آي خانم
آي خانم | |
الاسم البديل | Seleneia, Eukratideia, Alexandria-Oxus |
---|---|
المكان | ولاية تخار، أفغانستان |
المنطقة | باكتريا |
الإحداثيات | 37°09′53.7″N 69°24′31.4″E / 37.164917°N 69.408722°E |
النوع | Settlement |
التاريخ | |
تأسس | circa 280 BC, 3rd century BC |
هـُـجـِر | Possibly between 145 and 120 BC |
الفترات | Hellenistic |
الثقافات | Greek |
ملاحظات حول الموقع | |
تواريخ الحفريات | بين 1964 and 1978 |
الأثريون | Paul Bernard |
الحالة | Ruined |
آي خانم ( Ai-Khanoum ويعني حرفياً “سيدة القمر” بالأوزبكية) (باليونانية: Κυρία της Σελήνης)، ربما كانت أوكراتيديا Eucratideia التاريخية،[1] كانت واحدة من المدن الرئيسية ولغز Greco-Bactrian Kingdom and of the Indo-Greek kings when they ruled both in Bactria and northwestern India, from the time of Demetrius to the time of Eucratides (170–145 BC). Alexander the Great is believed to have founded the city in around 327 BC.[2] The city is located in Takhar Province, northern Afghanistan, at the confluence of the Panj River and the Kokcha River, both tributaries of the Amu Darya, historically known as the Oxus. It is on the lower of two major sets of routes (lowland and highland) which connect Western Asia to the Khyber Pass which gives road access to جنوب آسيا.
Ai-Khanoum was one of the focal points of Hellenism in the East, combined in both Greek and Persian style, the magnificent Royal Palace was built in the Achaemenid style, as discovered by Bernard, while clear Greek influence is also noticeable, with the large amphitheater and several Hellenic temples also found. For nearly two centuries, Ai-Khanoum remained the principal city of Bactria, serving as the capital of the Bactrian kingdom, until its annihilation by nomadic invaders around 145 BC about the time of the death of Eukratides the Great.[3]
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الاكتشاف
On a hunting trip in the 1960s, the Afghan Khan Gholam Serwar Nasher discovered ancient artifacts of Ai Khanom and invited Princeton archaeologist Daniel Schlumberger with his team to examine Ai-Khanoum.[4] It was soon found to be the historical Alexandria on the Oxus, also possibly later named اروکرتیه Arukratiya or Eucratidia), one of the primary cities of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom. Some of those artifacts were displayed in Europe and USA museums in 2004. The site was subsequently excavated through archaeological work by a French Archaeological Delegation in Afghanistan (DAFA) mission under Paul Bernard between 1964 and 1978, as well as Soviet scientists. The work had to be abandoned with the onset of the Soviet–Afghan War, during which the site was looted and used as a battleground, leaving very little of the original material. In 2013, the film-maker David Adams produced a six-part documentary mini-series about the ancient city entitled Alexander's Lost World.[بحاجة لمصدر]
الموقع الاستراتيجي
The choice of this site for the foundation of a city was probably guided by several factors. The region, irrigated by the Oxus, had a rich agricultural potential. Mineral resources were abundant in the back country towards the Hindu Kush, especially the famous so-called "rubies" (actually, spinel) from Badakshan, and gold. Its location at the junction between Bactrian territory and nomad territories to the north, ultimately allowed access to commerce with the Chinese empire. Lastly, Ai-Khanoum was located at the very doorstep of Ancient India, allowing it to interact directly with the Indian subcontinent.[بحاجة لمصدر]
مدينة يونانية في باكتريا
Numerous artefacts and structures were found, pointing to a high Hellenistic culture, combined with Eastern influences. "It has all the hallmarks of a Hellenistic city, with a Greek theatre, gymnasium and some Greek houses with colonnaded courtyards".[5] Overall, Aï-Khanoum was an extremely important Greek city (1.5 sq kilometer), characteristic of the Seleucid Empire and then the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom. It seems the city was destroyed, never to be rebuilt, about the time of the death of the Greco-Bactrian king Eucratides around 145 BC.[بحاجة لمصدر]
Ai-Khanoum may have been the city in which Eucratides was besieged by Demetrius, before he successfully managed to escape to ultimately conquer India (Justin).[بحاجة لمصدر]
العمارة
The mission unearthed various structures, some of them perfectly Hellenistic, some other integrating elements of Persian architecture:
- Two-miles long ramparts, circling the city
- A citadel with powerful towers (20 × 11 metres at the base, 10 meters in height) and ramparts, established on top of the 60 meters-high hill in the middle of the city
- A Classical theater, 84 meters in diameter with 35 rows of seats, that could sit 4,000-6,000 people, equipped with three loges for the rulers of the city. Its size was considerable by Classical standards, larger than the theater at Babylon, but slightly smaller than the theater at Epidaurus.
