The Silk Road: A New History

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The Silk Road: A New History Page 42

by Valerie Hansen


  robbers and bandits artwork depicting, 193

  and de Goes, 231

  and diplomatic delegations, 225

  and Dunhuang caves, 188

  and Sogdian traders, 103

  use of Silk Road routes, 238

  and Xuanzang’s travels, 113, 192, 240

  See also raiding

  rock crystal, 155

  Roman Empire

  and diplomatic envoys, 18

  and Dunhuang documents, 197

  intermittent contact with China, 19–21

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 54

  Roman coins in China, 9, 20, color plate 4A

  and Shanpula graveyard

  artifacts, 202

  and silk production, 19

  and Turfan, 97

  Rong Xinjiang, 176, 177, 228

  Rouran confederacy, 55, 75, 94

  Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal, 209

  royal orders. See edicts

  royal silk, 49

  rubies, 156

  Ruins of Desert Cathay (Stein), 173

  Rulers of the Heavens, 169

  Russia, 167, 233

  Rustam (Stein’s assistant), 45, 125

  sabao headmen

  An Jia, 144, 145, color plate 14

  bureaucratic ranking of, 274n11

  etymology of, 265n58, 277n58

  Faxian on, 160

  and migrant populations, 239

  Shi Wirkak, 146

  and Sogdian religious

  practices, 118

  and Zoroastrian religious

  practices, 98

  Samarkand, 115

  and the Afrasiab murals, 125, 128, 129, 138–39

  and diplomatic envoys, 127–29, 128, 241

  and the horse trade, 81

  and Iranian merchants, 3

  languages of, 56–57

  and migrant populations, 239

  and the Mount Mugh letters, 129–39

  Muslim conquest of, 22

  and the Panjikent excavations, 121–26, 124, 134–35, 138–39

  and popular perceptions of the Silk Road, 6

  and private mail, 112

  and Silk Road routes, 10

  and Sogdian culture, 4–5, 31, 43, 113–20, 121

  and Turfan, 83, 94, 98

  and Xuanzang’s travels, 113–16, 121

  Sängim, 74

  Sanskrit

  and birch bark documents, 10

  and Buddhism, 47, 56

  and Dunhuang cave documents, 174, 181, 187, 240–41

  and Khotanese, 24, 203, 210, 211, 220

  and Kumarajiva, 56–57, 69–70

  and languages of Kroraina Kingdom, 44

  The Mahabharata (Sanskrit epic), 52

  and Niya documents, 51–52

  and Stein, 12, 174

  and Tibetans, 184–85

  and Tocharian, 72

  and Turfan, 85

  word for “China,” 19

  and Yijing’s travels, 164

  sapphires, 156

  Sarvastivadin school of Buddhism, 52, 66

  Sasanian Empire

  coins of, 20, 94–96, 122–23, 156, color plate 4B

  refugees from Islamic conquest, 149

  and Sogdian culture, 120

  and Turfan, 98

  Satuq Bughra Khan, 226, 234, color plate 16A

  scale fees, 99–102, 100–102

  scribes, 216–17, 220

  The Scripture of the Benevolent Kings (Buddhist text), 90

  sculptures, 212

  seashells, 13

  sea travel, 160–65, 162–63

  Second Central Asian Expedition, 167, 168

  Semireche, 196

  Serindia (Stein), 35, 176

  shamanism, 229

  Shamasena, 52

  Shan, Kingdom of, 41

  Shandong Peninsula, 161–64

  Shang dynasty, 13, 235–36

  Shanpula, 199, 201, 204

  Shanshan Kingdom, 26, 28–29, 40, 42, 55. See also Kroraina Kingdom

  Shatial site, 31

  Shi Le, 117

  Shi Pantuo, 85

  Shi Randian, 104

  Shiva, 122

  Shi Wirkak, 143, 146, 147

  shizhong, 44

  Shouchang, 185

  Sidaka, 215–16

  Siddhabhadra, 211

  Sieg, Emil, 70–73, 211

  Siegling, Wilhelm, 70–73, 211

  silk

  and Dandan Uiliq painting, 213

  and diplomatic envoys, 225–26

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 38–40, 40, 42–43, 49–51

