Empire of Horses

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Empire of Horses Page 28

by John Man


  grave objects

  Arzhan 1 and 2 kurgans 18, 19–23

  Daodunzi cemetery 99–100

  Egiin Gol graves excavation 230–1

  linking Xiongnu and Hun 273–4

  Noyon Uul (Royal Hills) 8–9, 227–30

  Kaogong, Ai ‘ear-cup’ 213–14, 228

  Xiongnu 228–46

  grave wealth decrease/ increase 189–90

  post-Huhanye, few weapons 245–6

  Great August (da huang) title 57

  Great Salbyk Kurgan 18

  Great Ulugan River 25

  Great Wall 3, 206, 262

  and Ordos invasion 62

  as Xiongnu legacy 291

  effective 190

  fortress, as film studio 208, 211

  north Shanxi 138

  northwards 180–5

  bamboo strip records 180

  record keeping 180–5

  settlements 165

  western 179–80

  Wu extends/repairs 154, 158, 164–7

  Xiongnu breakthrough attempt 105–6

  Greeks, Ferghana Valley 166

  Grousset, René, L’Empire des Steppes, on Hsiung-nu as Huns 268

  Gu Ji 198, 203

  Guan Zhong 37

  Gunchen (Junchen) chanyu

  succeeds Jizhu 135

  death 152

  Gurvan Saikhan mountains 173

  Gutenberg, Johannes 241

  Guyuk 90

  hair braids, Xiongnu graves 9

  halberds 172

  Halley’s comet 1–2, 292

  Han dynasty

  founded by Gaozu (Liu Bang) 93

  restored as Eastern Han 255

  Han emperors

  and client chanyus 212–13

  and Wusun attack Xiongnu 192

  attack & kill Zhizhi 202–3

  conquer Wuhuan 190

  crush Shache uprising 192

  see also specific emperors

  Han-Xiongnu relations see under Xiongnu

  Han Fei, Legalist agenda 50, 55

  Han Fei Tzu: Basic Writings 49n1

  Han princesses, Xiongnu and 96–7, 215–17

  Han Shu see under Ban Gu

  Hancheng, Sima Qian’s tomb 112

  Hann state, Xiongnu and 94

  Hanye, Xiongnu general 160

  Harris, David, Black Horse Odyssey 208

  He, Han Emperor 256

  Hedin, Sven 180

  Helian Bobo, chanyu of Da Xia, builds city 261–4

  Heng Mountains 138

  Hercules 15

  herders, wandering 10–29

  Herodotus 92n7, 111, 235

  on Scythians 16, 17

  Herrmann, Albert, Historical Atlas of China, on Hsiung-nu as Huns 268

  Hohhot 33, 215

  Zhaojun memorial 223–4

  Homeward Bound (TV film) 209, 211

  Honeychurch, William 90–1

  Honoria, persuades Attila to attack Orléans 288–9

  horse-archers see archers, mounted

  horse-based cultures, broken bones 21–2

  horses

  blood-sweating, Ferghana Valley 152, 166, 167, 192

  decorations 233–4

  domestication 11

  Gol Mod 1 242

  Jing increases stud farms 136–7

  Xiongnu raid Jing’s studs 140

  Hou Han Shu see under, Ban Gu

  Hu people, Zhao and 37–8

  Huandi chanyu

  and peace-and-kinship treaty 175–6

  failed China invasion 190

  Huhai, Second Emperor, reign of terror 76–8

  Huhanye, chanyu of eastern Mongolia tribes 193–4, 198

  accedes South to China 194–7

  and Zhaojun 218, 219–20, 224, 225–7

  and Zhizhi 194–5

  returns people to north 199

  revisits Han emperor 211–12

  dies 218

  Hui, son of Empress Lü 100

  Hulugu chanyu, and Li Ling 174

  ‘Hun City’ (Ivolga) 125, 126

  Hungary, Hungary, Huns in 272

  Attila returns, dies 289

  Huns

  Hun (Xwn) people 39

  and Alans 270–1

  at Roman defeat 286, 287

  emerge from Central Asia 265–76

  cross Volga, move west 269–76

  in Hungary 272

  inside Roman Empire 287–8

  raid Rhineland 288

  raid Turkey and Syria 288

  return to eastern steppes 289

  Huns origins controversy 266–9

  descendants of ‘Hiong-nou’, de Guignes on 267–8

