The Silk Road: A New History

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The Silk Road: A New History Page 43

by Valerie Hansen


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

  taxation in, 91–92, 96, 99–102, 100–102, 108

  textile finds from, 14

  tomb figurines, 140

  and tourism, 10, color plate 9

  and trade regulation, 237

  and Uighur refugees, 190–91

  and Xuanzang’s travels, 83–91

  Turgesh, 135–36

  Turkic languages, 182, 233–34

  Turkish kaghanates, 75, 79

  Turks, 120, 127, 135, 226–27

  Twgrhy language, 71–72, 211, 257n30, 258n35

  Uddyana Kingdom, 94

  Uighur kaghanates, 108–11, 190–92, 196, 216, 220, 222, 224, 226

  Uighur language

  and Dunhuang cave

  documents, 181, 195–96, 241

  and Khotanese, 199, 211, 234

  and Manichaeism, 108, 109, 110

  and the Qing dynasty, 232–33

  spoken, 168–69

  and Tocharian, 71–74

  and Turfan, 108

  from Yarkand, 228

  Uighurs

  and the An Lushan rebellion, 157

  defeat of Tibetans, 218

  and diplomatic envoys, 191, 192, 224

  and distribution of languages, 73 (see also Uighur language)

  and Dunhuang, 168, 190–91, 216

  and Khotan, 226, 233–34

  Kirghiz conquest of, 108, 190, 216, 226

  and Kucha, 80

  and Manichaeism, 108–11, 109, 228

  mercenaries, 108

  tensions with Han population, 93

  and Turfan, 83, 108–10

  and Zhang Yichao, 189

  Umayyad Caliphate, 129

  Urumqi Museum, 94

  Vagiti Vadhaga, 209

  Vaissière, Étienne de la, 119

  Vajrayana, 221

  Vandak, 85–86, 86–87

  Varkhuman, 125, 127, 129

  vinaya law, 51, 79, 221

  Visa Sambhava, 222, 223, 227

  Visa Sura, 227

  Vreshmanvandak, 146

  Wang Binghua, 41

  Wang Fengxian, 104

  Wang Mang, 36

  Wang Pa-kyau, 225

  Wang Yuanlu, 169, 173–74, 177–78, 180

  warlords, 233–34

  Wei dynasty, 75

  Wei River, 166

  Wei Zhuang, 166

  Western Jin dynasty, 44

  Western Liao dynasty, 229

  Western Market (Chang’an), 141, 142, 148–49, 165–66

  Western Paradise, 182

  Western Turks, 88, 90, 114, 121

  White Huns, 120–21

  Wild Horse Spring, 88

  willow branch documents, 132, 134, 137

  wonder tales, 157–58

  woodblock printing, 138, 179, 236

  wooden documents and Buddhist texts, 52

  and burial practices, 99

  and Khotan, 207

  and Kuchean language, 70, 77

  legal documents, 46, 214

  and Loulan site, 36–38, 42–43, 45

  and Niya site, 21, 25, 25–26, 33–35, 46, 46, 51–52

  requisition documents, 16

  travel passes, 57

  willow branch documents, 132, 134, 137

  and Xuanquan site, 15, 241

  wool, 13, 40, 41, 50, 119, 196, 201, 202, 239, 240

  World War I, 64

  Wu, Han-dynasty Emperor, 14

  Wuhan University, 94

  Wuqia hoard, 98

  Wuwei, 85, 118, 119, 144

  wuzhu coins, 36, 97, 250n30, 255n90

  Xi’an, 142

  archeology in, 143, 152

  climate of, 151

  and Kumarajiva’s travels, 68

  and railroad lines, 8

  and religious institutions, 150, 182

  and Silk Road art, 239–40

  and Silk Road routes, 9

  tombs of foreign residents, 22

  tourist attractions, 141, 149

  and Xuanzang’s travels, 85

  See also Chang’an

  Xidir (Xizir) Khoja, 111

  Xin (“New”) Dynasty, 36

  Xinjiang

  archeologists in, 93–94

  coins of, 82

