YUEZHI
Figures
in the embroidered carpets of the Noin-Ula burial site, proposed
to be Yuezhis (1st century BC - 1st century AD)
The
migrations of the Yuezhi through Central Asia, from around 176 BC
to 30 AD
Total
population :
Some 100,000 to 200,000 horse archers, according to the Shiji, Chapter
123. The Hanshu Chapter 96A records: 100,000 households, 400,000
people with 100,000 able to bear arms.
Regions with significant populations :
Western China (pre-2nd century BC)
Central Asia (2nd century BC-1st century AD)
Northern India (1st century AD-4th century AD)
Languages :
Bactrian (in Bactria in the 1st century AD)
Religion :
Buddhism, Hinduism, Shamanism, Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism and Kushan
deities
Timeline
of the Yuezhi :
Before
:
221 BCE :
The Yuezhi are powerful near Dunhuang, near the western end of the
Hexi corridor, and control the jade trade from the Tarim basin.
Somewhere west are the Wusun, and further east near the Ordos plateau
are the Xiongnu or their precursors.
215 BCE :
The Xiongnu are defeated by Qin dynasty China and retreat into Mongolia.
207 BCE :
The Xiongnu begin a campaign of raids against the Yuezhi.
Circa :
176 BCE :
The Xiongnu inflict a major defeat on the Yuezhi.
173 BCE :
The Yuezhi defeat the Wusun.
165
BCE :
The majority of the Yuezhi begin migrating west to the Ili valley;
this faction is known later as the "Great Yuezhi". Most
of the other faction, known as the "Lesser Yuezhi", settle
on the Tibetan plateau and in the Tarim basin.
132 BCE :
The Wusun attack the Great Yuezhi, forcing them southward from the
Ili valley.
132 - 130 :
BCE The Great Yuezhi migrate west, then south and settle in north-west
Bactria.
128 BCE :
A Chinese envoy named Zhang Qian reaches the Great Yuezhi.
Circa :
30 CE :
One of five tribes comprising the Great Yuezhi tribes, the Kushan,
become dominant and form the basis of the Kushan Empire.
The
Yuezhi (Pinyin: Yuèzhi; Wade–Giles: Yüeh4-chih1)
were an ancient people first described in Chinese histories as nomadic
pastoralists living in an arid grassland area in the western part
of the modern Chinese province of Gansu, during the 1st millennium
BC. After a major defeat by the Xiongnu in 176 BC, the Yuezhi split
into two groups migrating in different directions: the Greater Yuezhi
(Dà Yuèzhi) and Lesser Yuezhi (Xiao Yuèzhi).
The
Greater Yuezhi initially migrated northwest into the Ili Valley
(on the modern borders of China and Kazakhstan), where they reportedly
displaced elements of the Sakas. They were driven from the Ili Valley
by the Wusun and migrated southward to Sogdia and later settled
in Bactria. The Greater Yuezhi have consequently often been identified
with peoples mentioned in classical European sources as having overrun
the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, like the Tókharioi (Sanskrit
Tukhar) and Asii (or Asioi).
During the 1st century BC, one of the five major Greater Yuezhi
tribes in Bactria, the Kushans (Pinyin: Guìshuang), began
to subsume the other tribes and neighbouring peoples. The subsequent
Kushan Empire, at its peak in the 3rd century AD, stretched from
Turfan in the Tarim Basin in the north to Pataliputra on the Gangetic
plain of India in the south. The Kushans played an important role
in the development of trade on the Silk Road and the introduction
of Buddhism to China.
The
Lesser Yuezhi migrated southward to the edge of the Tibetan Plateau.
Some are reported to have settled among the Qiang people in Qinghai,
and to have been involved in the Liangzhou Rebellion (184–221
AD). Others are said to have founded the city state of Cumuda (now
known as Kumul and Hami) in the eastern Tarim. A fourth group of
Lesser Yuezhi may have become part of the Jie people of Shanxi,
who established the Later Zhao state of the 4th century AD (although
this remains controversial).