  forgotten forebears 275

  probably Turkic stock 276

  Xiongnu as 2–4, 265–9

  Xiongnu and Hun bows, asymmetrical 273

  Xiongnu and Hun cauldrons 273–4

  see also Attila

  Hunye, defecting prince 158

  Huo Guang regent 191

  Huo Qubing

  and Xiongnu wars 155, 158–61

  assaults Black Water fortress 159

  background 155–7

  grave/ monuments 161–2

  hyoid bone mysteries 230–1, 242–3

  Ichise (Yizhixie) chanyu

  power grab 152

  ousts heir Yutan 145

  flees Han assault 163

  death 167

  Ildico 289

  Ili Valley southern Kazakhstan 268

  Xiongnu princess sent 166

  Imperial Russian Geographical Society 7

  Imperial Workshop, Chang’an 242

  Ingram, Isabel, and Ordos Bronzes 36–7

  Inner Mongolia University Hohhot 260

  Iran, Ordos Bronzes 35

  iron replaces bronze, China 46

  iron, trading for 146–7

  Issyk Kul, Kyrgyzstan 33

  Issyk lake, Kazakh 23–5

  Ivolga, southern Siberia, cemetery 125, 126, 159

  Jade Emperor 222

  Jamukha 34

  Jayne, Horace 36

  Ji An, on Hunye 158

  Jia Yi 98

  on subverting Xiongnu 129, 135, 136

  Jin 12th century empire 92

  Jing, emperor 136–7

  Jiuquan 160

  Jizhu, (Laoshang), chanyu 121–2

  death 135

  defeats Yuezhi 133–4

  Jordanes, Gothic historian, on Huns 278

  Jorigt 138

  Julius Caesar 200

  Jurchens 139

  Juyan border fortress 160

  Juyan Lake 160, 180

  Kangju kingdom

  joins Zhizhi, attacks Wusun 198–9

  Zhizhi takes over 201–2

  Kaogong, Ai ‘ear-cup’, found in Noyon Uul 213–14, 228

  Karakorum, Mongol capital 124, 126

  Kassai, Lajos 85

  Kazakh Institute 33

  Kazakhstan 81, 166, 193

  Khangai Mountains 258

  Khasar 34

  Khentii Mountains 124

  Kherlen River 123, 124

  Khökh Tenger (Blue Sky) 232

  Khünüi River 238

  Kitchen Deity 136

  Klopsteg, Paul E., Turkish Archery 85n3

  Kolomyya 272

  Kondratiev, Sergei, and Noyon Uul grave mounds 8–9

  Kossack, Georg, on Xiongnu imitating Chinese culture 246

  Kozlov, Petr 36, 213–14

  and Noyon Uul find 8–9

  tombs 227–8

  Kradin, Nikolai 44

  Kuaiji mountain 70

  Kublai Khan 104, 176–9

  kumiss 24

  Kunyang, great siege 254

  kurgans (grave-mounds) 17–29

  Kuruk river 107

  Kushan empire 43

  labour utilisation, Middle Kingdom 58–9

  lacquered tray, provenance 241–2

  Lanzhou

  to Liaodong, Great Wall 62–3

  to Xinjiang, Great Wall 164–7
r />   Lao Ai 52–4

  Laoshang, (Venerable-Supreme) see Jizhu

  Lattimore, Owen 82, 153

  legalistic period 48–59

  Li Guang, ‘Flying General’ 137–41

  and centre campaign 162–3, 164

  confuses Xiongnu 140–1

  on Xiongnu raids 137

  defeated 151

  Li Guangli, invasion/ migration 166

  Li Ling, general

  and Su Wu 174–6, 179

  defeated, taken hostage 115, 171–6

  defects to Xiongnu 116

  Li Mu, strategy against Xiongnu 41–2

  Li Qian (Rome) 201, 204, 209–10

  see also Zhelai

  Li Si, chancellor 55, 69, 71–5

  Lintao, Xiongnu raid from Ordos 105–6

  Liu Bang see Gaozu

  Liu Bingyi Xuan Emperor 191

  Liu He Emperor 191

  Liu Jing 94, 95–7

  peace-and-kinship treaty 130

  ‘peace’ appeasement 95–100

  Liu Shi, Emperor Yuan 176–9, 198

  Liu Xijun, poem about 217

  Loewe, Michael 180

  Long Cheng (Xiongnu gathering place) 122, 125

  Lop Nor 107

  Loulan, siezed by Xiongnu 107

  Lü Buwei 51–4

  Lü Empress 100–3, 216

  and Modun 100–3

  brutality 100–1

  death 103, 106

  Luandi clan 43

  Luo Ma (Roma) 201

  Luo, Mr 205–8

  Lupicinus, and Visigoth refugees 279–81

