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Alchon Huns

The Alchon Huns, (Bactrian: αλχον(ν)ο Alchon(n)o) also known as the Alchono, Alxon, Alkhon, Alkhan, Alakhana, and Walxon, were a nomadic people who established states in Central Asia and South Asia during the 4th and 6th centuries CE.[1] They were first mentioned as being located in Paropamisus, and later expanded south-east, into the Punjab and Central India, as far as Eran and Kausambi. The Alchon invasion of the Indian subcontinent eradicated the Kidarite Huns who had preceded them by about a century, and contributed to the fall of the Gupta Empire, in a sense bringing an end to Classical India.[9][5]

Alchon Huns
370–670
Portrait of Alchon king Khingila (c.450 CE), and the bull/ lunar tamga of the Alchon (known as Tamgha S1),[1] as visible on Alchon coinage.
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Find spots of epigraphic inscriptions (red dots) indicating local control by the Alchon Huns in India between 500-530 CE,[2] with neighbouring polities,[3] and territorial extent of the Alchon Huns (brown).[4]
CapitalKapisa
Udabhanda[5]
Sagala[6][7]
Common languagesBrahmi and Bactrian (written)
Religion
Hinduism
Buddhism
Zoroastrianism[8]
GovernmentNomadic empire
Historical eraLate antiquity
• Established
370
• Disestablished
670
CurrencyDrachm
Today part ofAfghanistan
Pakistan
India

The invasion of India by the Huna peoples follows invasions of the subcontinent in the preceding centuries by the Yavana (Indo-Greeks), the Saka (Indo-Scythians), the Pahlava (Indo-Parthians), and the Kushana (Yuezhi). The Alchon Empire was the second of four major Huna states established in Central and South Asia. The Alchon were preceded by the Kidarites and succeeded by the Hephthalites in Bactria and the Nezak Huns in the Hindu Kush. The names of the Alchon kings are known from their extensive coinage, Buddhist accounts, and a number of commemorative inscriptions throughout the Indian subcontinent.

The Alchons have long been considered as a part or a sub-division of the Hephthalites, or as their eastern branch, but now tend to be considered as a separate entity.[1][10][11]

Identity edit

Name edit

To contemporaneous observers in India, the Alchon were one of the Hūṇa peoples (or Hunas),[12] whose origins are controversial. A seal from Kausambi associated with Toramana, bears the title Hūnarāja ("Huna King").[13] Toramana is also described as a Huna (   Hūṇā) in the Rīsthal inscription.[14][15]

 
The word "Alchono" (αλχοννο) in the Greco-Bactrian cursive script, on a coin of Khingila.[16][17][18]

The Hunas appear to have been the peoples known in contemporaneous Iranian sources as Xwn, Xiyon and similar names, which were later Romanised as Xionites or Chionites. The Hunas are often linked to the Huns that invaded Europe from Central Asia during the same period. Consequently, the word Hun has three slightly different meanings, depending on the context in which it is used: 1) the Huns of Europe; 2) groups associated with the Huna people who invaded northern India; 3) a vague term for Hun-like people. The Alchon have also been labelled "Huns", with essentially the second meaning, as well as elements of the third.[19][20]

The name "Alchon" generally given to them comes from the Bactrian legend of their early coinage, where they simply imitated Sassanian coins to which they added the name "alchono" ( , αλχονο, also αλχοννο)[21] in Bactrian script (a slight adaptation of the Greek script) and the tamgha symbol of their clan.[22][23][16][24] Several original coins such as those of Khingila also bear the mention "alchono" together with the Tamgha symbol.[16]

Philologically, "alchono" (αλχονο) may be a combination of al- for Aryan and -xono for Huns, although this remains hypothetical.[17] Another etymology could be al-, Turkish for scarlet, and -xono for Huns, meaning "Red Huns", red being a symbol of the south among steppe nomads.[25]

Visual appearance edit

 
 
Left: Portrait of Alchon king Khingila, from his coinage (c. 450 CE). Right: Elongated skull excavated in Samarkand (dated 600-800 CE), Afrasiab Museum of Samarkand

The Alchons are generally recognized by their elongated skull, a result of artificial skull deformation, which may have represented their "corporate identity".[26] The elongated skulls appear clearly in most of the portraits of rulers in the coinage of the Alkhon Huns, and most visibly on the coinage of Khingila.[26] These elongated skulls, which they obviously displayed with pride, distinguished them from other peoples, such as their predecessors the Kidarites.[26] On their coins, the spectacular skulls came to replace the Sasanian-type crowns which had been current in the coinage of the region.[26] This practice is also known among other peoples of the steppes, particularly the Huns, and as far as Europe, where it was introduced by the Huns themselves.[26][27]

In another ethnic custom, the Alchons were represented beardless, often wearing a moustache, in clear contrast with the Sasanian Empire prototype which was generally bearded.[28]

The emblematic look of the Alchons seems to have become rather fashionable in the area, as shown by the depiction of the Iranian hero Rostam, mythical king of Zabulistan, with an elongated skull in his 7th century CE mural at Panjikent.[29][30][31]

Symbolism edit

Another way for the Alchon Huns to affirm their identity and to differentiate themselves from their predecessors the Kidarites, was the use of a specific symbol, or tamgha, which regularly appears on their coinage and seals:  .[26]

History edit

Invasion of Bactria (370 CE) edit

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The Alkhons are initially recorded in the area of Bactria circa 370 CE, from where they confronted the Sasanian Empire to the west and the Kidarites to the southeast.
Emergence of the Alchon tamgha
 
 
An early Alchon coin based on the design of Sasanian coinage, with bust imitating Sasanian king Shapur II (r.309 to 379 CE), only adding the Alchon Tamgha symbol   and "Alchono" (αλχοννο) in Bactrian script on the obverse. Dated 400-440 CE.[22][32][33]

During the reign of Shapur II, the Sasanian Empire and the Kushano-Sasanians gradually lost the control of Bactria to these invaders from Central Asia, first the Kidarites from around 335 CE, then the Alchon Huns from around 370 CE, who would follow up with the invasion of India a century later, and lastly the Hephthalites from around 450 CE.[34]

Early confrontations between the Sasanian Empire of Shapur II with the nomadic hordes from Central Asia called the "Chionites" were described by Ammianus Marcellinus: he reports that in 356 CE, Shapur II was taking his winter quarters on his eastern borders, "repelling the hostilities of the bordering tribes" of the Chionites and the Euseni ("Euseni" is usually amended to "Cuseni", meaning the Kushans),[35][36] finally making a treaty of alliance with the Chionites and the Gelani, "the most warlike and indefatigable of all tribes", in 358 CE.[37] After concluding this alliance, the Chionites (probably of the Kidarites tribe)[38] under their King Grumbates accompanied Shapur II in the war against the Romans, especially at the siege of Amida in 359 CE. Victories of the Xionites during their campaigns in the Eastern Caspian lands were also witnessed and described by Ammianus Marcellinus.[39]

The Alchon Huns occupied Bactria circa 370 CE, chasing the Kidarites in the direction of India, and started minting coins in the style of Shapur II but bearing their name "Alchono".

Invasion of Kabulistan (c.385 CE) edit

Around 380-385 CE, the Alchons emerged in Kapisa, taking over Kabulistan from the Sassanian Persians, while at the same time the Kidarites (Red Huns) ruled in Gandhara.[12] The Alchons are known to have reused the mint and the coin dies of Shapur II south of the Hindu Kush, again simply adding their name "Alchono" to Sasanian coinage.[40] The Alchon Huns are sometimes said to have taken control of Kabul in 388.[12]

Coinage edit

The Alchon Huns initially issued anonymous coins based on Sasanian designs.[32] Several types of these coins are known, usually minted in Bactria, using Sasanian coinage designs with busts imitating Sasanian kings Shapur II (r.309 to 379 CE) and Shapur III (r.383 to 388 CE), adding the Alchon Tamgha   and the name "Alchono" (αλχοννο) in Bactrian script (a slight adaptation of the Greek script which had been introduced in the region by the Greco-Bactrians in the 3rd century BCE) on the obverse, and with attendants to a fire altar, a standard Sasanian design, on the reverse.[41][42] It is thought the Alchons took over the Sasanian mints in Kabulistan after 385 CE, reusing dies of Shapur II and Shapur III, to which they added the name "Alchono".[43]

Gandhara (460 CE) edit

 
Portrait of an older King Khingila, founder of the Alchon Huns, on one of his coins, c. 430 – 490 CE.