  monetary value of, 96, 103, 192–93, 225–26, color plate 5A

  production of, 19–20 “royal silk,” 49

  and Samarkand, 138

  and the Sogdian Ancient Letters, 119

  spread of silk technology, 238

  and the Tang dynasty, 184

  and Turfan, 91

  Silk Road, routes of, color plate 2–3

  invention of the term, 6–8

  of Kucha region, 58–59

  main Eurasian routes, 6–7

  and pilgrimages to India, 162–63

  popular perceptions of, 6–10

  of Taklamakan desert, 6, 22–23

  of Turfan region, 86–87

  The Silk Road (Hedin), 8

  Silla, 165

  silver

  and Hejiacun Village Hoard, 153, 155

  ingots, 217

  tax biscuits, 152, 157

  See also silver under coins entry

  Sims-Williams, Nicholas, 116

  Skjærvø, Prods Oktor, 210

  slavery, 3, 45, 48, 104, 183–84, 224

  Small Goose Pagoda, 151

  Sogdians and Sogdiana, 115

  and the Afrasiab murals, 125, 128, 129, 138–39, color plate 11B

  and An Jia’s tomb, color plate 14

  and the An Lushan rebellion, 157–58

  and anti-foreign sentiment, 159–60

  and Chang’an, 103, 143–47, 145, 147, 149–50, 157–59

  and Christianity, 109

  and cultural exchange, 4–5

  and diplomatic envoys, 17

  and Dunhuang cave

  documents, 181, 182, 195–96, 241

  and Hejiacun Village Hoard, 154–55, 155

  and the horse trade, 81

  and Karakorum Highway

  inscriptions, 31

  and Khotanese, 210

  and Kumarajiva, 56

  languages of, 56, 71–72, 113

  and Loulan documents, 43

  and migrant populations, 22–23, 239

  and the Mount Mugh letters, 129–39

  and the Panjikent excavations, 121–26, 124, 134–35, 138–39

  and Samarkand, 4–5, 31, 43, 113–20, 121

  Sogdian Ancient Letters, 116–20, 120–21, 138, 160, 173, 239

  and travels to India, 164–65

  and Turfan, 21, 83, 85–86, 91, 98–99

  and Xuanzang’s travels, 113–16

  Song dynasty, 94, 192, 222

  Soviet Union, 130

  Sri Lanka, 156, 160, 161

  statues, 204–5, 206

  Steel Road, 113

  Stein, Aurel

  and Astana graveyard site, 84

  cataloguing of finds, 208

  and Dandan Uiliq, 217–18

  and the Dunhuang caves, 167–77, 172, 180–81, 196–97

  funding for expeditions, 212

  and itinerant traders, 237–38

  and Khotan, 176–77, 207, 209, 212

  and Kroraina Kingdom sites, 12–13, 25–27, 30, 32–38, 42–43, 45–47, 53–54

  and Rawak, 204–5, 205, 206

  and the Sogdian Ancient Letters, 116

  and Turfan, 93, 95

  and Xinjiang province, 233

  on Xuanzang’s travels, 85

  steles, 149, 150

  stupas

  of Karakorum Highway, 30, 31

  at Kizil caves, 61–62, 62

  at Niya, 33–35, 52–54, 53, 2
05, color plate 6

  at Rawak, 204–6, 205, 207

  subsistence economy, 43, 79, 197, 224, 237

  Sufism, 232–34

  Sui dynasty, 79, 85, 141, 147, 168–69

  Sumatra, 164

  Supis, 49, 51, 54

  Suvarnadeva, 77

  Suzong, 107–8

  Syrians, 231

  Taizong, Tang-dynasty Emperor, 125, 148, 151, 211

  Tajikistan, 130

  Taklamakan Desert

  and Dandan Uiliq, 212

  and de Goes’ caravan, 232

  and distribution of languages, 72, 75

  glacial rivers of, 58

  and Han dynasty trade, 18

  and Hedin’s explorations, 11–12, 242, color plate 10

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 27, 33, 55

  and the Mongol Empire, 229

  and oasis towns, 8

  and Silk Road routes, 6, 9–10, 22–23

  and Turfan, 82

  withdrawal of Chinese military, 160

  Tamerlane, 231

  Tamjaka, 47

  Tamluk, 160, 164

  Tang Code, 92, 96, 148, 183–84

  Tang dynasty

  and art trade, 21

  and Central Asian economy, 107

  and Chang’an, 141–43, 147–59, 166

  and contracts, 103–4, 192–94

  and Dunhuang cave

