c.180
BC :
Placing the death of Demetrius of Bactria (of unknown causes) on
this date is generally accepted but far from certain. It is used
in an attempt to fit in his death with the subsequent appearance
of many successors in several regions of the enlargened kingdom.
Some of Demetrius' successors may be co-regents, but civil wars
and territorial divisions are very likely. Pantaleon, Antimachus
I, Agathocles, and possibly Euthydemus II are all theoretically
linked as relatives to Demetrius. In Bactria, Euthydemus II rules,
while in the Indo-Greek territories, Agathocles rules in Paropamisadae
while Pantaleon rules in Arachosia.
180?
- 165? BC :
Agathocles
: Bactrian. In Paropamisadae.
180?
- 165? BC :
Antimachus
I Theos : Brother? In Bactria, Paropamisadae and Arachosia.
c.175
- 160 BC :
Apollodotus I : In Paropamisadae, Arachosia, & Western
Indus.
175
- 170/165 BC :
Demetrius
II : Son of Antimachus I. In Paropamisadae & Arachosia.
c.175
BC :
Demetrius II rules in Paropamisadae and Arachosia as a sub-king
or joint ruler with his father, the Bactrian king, Antimachus I.
While he is campaigning in the east, a usurper arises in the west
in about 170 BC.
170?
BC :
Antimachus of Bactria is apparently defeated by the able newcomer
and former general, Eucratides (an alternative is that his territory
is absorbed by Eucratides upon his death). Eucratides is opposed
by Demetrius II from the Indo-Greek territories. who apparently
returns to Bactria with 60,000 men to oust the usurper, but he is
defeated and killed in the encounter. Antimachus I also fights against
Eucratides, but ultimately is defeated around 160 BC and Eucratides
seems to occupy territory as far as the Indus. The Euthydemids are
pushed out of Bactria, retaining only the Indo-Greek territories.
The
successor to Antimachus I of Bactria was Eucratides I, with this
silver tetradrachm being minted in his image at some point during
the twenty-six years or so of his reign
171
- c.145 BC :
Eucratides
I / Eukratides I : Bactrian. In Paropamisadae, Arachosia,
& W Indus.
167
BC :
Under
Mithradates the Parthians rise from obscurity to become a major
regional power, although a precise chronology is not possible.
Their first expansion takes provinces from the Greco-Bactrian kingdom.
During the reign of Eucratides the Greco-Bactrians are also engaged
in warfare against the people of Sogdiana, showing that they have
lost control of that northern region too (and by inference Ferghana).
c.165
BC :
Defeated by the Xiongnu, the Greater Yuezhi are forced to evacuate
their lands on the borders of the Chinese kingdom. They begin a
migration westwards that triggers a slow domino effect of barbarian
movement. However, Bactria seems to be at least a decade away from
being affected by this, and the Greek kings continue to focus more
on their battles against established rivals.
160
- 155 BC :
Antimachus
II Nikephoros : In Paropamisadae, Arachosia, & Western
Indus.
c.160
BC :
Antimachus II is either the son of Demetrius II or Antimachus I,
and serves as co-regent until the deaths of both rulers. It is possible
that Apollodotus I becomes the senior ruler until he too dies in
160 BC, at which point Antimachus II heads the kingdom.
c.155
- 130 BC :
Menander
I Soter : In Paropamisadae, Western Indus & Eastern
Indus (Punjab).
c.155
BC :
In the east, the Indo-Greek king, Menander, seems to repel the invasion
by Eucratides, and pushes him back as far as Paropamisadae, thereby
consolidating the rule of the Indo-Greek kings in northern India.
After this, the Indo-Greek kingdom is permanently divided from Bactria.
c.150
- 145 BC :
Plato
: Brother of Eucratides? In Bactria or Paropamisadae.
c.145
BC :
Under pressure in their established homeland thanks to the migration
of the Greater Yuezhi, the Sakas enter the territory of Bactria
around this time. They burn to the ground the city of Alexandria
on the Oxus, an event which seemingly coincides with the death of
Eucratides I himself. Generally presumed to be the modern ruins
known as Ay Khanum (or Ai Khanum, literally 'Lady Moon' in Uzbek),
the city is possibly also known as Eucratidia during its last days
- almost certainly thanks to Eucratides I. It goes into unrecoverable
decline and today is entirely uninhabited.
Saka
Tikrakhauda (otherwise known as 'Scythians' who in this case can
be more precisely identified as Sakas) depicted on a frieze at Persepolis
in Achaemenid Persia
c.130
BC :
At around the time of Menander's death, the Greater Yuezhi overrun
Bactria and end Greek rule there, isolating the remaining Greeks
east of the Hindu Kush. Heliocles (I) of Bactria may possibly invade
the western part of the Indo-Greek kingdom, as there are strong
suggestions that the Eucratids continue to rule there, especially
in Heliocles' presumed son, Lysias.
There
are no historical records of events in the Indo-Greek kingdom after
Menander's death, since the Indo-Greeks have by now become very
isolated from the rest of the Greco-Roman world. Events from this
point are reconstructed almost entirely from archaeological and
numismatic analyses.
Zoilus
/ Zoilos I : Euthydemid? In Paropamisadae & Arachosia.
c.150
- 125? BC :
According
to numismatic evidence, Zolius rules during the reign of Menander,
as the latter king overstrikes two of his coins. Upon Menender's
death his queen, Agathokleia, apparently manages to flee east with
her child (the future Strato I) in the face of Zoilus' appropriation
of much of her husband's realm, and establishes a realm of her own
there. Alternatively, Menander himself may previously have relocated
east to the Indus (Punjab), where the mint marks on his coins had
changed, and this territory is then handed onto his wife and son
upon his death.
c.150
- 125? BC :
Agathokleia
: Queen. In Paropamisadae & W Indus (Punjab).
c.130
BC :
Thrason
: In Paropamisadae, Arachosia, & W Indus (Punjab).
Lysias
Aniketos (the Invincible) : In Paropamisadae & Arachosia
(& W Indus?).
c.130
- 120 BC :
Probably the son of Heliocles I of Bactria, coins for Lysias have
been found in the Punjab and it seems likely that he extends his
control to both halves of the Indo-Greek kingdom for a period, placing
his son as regent in Taxila. This makes understandable the fact
that Lysias imitates Demetrius before him, claiming that he is also
a conqueror of 'India' - which to the Greeks means Paropamisadae
and Indus (Punjab).
c.120
- 110 BC :
Strato
I Epiphanes : Son of Menander. In Paropamisadae & W
Indus (Punjab).