Many
scholars believe that the Yuezhi were an Indo-European people. Although
some scholars have associated them with artifacts of extinct cultures
in the Tarim Basin, such as the Tarim mummies and texts recording
the Tocharian languages, the evidence for any such link is purely
circumstantial.
Earliest
references in Chinese texts :
Circa
210 BC, the Yuezhi resided to the northwest of Qin China
Three pre-Han texts mention peoples who appear to be the Yuezhi,
albeit under slightly different names.
•
The philosophical
tract Guanzi (73, 78, 80 and 81) mentions nomadic pastoralists known
as the Yúzhi (Old Chinese: *nwjo-kje) or Niúzhi (OC:
*nwjo-kje), who supplied jade to the Chinese. (The Guanzi is now
generally believed to have been compiled around 26 BC, based on
older texts, including some from the Qi state era of the 11th to
3rd centuries BC. Most scholars no longer attribute its primary
authorship to Guan Zhong, a Qi official in the 7th century BC.)
The export of jade from the Tarim Basin, since at least the late
2nd millennium BC, is well-documented archaeologically. For example,
hundreds of jade pieces found in the Tomb of Fu Hao (c. 1200 BC)
originated from the Khotan area, on the southern rim of the Tarim
Basin. According to the Guanzi, the Yúzhi/Niúzhi,
unlike the neighbouring Xiongnu, did not engage in conflict with
nearby Chinese states.
•
The epic novel Tale of King Mu, Son of Heaven (early 4th century
BC) also mentions a plain of Yúzhi (OC: *nwjo-kje) to the
northwest of the Zhou lands.
• Chapter
59 of the Yi Zhou Shu (probably dating from the 4th to 1st century
BC) refers to a Yúzhi (OC: *nwjo-kje) people living to the
northwest of the Zhou domain and offering horses as tribute. A late
supplement contains the name Yuèdi (OC: *nwjat-tij), which
may be a misspelling of the name Yuèzhi (OC: *nwjat-kje)
found in later texts.
In the 1st century BC, Sima Qian – widely regarded as the
founder of Chinese historiography – describes how the Qin
dynasty (221–206 BC) bought jade and highly valued military
horses from a people that Sima Qian called the Wuzhi (OC: *?a-kje),
led by a man named as Luo. The Wuzhi traded these goods for Chinese
silk, which they then sold on to other neighbours. This is probably
the first reference to the Yuezhi as a lynchpin in trade on the
Silk Road, which in the 3rd century BC began to link Chinese states
to Central Asia and, eventually, the Middle East, the Mediterranean
and Europe.
Account
of Zhang Qian :
The earliest detailed account of the Yuezhi is found in chapter
123 of the Records of the Great Historian by Sima Qian, describing
a mission of Zhang Qian in the late 2nd century BC. Essentially
the same text appears in chapter 61 of the Book of Han, though Sima
Qian has added occasional words and phrases to clarify the meaning.
Both
texts use the name Yuèzhi (OC: *nwjat-kje), composed of characters
meaning "moon" and "clan" respectively. Several
different romanizations of this Chinese-language name have appeared
in print. The Iranologist H. W. Bailey preferred Üe-tsi. Another
modern Chinese pronunciation of the name is Ròuzhi, based
on the thesis that the character in the name is a scribal error
for however Thierry considers this thesis "thoroughly wrong".
Yuezhi
and Xiongnu :
The account begins with the Yuezhi occupying the grasslands to the
northwest of China at the beginning of the 2nd century BC :
The
Great Yuezhi was a nomadic horde. They moved about following their
cattle, and had the same customs as those of the Xiongnu. As their
soldiers numbered more than hundred thousand, they were strong and
despised the Xiongnu. In the past, they lived in the region between
Dunhuang and Qilian.
