DUNHONG
The
Dunhong Mountain, according to Classic of Mountains and Seas, is
a mountain of the Tian Shan range.
This
mountain has been proposed to be the homeland of the Yuezhi.
According to archaeologist Lin Meicun, this is the Dunhuang mentioned
in the Shiji by Sima Qian, which states that :
The
Yuezhi originally lived in the area between the Qilian Shan and
Dunhuang, but after they were defeated by the Xiongnu they moved
far away to the west, beyond Dayuan [the Ferghana Valley], where
they attacked and conquered the people of Daxia [Bactria].
Lin Meicun argued that the present Dunhuang, a Gansu oasis town,
was founded around 111 BC, that is, later than the report of Zhang
Qian on the Yuezhi (126 BC). Therefore, the Dunhuan referred to
in the Shiji cannot be the city currently bearing that name, and
is most likely an oasis near Turpan.
Place
names such Dunhong and Qilian may have had Indo-European etymologies,
from at two possible sources.
For example :
•
Lin Meicun suggested
that Dunhuan is the Chinese spelling of Tushar (an Eastern Iranian
people), and;
• Victor
Mair noted the word kaelum in the Tocharian languages of the Tarim
Basin, meaning "sky" or "heaven" (and therefore
related distantly to the Latin caelum) which may have been the basis
of qilian.
According to a Tang Dynasty commentator on the Shiji, qilian was
a Xiongnu word for "sky" – although Xiongnu may
also have borrowed the word from an Indo-European language.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Dunhong