115
- 100 BC :
With Parthian territory having been harried for years by the Sakas,
King Mithridates II is finally able to take control of the situation.
First he defeats the Greater Yuezhi in Sogdiana in 115 BC, and then
he defeats the Sakas in Parthia and Seistan (in Drangiana) around
100 BC. After their defeat, the Greater Yuezhi tribes concentrate
on consolidation in Bactria-Tokharistan while the Sakas are diverted
into Indo-Greek Gandhar. The western territories of Aria, Drangiana,
and Margiana would appear to remain Parthian dependencies. Although
Carmania doesn't seem to be mentioned directly, its position between
Drangiana and Persia would make it likely that this too is still
in Parthian hands.
Two
sides of a silver tetradrachm which was issued during the reign
of Mithradates the Great of Parthia, with the obverse (left) shown
a bearded bust of the king who stabilised the empire's eastern borders
with the Sakas and Greater Yuezhi
c.115
- 100 BC :
Antialcidas
: In Paropamisadae & Arachosia.
110
BC :
The
Heliodorus pillar in Vidisha in central India records that the Indo-Greek
king Antialcidas sends an ambassador to the court of the Sunga king,
Bhagabhadra, at or before this date.
c.110
- 100 BC :
Heliocles
II : In Paropamisadae & W Indus (Punjab).
c.100
BC :
Polyxenios
: In Paropamisadae & Arachosia.
c.100
BC :
Demetrius
III : In Paropamisadae & W Indus. Numismatic evidence
only.
100
- 95 BC :
Philoxenus : In Paropamisadae, Arachosia, W & E Indus
(Punjab).
c.100
- 70 BC :
Philoxenus briefly rules the whole of the remaining Indo-Greek territory.
He may even extend his rule as far as the city of Mathura (in modern
Uttar Pradesh), according to an inscription there. From 95 BC the
territories fragment again, with the western kings regaining their
territory as far west as Arachosia. Some time after 70 BC, Mathura
is lost to Indian kings, as is south-eastern Indus (Punjab).
c.95
- 90 BC :
Diomedes
: In Paropamisadae.
c.95
- 90 BC :
Amyntas
: In Arachosia & Paropamisadae.
c.90
BC :
Theophilos
: In Paropamisadae.
c.90
BC :
Peukolaos
: In Arachosia & Paropamisadae.
c.90
- 85 BC :
Nicias
: In Paropamisadae.
Menander
II : In Arachosia & Paropamisadae.
c.90
- 85 BC :
The line of alternating rulers in both Arachosia and Paropamisadae
and then Paropamisadae alone suggests the possibility that the latter
are sub-kings. They are linked to this region by their coin issuances
alone, with no surviving written record to back up their status,
while any potential agreements or conflicts between the kings is
also absent from the historical record. An alternative option is
that the Arachosian rulers also occupy part of Paropamisadae and
the two sides are in opposition.
By
the period between 100-50 BC the Greek kingdom of Bactria had fallen
and the remaining Indo-Greek territories (shown in white) had been
squeezed towards eastern Punjab. India was partially fragmented,
and the once tribal Sakas were coming to the end of a period of
domination of a large swathe of territory in modern Afghanistan,
Pakistan, and north-western India. The dates within their lands
(shown in yellow) show their defeats of the Greeks that had gained
them those lands, but they were very soon to be overthrown in the
north by the Kushans while still battling for survival against the
Satvahanas of India
c.90
- 70 BC :
Hermaeus
Soter : In Paropamisadae. Last Indo-Greek king here (to
50 BC?).
c.90
- 70 BC :
Hermaeus,
or Hermaios, seems to share the throne with his wife, Kalliope,
in the early days of his reign. He pursues an aggressive foreign
policy and re-conquers some territories which his predecessors had
lost. However, his success is only transitory and the Indo-Greeks
find themselves surrounded by powerful enemies. Eventually Hermaios
is defeated by the Kushans, bringing to an end any Indo-Greek efforts
to regain Paropamisada
c.90
- 70 BC :
Archebios : In Arachosia, Paropamisadae, & W Indus
(Punjab).
c.90
- 60 BC :
The
Sakas under Maues take control of Indo-Greek Gandhar, creating a
capital at Taxila in northern Indus. Gandhar falls within modern
southern Afghanistan, part of a region stretching into Persia that
remains known as Sakastan or Sistan even today. Taxila is in today's
Pakistan. Just forty or so years later, the Kushans capture the
same territory from the Sakas in Afghanistan.
c.75
- 70 BC :
Telephos
: In Paropamisadae.
c.70
BC :
The
Sakas expel the Indo-Greeks from Arachosia but subsequently lose
it to the Parthians. Parthian rule seems to be limited and perhaps
doesn't include the entire region. Paropamisadae is also permanently
lost to the Greater Yuezhi upon the death of Hermaeus Soter.
c.57
- 35 BC :
Azilises
: Ruled in Paropamisadae as a joint Saka king with Azes.
The
Kushans capture the territory of the Sakas in what is now Afghanistan.
They probably also cause the downfall of Indo-Greek King Hermaeus,
as they conquer Paropamisadae in the process. The Sakas consolidate
their rule in northern India as compensation for the loss of Paropamisadae.
They also fight the Satvahans in India, and later enter into matrimonial
alliances with them.
A
Hermaeus coin from Gandhar at the beginning of the first century
AD, which type was copied far and wide, especially by Sakas, Greater
Yuezhi, and Kushans - could Hermaeus be the same man as Maues of
the Sakas?
c.50
BC? :
Specific references to Paropamisadae or Gandhar now seem to go quiet.
While some activities are known for the Indo-Greeks in general,
they are largely confined to the Indus area, not reaching far enough
north to concern Paropamisadae. The Kushans are busy becoming
the dominant tribe of the Greater Yuezhi confederation, soon beginning
the process of uniting the tribes under a single ruler in the process
of creating the Kushan empire.
fl
c.AD 46 :
Phraotes
: In Indo-Parthian Taxila.
c.46
:
The somewhat dubious Phraotes is sometimes equated with the Indo-Parthian
King Gondophares. A Greek-speaking Indo-Greek king of Taxila named
Phraotes is allegedly met by the Greek philosopher, Apollonius of
Tyana, somewhere close to AD 46, although the writer of Apollonius'
biography is known to use the name as a stock feature to fill in
some of the gaps.