—
Book of Han, 61
The area between the Qilian Mountains and Dunhuang lies in the western
part of the modern Chinese province of Gansu, but no archaeological
remains of the Yuezhi have yet been found in this area. Some scholars
have argued that "Dunhuang" should be Dunhong, a mountain
in the Tian Shan, and that Qilian should be interpreted as a name
for the Tian Shan. They have thus placed the original homeland of
the Yuezhi 1,000 km further northwest in the grasslands to the north
of the Tian Shan (in the northern part of modern Xinjiang). Other
authors suggest that the area identified by Sima Qian was merely
the core area of an empire encompassing the western part of the
Mongolian plain, the upper reaches of the Yellow River, the Tarim
Basin and possibly much of central Asia, including the Altai Mountains,
the site of the Pazyryk burials of the Ukok Plateau.
By
the late 3rd century the Xiongnu monarch Touman even sent his eldest
son Modu as a hostage to the Yuezhi. The Yuezhi often attacked their
neighbour the Wusun to acquire slaves and pasture lands. Wusun originally
lived together with the Yuezhi in the region between Dunhuang and
Qilian Mountain. The Yuezhi attacked the Wusuns, killed their monarch
Nandoumi and took his territory. The son of Nandoumi, Kunmo fled
to the Xiongnu and was brought up by the Xiongnu monarch.
Men in Iranian dress in one of the embroidered carpets of
the Xiongnu Noin-Ula burial site. They have been proposed to be
Yuezhi. 1st century BC - 1st century AD
Gradually the Xiongnu grew stronger, and war broke out with the
Yuezhi. There were at least four wars according to the Chinese accounts.
The first war broke out during the reign of the Xiongnu monarch
Touman (who died in 209 BC) who suddenly attacked the Yuezhi. The
Yuezhi wanted to kill Modu, the son of the Xiongnu king Touman kept
as a hostage to them, but Modu stole a good horse from them and
managed to escape to his country. He subsequently killed his father
and became ruler of the Xiongnu. It appears that the Xiongnu did
not defeat the Yuezhi in this first war. The second war took place
in the 7th year of Modu era (203 BC). From this war, a large area
of the territory originally belonging to the Yuezhi was seized by
the Xiongnu and the hegemony of the Yuezhi started to shake. The
third war probably was at 176 BC (or shortly earlier) and the Yuezhi
were badly defeated.
Shortly
before 176 BC, led by one of Modu's tribal chiefs, the Xiongnu invaded
Yuezhi territory in the Gansu region and achieved a crushing victory.
Modu boasted in a letter (174 BC) to the Han emperor that due to
"the excellence of his fighting men, and the strength of his
horses, he has succeeded in wiping out the Yuezhi, slaughtering
or forcing to submission every number of the tribe." The son
of Modu, Laoshang Chanyu (ruled 174–166 BC), subsequently
killed the king of the Yuezhi and, in accordance with nomadic traditions,
"made a drinking cup out of his skull." (Shiji 123.)
Nevertheless,
in about 173 BC, the Wusun were apparently defeated by the Yuezhi,
who killed a Wusun king known as Nandoumi.
Exodus
of the Great Yuezhi :
Central
Asia in the 1st century BC
After their defeat by the Xiongnu, the Yuezhi split into two groups.
The Lesser or Little Yuezhi (Xiao Yuezhi) moved to the "southern
mountains", believed to be the Qilian Mountains on the edge
of the Tibetan Plateau, to live with the Qiang.
The
so-called Greater (or Great) Yuezhi (Dà Yuèzhi) began
migrating north-west in about 165 BC, first settling in the Ili
valley, immediately north of the Tian Shan mountains, where they
defeated the Sai (Sakas): "The Yuezhi attacked the king of
the Sai who moved a considerable distance to the south and the Yuezhi
then occupied his lands" (Book of Han 61 4B). This was "the
first historically recorded movement of peoples originating in the
high plateaus of Asia."
In
132 BC the Wusun, in alliance with the Xiongnu and out of revenge
from an earlier conflict, again managed to dislodge the Yuezhi from
the Ili Valley, forcing them to move south-west. The Yuezhi passed
through the neighbouring urban civilization of Dayuan (in Ferghana)
and settled on the northern bank of the Oxus, in the region of northern
Bactria, or Transoxiana (modern Tajikistan and Uzbekistan).