- A huge palace in Greco-Bactrian architecture, somehow reminiscent of formal Persian palatial architecture
- A gymnasium (100 × 100m), one of the largest of Antiquity. A dedication in Greek to Hermes and Herakles was found engraved on one of the pillars. The dedication was made by two men with Greek names (Triballos and Strato, son of Strato).
- Various temples, in and outside the city. The largest temple in the city apparently contained a monumental statue of a seated Zeus, but was built on the Zoroastrian model (massive, closed walls instead of the open column-circled structure of Greek temples).
- A mosaic representing the Macedonian sun, acanthus leaves and various animals (crabs, dolphins etc...)
- Numerous remains of Classical Corinthian columns
Architectural antefixae with Hellenistic "Flame palmette" design, Ai-Khanoum.
Winged antefix, a type only known from Ai-Khanoum.
بقايا التماثيل
Various sculptural fragments were also found, in a rather conventional, classical style, rather impervious to the Hellenizing innovations occurring at the same time in the Mediterranean world.
Of special notice, a huge foot fragment in excellent Hellenistic style was recovered, which is estimated to have belonged to a 5-6 meter tall statue (which had to be seated to fit within the height of the columns supporting the Temple). Since the sandal of the foot fragment bears the symbolic depiction of Zeus' thunderbolt, the statue is thought to have been a smaller version of the Statue of Zeus at Olympia.
Also found among the sculptural remains were:
- A statue of a standing female in a rather archaic chiton
- The face of a man, sculpted in stucco
- An unfinished statue of a young naked man with wreath
- A gargoyle head representing the Greek cook-slave
- A frieze of a naked man, possibly the god Hermes, wearing a chlamys
- A hermaic sculpture of an old man thought to be a master of the gymnasium, where it was found. He used to hold a long stick in his left hand, symbol of his function.
Due to the lack of proper stones for sculptural work in the area of Ai-Khanoum, unbaked clay and stucco modeled on a wooden frame were often used, a technique which would become widespread in Central Asia and the East, especially in Buddhist art. In some cases, only the hands and feet would be made in marble.
Stucco face found in the administrative palace. Ai-Khanoum, 2nd century BC
بقايا النقوش
Various inscriptions in Classical, non-barbarized, Greek have been found in Ai-Khanoum.
- On a Herõon (funerary monument), identified in Greek as the tomb of Kineas (also described as the oikistes (founder) of the Greek settlement) and dated to 300-250 BC, an inscription has been found describing Delphic maxims:
- παῖς ὢν κόσμιος γίνου,
- ἡβῶν ἐγκρατής,
- μέσος δίκαιος,
- πρεσβύτης εὔβουλος,
- τελευτῶν ἄλυπος.[7]
- "Païs ôn kosmios ginou (As children, learn good manners)
- hèbôn enkratès, (as young men, learn to control the passions)
- mesos dikaios (in middle age, be just)
- presbutès euboulos (in old age, give good advice)
- teleutôn alupos. (then die, without regret.)"
The precepts were placed by a Greek named Clearchos, who may or may not have been Clearchus of Soli the disciple of Aristotle,[8] who, according to the same inscription, had copied them from Delphi:
- ἀνδρῶν τοι σοφὰ ταῦτα παλαιοτέρων ἀνάκει[τα]ι
- ῥήματα ἀριγνώτων Πυθοὶ ἐν ἠγαθέαι·
- ἔνθεν ταῦτ[α] Κλέαρχος ἐπιφραδέως ἀναγράψας
- εἵσατο τηλαυγῆ Κινέου ἐν τεμένει.[7]
- "These wise commandments of men of old
- - Words of well-known thinkers - stand dedicated
- In the most holy Pythian shrine
- From there Klearchos, having copied them carefully, set them up, shining from afar, in the sanctuary of Kineas"
- Remains of some papyrus manuscripts, the imprint of which were left in the thin earth of brick walls, containing unknown philosophical dialogues on the theory of ideas, thought to be the only surviving remain of an Aristotelian dialogue, possibly the Sophist, where Xenocrates, another philosopher, present his theory of ideas.[9]
- Various Greek inscriptions were also found in the Treasury of the palace, indicating the contents (money, imported olive oil...) of various vases, and names of the administrators in charge of them. The hierarchy of these administrators appears to be nearly identical to that in the Mediterranean Greek areas. From the names mentioned in these inscriptions, it appears that the directors of the Treasury were Greek, but that lower administrators had Bactrian names.[9] Three signatories had Greek names (Kosmos, Isidora, Nikeratos), one a Macedonian or Thracian name (Lysanias), and two Bactrian names (Oxuboakes, Oxubazes).