However,
despite the Kushan ruler, Kadphises, seemingly inflicting a substantial
territorial defeat on the Indo-Parthians around this time, the Indo-Parthians
still survive in modern northern India and Pakistan, mainly Sakastan
(former Saka territory) and Arachosia, with perhaps tendrils of
territory reaching into Gedrosia and even Gandhar and its capital
of Taxila where Gondophares may still be ruling.
AD
? :
Theodamus
: In Bajaur area of Indo-Parthian Gandhar.
1st
century AD :
Theodamus
is the last Indo-Greek ruler of any kind to be noted, but only by
an inscription on a signet ring. Possibly he governs as a vassal
in this last stronghold of Indo-Greek influence in the region -
the Bajaur area of Gandhar. Subsequently, Post-Greek Gandhar
is largely a location of of Kushan control.
Post-Greek
Gandhar & Paropamisus :
The Greek period in Paropamisus lasted a good deal longer than it
did in one of the more northerly of the former Achaemenid satrapies
- Sogdiana. There Greek rule had ended with the mid-second century
BC Saka and Greater Yuezhi invasions. After that it fell almost
entirely out of the historical record for several centuries. Gandhar
- or Paropamisus in its Greek guise - remained a core part of the
Greek Bactrian kingdom and then its successor Indo-Greek state(s)
until Indo-Greek rule had been squeezed into extinction by the many
later-arriving forces that waxed and waned here.
The Sakas were generally dominant around this time, while the Greater
Yuezhi had been consolidating their hold on Bactria and establishing
how to govern an already-complex society. By the first century AD
one particular faction was becoming the strongest, and this soon
led the creation of the Kushan empire which swiftly assumed regional
control from the Sakas. They were eventually superseded by the Sassanids
from the west, and then governed by the Sassanid vassals, the Kushanshahs.
Then the region was hit by waves of invasion by the Xionites, and
the cycle continued.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information by David
Kelleher, from Life of Apollonius Tyana, Philostratus, from
King of the Seven Climes: A History of the Ancient Iranian World
(3000 BCE - 651 CE), Khodadad Rezakhani (Touraj Daryaee, Ed,
Ancient Iran Series Vol IV, 2017), from The Fragmentary
Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire, R C Blockley
(Francis Cairns, Oxford, 1983), from Epitome of the Philippic
History of Pompeius Trogus: Books 11-12, Volume 1, Marcus Junianus
Justinus, John Yardley, & Waldemar Heckel, and from External
Links: Ancient History Encyclopaedia (dead link), and Appian's
History of Rome: The Syrian Wars at Livius.org. Where information
conflicts regarding the Indo-Greek territories, Osmund Bopearachchi's
Monnaies Gréco-Bactriennes et Indo-Grecques, Catalogue Raisonné
(1991) has been followed.)
c.30
- 80 :
The
Kushan ruler, Kadphises, subdues the Sakas and establishes his kingdom
in Bactria, Gandhar, and the valley of the River Oxus (the Amu Darya).
This means defeating the Indo-Parthians and successfully recapturing
the main areas of their kingdom, which include Gandhar. The Pahlavas
survive in northern India and the Indus region, mainly in Sakastan
(former Saka territory) and Arachosia.
This
photo illustrates a Kadphises I coin which was discovered in the
Bactria-Tokharistan region and which has on it a corrupt Greek legend
c.80
- 90 :
Wima Takto, the son of Kujula Kadphises, is for a long time known
only to scholars by the Greek legends on his coins - Soter Megas
('the Great Saviour'). However, the translation of an inscription
by Kanishka I in Rabatak leads to the discovery that his name is
in fact Wima Takto (the 'w' is pronounced in English as a 'v').
His other inscriptions and statues are known from further south
and east in India, confirming Kushan control of Gandhar and north-western
India.
c.135
:
Pacores is the last Indo-Parthian king with any real power (in Drangiana
and Gandhar especially), and even that does not extend into former
core Indo-Parthian territories in Arachosia and Sindh. One more
Indo-Parthian king follows him but in diminished circumstances,
and virtually unknown to history. The Kushans still govern to the
south of Gandhar, where they are producing coins in Purushapura
(Peshawar) to the south.
c.245
:
Around this year, Shapur I devolves direct Sassanid rule in what
is now Afghanistan by creating a buffer state which is governed
by the Kushanshahs. They replace the Kushan nobility as the holders
of power in the east. Kushanshah coins, initially issued mainly
to the north of the Hindu Kush, are also soon to be found to the
south in the Begram/Kapiśa area alongside issues by Kushan
King Vasishka, suggesting a period of competition between the two
sides in this region. With the next Kushanshah, Pēroz I, the
Kushanshahs start to displace the later Kushans from Gandhar, confining
them to Mathura in northern India, where they are reduced to the
status of local princes.
Two
sides of a coin issued by Vasudev II around the middle of the third
century AD, a gold stater showing the king standing at the altar
(on the left), while honouring the Central Asian (Indo-Iranian)
goddess, Ardoksho who is seated facing outwards (on the right)
c.270
:
In Gandhar, the Kushanshah King Hormazd issues coins, possibly in
the names of his governors 'Kavad' and 'Meze' (if these are indeed
the names of governors and not titles or something else which remains
unknown). It may be that the governor of Gandhar at this time
is Vasudev IV, one of the last of the Kushan nobility.
c.325
- c.350 :
With Peroz II of the Kushanshahs beginning to pull away from Sassanid
control, the Persian ruler Shapur II divides the realm, assuming
direct control of the southern areas of what is now Afghanistan
(including Merv in modern Turkmenistan, Herat in Aria, and then
Gandhar), while the Kushanshahs continue to rule in the north. With
events in the east frequently being poorly documented, there is
some doubt about the identity of the Shapur who carries this out.
It is probably Shapur II, but it may instead be a governor, or even
Shapur's older brother, who bears the same name.
Varhran
is the last Kushanshah in Tokharistan and is also a contemporary
of Shapur II. Varhran's grip over the Kushanshah territories on
both sides of the Hindu Kush is greatly threatened, and it is not
long before his realm and power falls to the incoming Kidarites
and the expanding reach of Sassanid central power. The control of
Gandhar by Shapur II - known through the issue of his copper denomination
there - appears to be a side effect of the increased Sassanid interest
in the east.