  documents, 184–85, 186–88

  and Gaochang City, 105

  and Khotan, 79, 211, 226

  and Kucha, 79–82, 211

  military expenditures, 8

  monetary system, 184

  and moneylending, 151–52

  and Samarkand, 137

  and Sogdiana, 113, 116, 129

  “Tang Barbie,” color plate 8

  and taxation, 184, 187, 214–16

  and trade disputes, 149

  and Turfan, 21, 82, 85, 88–89, 91–92, 94, 96–98, 103–8, 105, 111, 211

  and volume of Silk Road trade, 237

  and Zhang-family rule at Dunhuang, 190

  Tanguts, 190–91, 228

  Tang Zhangru, 94

  Tarim River, 58, 60

  Tarxun, 135

  taxation

  and the An Lushan rebellion, 157

  cloth as payment, 106–7

  and coins, 95, 97

  and Dandan Uiliq, 214–17

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 48

  and Kucha, 77

  and Loulan documents, 43

  and payments to soldiers, 215

  and the Tang dynasty, 184, 187, 214–16

  tax biscuits, 152, 157

  tax documents as evidence, 238

  and Turfan, 91–92, 96, 99–102, 100–102, 108

  tea, 233

  technology

  availability of Dunhuang

  documents, 176

  and locating sites, 212

  and migrant populations, 4, 239

  paper-making technology, 137–39, 238

  silk technology, 238

  technological transfer, 137–39

  terra-cotta soldiers, 141

  textiles

  cotton, 38, 39, 138, 195

  and the Dunhuang economy, 195

  imported goods, 233

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 38, 39, 40, 41–43, 49–51

  of Mongols, 231

  nomadic themes in, 203

  Shanpula burial garb, 204

  and the Sogdians, 119

  and the Tang monetary system, 184

  tax cloth, 106–7

  and Turfan markets, 106–7

  See also silk

  Thailand, 156

  Theodosius II, 97

  Thierry, François, 76

  Thousand Buddha (Quianfodong) site, 172

  The Thousand-Character Classic. 180

  Three Realms Monastery, Dunhuang, 178–79, 181, 222

  Tianshan Mountains, 113–14

  Tibet and Tibetan Empire

  and the An Lushan rebellion, 184–85, 212

  and Buddhist pilgrimages, 221

  challenge to Tang dynasty, 80, 107, 108, 157

  collapse of, 216

  and diplomatic envoys, 192

  and Dunhuang cave

  documents, 169, 185–87

  and Khotan, 212

  and the Sogdian Ancient Letters, 119

  Tibetan language, 180–81, 186–87, 211, 240–41

  Times of London, 8

  Timur the Lame, 231

  Tocharian language, 13, 44, 71–74

  Tocharoi people, 71, 72

  Tokmak, 114, 115

  Tongzhou, Shaanxi, 144

  topazes, 155–56

  tortoiseshell, 20, 165

  tourism

  and Astana graveyard, 93, 172

  and desert ruins, 10

  and Jiaohe ruins, 91

  and Khotan, 199, 233

  and the Kizil caves, 57–58

  and mazar shrines, 234, color plate 16A, color plate 16B

  and Melikawat ruins, 207

  Tragbal Pass, 27

  transformation texts, 76–77, 179, 188

  translations, 214

  travel passes (guosuo)

  and diplomatic envoys, 17

  of Kucha, 57, 77–80, 78, 82

  at Niya, 36–37

  and sea travel, 165

  as source of evidence, 238

  and supervision of trade, 237

  and Turfan, 89, 103–4

  tribute, 231

  Trinkler, Emil, 212

  Trombert, Éric, 82, 184

  Turco-Sogdian, 195–96

  Turdi, 212

  Turfan

  and Astana graveyard site, 84, 86–87, 93–99, 151

  burial practices of, 92–94, 98–99

  and caravan trade, 88, 103–7, 232

  climate of, 11, 21, 92–93

  coinage of, 99, 100–102, 103–7, 111

  coins of, color plate 4B

  and diplomatic envoys, 192

  foods of, 83

  and Gaochang city, 105

  languages of, 72, 74–75

  religions of, 182, 228, 231

  and Sogdians, 21, 83, 85–86, 91, 98–99

 

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