  Ma Junwang, on Tong Wan Cheng city 262–4

  Ma Zhiyuan, Autumn in the Han Palace 222

  Maenchen-Helfen, Otto, on sham bows 273

  Maeotic marshes 269

  Mahmoud, bowman 85

  Mangasyn Khuree (Ogre’s Circle) 172

  Mao Jiao 54–5

  Mao Yanshou 221, 222

  Maoqinggou cemetery 35

  Markley, Jonathan

  on Sima Qian 112

  on Sima Qian’s history 132, 136

  Martin, Hélène 242–3

  Marxist history interpretations 82

  Mayer, William, and Ordos Bronzes 36–7

  Meng Tian 99, 197

  and Fusu 71–8

  and Great Wall 62–3

  and Xiongnu tribes 61–2

  border reinstated 151

  Ordos advance 83

  Straight Road see Straight Road

  imprisoned 76

  suicide 77–8

  Meng Yi, chief minister 70–7

  executed 76–77

  Michael 203–4

  see also Xu Zhaoyu

  Miller, Bryan K 35

  on Xiongnu appeasing Chinese 244–5, 246

  Ming Great Wall fortress, as film studio 208, 211

  Mingfei see Zhaojun

  Minusinsk Hollow kurgans 18

  Mirror of Good Governance (Zizhi Tongjian) 41

  mirrors, beliefs 240–1

  Modun, chanyu of Xiongnu 88–93

  son of Tumen 43–5

  and Empress Lü 100–3

  and Tumen 86–8

  and Wen 107–10

  attack-and-retreat on Han 93–5

  attacks Yuezhi 98–9

  defeats Dong 88–9

  government system

  army ‘decimal’ system,’decimal’ system 92

  East West viceroys & chiefs 91–2

  unifies clans 91–3

  reconquers Ordos 99–100

  secretaries 104

  death 109–10

  Modun’s queen 94–5

  Moldova 272

  Mongolia

  Dong Hu 81

  eastern tribes revolt 193–4

  independence 292

  Xianbei rule 261

  script 105

  Mongols

  13th century empire 4, 92

  Xiongnu genetic link 275–6

  Secret History of the Mongols 275

  Mönkhöö (driver) 235

  Murphy, Eileen, on Aymyrlyg excavations 21

  Nazarbayev, Nursultan 24

  Needham, Joseph, Science and Civilisation in China 55–6

  Nestorians 124

  Newton’s Third Law 3

  Nibelungs, Huns attack 288

  Nimi Mad King of Wusun 193

  Ningxia 99

  nomadic empires 81–93

  livestock as wealth 82–3

  Nomgon 172

  North Ossetia-Alania 271

  Noyon Uul (Royal Hills) 227–30

  grave mounds 8–9, 243

  skeletons 8

  treasure/ objects 8–9

  hair braids 9

  Kaogong, Ai ‘ear-cup’ 213–14, 228

  O’Neal, Shaquille 32

  Odbaatar 9, 227

  Odoacer, Roman emperor 289

  Ogedei son of Genghis Khan 90, 123, 124

  Olbia 16

  Old Nie Yi, and trap for Xiongnu 149–50

  Ordos 30–7, 40, 46, 81, 154, 157

  antiquities, collectors and 35–7

  coronet 32–3

  Daodunzi cemetery, grave objects 99–100

  graves 243

  cave homes 263–4

  invasion, First Emperor and 59, 60–75

  Meng Tian’s advance 83

  Modun reconquers 99–100

  Qin straight road 60–9, 78

  northern Xiongnu at 255–6

  Xiongnu relocate to central Mongolia 83

  Ordos Bronze Museum 32–7

  Ordos Bronzes 31–7, 227

  manufacture 37

  trade routes 34–7

  Ordos City 31, 66

  Qin Straight Road 65–9

  Ordos Loop 30–1

  Oriental Holding Group 66

  Orkhon River valley 124, 194

  Orléans, Attila at 289

  Ossetians 270

  Ostrogoths 271

  refugees arrive at Danube 279

  cavalry attacks Romans 284–5, 286–7

  Paludan, Ann 162

  Parthians 200

  passports, Great Wall 182

  pastoral nomads 10–29

  burials 15

  Pazyryk culture 25–9

  cemetery finds 25–6

  People’s Daily, on Dubs-Harris hypothesis 208

  Persian Achaemenids 92

  Peter the Great, Russian eastward expansion 16–17

  Pingcheng 94–5

  pipa (Chinese lute) 221–2

  Plutarch 200

  Polo, Marco 235

  Polosmak, Natalya 27–9