A
Kushanshah letter addressed to Varhran from the daughter of a princess
named Dukht-anosh, a Middle Persian name
c.350
- c.400 :
Peroz
III : In Gandhar. A rival claimant or opponent to Sassanid
rule?
c.360s
- 380s :
Interest in the Kidarites is greatly revived in the early twenty-first
century by the discovery of a whole new series of Kidarite copper
coins, from the Bhimadevi/Shiva shrine at Kashmir Smast in the mountains
of what is now northern Pakistan. The Kidarite leader, Kidara, who
is active in the 390s is used to name this group of coins but he
is only one of several Xionite rulers in Bactria and Gandhar during
the fourth and fifth centuries (albeit it best-known of them). Coinage
issues in the names of Kirada, Hanaka, Yosada, and Peroz all appear
on coins which are issued before those in the name of Kidara, highlighting
several previously unknown Kidarite leaders (Peroz aside). Only
approximate dates can be assigned to them, however, as coins usually
lack the more precise dating of the written record.
c.375
:
There is no evidence of any Kushans after Kipunada. Having been
subjugated by the Gupta kings, the rump eastern Kushan state is
soon conquered by the invading Kidarites. They, in turn, claim to
be the rightful successors of the Kushans and Kushanshahs. Any possible
survivors in the west are probably displaced by the Hephthalites.
This is the next wave of barbarians to invade the territory of the
Kushanshahs, where they conquer former Bactria and Gandhar to form
their own kingdom.
c.390
:
Roman sources mention a specific group of Xionites known as Kidarites.
Chinese sources mention a specific name that is assigned to the
ruler of this group, one Jiduoluo, interpreted as the Chinese transcription
of Ki-da-ra. This particular Hunnic grouping is reported to be located
in Gandhar, with its capital at Fu-lou-sha (Old Persian Paraupārisainā
(commonly shown as Purushapura), Greek Paropamisus, modern Peshawar).
Bactrian legends on the Kidarite coins issued around this period
declare them to represent the 'King of the Kushan'. The Kidarites
consider themselves to be the continuation of rule by Kushans and
Kushanshahs. A coin type which shows the king in frontal view and
wearing a crown with ram's horn has a legend in Brahmi declaring
the authority to be 'Sa Piroysa', meaning 'King Peroz'. This
is most likely the Peroz III of Gandhar (with his numbering continued
from that of the Kushanshahs), the potential rival to Sassanid rule,
but possibly only a puppet of the Kidarites.
The
Kidarites swept into eastern Iran and Tokharistan in the mid-fifth
century AD, and by the end of the century they and the other Xionite
groups were heavily involved in conquering areas of north-western
India, which is where this Kidarite bronze obol with a scorpion
was found (in the Kashmir Smast caves), while above is a map covering
Turkic origins, with the region around the Altai Mountains seemingly
having served as a general incubator
c.410
- 565 :
Despite being bordered by the powerful Guptas to the east and the
Sassanids to the west. Kushanshah vassal rule of the region is displaced
from the north, as the Hephthalites invade and conquer Bactria and
Gandhar.
c.430s
:
Khingila is the most famous of the Alchon leaders, heading the campaigns
in Gandhar which take control of the region from the Kidarites.
In the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi, he is mentioned as Shengil,
where he is considered the king of India. References to other kings
called Khingila are made in various sources, such as a garnet seal
with the inscription 'Eshkingil the Lord of Rōkan'.
c.455
:
The
accession of Kumargupt had seen the continuation of his father's
secure Gupta empire under his able rule. However, the last days
of his reign are less comfortable, as the empire is threatened by
invasions by the Pushyamitras of central India. At a point somewhere
around the same time, the Kidarites seize Kabul (in Gandhar) and
venture east into Punjab where they reach the kingdom's borders
near Doab or Malwa. There they are repulsed by Kumargupt's successor,
Skandgupt.
467/468
:
It is Priscus who reports the name of the current Kidarite king
as Kunkhas (see Brockley for details). With the Sassanids suffering
a seven year famine between 464-471 and unable to launch a serious
military offensive, the Kidarites cease making tribute payments.
Then both Kunkhas and Shah Peroz attempt diplomacy through trickery
until the latter is finally able to go on the attack, possibly motivated
by the help rendered to him by the Hephthalites when fighting for
his crown against his brother, Hormuzd III. The Kidarites are permanently
driven out, finding refuge in Gandhar. The Sassanids may temporarily
control the region but it is soon a Hephthalite possession.
484
:
Shah Peroz again chases the Hephthalites out of Bactra in 484 and
towards Arion in Aria (Alexandria Ariana, modern Herat). Along the
way he destroys the tower built by Bahram V which marks the border
between Sassanid and Hephthalite. On the other side of the border,
Hephthalite King Khushnavaz sets a trap into which Peroz falls (literally),
along with around thirty of his sons and about 100,000 troops. Their
bodies are never recovered by the Sassanids.
By
the late 400s the eastern sections of the Sassanid empire had been
overrun and to an extent occupied by the Hephthalites (Xionites)
after they had killed Shah Peroz
The
eastern empire is overrun and is largely occupied by the Hephthalites
until their final fall - this includes regions such as Margiana
and its rich capital at Merv, and also much of Gandhar, with the
Hephthalites setting up puppet governors. In Kabulistan and Zabulistan
the Nezak are able to create their own semi-independent dynasty.
Nezak
Kingdom of Kabulistan & Zabulistan :
AD 484 - 565? :
The modern city of Kabul may have been founded as a settlement as
early as 1500 BC. There are references to it in Rig Ved scriptures
which were probably composed when Indo-Aryan migrants were drifting
down into India. During the Indo-Greek period in south Asia, the
region was known as Gandhar, and by the time it was conquered by
Alexander the Great it was already home to an old Indo-Aryan kingdom
of which virtually nothing is known. Today Kabul is the largest
and most highly-populated city in modern Afghanistan, as well as
being its capital.
The Nezak rulers of Kabulistan and Zabulistan emerged as an autonomous
power following the death of the Sassanid Shah Peroz in 484. The
dynasty they created dominated the regions around the two cities
and beyond until the sixth or seventh century when their waning
power was replaced by a Turkic dynasty of Kabul shahs which opposed
the expanding authority of Muslims that were based further west
in Sakastan.
The
Xionite invasion of eastern Iran in the fourth and fifth centuries
also changed the balance of power in Gandhar. Kabul and the nearby
ancient city of Ghanzi (in the region known as Zabulistan) were
seized by the Kidarites at a point close to AD 455, following which
they were able to venture into Punjab where they came up against
the powerful Gupta kingdom in India. Kabul and Zabulistan seemingly
remained Kidarite possessions until the Hephthalites achieved domination
following their defeat of Shah Peroz.