  division of, 229

  and grasslands, 65

  and the Han dynasty, 37

  and the Kizil caves, 57–59

  and migrant populations, 50

  and the Qing dynasty, 233

  and Silk Road routes, 9

  and tax cloth, 107

  and Turkish conquests, 75

  Xinjiang Museum, 38

  Xiongnu confederation

  cooperation with Sogdians, 17

  and diplomatic envoys, 236

  and distribution of languages, 73

  and the Han dynasty, 14

  and the Huns, 117

  and Kucha, 65, 73

  and Kushan migrants, 32

  and Loulan, 35

  and Turfan, 90–91

  Xixia, 191, 228

  Xiyu region, 9

  Xuanquan, Dunhuang, 14–15, 16, 18, 241

  Xuanzang

  account of travels, 83–91, 240

  and Chang’an, 85, 141, 144, 151

  and Khotan, 200, 207, 211

  robbed, 192

  and Sanskrit, 85, 187

  and Sogdiana, 113–16, 121

  Stein’s invocation of, 174, 176

  Xuanzong, Tang-dynasty Emperor, 107, 157

  Yaghnob Valley, 113

  Yang Guifei, 107–8, 157

  Yangzhou, 147, 164

  Yangzi River, 141

  Yanqi, 57–58, 70, 72–75, 79

  Yanshuigou, 82

  Yao Xing, 68, 69

  Ya’qub Beg, 233

  Yarkand, 59, 90–91, 228–29, 231–32

  Yarkand River, 59–60

  Yarlung dynasty (Tibet), 184, 187

  Yazdegerd III, 149

  Ye Changchi, 169

  Yijing, 162–63, 164–65

  Yingpan, 27, 40–42, 41

  Yizhou, 192

  yong taxes, 152

  Yoshida Yutaka, 98, 216

  Yotkan, 199, 207, 208

  Ysambasta, 210

  Ysarkula, 210

  Yuan dynasty, 230–31

  Yuezhi people, 14, 33, 71

  Yurungkash River, 203, 207

  Zarathustra, 5, 30

  Zerafshan River, 121, 130

  Zhang Huaiding, 190

  Zhang Huaishen, 188–89, 190, 191

  Zhang Qian, 14, 33, 236

  Zhang Yichao, 187–88, 189, 190, 191

  “Zhang Yichao Transformation Text,” 188

  Zhang Zhan, 218

  Zhematvandak, 146

  Zhi Qian, 32

  Zhou dynasty, 79

  Zoroastrianism

  and the Afrasiab murals, 128, 128

  and An Jia’s tomb, color plate 15

  and Chang’an, 149, 159

  and Dunhuang cave

  documents, 167, 181, 241

  and funerary practices, 118, 123, 123, 123–25, 143–46, 145, 147, 240

  and the Huang Chao rebellion, 165

  and immigrant populations, 4–5

  and Islamic conquest of Samarkand, 137

  and Kroraina Kingdom, 30

  and the Mount Mugh excavations, 134–35, 136–37

  and Sasanian coins, 95, color plate 4B

  and Sogdian migrants, 23

  spread with migrant populations, 139

  and Turfan, 95, 98, 108

  Zou (moneylender), 96

  zu taxes, 152

  Table of Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Note on Scholarly Conventions

  Timeline

  Introduction

  CHAPTER 1 At the Crossroads of Central Asia

  The Kingdom of Kroraina

  CHAPTER 2 Gateway to the Languages of the Silk Road

  Kucha and the Caves of Kizil

&
nbsp; CHAPTER 3 Midway Between China and Iran

  Turfan

  CHAPTER 4 Homeland of the Sogdians, the Silk Road Traders

  Samarkand and Sogdiana

  CHAPTER 5 The Cosmopolitan Terminus of the Silk Road

  Historic Chang’an, Modern-day Xi’an

  CHAPTER 6 The Time Capsule of Silk Road History

  The Dunhuang Caves

  CHAPTER 7 Entryway into Xinjiang for Buddhism and Islam

  Khotan

  Conclusion

  The History of the Overland Routes through Central Asia

  Notes

  Art Credits

  Index

  page 144

 

 

 


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