Calling the Soul of the Dead
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Book Series
Silk Road Studies, vol. 14
The Yuezhi. Origin, Migration and the Conquest of Northern Bactria
Craig Benjamin
- Pages: xviii + 245 p.
- Size:156 x 234 mm
- Language(s):English
- Publication Year:2007
- € 50,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
- ISBN: 978-2-503-52429-0
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- € 50,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
- ISBN: 978-2-503-57388-5
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Summary
This book provides a detailed narrative history of the dynasty
and confederation of the Yuezhi, whose migration from western China
to the northern border of present-day Afghanistan resulted
ultimately in the creation of the Kushan Empire. Although the
Yuezhi have long been recognised as the probable ancestors of the
Kushans, they have generally only been considered as a prelude to
the principal subject of Kushan history, rather than as a
significant and influential people in their own right. The evidence
seemed limited and ambiguous, but is actually surprisingly
extensive and detailed and certainly sufficient to compile a
comprehensive chronological political history of the Yuezhi during
the first millennium BCE. The book analyses textual, numismatic and
archaeological evidence in an attempt to explain the probable
origin of the Yuezhi, their relationship with several Chinese
dynasties, their eventual military defeat and expulsion from the
Gansu by the Xiongnu, their migration through the Ili Valley,
Ferghana and Sogdia to northern Bactria, and their role in the
conquest of the former Greco-Bactria state. All of these events
were bound up with broader cultural and political developments in
ancient Central Asia and show the extraordinary interconnectedness
of the Eurasian historical processes. The domino-effect of the
migration of the Yuezhi led to significant changes in the broader
Eurasian polity.