One of these economic inscriptions relates in Greek the deposit of olive oil jars in the treasury:
- "In the year 24, on ....;
- an olive oil (content);
- the partially empty (vase) A (contains) oil transferred from
- two jars by Hippias
- the hemiolios; and did seal:
- Molossos (?) for jar A, and Strato (?) for jar B (?)"[9]
The last of the dates on these jars has been computed to 147 BC, suggesting that Ai-Khanoum was destroyed soon after that date.
اللقى
Numerous Greco-Bactrian coins were found, down to Eucratides, but none of them later. Ai-Khanoum also yielded unique Greco-Bactrian coins of Agathocles, consisting of six Indian-standard silver drachms depicting Hindu deities. These are the first known representations of Vedic deities on coins, and they display early Avatars of Vishnu: Balarama-Samkarshana and Vasudeva-Krishna, and are thought to correspond to the first Greco-Bactrian attempts at creating an Indian-standard coinage as they invaded northern India.[بحاجة لمصدر]
Among other finds:
- A round medallion plate describing the goddess Cybele on a chariot, in front of a fire altar, and under a depiction of Helios
- A fully preserved bronze statue of Herakles
- Various golden serpentine arm jewellery and earrings
- Some Indian artefacts, found in the treasure room of the city, probably brought back by Eucratides from his campaigns
- A toilet tray representing a seated Aphrodite
- A mold representing a bearded and diademed middle-aged man
Various artefacts of daily life are also clearly Hellenistic: sundials, ink wells, tableware. An almost life-sized dark green glass phallus with a small owl on the back side and other treasures are said to have been discovered at Ai-Khanoum, possibly along with a stone with an inscription, which was not recovered. The artefacts have now been returned to the Kabul Museum after several years in Switzerland by Paul Bucherer-Dietschi, Director of the Swiss Afghanistan Institute.[10]
Imprint from a mold found in Ai-Khanoum. 3rd-2nd century BC.[11]
Ai-Khanoum ivory statuette. Temple of Indented Niches.[12]
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التجارة مع البحر المتوسط
The presence of olive oil jars at Ai-Khanoum indicates that this oil was imported from the Mediterranean, as its only possible source would have been the Aegean Basin or Syria. This suggests important trade contacts with the Mediterranean, through long and expensive land routes.[13]
اتصالات مع الهند
Several Indian artefacts were found among the archaeological remains of Ai-Khanoum, especially a narrative plate made of shell inlaid with various materials and colors, thought to represent the Indian myth of Kuntala.[14] Also, numerous Indian punch-marked coins were found.[15]
In Ai-Khanoum remarkable Greek coins were also found, of one of the last Greco-Bactrian kings, Agathocles of Bactria (ruled 190-180 BC). They are Indian-standard square coins bearing the representations of Hindu deities, which have been variously interpreted as Vishnu, Shiva, Vasudeva, Balarama. Altogether, six such Indian-standard silver drachmas in the name of Agathocles were discovered at Ai-Khanoum in 1970.[16][17][18] Some other coins by Agathocles are also thought to represent the Buddhist lion and the Indian goddess Lakshmi.[18]
الأثر على الفن الهندي
According to John Boardman, Ai-Khanoum may have been one of the conduits for some art influence into ancient India, though these influences and their sources are "not always properly identified or yet identifiable".[19] There are three competing scholarly views: one originated by early scholars such as Percy Brown where Indian architecture was due to immigration of western craftsmen, second by later scholars such as John Irwin who favor mostly indigenous inspiration and third such as S.P. Gupta who favor a combination.[19] Persia, states Boardman, did not have a stone tradition of its own that can be traced, but there is evidence that "Persian bases of a plain half round torus" combined with Corinthian capitals existed there, and there is evidence that India had an intricate wooden architecture tradition about the same time. It is possible that Ai-Khanoum, a Greek city of Bactria in 3rd-century BC, could have provided the conduit to connect the Hellenistic and Indian artists. However, Persepolis fell about 80 years before the first Buddhist stone architecture appeared, which leaves the question whether knowledge was preserved over the generations between Persepolis to the west of Ai-Khanoum and the Mauryans to its east.[19]
العملات
Many Seleucid and Bactrian coins were found at Ai-Khanoum, as were ten blank planchets, indicating that there was a mint in the city.[20] Ai-Khanoum apparently had a city symbol (a triangle within a circle, with various variations), which was found imprinted on bricks coming from the oldest buildings of the city.