Visit
of Zhang Qian :
A
later mural (c. 618 – 712 AD) from the Mogao Caves, depicting
the Chinese mission of Zhang Qian to the Yuezhi in 126 BC
The Yuezhi were visited in Transoxiana by a Chinese mission, led
by Zhang Qian in 126 BC, which sought an offensive alliance with
the Yuezhi against the Xiongnu. Zhang Qian, who spent a year in
Transoxiana and Bactria, wrote a detailed account in the Shiji,
which gives considerable insight into the situation in Central Asia
at the time. The request for an alliance was denied by the son of
the slain Yuezhi king, who preferred to maintain peace in Transoxiana
rather than seek revenge.
Zhang
Qian also reported :
the
Great Yuezhi live 2,000 or 3,000 li [832–1,247 kilometers]
west of Dayuan, north of the Gui [Oxus ] river. They are bordered
on the south by Daxia [Bactria], on the west by Anxi [Parthia],
and on the north by Kangju [beyond the middle Jaxartes/Syr Darya].
They are a nation of nomads, moving from place to place with their
herds, and their customs are like those of the Xiongnu. They have
some 100,000 or 200,000 archer warriors.
—
Shiji, 123
In a sweeping analysis of the physical types and cultures
of Central Asia, Zhang Qian reports :
Although
the states from Dayuan west to Anxi (Parthia), speak rather different
languages, their customs are generally similar and their languages
mutually intelligible. The men have deep-set eyes and profuse beards
and whiskers. They are skilful at commerce and will haggle over
a fraction of a cent. Women are held in great respect, and the men
make decisions on the advice of their women.
—
Shiji, 123
Watershed
of the Oxus River (modern Amu Darya)
Zhang Qian also described the remnants of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
on the other side of the Oxus River (Chinese Gui) as a number of
autonomous city-states under Yuezhi suzerainty :
Daxia
is located over 2,000 li southwest of Dayuan, south of the Gui river.
Its people cultivate the land and have cities and houses. Their
customs are like those of Ta-Yuan. It has no great ruler but only
a number of petty chiefs ruling the various cities. The people are
poor in the use of arms and afraid of battle, but they are clever
at commerce. After the Great Yuezhi moved west and attacked the
lands, the entire country came under their sway. The population
of the country is large, numbering some 1,000,000 or more persons.
The capital is called the city of Lanshi and has a market where
all sorts of goods are bought and sold.
—
Shiji, 123
Later Chinese accounts :
The next mention of the Yuezhi in Chinese sources is found in chapter
96A of the Book of Han (completed in AD 111), relating to the early
1st century BC. At this time, the Yuezhi are described as occupying
the whole of Bactria, organized into five major tribes or xihóu
(Ch: "Allied Prince"). These tribes were known to the
Chinese as :
•
Xiumì
in Western Wakhan and Zibak;
• Guìshuang
in Badakhshan and adjoining territories north of the Oxus;
• Shuangmí
in the region of Shughnan or Chitral.
• Xidùn
in the region of Balkh, and;
• Dumì
in the region of Termez.
The Book of the Later Han (5th century CE) also records the visit
of Yuezhi envoys to the Chinese capital in 2 BC, who gave oral teachings
on Buddhist sutras to a student, suggesting that some Yuezhi already
followed the Buddhist faith during the 1st century BC (Baldev Kumar
1973).
Chapter
88 of the Book of the Later Han relies on a report of Ban Yong,
based on the campaigns of his father Ban Chao in the late 1st century
AD. It reports that one of the five tribes of the Yuezhi, the Guishuang,
had managed to take control of the tribal confederation :
More
than a hundred years later, the xihou of Guishuang, named Qiujiu
Que (Ch: Kujula Kadphises) attacked and exterminated the four other
xihou. He set himself up as king of a kingdom called Guishuang (Kushan).