Some overenthusiastic readings of the Pahlavi phrase 'nycky MLKA'
on regional coinage have converted it into the name of an individual
Nezak king called Napki Malka, or Nezak Shah. In fact this is based
on a misunderstanding of the Middle Persian word 'nycky', meaning
'Nezak; which would have referred to the Nezak dynasty as a whole
- the Nezak shahs were the Nezak rulers of the two cities. The use
of MLK or MLKA originated with the monotheistic god of Zoroastrianism,
Ahura Mazda (giving the religion its more regional title of Mazdayasna),
with 'mazda' meaning 'lord'. By the Middle Persian period it was
also being used as a more earthly title in the sense that it referred
to a king. Some Sassanid coins of the seventh century show the legend
'MLKAn MLKA', meaning 'king of kings', so it is highly likely that
the rulers of Kabul and Zabulistan would have copied this. A single
use of MKLA meant that they were realistic enough not to claim to
be more powerful than they actually were, and certainly did not
see themselves as ruling over other kings.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information from
King of the Seven Climes: A History of the Ancient Iranian World
(3000 BCE - 651 CE), Khodadad Rezakhani (Touraj Daryaee, Ed,
Ancient Iran Series Vol IV, 2017), from The Religious
Traditions of Asia: Religion, History, and Culture, Joseph Kitagawa
(Routledge, 2013), and from External Link: The British Museum:
Coin Collection Online and Shri Sahi.)
c.530
:
The defeat of the Alchon leader Mihirakula in Malwa around this
time signals the end of the 'Huna' involvement in Indian affairs.
However, there is no clear indication that the rule of the Alchons
in Gandhar and further to the west actually stops with this event.
It is presumably following this latest setback that the Alchons
retreat back to Gandhar, and possibly even farther west to Kabul.
Following
the fall of the Hephthalite empire, Gandhar remained a key stronghold
of Xionite power, with several principalities having been established
and coin-producing mints springing up to provide vague clues about
the existence of their rulers
fl
c.560 - 620 :
Shri
Shahi : Not a name but a rank, found on coinage.
This
Shri Shahi is known from coins found in Gandhar, but it is a title
not a name. The same title is found on a coin dated to the eighth
century Shahi kingdom (below). With this being a translation of
the Brahmi Sri Sahi, the same title has been found in Bactrian
as sri auo, and more tellingly in Pahlavi as 'nspk' MLK'.
The last form certainly means Nezak king' (see the introduction
above for more detail). Only the most approximate dating can be
applied to this king, coming entirely from the coin which bears
his title.
565
:
The Hephthalites are defeated by an alliance of Göktürks and the
Sassanids, and a level of Indo-Sassanid authority is re-established
in the region for the next century. The Western Göktürks set up
rival states in Bamiyan, Kabul (seemingly replacing the Nezak kings
with their Shahi subjects), and Kapisa under the authority of the
viceroy in Tokharistan, strengthening their hold on the Silk Road.
There
are further claims for a continuity of Nezak rule in AD 661 and
post-679 (see below) but these may be based upon a misunderstanding
or a lack of knowledge of the succession of Kabul's rulers. Considering
the fact that Nezak-style coins continue to be produced well into
the eighth century it is more than likely that the Nezak are not
overthrown but instead intermarry and pass on their kingdom to their
natural successors.
Shahi
Kingdom of Kabulistan :
AD 565? - 962 :
Following their success alongside the Sassanids against the Hephthalites,
the Western Göktürks secured control of Tokharistan (ancient Bactria).
With their own capital lying to the north of the River Oxus, the
position of the yabghu of Tokharistan was established (essentially
the role of viceroy). This position appears to have provided the
Göktürks with a supreme governor for their domains to the south
of the Oxus with his authority also being acknowledged to the south
of the Hindu Kush, in Kabul and Ghazni (the latter in Zabulistan).
In these two cities the original dynasty of Nezak rulers was replaced
by that of the Shahis - possibly by two branches of the Shahis from
the very beginning, one in each of the cities.
The western Göktürk empire nominally ruled other territories to
the south of the Hindu Kush, but these were able to remain virtually
independent. Khuttal and Kapisa-Gandhar (Kapisa being the city of
Alexandria on the Caucasus, modern Bagram) in the untamed mountainous
countryside of what is now northern Pakistan were amongst these
independent principalities. Hephthalite or Alchon kings who bore
the title xingil in Kapisa-Gandhar continued the coinage
of the Hephthalite kings. Several names can be gathered together
thanks to this coinage, albeit without any formal idea of dates
or order of succession, and these are shown under the Alchon banner.
Later the Shahi kings of Kabul managed to create a fairly extensive
empire which stretched eastwards towards the Himalayas. It became
known as the Hindu Shahi kingdom (except by the Muslim world), surviving
the Islamic empire's conquest of Sassanid Persia in 651-652. Kabulistan
and Zabulistan staunchly defended their territory against the Islamic
advance for a century, possibly coordinating their efforts with
Peroz, the disinherited son and heir of the last of the Sassanid
kings, Yazdagird III, who operated in Sakastan and Tokharistan
before he was forced to give up the unequal battle and flee to the
Tang court between 673-675. His son, Narse, returned from the east
to fight on from Tokharistan between 679 and 705-706 before that
too fell. Eventually even Kabulistan and Zabulistan fell, being
controlled by the Samanid emirate after 900.
(Information
by Peter Kessler, with additional information from King of the
Seven Climes: A History of the Ancient Iranian World (3000 BCE -
651 CE), Khodadad Rezakhani (Touraj Daryaee, Ed, Ancient
Iran Series Vol IV, 2017), from The Religious Traditions
of Asia: Religion, History, and Culture, Joseph Kitagawa (Routledge,
2013), from Zāwulistān, Kāwulistān and the
Land of Bosi, Domenico Agostini & Sören Stark (Studia
Iranica, Tome 45, Fascicule 1, 2016), and from External Links:
Coin Archives, and the Turk Shahis in Kabulistan (The Countenance
of the Other), and Ancient Coins.)
618
- 630 :
The
accession of Tong as the Western Göktürk ruler witnesses a resurgence
in the fortunes of the western khagans. He forms a new army, and
puts down revolts by the Tiele (Tieh-lê), so that he is able to
annexe their lands and extend his domains as far as Gandhar.
In
2012 archaeologists were able to examine the previously-untouched
tomb of a Göktürk khagan, which contained amongst many other delights
these mounted figurines
fl
640 :
?
: Khalaj Turk with a branch in Zabulistan.