The same symbol was used on various Seleucid eastern coins, suggesting that they were probably minted in Ai-Khanoum. Numerous Seleucid coins were thus reattributed to the Ai-Khanoum mint rather recently, with the conclusion that Ai-Khanoum was probably a larger minting center than even Bactra.[21]
The coins found in Ai-Khanoum start with those of Seleucus, but end abruptly with those of Eucratides, suggesting that the city was conquered at the end of his rule.
غزوات البدو
The invading Indo-European nomads from the north (the Scythians and then the Yuezhi) crossed the Oxus and subdued Bactria about 135 BC. It is likely that the city itself fell during a major siege, due to the presence of arrowheads in the city walls alongside a colossal stone projectile in the main cathedral, suggesting that the invaders had the means of constructing siege weaponry.[22]
It seems the city was totally abandoned between 140 and 120 BC following the Yuezhi invasion. There is evidence of huge fires in all the major buildings of the city, however there remains evidence that the city was temporarily re-inhabited following the fire prior to being totally abandoned.[22]
Ai-Khanoum was likely affected as many nomadic invasions passed through across through the Hindu Kush passes. In 1838 a Lieutenant Wood heard local people refer to the site as "Barbarrah".[23] As with other archaeological sites such as Begram or Hadda, the Ai-Khanoum site has been pillaged during the long phase of war in Afghanistan since the fall of the Communist government.[بحاجة لمصدر]
الأهمية
The findings are of considerable importance, as no remains of the Greco-Bactrian and Indo-Greek civilizations had been uncovered in the East (beyond the abundant coinage) until this discovery, which led some to speak of a "Bactrian mirage."[بحاجة لمصدر]
Ai-Khanoum was a center of Hellenistic culture at the doorstep of India, and there was a strong reciprocal awareness between the two areas. A few years after the foundation of the city, around 258 BC, the Indian Emperor Ashoka was carving a rock inscription in Greek and Aramaic addressed to the Greeks in the region, the Kandahar Edict of Ashoka, in the nearby city of Kandahar.[24]
The discovery of Ai-Khanoum also gives a new perspective on the influence of Greek culture in the East, and reaffirms the influence of the Greeks on the development of Greco-Buddhist art.[25]
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انظر أيضاً
- Seleucid Empire
- Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
- Indo-Greek Kingdom
- Yuezhi
- Kushan Empire
- Indo-Scythians
- List of cities founded by Alexander the Great
- Takht-i Sangin
الهامش
- ^ Bell, George. "Journal of the Royal Society of Arts". Royal Society of Arts, 1970. p. 445 JSTOR 41370364
- ^ Martinez-Seve, Laurianne (2014). "The Spatial Organization of Ai Khanoum, a Greek City in Afghanistan". American Journal of Archaeology. 118 (2): 267–283. doi:10.3764/aja.118.2.0267.
- ^ Bernard, P. (1994): "The Greek Kingdoms of Central Asia." In: History of civilizations of Central Asia, Volume II. The development of sedentary and nomadic civilizations: 700 B.C. to A.D. 250. Harmatta, János, ed., 1994. Paris: UNESCO Publishing. ISBN 92-3-102846-4, p. 103.
- ^ Bernard, Paul (2001). "Aï Khanoum en Afghanistan hier (1964-1978) et aujourd'hui (2001) : Un site en péril. Perspectives d'avenir (Information)". Comptes Rendus des Séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. 145 (2): 971–1029. doi:10.3406/crai.2001.16315.