He invaded Anxi (Parthia) and took the Gaofu (Ch: Kabul) region.
He also defeated the whole of the kingdoms of Puda and Jibin (Ch:
Kapis-Gandhar). Qiujiu Que (Kujula Kadphises) was more than eighty
years old when he died. His son, Yan Gaozhen (Vim Takto), became
king in his place. He returned and defeated Tianzhu (Northwestern
India) and installed a General to supervise and lead it. The Yuezhi
then became extremely rich. All the kingdoms call [their king] the
Guishuang (Kushan) king, but the Han call them by their original
name, Da Yuezhi.
—
Book of the Later Han, trans. John Hill
A later Chinese annotation in Zhang Shoujie's Shiji (quoting Wan
Zhen in Nánzhouzhì ["Strange Things from the
Southern Region"], a now-lost 3rd-century text from the Wu
kingdom), describes the Kushans as living in the same general area
north of India, in cities of Greco-Roman style, and with sophisticated
handicraft. The quotes are dubious, as Wan Zhen probably never visited
the Yuezhi kingdom through the Silk Road, though he might have gathered
his information from the trading ports in the coastal south. Chinese
sources continued to use the name Yuezhi and seldom used the Kushan
(or Guishuang) as a generic term :
The
Great Yuezhi are located about seven thousand li [2,910 km] north
of India. Their land is at a high altitude; the climate is dry;
the region is remote. The king of the state calls himself "son
of heaven". There are so many riding horses in that country
that the number often reaches several hundred thousand. City layouts
and palaces are quite similar to those of Daqin [the Roman Empire].
The skin of the people there is reddish white. People are skilful
at horse archery. Local products, rarities, treasures, clothing,
and upholstery are very good, and even India cannot compare with
it.
—
Wan Zhen (3rd century AD)
Kushan :
Yuezhis in Bactria, on Noin-Ula carpets
Yuezhi
nobleman over firealtar, Noin-Ula
Yuezhi
armoured horseman, Noin-Ula
Yuezhi
(left) fighting a Sogdian behind a shield (right), Noin-Ula
The Central Asian people who called themselves Kushan, who were
among the conquerors of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom during the 2nd
century BC, are widely believed to have originated as a dynastic
clan or tribe of the Yuezhi. The area of Bactria they settled came
to be known as Tokharistan. Because some inhabitants of Bactria
became known as Tukhar (Sanskrit) or Tókharoi (Greek), these
names later became associated with the Yuezhi.
The
Kushan spoke Bactrian, an Eastern Iranian language.
Bactria
:
In the 3rd century BC, Bactria had been conquered by the Greeks
under Alexander the Great and since settled by the Hellenistic civilization
of the Seleucids.
The
resulting Greco-Bactrian Kingdom lasted until the 2nd century BC.
The area came under pressure from various nomadic peoples and the
Greek city of Alexandria on the Oxus was apparently burnt to the
ground in about 145 BC. The last Greco-Bactrian king, Heliocles
I, retreated and moved his capital to the Kabul Valley. In about
140–130 BC, the Greco-Bactrian state was conquered by the
nomads and dissolved. The Greek geographer Strabo mentions this
event in his account of the central Asian tribes he called "Scythians"
:
All, or the greatest part of them, are nomads. The best known tribes
are those who deprived the Greeks of Bactriana: the Asii, Pasiani,
Tochari, and Sacarauli, who came from the country on the other side
of the Jaxartes [Syr Darya], opposite the Sacae and Sogdiani.
—
Strabo
Early Yuezhis coinage
Yuezhi
anonymous copy of a coin of Greco-Bactrian king Heliocles
Yuezhi
anonymous of a coin of Greco-Bactrian king Heliocles, with original
horse on the reverse
Yuezhi
ruler Arseiles. Late 1st century BCE
Yuezhi
ruler Sapadbizes. Late 1st century BCE
Writing in the 1st century BC, the Roman historian Pompeius Trogus
attributed the destruction of the Greco-Bactrian state to the Sacaraucae
and the Asiani "kings of the Tochari". Both Pompeius and
the Roman historian Justin (2nd century AD) record that the Parthian
king Artabanus II was mortally wounded in a war against the Tochari
in 124 BC. Several relationships between these tribes and those
named in Chinese sources have been proposed, but remain contentious.