640
:
The
Chinese envoy Xuanzang visits the region and reports that the new
ruler of Kabul is a Khalaj Turk. He also states that the family
has a branch in Zabulistan, while Bamiyan has its own independent
ruler. Huichao, a Korean monk, additionally reports that the area
of Uddyana (modern Swat in northern Pakistan) and its population
of Alchons is under the control of the king of Jibin (Kabul), supposedly
belonging to the new incoming Turkic ruling family or perhaps still
in the hands of the Nezak shahs.
652
:
Large areas of the territory (mostly what is now western Afghanistan
and large swathes of ancient Chorasmia) are conquered by the Islamic
empire as it takes Sassanid Iran, although Kabul remains independent
as does neighbouring Zabulistan. At this time the king of Zabulistan
is referred to as 'Rtbyl' in Islamic sources, possibly a title rather
than a name.
mid-650s
:
A king of Kabul - seemingly unnamed but probably Ghar-Ilchi, below
- apparently faces off against the young Islamic general, Al-Muhallab
ibn Abi Sufra, in an heroic battle. Kabul's well-provisioned troops
are able to hold their own and the two leaders subsequently agree
to peaceful coexistence. Al-Muhallab later becomes governor of Khorasan
(in 698).
653
- c.661 :
Ghar-Ilchi
: Last-known Nezak ruler.
653
- 661 :
According to the Chinese sources, in AD 653 the Chinese emperor
formally installs Ghar-ilchi as king of Jibin (Kabul). In 661 the
Chinese protectorate of the 'Western Regions' is formed which includes
Jibin, and the Tang emperor confirms Ghar-Ilchi him as Kabul's ruler.
However, a Turkic dynasty soon reigns in Zabulistan, apparently
seizing power in Kabulistan from Ghar-ilchi, the last Nezak king
to be known by name. This occurs at a point after AD 661, and perhaps
even during 661.
fl
661 :
Hejiezhi
: 'Twelfth of the dynasty', possibly including the Nezak
in total.
661
:
The
Nezak shahs are claimed to have survived on an independent basis
until at least this date when, according to Tangshu, a king named
Hejiezhi claims to be the twelfth king of a dynasty to rule over
Jibin or Kabul. The Nezak branch which rules over Zabulistan probably
also survives into the same period in the form of the Late Nezak
before succumbing to local Turkic rule.
Two
sides of an Alchon-Nezak crossover-type coin dated to a period between
AD 580-680 which contains a Nezak-style bust on the obverse (left),
and an Alchon tamga within a double border on the reverse
(right), displaying the continued close links between the Nezak
and the Alchons
The
claim of the Nezak being in charge of Zabulistan, however, contradicts
a claim of 640 that Kabul's ruler is a Khalaj Turk. It may instead
be the case that Nezak Kabulistan has passed to this seemingly-locally-formed
group of Turks who claim continuity of rule. The local nature of
the Nezak and their connection to the Alchons still means that they
have survived as local administrators under Göktürk suzerainty,
and continue to do so even after the fall of the Göktürks themselves.
Considering the fact that Nezak-style coins continue to be produced
well into the eighth century it is more than likely that the Nezak
are not overthrown at all but instead intermarry and pass on their
kingdom to their natural successors. Hejiezhi, though, could be
same same person as Ghar-Ilchi, with the Turkic takeover coming
around AD 665-666. Once it does, under the leadership of Barha Tegin
the administrative and royal centre is moved from Kapisa (Begram)
to Kabul.
fl
666 - c.687? :
Burha
Tegin : Issuer of the 'Tegin coins' post-679.
666
:
Scholarly speculation that there is more than one person named 'Rtbyl'
in Zabulistan would appear to be accurate, with the word perhaps
not being a personal name after all. Tarikh-e Sistan of eleventh
century Seistan provides an extensive account of the wars of a Rutbil
of Seistan and Zabulistan against the Muslim conquerors of the region.
These wars, starting with the confrontation in Sakastan with Islam's
Rabi' al-Harithi (Hārithī) in 666, continue well into
the ninth century when the Rutbil at the time is defeated by Yaghub
bin Laith, founder of the Saffarids of Seistan.
At the same time this Rutbil himself (or themselves) use the kingdom
of Kabul for refuge. Whenever the Rutbil is pressured or forced
into an alliance, he heads towards the north and east, to upper
Zabulistan and Kabulistan, and seems to have a huge reserve of money
and soldiers either to buy off or to fend off the Muslims (for the
latter, see AD 650s as a first instance of this). AD 665 or 666
is the date for the first Arab raid to reach Kabul, although it
is quickly fended off. The source of this wealth lies in Kabul while,
lying essentially to the north of Zabulistan, the little-known kingdom
of Rob may be an appendage.
This
silver drachm which was issued by Tegin is remarkable for being
trilingual carrying legends in Greco-Bactrian, Pahlavi, and Brahmi
which illustrates the growing influence of the issuing body
post-679
:
Coins
issued by one Tegin which can be dated to the immediate post-679
period bear the inscription 'His perfection, Tegin, King'. This
Tegin is most likely the same as Burha Tegin, named as the founder
of the Turki-shahi dynasty of Kabul by Al-Biruni (providing yet
another date for the replacement of the Nezak rulers after 640 and
661). He is claimed as the reason for the Arabs being expelled from
Kabul in 666 and, according to Gyselen, is succeeded by Rutbil of
Zabulistan in the 680s. One Tegin coin is related to a later type
which is issued after 687, with a Pahlavi inscription of 'Tegin,
His Majesty, Lord, King of Khorasan', but bearing a mint signature
of 'Zabulistan.
c.687?
- ? :
'Rutbil'
: Successor. King of Zabulistan since 660s.
fl
693 :
?
: Uncle of the king of Zabulistan.
693
:
Perhaps one of the earliest mentions of the ruler of Kabul is through
the 'Ser' of the Göktürks in the Bactrian Documents (BD S)
which are written in Bactrian Era 470 (AD 693). A series of coins
with the title of Sero also appear around this time alongside
the Pahlavi 'nycky MLKA', which further strengthens this identification
and can be assigned to the Kabul region. At the same time, a Zabulistan
branch of Kabul's ruling dynasty can also be seen to exist, based
on Chinese sources which assert that the king of Zabulistan is a
nephew of the king of Kabul.
c.738
:
Tegin's
son and successor is from Kesar who, according to scholars,
must ascend the throne of Kabul shortly before 738, although he
is possibly a powerful viceroy who is based in the eastern capital
of Wayhind in Uddiyana. The coins carrying his name and titles in
Bactrian, and sometimes Brahmi, read 'Phromo Kesaro the Mighty (?)
the King, the Lord'. His actual name could be the well-known name
Zawāra, mentioned in the Shahnameh as the brother of
the hero Rostam.
c.738
- ? :
Zawāra?
