KINGDOM
OF KAPISA
The
Kingdom of Kapisa was a state located in what is now Afghanistan
during the late 1st millennium CE. Its capital was the city of Kapisa.
The kingdom stretched from the Hindu Kush in the north to Bamiyan
and Kandahar in the south and west, out as far as the modern Jalalabad
District in the east.
The
name Kapisa appears to be a Sanskritized form of an older name for
the area, from prehistory. Following its conquest in 329 BCE by
Alexander the Great, the area was known in the Hellenic world as
Alexandria on the Caucasus, although the older name appears to have
survived.
In
around 600 CE, the Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang made a pilgrimage
to Kapisa, and described there the cultivation of rice and wheat,
and a king of the Suli tribe. In his chronicle, he relates that
in Kapisa were over 6,000 monks of the Mahayana school of Buddhism.
In a 7th-century Chinese chronicle, the Book of Sui, Kapisa appears
to be known as the kingdom of Cao.
Between
the 7th and 9th centuries, the kingdom was ruled by the Turk Shahi
house. At one point, Bagram was the capital of the kingdom, though
in the 7th century, the center of power of Kapisa shifted to Kabul.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Kingdom_of_Kapisa