After
they settled in Bactria, the Yuezhi became Hellenized to some degree
– as shown by their adoption of the Greek alphabet and by
some remaining coins, minted in the style of the Greco-Bactrian
kings, with the text in Greek.
Noin-Ula
carpets :
According to Sergey Yatsenko, the carpets with vivid embroidened
scenes discovered in Noin-Ula were made by the Yuezhi in Bactria,
and were obtained by the Xiongnu through commercial exchange or
tributary payment, as the Yuezhi may have remained tributaries of
the Xiongnu a long time following their defeat. Embroidered carpets
were one of the highest prized luxury items for the Xiongnu. The
figures depicted in the carpets are believed to reflect the clothing
and customs of the Yuewhi while in Bactria in the 1st century BCE-1st
century CE.
In
the Hindu Kush :
The area of the Hindu Kush (Paropamisadae) was ruled by the western
Indo-Greek king until the reign of Hermaeus (reigned c. 90 BC–70
BC). After that date, no Indo-Greek kings are known in the area.
According to Bopearachchi, no trace of Indo-Scythian occupation
(nor coins of major Indo-Scythian rulers such as Maues or Azes I)
have been found in the Paropamisade and western Gandhar. The Hindu
Kush may have been subsumed by the Yuezhi, [original research?]
who by then had been dominated by Greco-Bactria for almost two centuries.
As
they had done in Bactria with their copying of Greco-Bactrian coinage,
the Yuezhi copied the coinage of Hermeaus on a vast scale, up to
around 40 AD, when the design blends into the coinage of the Kushan
king Kujula Kadphises. Such coins may provide the earliest known
names of Yuezhi yabgu (a minor royal title, similar to prince),
namely Sapadbizes [original research?] and/or Agesiles, who both
lived in or about 20 BC.
Kushan
Empire :
The first self-declared Kushan ruler Heraios (1–30 AD) in
Greco-Bactrian style
Obv : Bust of Heraios, with Greek royal headband.
Rev : Horse-mounted King, crowned with a wreath
by the Greek goddess of victory Nike. Greek legend:
TVPANNOVOTOS HAOV – SANAB – KOÞÞANOY "The
Tyrant Heraios, Sanav (meaning unknown), of the Kushans"
After that point, they extended their control over the northwestern
area of the Indian subcontinent, founding the Kushan Empire, which
was to rule the region for several centuries. Despite their change
of name, most Chinese authors continued to refer to the Kushanas
as the Yuezhi.
The
Kushanas expanded to the east during the 1st century AD. The first
Kushan emperor, Kujul Kadphises, ostensibly associated himself with
King Hermaeus on his coins.[citation needed]
The
Kushanas integrated Buddhism into a pantheon of many deities and
became great promoters of Mahayan Buddhism, and their interactions
with Greek civilization helped the Gandharan culture and Greco-Buddhism
flourish.
During
the 1st and 2nd centuries, the Kushan Empire expanded militarily
to the north and occupied parts of the Tarim Basin, putting them
at the center of the lucrative Central Asian commerce with the Roman
Empire. The Kushanas collaborated militarily with the Chinese against
their mutual enemies. This included a campaign with the Chinese
general Ban Chao against the Sogdians in 84 CE, when the latter
were trying to support a revolt by the king of Kashgar. In around
AD 85, [citation needed] the Kushans also assisted the Chinese in
an attack on Turpan, east of the Tarim Basin.