'Phromo Kesaro' : Son of Burha Tegin.
On the obverse of one type of his coins, 'Phromo Kesaro' refers
to himself as 'From Kesar, His Majesty, the Lord, who smote the
Arabs', in a countermark, thereby showing his successes in fights
against the Islamic empire. Considering the mint mark of z'wl (Zabul)
on at least one type (247), it could be speculated that Phromo Kēsaro
is either the same as the Rutbil of the Islamic sources, or is the
Kabulshah (ruler of Kabul) on whom the Rutbil, the possible series
of local rulers of Zabulistan, are relying for their continued fight
against the Muslim governors of Sakastan.
Shown
here are the two sides of a coin that was issued by Phromo Kesaro,
although the dating can vary widely from that shown above for this
king - even the late seventh century is sometimes claimed for his
rule of Kabul
700s
:
Vipilind?
: Known only from a single coin.
A single gold dinar mentions one 'Vipilind', an otherwise unknown
ruler of the eighth century (the dating cannot be any more precise
than this). The coin has on it the Sarada legend, 'Shri Shahi' ('Nezak
king' - see the Kabulistan Nezaks for additional detail), clockwise
above and Vipilinda anticlockwise below. This is probably the earliest
example of a Shahi 'Bull and Horseman' type coin to be struck in
gold to the 'dinar' standard. Palaeography of the legend suggests
its dating, when Brahmi is gradually being transformed into Sarada
script. The name of the issuer, 'Vipilinda', could be the governor
of the mint which issues the coin, although the king's name is more
likely.
c.820
:
Devapal
of the Pala kings of north-eastern India counts as his military
successes the conquest of Pragjyotisha (Assam), where the king submits
without a fight, and the Utkalas, whose king flees from his capital
city. But he is also claimed as having routed the Hunas, seemingly
late for such a victory. Could this be a raid by the Hephthalites
or Alchons who are still in the Gandhar region?
821
:
The
Tahirid emirs are established in Khorasan to the north-west when
the region is granted to them by the Abbasid caliph, al-Mamun.
873
:
The
Tahirids are ousted as emirs of Khorasan by the Saffarids. The Saffarid
dynasty founder, Yaghub, now dominates Kabul and Zabul, along with
a great swathe of other territory in South Asia.
900
:
Much of Saffarid Khorasan is conquered by the Transoxianan Samanid
emirate while the Buwayid amirs gain control of western Persia.
This territory includes Zabulistan with its capital at Ghazni, and
it is this area that emerges as the main focal point for control
of the entire region.
India
of AD 900 was remarkably unchanged in terms of its general distribution
of the larger states - only the names had changed, although now
there was a good deal more fracturing and regional rule by minor
states or tribes
962
:
Zabulistan is seized by a rebellious Samanid governor and a semi-independent
Afghan kingdom is formed with its capital at Ghazni. Although the
rebel, Alptigin, establishes his independent rule of Ghazni, coins
from the era show that he nominally acknowledges Samanid overlordship,
always a useful ruse for avoiding an attack by former masters.
977
:
Sebuktigin becomes the first Yamanid king of Ghazni when he succeeds
to the throne, which is situated south of Transoxiana (and 120 kilometres
(eighty miles) to the south-west of Kabul, both in modern Afghanistan).
The Ghaznavids govern the region for much of the following two centuries.
Then they are ousted by the Ghurids who are themselves displaced
by the Khwarazm shahs.
Timurid
Kabul (with Ghazni & Kandahar) :
AD 1504 - 1526 :
Following the Shaibanid conquest of Transoxiana in the fifteenth
century AD, Southern Khorasan with its centre around Herat was now
threatened. Its ruler, Sultan Husayn Bayqarah, did nothing initially,
although one of his princes, Babur of Ferghana, attempted to fight
back. Finally deciding to mobilise in 1506, Husayn died before he
could achieve anything, and the crown was disputed between his sons.
Having already realised the hopelessness of the Timurid position
there, Babur withdrew southwards to the recently-captured Kabul
in 1506 to continue the fight.
Shortly
afterwards, he also took Ghazni (near Kandahar), displacing an unpopular
Arghunid usurper in the region called Muquim (the Arghunids moved
to Sindh and took over there instead). Babur made many attempts
to recapture Transoxiana, which he had briefly won before his exile.
Each attempt was a failure until he was aided by the Safavid ruler
of Persia, Ismail, who subsequently took control of the region himself.
The Shaibanids themselves now held much of former Khwarazm, effectively
ending Timurid rule of Transoxiana.
(Information
by Peter Kessler, with additional information by Abhijit Rajadhyaksha,
from the Encyclopaedia Britannica, from History of the
Mongols: From the 9th to the 19th Century, Henry H Howarth (1880),
from A History of Inner Asia, Svat Soucek (2000), from Mannerheim,
Stig Axel Fridolf Jägerskiöld, from The Russian Conquest of the
Bukharan Emirate: Military and Diplomatic Aspects, A Malikov
(Central Asian Survey, Volume 33, Issue 2, 2014), and from
External Link: History of Khiva.)
1504
- 1530 :
Babur
: Timurid prince from Ferghana in Transoxiana.
1506
- 1507 :
Babur
recognises that Khorasan is undefendable and withdraws south. The
following year, the Shaibanids invade and capture Herat, putting
a final end to Timurid rule. In Transoxiana, the remnants of Khwarazm
become an independent Muslim Uzbek state that is later known as
the khanate of Khiva, but without Ghazni (modern Kandahar). At Babur's
urging, Khorasan is soon recaptured by the Safavid shah of Iran,
Ismail. Although only part of it is held permanently, this becomes
the Persian province of Khorasan.
Silver
coins issued by Kamran Mirza during his reign as an independent
king in Afghanistan, bearing his mark stamped over that of Babur's,
showing that Babur's old coins had simply been reissued rather than
being replaced
1510
- 1511 :
Upon
the death of the Shaibanid ruler, Mohammed Shaibani, Babur of Samarkand
is able to retake much of his former territory with Safavid Persian
help from his base in Kabul. However, he is unable to retain it.
The Shaibanids in the form of Sultan Ibars and Sultan Balbars re-conquer
the city just eight months later, shortly after capturing Old Urgench,
and they assume control of its governance as the khanate of Khwarazm
(Khiva).