Around 430 King Khingila, the most notable Alchon ruler, and the first one to be named and represented on his coins with the legend "χιγγιλο" (Chiggilo) in Bactrian, emerged and took control of the routes across the Hindu Kush from the Kidarites.[12][1] Coins of the Alchons rulers Khingila and Mehama were found at the Buddhist monastery of Mes Aynak, southeast of Kabul, confirming the Alchon presence in this area around 450-500 CE.[44] Khingila seems to have been a contemporary of the Sassanian ruler Bahram V.[1] As the Alchons took control, diplomatic missions were established in 457 with China.[45]: 162  Khingila, under the name Shengil, was called "King of India" in the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi.[11]

Alchon ruler Mehama (r.461-493) was elevated to the position of Governor for Sasanian Emperor Peroz I (r. 459–484), and described himself as "King of the people of Kadag and governor of the famous and prosperous King of Kings Peroz" in a 462-463 letter.[46] He allied with Peroz I in his victory over the Kidarites in 466 CE, and may also have helped him take the throne against his brother Hormizd III.[47] But he was later able to wrestle autonomy or even independence.[47]

Between 460 and 470 CE, the Alchons took over Gandhara and the Punjab which also had remained under the control of the Kidarites, while the Gupta Empire remained further east.[48][20] The Alkhon Huns may simply have filled the power vacuum created by the decline of the Kidarites, following their defeat in India against the Gupta Empire of Skandagupta in 455 CE,[49] and their subsequent defeat in 467 CE against the Sasanian Empire of Peroz I, with Hephthalite and Alchon aid under Mehama, which put an end to Kidarite rule in Transoxiana once and for all.[50]

 
The silver bowl in the British Museum
 
Alchon horseman.[51]
The so-called "Hephthalite bowl" from Gandhara, features two Kidarite hunters wearing characteristic crowns, and as well as two Alchon hunters (one of them shown here, with skull deformation), suggesting a period of peaceful coexistence between the two entities.[51] Swat District, Pakistan, 460–479 CE. British Museum.[52][53]

The numismatic evidence as well as the so-called "Hephthalite bowl" from Gandhara, now in the British Museum, suggests a period of peaceful coexistence between the Kidarites and the Alchons, as it features two Kidarite noble hunters wearing their characteristic crowns, together with two Alchon hunters and one of the Alchons inside a medallion.[51] At one point, the Kidarites withdrew from Gandhara, and the Alchons took over their mints from the time of Khingila.[51]

The Alchons apparently undertook the mass destruction of Buddhist monasteries and stupas at Taxila, a high center of learning, which never recovered from the destruction.[54] Virtually all of the Alchon coins found in the area of Taxila were found in the ruins of burned down monasteries, where apparently some of the invaders died alongside local defenders during the wave of destructions.[54] It is thought that the Kanishka stupa, one of the most famous and tallest buildings in antiquity, was destroyed by them during their invasion of the area in the 460s CE. The Mankiala stupa was also vandalized during their invasions.[55]

The rest of the 5th century marks a period of territorial expansion and eponymous kings, several of which appear to have overlapped and ruled jointly.[56][Note 1] The Alchon Huns invaded parts of northwestern India from the second half of the 5th century.[57] According to the Bhitari pillar inscription, the Gupta ruler Skandagupta already confronted and defeated an unnamed Huna ruler c. 456-457 CE.[57]

Sindh edit

 
Uncertain Hunnic chieftain. Sindh. 5th century.

From circa 480 CE, there are also suggestion of Hunnic occupation of Sindh, between Multan and the mouth of the Indus river, as the local Sasanian coinage of Sindh starts to incorporate sun symbols or a Hunnic tamgha to the design.[58] These little-known coins are usually described as the result of the invasions of the "Hephthalites".[58] The quality of the coins also becomes very much degraded by that time, and the actual gold content becomes quite low compared to the previous Sasanian-style coinage.[59]

Contributions edit

The Hūṇas were precisely ruling the area of Malwa, at the doorstep of the Western Deccan, at the time the famous Ajanta caves were made by ruler Harisena of the Vakataka Empire.[60][61] Through their control of vast areas of northwestern India, the Huns may actually have acted as a cultural bridge between the area of Gandhara and the Western Deccan, at the time when the Ajanta or Pitalkhora caves were being decorated with designs of Gandharan inspiration, such as Buddhas dressed in robes with abundant folds.[62]

First Hunnic War: Central India edit

Kausambi
 
The monastery of Ghoshitarama in Kausambi was probably destroyed by the Alchon Huns under Toramana.[13]
 
"Hūna Rāja" Toramana seal impression, Kausambi[63]

In the First Hunnic War (496–515),[2] the Alchon reached their maximum territorial extent, with King Toramana pushing deep into Indian territory, reaching Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh in Central India, and ultimately contributing to the downfall of the Gupta Empire.[45]: 162  To the south, the Sanjeli inscriptions indicate that Toramana penetrated at least as far as northern Gujarat, and possibly to the port of Bharukaccha.[64] To the east, far into Central India, the city of Kausambi, where seals with Toramana's name were found, was probably sacked by the Alkhons in 497–500, before they moved to occupy Malwa.[2][65][66]: 70 [67] In particular, it is thought that the monastery of Ghoshitarama in Kausambi was destroyed by Toramana, as several of his seals were found there, one of them bearing the name Toramana impressed over the official seal of the monastery, and the other bearing the title Hūnarāja ("King of the Huns"), together with debris and arrowheads.[13] Another seal, this time by Mihirakula, is reported from Kausambi.[13] These territories may have been taken from Gupta Emperor Budhagupta.[66]: 79  Alternatively, they may have been captured during the rule of his successor Narasimhagupta.[68]

First Battle of Eran (510 CE) edit

A decisive battle occurred in Malwa, where a local Gupta ruler, probably a governor, named Bhanugupta was in charge. In the Bhanugupta Eran inscription, this local ruler reports that his army participated in a great battle in 510 CE at Eran, where it suffered severe casualties.[68] Bhanugupta was probably vanquished by Toramana at this battle, so that the western Gupta province of Malwa fell into the hands of the Hunas.[68]

 
Portrait of Toramana. He sacked Kausambi and occupied Malwa.[69]

According to a 6th-century CE Buddhist work, the Manjusri-mula-kalpa, Bhanugupta lost Malwa to the "Shudra" Toramana, who continued his conquest to Magadha, forcing Narasimhagupta Baladitya to make a retreat to Bengal. Toramana "possessed of great prowess and armies" then conquered the city of Tirtha in the Gauda country (modern Bengal).[70][Note 2] Toramana is said to have crowned a new king in Benares, named Prakataditya, who is also presented as a son of Narasimha Gupta.[68]

 
The Eran "Varaha" boar, under the neck of which can be found the Eran boar inscription mentioning the rule of Toramana.[71]
 
            
Mahārājadhirāja Shrī Toramāṇa
"Great King of Kings, Lord Toramana"
in the Eran boar inscription of Toramana in the Gupta script.[72]
 
A rare gold coin of Toramana in the style of the Guptas. The obverse legend reads: "The lord of the Earth, Toramana, having conquered the Earth, wins Heaven".[73][74]

Having conquered the territory of Malwa from the Guptas, Toramana was mentioned in a famous inscription in Eran, confirming his rule on the region.[68] The Eran boar inscription of Toramana (in Eran, Malwa, 540 km south of New Delhi, state of Madhya Pradesh) of his first regnal year indicates that eastern Malwa was included in his dominion. The inscription is written under the neck of the boar, in 8 lines of Sanskrit in the Brahmi script. The first line of the inscription, in which Toramana is introduced as Mahararajadhidaja (The Great King of Kings),[66]: 79  reads:

In year one of the reign of the King of Kings Sri-Toramana, who rules the world with splendor and radiance...

