KOMEDES
The
"Seventh Asian Map", by Tomaso Porcacchi Castilione,
from a 1620 Italian edition of Ptolemy's Geography
Komedes
is the ethnonym of a people in Central Asia during antiquity, who
were mentioned by the ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy, in his Geography
(c. 150 CE). Ptolemy reported that the Komedes were found throughout
the "entire mountainous land of the Sacae", including
Bactria, Sogdiana and/or Transoxiana.
Some
scholars have linked the Komedes to Central Asian toponyms and ethnonyms
in ancient Hindu literature, such as a country called Kumud and
a people called the Kambojs.
Ancient
& medieval texts :
Greek & Roman geographers :
The Greek geographer Ptolemy uses the name Komdei for the region
fed by the Jaxartes river (modern Syr Darya) and its tributaries.
Ptolemy refers to the people of Komdei as Komedes. Ptolemy also
refers to one tribal people whom he variously calls Komoi/Kamoi,
Komroi/Khomroi or Komedei, and locates in the mountainous regions
of Sogdiana as far as Jaxartes. In fact, as per Ptolemy's evidence,
"the Komedes (people) inhabited the entire land of the Sacae",
a name often taken to be synonymous with that of the Sakas. Julius
Honorius’ Cosmography mentions a people called Traumeda and
mentions a mountain called Caumedes as the source of the river Oxus
(modern Amu Darya). Ammianus Marcellinus too calls the Sogdian mountainous
regions as Komadas. To the north of the Komedes was the homeland
of the Sacarauloi (or Sacaraucae) and, probably, the Pasianoi.
The
Ptolemian references to Komdei or Komedes as a region probably alludes
to Hindu toponyms Komdesh, Kamdesh and Kambodesh (probably originally
Kamboi-desh). They Cambothi, Kambuson and Komedon of some other
Greek writings. The classical sources further indicate that the
south-western section of the Komedes (people) living within "Mt
Hemodos or Emode" were known as Homodotes. Thus, the Homodotes
appear to have been a section of the Komedes living within a part
of the Hindukush or Pamirs.
Kumud
in ancient Hindu texts :
According to Hindu texts authored in the early Epic Age (from about
1000 BCE), Kumud was the name given to a high tableland located
somewhere to the north of Himvat (Hindukush or the Himalayas in
general), from which the Indo-Aryan peoples may have originally
pushed their way southwards into India, and preserved the name in
their traditions as a relic of old mountain worship (Thompson[incomplete
short citation])
The
Indian literary classic Mahabharat (dating from the mid-1st millennium
BCE) indicates that the southern parts of Shakdvip were the habitat
of peoples including the Kambojs – specifically the Param
Kambojs – alongside the Lohs and Rishiks.
A
Sanskrit pur from the early 1st millennium CE, the Vayu Puran uses
the name Kumud-dvip as an alternate for Kushdvip, one of seven dvip
("continents" or "great lands") mentioned in
Hindu topology. Kumud is also the puranic name of a mountain forming
the northern buttress of Mount Meru, also known as Sumeru (possibly
the Pamirs). In this specific sense, Kumud extended between headwaters
of the rivers now known as the Amu Darya (Latin Oxus) and Syr Darya
(Greek Jaxartes).
Thus
the name Kumud, in the topology of the ancient Hindu world, lay
close to the Pamirs, north of Himavat and probably comprised Badakshan,
the Alay Valley, Alay Mountains, Tienshan, Karotegin (Rasht Valley,
in modern Tajikistan) and possibly extended as far north as the
Zeravshan and Fergan valleys.[citation needed]
Ancient
Chinese names :
A Chinese equivalent name appears to have been Xiuxun. However,
Kumud is probably also the Kiumito or Kumito mentioned by Xuanzang,
the Kiumiche of Wu'k ong, and the Kumi of T'ang.
Islamic
geographers :
Kumed or Kumadh of the Muslim writers Al-Maqidisi, in his Al-Muqhni,
calls the people of this territory Kumiji, which seems equivalent
to Sanskrit Kamboji (or Kambojs). Numerous scholars have connected
the Komedes (Komedei) of classical writings with the Kambojs of
Iranian topology.
Modern
interpretations :
Historical evidence :
The name and geographical references indicates that the Kumud (or
Kumud-dvip) and Param Kambojs of Hindu tradition and ancient Indian
literarure appear to be synonymous with the Komedes ( or Komedei),
Traumeda (or Caumedae) of European classical sources. The same applies
to the Homodotes (Homodoti or Homodontes). The Komoi (Komroi or
Khomroi) of Ptolemy may be linked the placename Kamboi (in modern
Gujarat), itself apparently a corruption of Kamboj, Kambojik or
Kamboik.
Linguistic
links between the Kambojs and modern languages :
Linguistic traces of the ancient Kambojs have been suggested in
several modern languages of the Pamir Mountains, Khotan and Sogdiana.
[citation needed] The Param Kambojs appear to have originated from
Central Asia and have been lumped together with neighbouring tribes,
under names like Scythians in Latin, Sacae in Greek and Sakas (or
Shaks) in Indo-Iranian languages. Ancient Kamboj probably included
the Pamir Mountains, Badakshan and other parts of modern Tajikistan
extending as far as the source of the Zarafshon/Zeravshan river.
On the east it was probably bounded by modern Yarkand and/or Kashgar,
to the west by Bactria, to the north-west by Sogdiana, to the north
by Uttarakuru, to the south-east by Darad, and to the south by Gandhar.
Many languages of this region are said to shows the influence of
an ancient Kambojan verb shvati "to go". Nirukat (II.2)
of Yasak attests that verb shavati "to go" was used "only
by the Kambojs".
•
The modern Pamiri
or Ghalchah languages, spoken in around the Pamir Mountains use
similar terms, such as shavati ("to go").
• The
Yaghnobi language, spoken in the Yaghnob Valley, also contains shavati
"to go". Further, the former language of Badakshan was
also a Ghalchah language which has been replaced by other Iranian
languages only in the last few centuries.
• Wilhelm
Tomaschek has stated that, of all the Ghalchah/Pamiri languages,
"Munjani is most closely related to the language of Zend Avestan".
Other scholars connect the ethnoliguistic term Munjan to the Mujavat
of the Hindu Atharv Ved and Mahabharat, The Munjani for "to
go" is shiya. According to other version, Munjan is derived
from root 'Murg' of Amyurgio Sacae (Haumavarga Saka of Persian inscriptions),
which according to scholars, translates into Som-twisting Sakas
(Dr Michael Witzel). This again connects Munjan with Mujavat, the
home of Haom/Som i.e. Pamirs/Hindukush. the land of the ancient
ritual drink known to Hindus as som and to Zoroastrians as haom.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Komedes