Possible Yuezhi king and attendants, Gandhar stone palette,
1st century AD
Following the military support provided to the Han, the Kushan emperor
requested a marriage alliance with a Han princess and sent gifts
to the Chinese court in expectation that this would occur. After
the Han court refused, a Kushan army 70,000 strong marched on Ban
Chao in 86 AD. The army was apparently exhausted by the time it
reached its objective and was defeated by the Chinese force. The
Kushans retreated and later paid tribute to the Chinese emperor
Han He (89–106).
In
about 120 AD, Kushan troops installed Chenpan—a prince who
had been sent as a hostage to them and had become a favorite of
the Kushan Emperor—on the throne of Kashgar, thus expanding
their power and influence in the Tarim Basin. There they introduced
the Brahmi script, the Indian Prakrit language for administration,
and Greco-Buddhist art, which developed into Serindian art.
Buddhist art c. 300 AD, depicting (left to right) a Kushan
lay Buddhist, Maitreya, Buddha, Avalokitesvar, and a Kushan Buddhist
monk
Following this territorial expansion, the Kushans introduced
Buddhism to northern and northeastern Asia, by both direct missionary
efforts and the translation of Buddhist scriptures into Chinese.
Major Kushan missionaries and translators included Lokaksem (born
c. 147 CE) and Dharmaraksa (c. 233 – c. 311), both of whom
were influential translators of the Mahayan sutras into Chinese.
They went to China and established translation bureaus, thereby
being at the center of the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism.[citation
needed]
In
the Records of the Three Kingdoms (chap. 3), it was recorded that
in 229 AD, "The king of the Da Yuezhi [Kushans], Bodiao (Vasudev
I), sent his envoy to present tribute, and His Majesty (Emperor
Cao Rui) granted him the title of King of the Da Yuezhi Intimate
with the Wei (Ch: Qin Wèi Dà Yuèzhi Wáng)."
Soon
afterwards, the military power of the Kushans began to decline.
The rival Sasanian Empire of Persia extended its dominion into Bactria
during the reign of Ardashir I around 230 CE. The Sasanians also
occupied neighboring Sogdia by 260 AD and made it into a satrapy.
During
the course of the 3rd and 4th centuries, the Kushan Empire was divided
and conquered by the Sasanians, the Hephthalite tribes from the
north, and the Gupta and Yaudheya empires from India.
Later
references to the Lesser Yuezhi :
This
section needs additional citations for verification.
Yuezhi
horseman on the coinage of Heraios
Xiao Yuezhi may have been used as a generic term for various Caucasoid
minorities that remained in northern China (following the migration
of the Greater Yuezhi). The term is used of peoples in locations
as diverse as Tibet, Qinghai, Shanxi and the Tarim Basin.
Some
of the Lesser Yuezhi settled among the Qiang people of Huangzhong,
Qinghai, according to archaeologist Sophia-Katrin Psarras. Yuezhi
and Qiang were said to be among members of the Auxiliary of Loyal
Barbarians From Huangzhong that mutinied against the Han dynasty,
in the Liangzhou Rebellion (184–221 CE).
Elements
of the Lesser Yuezhi are said to have been a component of the Jie
people, who originated from Yushe County in Shanxi. [citation needed]
Other theories link the Jie more strongly to the Xiongnu, Kangju,
or the Tocharian-speaking peoples of the Tarim. Led by Emperor Shi
Le the Jie established the Later Zhao state (319–351) and
were massacred by King Ran Min of the Ran Wei state, during the
Wei–Jie war.
In
Tibet, the Lesser Yuezhi constituted the Gar or mGar – a clan
name associated with blacksmiths. The Gar became influential during
the period of the Tibetan Empire – until the end of the 7th
century, when 2,000 of them were massacred by the Tibetan emperor
Tridu Songtsän.[citation needed]
A
Chinese monk named Gao Juhui, who traveled to the Tarim Basin in
the 10th century, described the Zhongyun (Wade–Giles Tchong-yun)
as descendants of the Lesser Yuezhi. This was the city state of
Cumuda (also Cimuda or Cunuda), south of Lop Nur in the eastern
Tarim. (Following the subsequent settlement of Uyghur-speaking people
in the area, Cumuda became known as Cungul, Xungul and Kumul. Under
subsequent Han Chinese influence, it became known as Hami.)