On his gold coins minted in India in the style of the Gupta Emperors, Toramana presented himself confidently as:

Avanipati Torama(no) vijitya vasudham divam jayati

The lord of the Earth, Toramana, having conquered the Earth, wins Heaven

— Toramana gold coin legend.[73][74]

The fact that the Alchon Huns issued gold coins, such as the Toramana issue, in addition to their silver and copper coins, suggest that their empire in India was quite rich and powerful.[75]

Defeat (515 CE) edit

Toramana was finally defeated by local Indian rulers. The local ruler Bhanugupta is sometimes credited with vanquishing Toramana, as his 510 CE inscription in Eran, recording his participation in "a great battle", is vague enough to allow for such an interpretation. The "great battle" in which Bhanagupta participated is not detailed, and it is impossible to know what it was, or which way it ended, and interpretations vary.[76][77][78] Mookerji and others consider, in view of the inscription as well as the Manjusri-mula-kalpa, that Bhanugupta was, on the contrary, vanquished by Toramana at the 510 CE Eran battle, so that the western Gupta province of Malwa fell into the hands of the Hunas at that point,[68] so that Toramana could be mentioned in the Eran boar inscription, as the ruler of the region.[68]

Toramana was finally vanquished with certainty by an Indian ruler of the Aulikara dynasty of Malwa, after nearly 20 years in India. According to the Rīsthal stone-slab inscription, discovered in 1983, King Prakashadharma defeated Toramana in 515 CE.[2][64][79] The First Hunnic War thus ended with a Hunnic defeat, and Hunnic troops apparently retreated to the area of Punjab.[2] The Manjusri-mula-kalpa simply states that Toramana died in Benares as he was returning westward from his battles with Narasimhagupta.[68]

Second Hunnic War: to Malwa and retreat edit

 
Mihirakula on one of his coins. He was finally defeated in 528 by King Yasodharman.

The Second Hunnic War started in 520, when the Alchon king Mihirakula, son of Toramana, is recorded in his military encampment on the borders of the Jhelum by Chinese monk Song Yun.[2] At the head of the Alchon, Mihirakula is then recorded in Gwalior, Central India as "Lord of the Earth" in the Gwalior inscription of Mihirakula.[2] According to some accounts, Mihirakula invaded India as far as the Gupta capital Pataliputra, which was sacked and left in ruins.[80][66]: 64 

There was a king called Mo-hi-lo-kiu-lo (Mihirakula), who established his authority in this town (Sagala) and ruled over India. He was of quick talent, and naturally brave. He subdued all the neighbouring provinces without exception.

— Xuanzang "The Record of the Western Regions", 7th century CE[81]

The destructions of Mihirakula are also recorded in the Rajatarangini:[11]

Mihirakula, a man of violent acts and resembling Kāla (Death) ruled in the land which was overrun by hordes of Mlecchas... the people knew his approach by noticing the vultures, crows, and other [birds], which were flying ahead to feed on those who were being slain within his army's [reach]

— The Rajatarangini[11]
 
Pillar of Yashodharman at Sondani near Mandsaur, with the Sondani inscription claiming victory over Mihirakula of the Alchons in 528 CE.

Finally however, Mihirakula was defeated in 528 by an alliance of Indian principalities led by Yasodharman, the Aulikara king of Malwa, in the Battle of Sondani in Central India, which resulted in the loss of Alchon possessions in the Punjab and north India by 542. The Sondani inscription in Sondani, near Mandsaur, records the submission by force of the Hunas, and claims that Yasodharman had rescued the earth from rude and cruel kings,[82][Note 3] and that he "had bent the head of Mihirakula".[2] In a part of the Sondani inscription Yasodharman thus praises himself for having defeated king Mihirakula:[71]

 
Mihirakula used the Indian Gupta script on his coinage. Obv: Bust of king, with legend in Gupta script ( )       ,[83] (Ja)yatu Mihirakula ("Let there be victory to Mihirakula").[84][85][86][87]

He (Yasodharman) to whose two feet respect was paid, with complimentary presents of the flowers from the lock of hair on the top of (his) head, by even that (famous) king Mihirakula, whose forehead was pained through being bent low down by the strength of (his) arm in (the act of compelling) obeisance

The Gupta Empire emperor Narasimhagupta is also credited in helping repulse Mihirakula, after the latter had conquered most of India, according to the reports of Chinese monk Xuanzang.[89][90] In a fanciful account, Xuanzang, who wrote a century later in 630 CE, reported that Mihirakula had conquered all India except for an island where the king of Magadha named Baladitya (who could be Gupta ruler Narasimhagupta Baladitya) took refuge, but that was finally captured by the Indian king. He later spared Mihirakula's life on the intercession of his mother, as she perceived the Hun ruler "as a man of remarkable beauty and vast wisdom".[90] Mihirakula is then said to have returned to Kashmir to retake the throne.[91][45]: 168  This ended the Second Hunnic War in c. 534, after an occupation which lasted nearly 15 years.[2]

Victories of the Maukharis edit

According to the Aphsad inscription of Ādityasena, the Maukharis also fought against the Hunas in the areas of the Gangetic Doab and Magadha.[92] The Aphsad inscription of Ādityasena mentions the military successes of kings of the Later Gupta dynasty against the Maukharis, and explains that the Maukharis were past victors of the Hunas:[92]

 
The Aphsad inscription of Ādityasena

"The son of that king (Kumaragupta) was the illustrious Dâmôdaragupta, by whom (his) enemies were slain, just like the demons by (the god) Dâmôdara. Breaking up the proudly stepping array of mighty elephants, belonging to the Maukhari, which had thrown aloft in battle the troops of the Hûnas (in order to trample them to death), he became unconscious (and expired in the fight)."

The Maukharis led by their king Ishanavarman, rather than any of the Guptas, were therefore pivotal in repelling the Hunas.[94]

Retreat to Gandhara and Kashmir (530 CE) edit

 
Coinage of Sri Pravarasena, successor of Mihirakula, and supposed founder of Srinagar. Obverse: Standing king with two figured seated below. Name "Pravarasena". Reverse: goddess seated on a lion. Legend "Kidāra". Circa 6th-early 7th century CE

The Alchon Huns resettled in the area of Gandhara and Kashmir in northwestern India under the rule of Sri Pravarasena (c.530-590 CE), thought to be the son of Toramana.[95] His reign probably lasted about 60 years from circa 530 CE.[95][96] According to Kalhana's 12th century text Rajatarangini, Pravarasena established a new capital named Pravarapura (also known as Pravarasena-pura). Based on topographical details, Pravarapura appears to be same as the modern city of Srinagar.[97][95] He also built a temple named "Pravaresha".[95][96]

Pravarasena was probably succeeded by a king named Gokarna, a follower of Shiva, and then by his son king Narendraditya Khinkhila.[96][95] The son of Narendraditya was Yudhishthira, who succeeded him as king, and was the last known king of the Alchon Huns.[95] According to the Rajatarangini Yudhishthira ruled 40 years, probably until circa 625 CE, but he was dethroned by Pratapaditya, son of the founder of the Karkoṭa Empire, Durlabhavardhana.[98][99][100]

Kashmir descendents of the Alchon Huns edit

Several rulers with Alchon names appear in Kalhana's Rajatarangini.[101] Although the chronology of the Rajatarangini is largely deficient, several of the names of these rulers, especially those belonging to the so-called Gonanda dynasty (II), have been confirmed by coin finds in Kashmir and dated to the 7th century CE. They were "very likely" descendents of the Alchon Huns in the Kashmir area.[102]

Retreat to Kabulistan and displacement of the Nezak Huns edit

 
Portrait of Toramana II, from his coinage.