  Priscus, Greek official, visits Attila 288, 289

  Ptolemy, on ‘Khoinoi’ north of Sea of Azov 268–9

  Puyi (last emperor) 36

  Qi, conquest 56

  Qilian 154

  Qilian Mountains 98, 161, 162, 180, 199, 205

  Qin, Shaanxi

  emergence 1–3

  enrichment/ expansion 48–56

  army 55–6

  becomes China, Middle Kingdom 56–7

  Qin Straight Road, Ordos City 65–9

  Rabelais 90

  Rachewiltz, Igor de 89–90

  Red Guards, campaign against old things 262–3

  Roman empire

  Huns and 265–6

  Visigoths and 272, 276–86

  Roman glass bowl, Gol Mod 234–5

  Romania 271

  Visigoths in 278–9

  Romans in China 199–201, 203–11

  and tourism 208–9, 211

  Rome, Chinese names for 201

  Romulus, Roman emperor 289

  Rong and Di tribes, Inner Mongolia 37–81

  campaign against 61

  combining into Xiongnu 81–93

  Roxelani 269

  Rudenko, Sergei 25–6

  Ruga, takes gold to stop raids 288

  Russian eastward expansion 16–17

  Saka see Scythians

  Sand Hill Plot 71–8

  Saracens
, rout Visigoths 286

  Sarmatians 269–70

  Scythes 15

  Scythian art

  Animal Style 28–9

  bronzes 36–7

  gold 17

  Scythians 9, 15–29, 235, 270

  burials 16–29

  culture 15–29

  migrate to Kashmir 134

  settlements 15–29

  slain enemies 40

  tribes, pre-Xiongnu 30–1

  women

  ‘Golden Man’ find 23–5

  tough lives 21–3

  Secret History of the Mongols 33–4

  Segalen, Victor 161

  Selenge River 125

  Seuxie (Souxie) chanyu 242

  Shaanxi, Tong Wan Cheng city 261–4

  Shache uprising crushed by Han 192

  shamans, access to Tenger 90

  Shang Yang 48–50

  Shanggu raid 151

  Shangguan, Han empress dowager 190–1

  Shanxi 138

  Shaoxing 70

  Shark, Mr (Zhang Ziyang, translator) 32–3, 36

  She Yifeng 139

  Shigi Qutuqu 42n

  Shouxiang (Bayan Bulag) 172

  Siberia, Russian eastward expansion 16

  Sichuan, Qin expands to 49

  Silk Road (early routes) 43, 106, 107

  extends west 165–6

  to India 152

  Zhizhi and 201

  Sima Guang (historian) 54, 157

  on centre campaign 163

  on emperor Jing 136

  on flying machine 252–4

  on Han rising power 192

  on Han-Xiongnu wars 160

  on Huhanye in Chang’an 196–7

  on Li Ling 173–6

  on Liu He 191

  on Lü and Modun 102–3

  on Modun and Gaozu 93–100

  on Wang Mang 214

  and Xiongnu 248–9

  on Xiongnu split 197

  on Zhang Sheng’s plot 170–1

  on Zhizhi 201–3

  Zhonghang Yue dialogue 122, 126–7, 129

  Zizhi Tongjian, (The Mirror of Good Government) 41, 43, 44, 61–2

  Sima Qian (historian) 39–40, 48–9, 50–3, 58, 136

  defends Li Ling, castrated 115–18

  Grand Historian, Shi Ji 111–20

  on Dou Xian victory rituals 260

  on Emperor Wen 106

  on Han court women 216

  on Han/ Xiongnu ‘peace’ 95–109

  on Li Guang 137–42

  on Li Ling 172–3

  on Meng Tian 151–2

  on Modun 86–93

  on Wu’s trap for Xiongnu 150

  on Xiongnu split 197

  Shi Ji, Records of the Grand Historian 61–78

  unreliable

  anti-Wu agenda 114, 116–20

  reporting distorted 112–14

  Zhonghang Yue dialogue 122, 127–8, 132

  Sogdia 39

  Song Guorong 204, 208

  spy-in-the-sky machine 252–4

  stationery, wooden 180–1

  Stein, Aurel 36

  Straight Road 60–9, 77, 104, 218, 225, 233

  construction theories 63–9

  maintenance 67

  Ordos City 65–9

  Xianyang to Yellow River 63–9

  Su Wu, general

  Wu and Li Ling 174–6, 179

  and Zhang Sheng’s plot 168–71

  Suide, Ordos 75, 78

  Syrdarya River 198, 268

  Taihu Lake 177

 

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