Whatever
their fate may have been, the Xiao Yuezhi ceased to be identifiable
by that name and appear to have been subsumed by other ethnicities,
including Tibetans, Uyghurs and Han.
Proposed
links to other groups :
Sampul tapestry
Full
length
Detail
Probable Yuezhi soldier in red jacket and trousers, in the Sampul
tapestry. Embroidened in Hellenistic style, with motif of a centaur,
1st century AD, Sampul, Ürümqi Xinjiang Region Museum.
The relationship between the Yuezhi and other Central Asian peoples
is unclear. Based on claimed similarities of names, different scholars
have linked them to several groups, but none of these identifications
is widely accepted.
Mallory
and Mair suggest that the Yuezhi and Wusun were among the nomadic
peoples, at least some of whom spoke Iranian languages, who moved
into northern Xinjiang from the Central Asian steppe in the 2nd
millennium BC.
Scholars
such as Edwin Pulleyblank, Josef Markwart, and László
Torday, suggest that the name Iatioi—a Central Asian people
mentioned by Ptolemy in Geography (AD 150)—may also be an
attempt to render Yuezhi.
There
has been only limited scholarly support for a theory developed by
W. B. Henning, who proposed that the Yuezhi were descended from
the Guti (or Gutians) and an associated, but little known tribe
known as the Tukri, who were native to the Zagros Mountains (modern
Iran and Iraq), during the mid-3rd millennium BC. In addition to
phonological similarities between these names and *nwjat-kje and
Tukhar, Henning pointed out that the Guti could have migrated from
the Zagros to Gansu, by the time that the Yuezhi entered the historical
record in China, during the 1st millennium BC. However, the only
material evidence presented by Henning, namely similar ceramic ware,
is generally considered to be far from conclusive.
Proposed
links with the Aorsi, Asii, Getae, Goths, Gushi, Jat, Massagetae,
and other groups have also gathered little support.
Yuezhi-Tocharian
hypothesis :
When manuscripts dating from the 6th to 8th centuries AD written
in two hitherto-unknown Indo-European languages were discovered
in the northern Tarim Basin, the early 20th-century linguist Friedrich
W. K. Müller identified them with the enigmatic "twyry
("Toyari") language" used to translate Indian Buddhist
Sanskrit texts and mentioned as the source of an Old Turkic (Uyghur)
manuscript. Müller then proposed to connect the name "Toyari"
(Togar/Tokar) to the Tókharoi people of Tokharistan (themselves
associated with the Yuezhi) described in early Greek histories.
He thus referred to the newly discovered languages as "Tocharian",
which became the common name for both the languages of the Tarim
manuscripts and the people who produced them. Most historians have
been rejecting the identification of the Tocharians of the Tarim
with the Tókharoi of Bactria, mainly because they are not
known to have spoken any languages other than Bactrian, a quite
dissimilar Eastern Iranian language. Other scholars suggest that
the Yuezhi/Kushanas may previously have spoken Tocharian before
shifting to Bactrian on their arrival in Bactria, an example of
an invading or colonising elite adopting a local language (as also
seen for the Greeks, the Turks or the Arabs upon their successive
settlements in Bactria). However, while Tocharian contains some
loanwords from Bactrian, there are no traces of Tocharian in Bactrian.
Another
possible endonym of the Yuezhi was put forward by H. W. Bailey,
who claimed that they were referred to, in 9th and 10th century
Khotan Saka Iranian texts, as the Gara. According to Bailey, the
Tu Gara ("Great Gara") were the Great Yuezhi. This is
consistent with the Ancient Greek Tokharoi (Latinised Tochari) in
reference to the faction of the Kushans that conquered Bactria,
as well as the Tibetan language name Gar (or mGar), for the members
of the Lesser Yuezhi who settled in the Tibetan Empire.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Yuezhi