Around the end of the 6th century CE, the Alchons withdrew to Kashmir and, pulling back from Punjab and Gandhara, moved west across the Khyber pass where they resettled in Kabulistan under the leadership of Toramana II.[103] There, their coinage suggests that they merged with the Nezak – as coins in Nezak style now bear the Alchon tamga mark.[104][71]

 
Alchon-Nezak "crossover coinage", 580–680. Nezak-style bust on the obverse, and Alchon tamga   within double border on the reverse.[104]

During the 7th century, continued military encounters are reported between the Hunas and the northern Indian states which followed the disappearance of the Gupta Empire. For example, Prabhakaravardhana, the Vardhana dynasty king of Thanesar in northern India and father of Harsha, is reported to have been "A lion to the Huna deer, a burning fever to the king of the Indus land".[105]: 253 

The Alchons in India declined rapidly around the same time that the Hephthalites, a related group to the north, were defeated by an alliance between the Sassanians and the Western Turkic Kaghanate in 557–565 CE.[106]: 187  The areas of Khuttal and Kapisa-Gandhara had remained independent kingdoms under the Alchon Huns, under kings such as Narendra, but in 625 CE they were taken over by the expanding Western Turks when they established the Yabghus of Tokharistan.[107] Eventually, the Nezak-Alchons were replaced by the Turk Shahi dynasty around 665 CE.[106]: 187 

Religion and ethics edit

 
Alchon devotee, Butkara I (construction phase 4), 5th century CE.[108]

The four Alchon kings Khingila, Toramana, Javukha, and Mehama are mentioned as donors to a Buddhist stupa in the Talagan copper scroll inscription dated to 492 or 493 CE, that is, at a time before the Hunnic wars in India started. This corresponds to a time when the Alchons had recently taken control of Taxila (around 460 CE), at the center of the Buddhist regions of northwestern India.[108] Numerous Alchon coins were found in the dedication compartment of the "Tope Kalān" stupa in Hadda.[109]

Mural with paintings of probable Alchon devotees can be seen in the Buddhist complex of the Butkara Stupa (Butkara I, construction phase 4). Dated to the 5th century CE, they suggest that the Alchon Huns may have been participants to the local Buddhist culture.[110]

Persecution of Buddhism edit

Later, however, the attitude of the Alchons towards Buddhism is reported to have been negative. Mihirakula in particular is remembered by Buddhist sources to have been a "terrible persecutor of their religion" in Gandhara in northern (modern day) Pakistan.[111] During his reign, over one thousand Buddhist monasteries throughout Gandhara are said to have been destroyed.[112] In particular, the writings of Chinese monk Xuanzang from 630 CE explained that Mihirakula ordered the destruction of Buddhism and the expulsion of monks.[45]: 162  Indeed, the Buddhist art of Gandhara, in particular Greco-Buddhist art, becomes essentially extinct around that period. When Xuanzang visited northwestern India in c. 630 CE, he reported that Buddhism had drastically declined, and that most of the monasteries were deserted and left in ruins.[113]

Although the Guptas were traditionally a Hindu dynasty,[114] around the period of the invasions of the Alchon the Gupta rulers had apparently been favouring Buddhism. According to contemporary writer Paramartha, Mihirakula's supposed nemesis Narasimhagupta Baladitya was brought up under the influence of the Mahayanist philosopher Vasubandhu.[114] He built a sangharama at Nalanda and a 300 ft (91 m) high vihara with a Buddha statue within which, according to Xuanzang, resembled the "great Vihara built under the Bodhi tree". According to the Manjushrimulakalpa (c. 800 CE), king Narasimhsagupta became a Buddhist monk, and left the world through meditation (Dhyana).[114] Xuanzang also noted that Narasimhagupta Baladitya's son Vajra, who also commissioned a sangharama, "possessed a heart firm in faith".[115]: 45 [116]: 330 

The 12th century Kashmiri historian Kalhana also painted a dreary picture of Mihirakula's cruelty, as well as his persecution of the Buddhist faith:

Solar symbolism
 
Solar symbol on the coinage of Toramana.
 
Khingila with solar symbol.
 
Alchon king with small male figure wearing solar nimbus.

In him, the northern region brought forth, as it were, another god of death, bent in rivalry to surpass... Yama (the god of death residing in the southern regions). People knew of his approach by noticing the vultures, crows and other birds flying ahead eager to feed on those who were being slain within his army's reach. The royal Vetala (demon) was day and night surrounded by thousands of murdered human beings, even in his pleasure houses. This terrible enemy of mankind had no pity for children, no compassion for women, no respect for the aged

— 12th century Kashmiri historian Kalhana[90]

Sun cult, Vaishnavism and Shivaism edit

 
Coinage of Khingila with Hindu goddess Lakshmi.

The Alchons are generally described as sun worshipers, a traditional cult of steppe nomads. This stems from the appearance of sun symbols on some of their coins, combined with the probable influence they received from the worship of Surya in India.[117]

The Hindu Vaishnavite goddess Lakshmi, goddess of wealth, fortune, power, beauty, fertility and prosperity and also an ancient goddess of Buddhism, also appears on the coinage of some rulers, especially Khingila,[118][119] and Toramana.

Mihirakula is also said to have been an ardent worshiper of Shiva,[120][121] although he may have been selectively attracted to the destructive powers of the Indian deity.[90]

Mihirakula is said to have been the founder of the Shankaracharya Temple, a shrine dedicated to Shiva in Srinagar,[122][123] a shrine to Shiva named Mihiresvara in Halada, and a large city called Mihirapura.[123]

Consequences on India edit

The Alchon invasions, although only spanning a few decades, had long term effects on India, and in a sense brought an end to the middle kingdoms of India.[90]

Destructions edit

Indian urban culture was left in decline. Major traditional cities, such as Kausambi and probably Ujjain were in ruins, Vidisha and Mathura fell into decline.[125] Buddhism, gravely weakened by the destruction of monasteries and the killing of monks, started to collapse.[90] Great centers of learning were destroyed, such as the city of Taxila, bringing cultural regression.[90] The art of Mathura suffered greatly from the destructions brought by the Hunas, as did the art of Gandhara in the northwest, and both schools of art were nearly wiped out under the rule of the Huna Mihirakula.[126] New cities arose from these destructions, such as Dashapura, Kanyakubja, Sthaneshvara, Valabhi and Shripura.[125]

Political fragmentation edit

Soon after the invasions, the Gupta Empire, already weakened by these invasions and the rise of local rulers, ended as well.[105]: 221  Following the invasions, northern India was left in disarray, with numerous smaller Indian powers emerging after the crumbling of the Guptas.[127] Many autonomous regional states rose to prominence following the dislocation of Gupta power: the Aulikaras, the Maukharis, the Maitrakas, the Kalacuris or the Vardhanas, all in a constant flux of rivalry.[125] With the end of Hunnic power, some India polities, such as the Maukhari dynasty were able to establish direct contacts with Central Asia and the Sasanian Empire: the Maukhari King Śarvavarman of Kannauj is said to have introduced the game of chess to the Sasanian court of Khosrow I, between the beginning of Śarvavarman's reign in 560/565 and the end of Khosrow's reign in 579.[128][129]

Rise of Saivism edit

Vaisnavism, which had been strongly supported by the Gupta Empire, was discredited by the decline and the ultimate failure of the Empire.[125] All the newly arising regional powers preferred adopting Saivism instead, as did the Alchon Huns under Mihirakula, giving a strong impetus to the development of the worship of Shiva, and its ideology of power.[125] Vaisnavism only remained strong in the territories which had not been affected by these events: South India and Kashmir.[125]

International trade edit

The Huna invasions are said to have seriously damaged India's trade with Europe and Central Asia,[90] particularly Indo-Roman trade relations, which the Gupta Empire had greatly benefited from. The Guptas had been exporting numerous luxury products such as silk, leather goods, fur, iron products, ivory, pearl and pepper from centers such as Nasik, Paithan, Pataliputra and Benares. The Huna invasion probably disrupted these trade relations and the tax revenues that came with them.[130]

During their rule of 60 years, the Alchons are said to have altered the hierarchy of ruling families and the Indian caste system. For example, the Hunas are often said to have become the precursors of the Rajputs.[90] On the artistic side however, the Alchon Huns may have played a role, just like the Western Satraps centuries before them, in helping spread the art of Gandhara to the western Deccan region.[131]

Artistic syncretism: "A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art" edit

 
Fragment of a lid with a hunting scene, Gandhara, 5-6th century CE.[132]

The advances of the Alchon Huns in India seems to have fostered a type of syncretic art in Gandhara during the 5th-6th century, mixing Gupta art with Sasanian and Hunish inspiration and themes.[133] Particularly significant are a type of decorated lids from Gandhara which display courtly or hunting scenes, mixing them with Gupta decorative designs.[133]

The Chilek silver bowl edit

 
 
The Chilek bowl, with an Alchon Hun ruler in the central medallion, surrounded by naked Indian-style dancers.