1519
- 1530 :
From
1519, Babur leads a great many raids on the sultanate of Delhi,
which is divided and weakened. In 1526, he is invited by the nobility
to invade, and the sultan is killed at the Battle of Panipat. Babur
creates a Moghul empire which sacks and controls Delhi as the heart
of that empire, while also retaining Kabul within it. In 1530, Kabul
and Ghazni are handed by Babur's son to his brother, Kamran, to
rule (the mirza attached to his name means 'prince').
1530
- 1545 :
Kamran Mirza : Son. Brother of Moghul Emperor Humayun.
A detested ruler.
1540
:
After
being present at the rebellion of Hindal in Moghul Agra in 1539,
Kamran returns to Kabul and, with the help of his brother, Askari,
secures territory as far east as Lahore and proclaims himself king
of Afghanistan.
Askari
: Brother. Governor in Kandahar (1540-1545).
1543
- 1545 :
Kamran's
elder brother, Humayun, the exiled Moghul emperor, arrives in Kabul
following failed attempts from Amrakot to regain his territory.
The two are now implacable enemies, and Humayun is forced to flee
to the court of the Safavid shah of Persia. Here he receives enough
support to strike out and defeat Askari in Kandahar and then Kamran
in Kabul just two years later, also adding Lahore to his domains.
Humayun exiles his surviving brothers to Mecca, while Hindal has
already died fighting on his behalf.
1545
- 1555 :
Humayun
: Brother. Moghul emperor in exile. Regained throne (1555).
1554
- 1555 :
The
death of Islam Shah Suri in Delhi leaves his dynasty weak and open
to rival claimants, of which their are many. The most powerful of
these is the resurgent Humayun, who leads his army eastwards from
Kabul in a string of impressive victories. Much of what is now Afghanistan
is again part of the restored Moghul empire, with the emperor's
relative, Mirza Muhammed Hakim, governing Kabul and the surrounding
districts.
Humayun's
tomb in New Delhi marks the end point of a remarkable reign which
saw him accede and then submit to exile after a decade of opposition,
primarily from the Afghan adventurer, Sher Shah Suri, only to reclaim
his throne fifteen years later then to die the following year in
an accident
1555
- 1585 :
Mirza Muhammed Hakim : Cousin of Moghul emperor, Akbar.
Rebelled. Died Jul 1585.
1562
- 1564 :
The
Afghan Karrani dynasty captures large tracts of south-eastern Bihar
and west Bengal in India. With their assassination of the region's
previous ruler, they now seize complete control of Bengal. These
Afghans, under the leadership of Taj Khan Karrani, had long been
a thorn in the side of regional rulers, previously having conquered
parts of modern Uttar Pradesh from Muhammed Shah Adil (Muhammed
V of Delhi) before being defeated and pushed out to Bengal.
1566
:
An
army from nearby Badakhshan arrives to besiege Kabul. The governor
leaves the garrison in place and retreats with his army towards
the Indus in the Punjab plain. There, he is incited by Uzbek rebels
to besiege Lahore. The Moghul emperor, Akbar, marches to confront
him and he retreats back to Kabul, now cleared of its attackers.
Akbar chooses not to pursue him.
1576
:
The
new Safavid shah of Persia, Esmail, begins to encroach on Afghan
territory, putting pressure on Kabul to defend itself. Esmail manages
to offended many with his cold and haughty attitude, inherited from
his time in prison. One day in 1578 he drops dead unexpectedly.
The court doctors suspect poison, but it means that Kabul is temporarily
safe.
1581
:
Mirza
Muhammed continues to rule Kabul as an independent state, and the
governor of Kandahar now also supports him, while he plans to invade
Punjab and seize Hindustan. Moghul Emperor Akbar the Great sends
his Rajput general, Man Singh of Amer, to attack Kabul, and Man
Singh captures the city, while Kandahar is peacefully surrendered
by its erstwhile governor. However, Mirza Muhammed is restored as
governor of the province.
1585
:
Kabul
is formally annexed to the Moghul empire following the death of
Mirza Muhammed Hakim. Its future is as a satellite of the Moghuls
in Delhi until the Persians renew their interest in the region in
the seventeenth century.
1623
:
Taking
advantage of a revolt by Shah Jahan, son of the Moghul emperor,
the Persians capture Kandahar. The attempt has taken quite some
time, with Isfandiyar, son of Khan Arab Muhammad I of Khwarazm,
also aiding them in 1621. In return, he is granted five hundred
troops to aid him against his rebel brothers in the khanate.
The
reign of Shah Abbas was one that involved a restoration of Iranian
regional greatness, although he did have to wait eleven years to
be able to retake the city of Mashhad where he is pictured in this
illustration
1648
:
Ten
years after temporarily being retaken by Moghul Emperor Shah Jahan,
Ghazni is again captured by the Safavids. This time they hold onto
it, despite a concerted Moghul effort to recapture both it and Kandahar.
Both cities remain in Iranian hands until the formation of the Afghan
state under the Duranni dynasty.
1738
- 1747 :
The
Afsharid shah of Iran, Nadir Shah, enters Afghanistan in 1738 with
a large army and conquers Ghazni, Kandahar, Kabul, and Lahore in
the same year. Alongside him is his vassal, the future King Erekle
II of Kakhetia, and a contingent of Georgian troops. Persian rule
of the region is assured for the next nine years, until the effective
coup which creates the Duranni dynasty. The following year Nadir
Shah loots Delhi, heart of the Moghul empire, humiliating the emperor,
taking many of his treasures, and causing the empire to fragment
into a loose association of states.
1773
:
The
Afghan capital of the Durannis is transferred from Kandahar to Kabul
due to tribal opposition against them, and mainly against Timur
Shah Durrani himself. Constant internal revolts occur in the state,
especially in its eastern provinces, but from this point forwards,
Kabul forms the capital of Afghanistan.
1856
- 1857 :
The
AngloPersian War is triggered on 1 November 1856 during
a further - and this time largely successful - attempt by Persia
to capture the Afghan city of Herat, a long-standing ambition to
compensate them for the loss of the south Caucuses. However, they
have taken too long, and now Afghanistan is generally within the
British sphere of operations from their base in India. Herat has
already declared independence as a city state with its own emir,
in alliance with the emirate of Kabul, and has accepted British
protection. A two-pronged British attack on Iran's southern coast
and also in southern Mesopotamia drives Naser al-Din to sign the
Treaty of Paris in 1857, in which he relinquishes control over and
any claim to Herat.
Source
:
https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/
KingListsFarEast/AsiaGandhara.htm#Persians