JUSHI
KINGDOM
The
Jushi (Pinyin: Jushi), or Gushi (Pinyin: Gushi), were a people who
established a kingdom during the 1st millennium BC in the Turpan
basin (modern Xinjiang, China). The kingdom included the area of
Ayding Lake, in the eastern Tian Shan range. During the late 2nd
and early 1st century BC, the area was increasingly dominated by
the Han Dynasty and the northern neighbours of the Jushi, the Xiongnu,
and became one of the many minor states of the Western Regions of
Han dynasty China. The Jushi capital (Jiaohe, later known as Yarkhoto,
and Yarghul) was destroyed in a Mongol attack in the 13th century.
Contemporary
Chinese sources suggest that the Jushi were Caucasoid in appearance.
They may have been one of the Tocharian peoples and spoken one of
the associated languages.
Historical
accounts :
According to J. P. Mallory and Victor H. Mair, the earliest accounts
of the Jushi report them to have "lived in tents, followed
the grasses and waters, and had considerable knowledge of agriculture.
They owned cattle, horses, camels, sheep and goats. They were proficient
with bows and arrows".
Jushi
and the kingdom of Krorän were linked in the account of Zhang
Qian (d. 113 BC), in part because both were under the control of
the Xiongnu.
In
or about 60 BC, the Han—ruled at the time by Emperor Xuan—defeated
Xiongnu forces at the Battle of Jushi, during the Han–Xiongnu
War. Afterwards the main part of the Jushi lands was divided into
two states: a southern area controlled by the Han, who referred
to it as “Nearer Jushi” (or "Anterior Jushi"),
and a northern area known to the Han as “Further Jushi"
(or "Posterior Jushi") that was dominated by the Xiongnu.
Nearer Jushi was administered by the Han from a capital at Jiaohe
(16 kilometres west of the site of modern Turpan). The capital of
Further Jushi appears to have been called Yuli or Yulai, and was
located about 10 km north of Jimasa, 200 km north of Jiaohe. The
Jushi never regained their independence.
Archaeology
:
A 2,700-year-old grave discovered in 2008 at the Yanghai Tombs,
an ancient cemetery (54,000 m2 in area), has been attributed to
the Jushi or a precursor culture. The grave contains the remains
of a shaman who had blue eyes and light-coloured hair.
Near
the shaman's head and foot were a large leather basket and wooden
bowl filled 789 grams of dried cannabis, superbly preserved by climatic
and burial conditions. An international team demonstrated that this
material contained tetrahydrocannabinol, the psychoactive component
of cannabis. The cannabis was clearly "cultivated for psychoactive
purposes," rather than as fibre for clothing or as food. It
may have been employed as a medicinal agent, or an aid to divination.
This is the oldest known use of cannabis as a pharmacological agent.
The extremely dry conditions and alkaline soil acted as preservatives,
allowing a team of scientists to carefully analyze the stash, which
still looked green though it had lost its distinctive odour.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Jushi_Kingdom