Several silver bowls related to the Alchons have been found in the area of Samarkand, including the "Chilek bowl" ("Čilek bowl"), which is considered as the "best known specimen of Hephthalite art", and is similar in composition with the Hephthalite silver bowl, but represents "six dancers in Indian costume with Iranian ribbons and Hephthalite-short heads". Each of the dancers is positionned under a pointed arch in Indian style, and seems to be derived from contemporary Gupta art.[137] This bowl, too, is considered as an Alchon object, but was possibly manufactured in India at the request of the Alchons. It is now in the Samarkand Museum.[138][139][137]

The man in the medallion at the bottom of the Chilek bowl has a clearly elongated skull, characteristic of the Alchons Huns at that time and place.[140]

Coinage legacy (6th-12th century CE) edit

As they invaded northern and central India circa 500 CE, the Alchon Huns issued several types of coinage on the model of the Sasanian Empire, with ruler in profile on the obverse and sacred fire with attendants on the reverse.[141] It is thought that in the process of minting coins in occupied lands, they transmitted Sasanian coin designs to northern and western India.[141] This created a major type of Indian coinage called "Indo-Sasanian coinage", which lasted in degraded form until the 12th century CE as far as the Gangetic region.[141]

Ethnic legacy edit

 
Coin of the Gurjara Confederacy, Peroz I type. Sindh, circa 570-712 CE.

The Gurjaras and Gurjara-Pratiharas suddenly emerged as a political power in north India around sixth century CE, shortly after the Hunas invasion of that region.[142] The Gujara-Pratihara were "likely" formed from a fusion of the Alchon Huns ("White Huns") and native Indian element, and can probably be considered as a Hunnic state, although its precise origins remain unclear.[143] In Bana's Harshacharita (7th century CE), the Gurjaras are associated with the Hunas.[144] Some of the Hunas may also have contributed to the formation of the warlike Rajputs.[143]

Sources edit

 
The Talagan copper scroll

Ancient sources refer to the Alchons and associated groups ambiguously with various names, such as Huna in Indian texts, and Xionites in Greek texts. Xuanzang chronicled some of the later history of the Alchons.[89]

Modern archeology has provided valuable insights into the history of the Alchons. The most significant cataloguing of the Alchon dynasty came in 1967 with Robert Göbl's analysis of the coinage of the "Iranian Huns".[145] This work documented the names of a partial chronology of Alchon kings, beginning with Khingila. In 2012, the Kunsthistorisches Museum completed a reanalysis 17 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine of previous finds together with a large number of new coins that appeared on the antiquities market during the Second Afghan Civil War, redefining the timeline and narrative of the Alchons and related peoples.[106]

Talagan copper scroll edit

A significant contribution to our understanding of Alchon history came in 2006 when Gudrun Melzer and Lore Sander published their finding of the "Talagan copper scroll", also known as the "Schøyen Copper Scroll", dated to 492 or 493, that mentions the four Alchon kings Khingila, Toramana, Javukha, and Mehama (who was reigning at the time) as donors to a Buddhist reliquary stupa.[146][Note 4][Note 5]

Rulers edit

The rulers of the Alchons practiced skull deformation, as evidenced from their coins, a practice shared with the Huns that migrated into Europe. The names of the first Alchon rulers do not survive. Starting from 430 CE, names of Alchon kings survive on coins[145] and religious inscriptions:[146]

Coinage edit

 
An early Alchon Huns coin based on a Sasanian design, with bust imitating Sasanian king Shapur III. Only the legend "Alchono" appears on the obverse in the Greco-Bactrian script.[22][41][147]
Early Bactrian coinage based on Sasanian designs

The earliest Alchon Hun coins were based on Sasanian designs, often with the simple addition of the Alchon tamgha and a mention of "Alchon" or "Alkhan".[32] Various coins minted in Bactria and based on Sasanian designs are known, often with busts imitating Sasanian kings Shapur II (r.309 to 379 CE) and Shapur III (r.383 to 388 CE), with attendants to a fire altar on the reverse.[41][42] It is thought that the Sasanids lost control of Bactria to the Kidarites during the reign of Shapur II circa 370 CE, followed by the Hephthalites, and subsequently by the Alchon.[34]

Later original coinage

Later Alchon coinage became original and differed from predecessors in that it was devoid of Iranian (Sasanian) symbolism.[12] The rulers are depicted with elongated skulls, apparently a result of artificial cranial deformation.[12]

After their invasion of India the coins of the Alchon were numerous and varied, as they issued copper, silver and gold coins, sometimes roughly following the Gupta pattern. The Alchon empire in India must have been quite significant and rich, with the ability to issue a significant volume of gold coins.[148]

Coinage edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Here, for the first time, the names of Hepthalite (Alchon) kings are given, some of them otherwise known only from coins. Another important fact is that it dates all these kings in the same time." from Aydogdy Kurbanov (2010). The hephthalites: archaeological and historical analysis. Berlin: Free University of Berlin. p. 120. OCLC 863884689. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  2. ^ "After the successful conclusion of the Eran episode, the conquering Hunas ultimately burst out of Eastern Malwa and swooped down upon the very heart of the Gupta empire. The eastern countries were overrun and the city of the Gaudas was occupied. The Manjusrimulakalpa gives a scintillating account of this phase of Toramana's conquest. It says that after Bhanugupta's defeat and discomfiture, Toramana led the Hunas against Magadha and obliged Baladitya (Narasimha-gupta Baladitya, the reigning Gupta monarch) to retire to Bengal. This great monarch (Toramana), Sudra by caste and possessed of great prowess and armies took hold of that position (bank of the Ganges) and commanded the country round about. That powerful king then invested the town called Tirtha in the Gauda country." in Upendra Thakur (1967). The Hūṇas in India. Vol. 58. Varanasi: Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office. p. 122. OCLC 551489665.
  3. ^ "The earth betook itself (for succour), when it was afflicted by kings of the present age, who manifested pride; who were cruel through want of proper training; who,from delusion, transgressed the path of good conduct; (and) who were destitute of virtuous delights " from "Sondhni pillars: where Punjabis met with their Waterloo 1500 years ago". Punjab Monitor. Amritsar: Bhai Nand Lal Foundation. 27 April 2013. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  4. ^ "Together with the great sahi Khingila, together with the god-king Toramana, together with the mistress of a great monastery Sasa, together with the great sahi Mehama, together with Sadavikha, together with the great king Javukha, the son of Sadavikha, during the reign of Mehama."from Gudrun Melzer; Lore Sander (2000). Jens Braarvig (ed.). A Copper Scroll Inscription from the Time of the Alchon Huns. Buddhist manuscripts. Vol. 3. Oslo: Hermes Pub. pp. 251–278. ISBN 9788280340061.
  5. ^ For an image of the copper scroll: Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Showcase 8
  6. ^ For equivalent coin, see CNG Coins
  7. ^ This coin is in the collection of the British Museum. For equivalent coin, see CNG Coins

