YANCAI
Countries
described in Zhang Qian's report. Visited countries are highlighted
in blue
Yancai
(Chinese:pinyin: Yancài; Wade–Giles: Yen-ts’ai;
lit.: 'Vast Steppe') was the Chinese name of an ancient nomadic
state centered near the Aral Sea during the Han dynasty period (206
BC—220 AD). They are generally considered to have been an
Iranian people of the Sarmatian group. After becoming vassals of
the Kangju in the 1st century BC, Yancai became known as Alanliao
(Chinese: pinyin: Alán liáo; Wade–Giles: A-lan-ya/A-lan-liao).
Yancai is often connected to the Aorsi of Roman records, while Alanliao
has been connected to the later Alans.
History
:
Yancai is first mentioned in Chapter 123 of the Shiji (whose author,
Sima Qian, died c. 90 BC), based on the travels of 2nd century BC
Chinese diplomat Zhang Qian :
Yancai
lies some 2,000 li [832 km] northwest of Kangju. The people are
nomads and their customs are generally similar to those of the people
of Kangju. The country has over 100,000 archer warriors, and borders
on a great shoreless lake.
The
people of Yancai are usually considered an Iranian people of the
Sarmatian group. They are often connected to the Aorsi of Roman
records, who dominated the area between the Don and the Aral Sea
and were both a wealthy mercantile people and a powerful military
force. According to Chinese sources, Yancai belonged to the northern
part of the Silk Route, known as the Northern Route. The Chinese
sent embassies to Yancai and actively promoted trading relations.
The
Later Han Dynasty Chinese chronicle, the Hou Hanshu, 88 (covering
the period 25–220 and completed in the 5th century), mentioned
a report that Yancai was now as vassal state of the Kangju known
as Alanliao :
The
kingdom of Yancai [lit. ‘Vast Steppe’] has changed its
name to the kingdoms of Alan [and] Liao. They occupy the country
and the towns. They are dependencies of Kangju [the Talas basin,
Tashkent and Sogdiana]. The climate is mild. Wax trees, pines, and
‘white grass’ [aconite] are plentiful. Their way of
life and dress are similar to those of Kangju.
Y.
A. Zadneprovskiy writes that the subjection of Yancai by the Kangju
occurred in the 1st century BC. The westward expansion of the Kangju
obliged many of the Sarmatians to migrate westwards, and this contributed
significantly to the Migration Period in Europe, which played a
major role in world history. The name Alanliao has been connected
by modern scholars with that of the Alans.
Yancai
is last mentioned in the 3rd century Weilüe :
Then
there is the kingdom of Liu, the kingdom of Yan [to the north of
Yancai], and the kingdom of Yancai [between the Black and Caspian
Seas], which is also called Alan. They all have the same way of
life as those of Kangju. To the west, they border Da Qin [Roman
territory], to the southeast they border Kangju [the Chu, Talas,
and middle Jaxartes basins]. These kingdoms have large numbers of
their famous sables. They raise cattle and move about in search
of water and fodder. They are close to a large shoreless lake. Previously
they were vassals of Kangju [the Chu, Talas, and middle Jaxartes
basins]. Now they are no longer vassals.
In
the 1st and 2nd centuries the AD, the Alans emerged as the dominant
people of the Sarmatians either through conquering or absorbing
other tribes. At this time they migrated westwards to Southern
Russia and frequently raided the Parthian and Roman Empire.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Yancai