- ^ (Boardman)
- ^ Mairs, Rachel. "Ethnic Identity in the Hellenistic Far East" (in الإنجليزية): 85.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ أ ب Greek Culture in Afghanistan and India: Old Evidence and New Discoveries, Shane Wallace, 2016, p.215
- ^ Greek Culture in Afghanistan and India: Old Evidence and New Discoveries, Shane Wallace, 2016, p.217
- ^ أ ب ت Claude Rapin, "De l'Indus à l'Oxus", p. 375. Also full description of the papyrii (French)original text and French translation
- ^ Source, BBC News, Another article. German story with photographs here (translation here).
- ^ Bernard, P. THE GREEK KINGDOMS OF CENTRAL ASIA (PDF). Unesco. p. 118. ISBN 978-92-3-102846-5.
- ^ Mairs, Rachel. "Ethnic Identity in the Hellenistic Far East" (in الإنجليزية): 115.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Frölich, p.10
- ^ "Afghanistan, tresors retrouves", p150
- ^ Joe Cribb, Investigating the introduction of coinage in India, Journal of the Numismatic Society of India xlv Varanasi 1983 pp.89
- ^ Alexander the Great and Bactria: The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia, Frank Lee Holt, Brill Archive, 1988, p.2
- ^ Iconography of Balarāma, Nilakanth Purushottam Joshi, Abhinav Publications, 1979, p.22
- ^ أ ب The Hellenistic World: Using Coins as Sources, Peter Thonemann, Cambridge University Press, 2016, p.101
- ^ أ ب ت John Boardman (1998), "The Origins of Indian Stone Architecture", Bulletin of the Asia Institute, p.13-22
- ^ Brian Kritt: Seleucid Coins of Bactria, p. 22.
- ^ "Seleucid coins of Bactria", Brian Kritt
- ^ أ ب Mairs, Rachel (2014). The Hellenistic Far East. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-28127-1.
- ^ Llewelyn Morgan, "Greeks on the Edge" (review of Rachel Mairs, The Hellenistic Far East: archaeology, language and identity in Greek Central Asia), Times Literary Supplement 11 September 2015 page 25.
- ^ Dupree, L. (2014). Afghanistan. Princeton University Press. p. 286. ISBN 9781400858910. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ^ Harle, J.C., The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent, pp. 82-83, 2nd edn. 1994, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, ISBN 0300062176
المراجع
- Tarn, W. W. (1984). The Greeks in Bactria and India. Chicago: Ares. ISBN 0-89005-524-6.
- Bopearachchi, Osmund (2003). De l'Indus à l'Oxus, Archéologie de l'Asie Centrale (in الفرنسية). Lattes: Association imago-musée de Lattes. ISBN 2-9516679-2-2.
- Frölich, Pierre (2004). Les Grecs en Orient. L'heritage d'Alexandre. La Documentation photographique, n.8040 (in الفرنسية). Paris: La Documentation Francaise.
- Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul (2008). Eds., Friedrik Hiebert and Pierre Cambon. National Geographic, Washington, D.C. ISBN 978-1-4262-0374-9.
وصلات خارجية
- Ai-Khanum, the Capital of Eucratides on Ancient History Encyclopedia
- Ai-Khanoum archaeological site photographs
- Ai-Khanoum and vandalization during the Afghan war page not found
- The Hellenistic Age
- Afghan Treasures
- 3-D reconstruction of Ai-Khanoum
- Livius.org: Alexandria on Oxus
- Afghanistan: Crossroads of the Ancient World Surviving treasures from the National Museum of Afghanistan, at The British Museum, 3 March – 17 July 2011
- "The Forgotten Alexandria", 2nd film of Eurasia
- Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
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- Coordinates on Wikidata
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2021
- Articles with unsourced statements from December 2017
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- CS1 الفرنسية-language sources (fr)
- مستعمرات سلوقية
- مدن أسسها الإسكندر الأكبر
- أماكن مأهولة على طريق الحرير
- أماكن مأهولة تأسست في القرن الثالث ق.م.
- تأسيسات عقد 280 ق.م.
- أماكن مأهولة سابقاً في أفغانستان
- Bactrian and Indian Hellenistic period
- مستعمرات هلينية باخترية وهندية
- مدن آسيا الوسطى
- Hellenistic sites in Afghanistan
- ولاية تخار