References edit

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External links edit

  Media related to Alchon Huns at Wikimedia Commons

  • Nezak Kings in Zabulistan and Kabulistan 26 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna
  • Coinage of the Hephthalites/ Alchons, Grifterrec

alchon, huns, bactrian, αλχον, alchon, also, known, alchono, alxon, alkhon, alkhan, alakhana, walxon, were, nomadic, people, established, states, central, asia, south, asia, during, centuries, they, were, first, mentioned, being, located, paropamisus, later, e. The Alchon Huns Bactrian alxon n o Alchon n o also known as the Alchono Alxon Alkhon Alkhan Alakhana and Walxon were a nomadic people who established states in Central Asia and South Asia during the 4th and 6th centuries CE 1 They were first mentioned as being located in Paropamisus and later expanded south east into the Punjab and Central India as far as Eran and Kausambi The Alchon invasion of the Indian subcontinent eradicated the Kidarite Huns who had preceded them by about a century and contributed to the fall of the Gupta Empire in a sense bringing an end to Classical India 9 5 Alchon Huns370 670Portrait of Alchon king Khingila c 450 CE and the bull lunar tamga of the Alchon known as Tamgha S1 1 as visible on Alchon coinage SanjeliEranGwaliorSondaniChoti SadriKuraKausambi Toramana seals RisthalALCHONHUNSHEPHTHALITESNEZAKHUNSSASA NIANSRAISGUPTASVAKATAKASZHANGZHUNGKINGDOMNorthern WeiTOCHARIANSclass notpageimage Find spots of epigraphic inscriptions red dots indicating local control by the Alchon Huns in India between 500 530 CE 2 with neighbouring polities 3 and territorial extent of the Alchon Huns brown 4 CapitalKapisa Udabhanda 5 Sagala 6 7 Common languagesBrahmi and Bactrian written ReligionHinduism Buddhism Zoroastrianism 8 GovernmentNomadic empireHistorical eraLate antiquity Established370 Disestablished670CurrencyDrachmPreceded by Succeeded bySassanian EmpireKidaritesGupta Empire HephthalitesNezak HunsTurk ShahiSecond Aulikara dynastyKarkota dynastyMaukhari dynastyLater Gupta dynastyTaank KingdomKalachuri dynastyToday part ofAfghanistanPakistanIndiaThe invasion of India by the Huna peoples follows invasions of the subcontinent in the preceding centuries by the Yavana Indo Greeks the Saka Indo Scythians the Pahlava Indo Parthians and the Kushana Yuezhi The Alchon Empire was the second of four major Huna states established in Central and South Asia The Alchon were preceded by the Kidarites and succeeded by the Hephthalites in Bactria and the Nezak Huns in the Hindu Kush The names of the Alchon kings are known from their extensive coinage Buddhist accounts and a number of commemorative inscriptions throughout the Indian subcontinent The Alchons have long been considered as a part or a sub division of the Hephthalites or as their eastern branch but now tend to be considered as a separate entity 1 10 11 Contents 1 Identity 1 1 Name 1 2 Visual appearance 1 3 Symbolism 2 History 2 1 Invasion of Bactria 370 CE 2 2 Invasion of Kabulistan c 385 CE 2 3 Coinage 2 4 Gandhara 460 CE 2 5 Sindh 2 5 1 Contributions 2 6 First Hunnic War Central India 2 6 1 First Battle of Eran 510 CE 2 6 2 Defeat 515 CE 2 7 Second Hunnic War to Malwa and retreat 2 7 1 Victories of the Maukharis 2 8 Retreat to Gandhara and Kashmir 530 CE 2 8 1 Kashmir descendents of the Alchon Huns 2 9 Retreat to Kabulistan and displacement of the Nezak Huns 3 Religion and ethics 3 1 Persecution of Buddhism 3 2 Sun cult Vaishnavism and Shivaism 4 Consequences on India 4 1 Destructions 4 2 Political fragmentation 4 3 Rise of Saivism 4 4 International trade 4 5 Artistic syncretism A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art 4 5 1 The Chilek silver bowl 4 6 Coinage legacy 6th 12th century CE 4 7 Ethnic legacy 5 Sources 5 1 Talagan copper scroll 6 Rulers 7 Coinage 7 1 Coinage 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksIdentity editSee also Origin of the Huns Name edit To contemporaneous observers in India the Alchon were one of the Huṇa peoples or Hunas 12 whose origins are controversial A seal from Kausambi associated with Toramana bears the title Hunaraja Huna King 13 Toramana is also described as a Huna nbsp nbsp Huṇa in the Risthal inscription 14 15 nbsp The word Alchono alxonno in the Greco Bactrian cursive script on a coin of Khingila 16 17 18 The Hunas appear to have been the peoples known in contemporaneous Iranian sources as Xwn Xiyon and similar names which were later Romanised as Xionites or Chionites The Hunas are often linked to the Huns that invaded Europe from Central Asia during the same period Consequently the word Hun has three slightly different meanings depending on the context in which it is used 1 the Huns of Europe 2 groups associated with the Huna people who invaded northern India 3 a vague term for Hun like people The Alchon have also been labelled Huns with essentially the second meaning as well as elements of the third 19 20 The name Alchon generally given to them comes from the Bactrian legend of their early coinage where they simply imitated Sassanian coins to which they added the name alchono nbsp alxono also alxonno 21 in Bactrian script a slight adaptation of the Greek script and the tamgha symbol of their clan 22 23 16 24 Several original coins such as those of Khingila also bear the mention alchono together with the Tamgha symbol 16 Philologically alchono alxono may be a combination of al for Aryan and xono for Huns although this remains hypothetical 17 Another etymology could be al Turkish for scarlet and xono for Huns meaning Red Huns red being a symbol of the south among steppe nomads 25 Visual appearance edit nbsp nbsp Left Portrait of Alchon king Khingila from his coinage c 450 CE Right Elongated skull excavated in Samarkand dated 600 800 CE Afrasiab Museum of Samarkand The Alchons are generally recognized by their elongated skull a result of artificial skull deformation which may have represented their corporate identity 26 The elongated skulls appear clearly in most of the portraits of rulers in the coinage of the Alkhon Huns and most visibly on the coinage of Khingila 26 These elongated skulls which they obviously displayed with pride distinguished them from other peoples such as their predecessors the Kidarites 26 On their coins the spectacular skulls came to replace the Sasanian type crowns which had been current in the coinage of the region 26 This practice is also known among other peoples of the steppes particularly the Huns and as far as Europe where it was introduced by the Huns themselves 26 27 In another ethnic custom the Alchons were represented beardless often wearing a moustache in clear contrast with the Sasanian Empire prototype which was generally bearded 28 The emblematic look of the Alchons seems to have become rather fashionable in the area as shown by the depiction of the Iranian hero Rostam mythical king of Zabulistan with an elongated skull in his 7th century CE mural at Panjikent 29 30 31 Symbolism edit Another way for the Alchon Huns to affirm their identity and to differentiate themselves from their predecessors the Kidarites was the use of a specific symbol or tamgha which regularly appears on their coinage and seals nbsp 26 History editInvasion of Bactria 370 CE edit nbsp BYZANTINEEMPIRE nbsp ALKHONHUNSSASANIANEMPIREKIDARITESGUPTAEMPIREclass notpageimage The Alkhons are initially recorded in the area of Bactria circa 370 CE from where they confronted the Sasanian Empire to the west and the Kidarites to the southeast Emergence of the Alchon tamgha nbsp nbsp An early Alchon coin based on the design of Sasanian coinage with bust imitating Sasanian king Shapur II r 309 to 379 CE only adding the Alchon Tamgha symbol nbsp and Alchono alxonno in Bactrian script on the obverse Dated 400 440 CE 22 32 33 During the reign of Shapur II the Sasanian Empire and the Kushano Sasanians gradually lost the control of Bactria to these invaders from Central Asia first the Kidarites from around 335 CE then the Alchon Huns from around 370 CE who would follow up with the invasion of India a century later and lastly the Hephthalites from around 450 CE 34 Early confrontations between the Sasanian Empire of Shapur II with the nomadic hordes from Central Asia called the Chionites were described by Ammianus Marcellinus he reports that in 356 CE Shapur II was taking his winter quarters on his eastern borders repelling the hostilities of the bordering tribes of the Chionites and the Euseni Euseni is usually amended to Cuseni meaning the Kushans 35 36 finally making a treaty of alliance with the Chionites and the Gelani the most warlike and indefatigable of all tribes in 358 CE 37 After concluding this alliance the Chionites probably of the Kidarites tribe 38 under their King Grumbates accompanied Shapur II in the war against the Romans especially at the siege of Amida in 359 CE Victories of the Xionites during their campaigns in the Eastern Caspian lands were also witnessed and described by Ammianus Marcellinus 39 The Alchon Huns occupied Bactria circa 370 CE chasing the Kidarites in the direction of India and started minting coins in the style of Shapur II but bearing their name Alchono Invasion of Kabulistan c 385 CE edit Around 380 385 CE the Alchons emerged in Kapisa taking over Kabulistan from the Sassanian Persians while at the same time the Kidarites Red Huns ruled in Gandhara 12 The Alchons are known to have reused the mint and the coin dies of Shapur II south of the Hindu Kush again simply adding their name Alchono to Sasanian coinage 40 The Alchon Huns are sometimes said to have taken control of Kabul in 388 12 Coinage edit The Alchon Huns initially issued anonymous coins based on Sasanian designs 32 Several types of these coins are known usually minted in Bactria using Sasanian coinage designs with busts imitating Sasanian kings Shapur II r 309 to 379 CE and Shapur III r 383 to 388 CE adding the Alchon Tamgha nbsp and the name Alchono alxonno in Bactrian script a slight adaptation of the Greek script which had been introduced in the region by the Greco Bactrians in the 3rd century BCE on the obverse and with attendants to a fire altar a standard Sasanian design on the reverse 41 42 It is thought the Alchons took over the Sasanian mints in Kabulistan after 385 CE reusing dies of Shapur II and Shapur III to which they added the name Alchono 43 Gandhara 460 CE edit nbsp Portrait of an older King Khingila founder of the Alchon Huns on one of his coins c 430 490 CE Around 430 King Khingila the most notable Alchon ruler and the first one to be named and represented on his coins with the legend xiggilo Chiggilo in Bactrian emerged and took control of the routes across the Hindu Kush from the Kidarites 12 1 Coins of the Alchons rulers Khingila and Mehama were found at the Buddhist monastery of Mes Aynak southeast of Kabul confirming the Alchon presence in this area around 450 500 CE 44 Khingila seems to have been a contemporary of the Sassanian ruler Bahram V 1 As the Alchons took control diplomatic missions were established in 457 with China 45 162 Khingila under the name Shengil was called King of India in the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi 11 Alchon ruler Mehama r 461 493 was elevated to the position of Governor for Sasanian Emperor Peroz I r 459 484 and described himself as King of the people of Kadag and governor of the famous and prosperous King of Kings Peroz in a 462 463 letter 46 He allied with Peroz I in his victory over the Kidarites in 466 CE and may also have helped him take the throne against his brother Hormizd III 47 But he was later able to wrestle autonomy or even independence 47 Between 460 and 470 CE the Alchons took over Gandhara and the Punjab which also had remained under the control of the Kidarites while the Gupta Empire remained further east 48 20 The Alkhon Huns may simply have filled the power vacuum created by the decline of the Kidarites following their defeat in India against the Gupta Empire of Skandagupta in 455 CE 49 and their subsequent defeat in 467 CE against the Sasanian Empire of Peroz I with Hephthalite and Alchon aid under Mehama which put an end to Kidarite rule in Transoxiana once and for all 50 nbsp The silver bowl in the British Museum nbsp Alchon horseman 51 The so called Hephthalite bowl from Gandhara features two Kidarite hunters wearing characteristic crowns and as well as two Alchon hunters one of them shown here with skull deformation suggesting a period of peaceful coexistence between the two entities 51 Swat District Pakistan 460 479 CE British Museum 52 53 The numismatic evidence as well as the so called Hephthalite bowl from Gandhara now in the British Museum suggests a period of peaceful coexistence between the Kidarites and the Alchons as it features two Kidarite noble hunters wearing their characteristic crowns together with two Alchon hunters and one of the Alchons inside a medallion 51 At one point the Kidarites withdrew from Gandhara and the Alchons took over their mints from the time of Khingila 51 The Alchons apparently undertook the mass destruction of Buddhist monasteries and stupas at Taxila a high center of learning which never recovered from the destruction 54 Virtually all of the Alchon coins found in the area of Taxila were found in the ruins of burned down monasteries where apparently some of the invaders died alongside local defenders during the wave of destructions 54 It is thought that the Kanishka stupa one of the most famous and tallest buildings in antiquity was destroyed by them during their invasion of the area in the 460s CE The Mankiala stupa was also vandalized during their invasions 55 The rest of the 5th century marks a period of territorial expansion and eponymous kings several of which appear to have overlapped and ruled jointly 56 Note 1 The Alchon Huns invaded parts of northwestern India from the second half of the 5th century 57 According to the Bhitari pillar inscription the Gupta ruler Skandagupta already confronted and defeated an unnamed Huna ruler c 456 457 CE 57 Sindh edit nbsp Uncertain Hunnic chieftain Sindh 5th century Main article Sasanian coinage of Sindh From circa 480 CE there are also suggestion of Hunnic occupation of Sindh between Multan and the mouth of the Indus river as the local Sasanian coinage of Sindh starts to incorporate sun symbols or a Hunnic tamgha to the design 58 These little known coins are usually described as the result of the invasions of the Hephthalites 58 The quality of the coins also becomes very much degraded by that time and the actual gold content becomes quite low compared to the previous Sasanian style coinage 59 Contributions edit The Huṇas were precisely ruling the area of Malwa at the doorstep of the Western Deccan at the time the famous Ajanta caves were made by ruler Harisena of the Vakataka Empire 60 61 Through their control of vast areas of northwestern India the Huns may actually have acted as a cultural bridge between the area of Gandhara and the Western Deccan at the time when the Ajanta or Pitalkhora caves were being decorated with designs of Gandharan inspiration such as Buddhas dressed in robes with abundant folds 62 First Hunnic War Central India edit Kausambi nbsp The monastery of Ghoshitarama in Kausambi was probably destroyed by the Alchon Huns under Toramana 13 nbsp Huna Raja Toramana seal impression Kausambi 63 In the First Hunnic War 496 515 2 the Alchon reached their maximum territorial extent with King Toramana pushing deep into Indian territory reaching Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh in Central India and ultimately contributing to the downfall of the Gupta Empire 45 162 To the south the Sanjeli inscriptions indicate that Toramana penetrated at least as far as northern Gujarat and possibly to the port of Bharukaccha 64 To the east far into Central India the city of Kausambi where seals with Toramana s name were found was probably sacked by the Alkhons in 497 500 before they moved to occupy Malwa 2 65 66 70 67 In particular it is thought that the monastery of Ghoshitarama in Kausambi was destroyed by Toramana as several of his seals were found there one of them bearing the name Toramana impressed over the official seal of the monastery and the other bearing the title Hunaraja King of the Huns together with debris and arrowheads 13 Another seal this time by Mihirakula is reported from Kausambi 13 These territories may have been taken from Gupta Emperor Budhagupta 66 79 Alternatively they may have been captured during the rule of his successor Narasimhagupta 68 First Battle of Eran 510 CE edit A decisive battle occurred in Malwa where a local Gupta ruler probably a governor named Bhanugupta was in charge In the Bhanugupta Eran inscription this local ruler reports that his army participated in a great battle in 510 CE at Eran where it suffered severe casualties 68 Bhanugupta was probably vanquished by Toramana at this battle so that the western Gupta province of Malwa fell into the hands of the Hunas 68 nbsp Portrait of Toramana He sacked Kausambi and occupied Malwa 69 According to a 6th century CE Buddhist work the Manjusri mula kalpa Bhanugupta lost Malwa to the Shudra Toramana who continued his conquest to Magadha forcing Narasimhagupta Baladitya to make a retreat to Bengal Toramana possessed of great prowess and armies then conquered the city of Tirtha in the Gauda country modern Bengal 70 Note 2 Toramana is said to have crowned a new king in Benares named Prakataditya who is also presented as a son of Narasimha Gupta 68 nbsp The Eran Varaha boar under the neck of which can be found the Eran boar inscription mentioning the rule of Toramana 71 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Maharajadhiraja Shri Toramaṇa Great King of Kings Lord Toramana in the Eran boar inscription of Toramana in the Gupta script 72 nbsp A rare gold coin of Toramana in the style of the Guptas The obverse legend reads The lord of the Earth Toramana having conquered the Earth wins Heaven 73 74 Having conquered the territory of Malwa from the Guptas Toramana was mentioned in a famous inscription in Eran confirming his rule on the region 68 The Eran boar inscription of Toramana in Eran Malwa 540 km south of New Delhi state of Madhya Pradesh of his first regnal year indicates that eastern Malwa was included in his dominion The inscription is written under the neck of the boar in 8 lines of Sanskrit in the Brahmi script The first line of the inscription in which Toramana is introduced as Mahararajadhidaja The Great King of Kings 66 79 reads In year one of the reign of the King of Kings Sri Toramana who rules the world with splendor and radiance Eran boar inscription of Toramana 71 On his gold coins minted in India in the style of the Gupta Emperors Toramana presented himself confidently as Avanipati Torama no vijitya vasudham divam jayatiThe lord of the Earth Toramana having conquered the Earth wins Heaven Toramana gold coin legend 73 74 The fact that the Alchon Huns issued gold coins such as the Toramana issue in addition to their silver and copper coins suggest that their empire in India was quite rich and powerful 75 Defeat 515 CE edit Toramana was finally defeated by local Indian rulers The local ruler Bhanugupta is sometimes credited with vanquishing Toramana as his 510 CE inscription in Eran recording his participation in a great battle is vague enough to allow for such an interpretation The great battle in which Bhanagupta participated is not detailed and it is impossible to know what it was or which way it ended and interpretations vary 76 77 78 Mookerji and others consider in view of the inscription as well as the Manjusri mula kalpa that Bhanugupta was on the contrary vanquished by Toramana at the 510 CE Eran battle so that the western Gupta province of Malwa fell into the hands of the Hunas at that point 68 so that Toramana could be mentioned in the Eran boar inscription as the ruler of the region 68 Toramana was finally vanquished with certainty by an Indian ruler of the Aulikara dynasty of Malwa after nearly 20 years in India According to the Risthal stone slab inscription discovered in 1983 King Prakashadharma defeated Toramana in 515 CE 2 64 79 The First Hunnic War thus ended with a Hunnic defeat and Hunnic troops apparently retreated to the area of Punjab 2 The Manjusri mula kalpa simply states that Toramana died in Benares as he was returning westward from his battles with Narasimhagupta 68 Second Hunnic War to Malwa and retreat edit nbsp Mihirakula on one of his coins He was finally defeated in 528 by King Yasodharman The Second Hunnic War started in 520 when the Alchon king Mihirakula son of Toramana is recorded in his military encampment on the borders of the Jhelum by Chinese monk Song Yun 2 At the head of the Alchon Mihirakula is then recorded in Gwalior Central India as Lord of the Earth in the Gwalior inscription of Mihirakula 2 According to some accounts Mihirakula invaded India as far as the Gupta capital Pataliputra which was sacked and left in ruins 80 66 64 There was a king called Mo hi lo kiu lo Mihirakula who established his authority in this town Sagala and ruled over India He was of quick talent and naturally brave He subdued all the neighbouring provinces without exception Xuanzang The Record of the Western Regions 7th century CE 81 The destructions of Mihirakula are also recorded in the Rajatarangini 11 Mihirakula a man of violent acts and resembling Kala Death ruled in the land which was overrun by hordes of Mlecchas the people knew his approach by noticing the vultures crows and other birds which were flying ahead to feed on those who were being slain within his army s reach The Rajatarangini 11 nbsp Pillar of Yashodharman at Sondani near Mandsaur with the Sondani inscription claiming victory over Mihirakula of the Alchons in 528 CE Finally however Mihirakula was defeated in 528 by an alliance of Indian principalities led by Yasodharman the Aulikara king of Malwa in the Battle of Sondani in Central India which resulted in the loss of Alchon possessions in the Punjab and north India by 542 The Sondani inscription in Sondani near Mandsaur records the submission by force of the Hunas and claims that Yasodharman had rescued the earth from rude and cruel kings 82 Note 3 and that he had bent the head of Mihirakula 2 In a part of the Sondani inscription Yasodharman thus praises himself for having defeated king Mihirakula 71 nbsp Mihirakula used the Indian Gupta script on his coinage Obv Bust of king with legend in Gupta script nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 83 Ja yatu Mihirakula Let there be victory to Mihirakula 84 85 86 87 He Yasodharman to whose two feet respect was paid with complimentary presents of the flowers from the lock of hair on the top of his head by even that famous king Mihirakula whose forehead was pained through being bent low down by the strength of his arm in the act of compelling obeisance Sondani pillar inscription 82 88 The Gupta Empire emperor Narasimhagupta is also credited in helping repulse Mihirakula after the latter had conquered most of India according to the reports of Chinese monk Xuanzang 89 90 In a fanciful account Xuanzang who wrote a century later in 630 CE reported that Mihirakula had conquered all India except for an island where the king of Magadha named Baladitya who could be Gupta ruler Narasimhagupta Baladitya took refuge but that was finally captured by the Indian king He later spared Mihirakula s life on the intercession of his mother as she perceived the Hun ruler as a man of remarkable beauty and vast wisdom 90 Mihirakula is then said to have returned to Kashmir to retake the throne 91 45 168 This ended the Second Hunnic War in c 534 after an occupation which lasted nearly 15 years 2 Victories of the Maukharis edit According to the Aphsad inscription of Adityasena the Maukharis also fought against the Hunas in the areas of the Gangetic Doab and Magadha 92 The Aphsad inscription of Adityasena mentions the military successes of kings of the Later Gupta dynasty against the Maukharis and explains that the Maukharis were past victors of the Hunas 92 nbsp The Aphsad inscription of Adityasena The son of that king Kumaragupta was the illustrious Damodaragupta by whom his enemies were slain just like the demons by the god Damodara Breaking up the proudly stepping array of mighty elephants belonging to the Maukhari which had thrown aloft in battle the troops of the Hunas in order to trample them to death he became unconscious and expired in the fight Line 8 of the Aphsad inscription of Adityasena 93 The Maukharis led by their king Ishanavarman rather than any of the Guptas were therefore pivotal in repelling the Hunas 94 Retreat to Gandhara and Kashmir 530 CE edit nbsp Coinage of Sri Pravarasena successor of Mihirakula and supposed founder of Srinagar Obverse Standing king with two figured seated below Name Pravarasena Reverse goddess seated on a lion Legend Kidara Circa 6th early 7th century CEThe Alchon Huns resettled in the area of Gandhara and Kashmir in northwestern India under the rule of Sri Pravarasena c 530 590 CE thought to be the son of Toramana 95 His reign probably lasted about 60 years from circa 530 CE 95 96 According to Kalhana s 12th century text Rajatarangini Pravarasena established a new capital named Pravarapura also known as Pravarasena pura Based on topographical details Pravarapura appears to be same as the modern city of Srinagar 97 95 He also built a temple named Pravaresha 95 96 Pravarasena was probably succeeded by a king named Gokarna a follower of Shiva and then by his son king Narendraditya Khinkhila 96 95 The son of Narendraditya was Yudhishthira who succeeded him as king and was the last known king of the Alchon Huns 95 According to the Rajatarangini Yudhishthira ruled 40 years probably until circa 625 CE but he was dethroned by Pratapaditya son of the founder of the Karkoṭa Empire Durlabhavardhana 98 99 100 Kashmir descendents of the Alchon Huns edit Several rulers with Alchon names appear in Kalhana s Rajatarangini 101 Although the chronology of the Rajatarangini is largely deficient several of the names of these rulers especially those belonging to the so called Gonanda dynasty II have been confirmed by coin finds in Kashmir and dated to the 7th century CE They were very likely descendents of the Alchon Huns in the Kashmir area 102 Retreat to Kabulistan and displacement of the Nezak Huns edit nbsp Portrait of Toramana II from his coinage Around the end of the 6th century CE the Alchons withdrew to Kashmir and pulling back from Punjab and Gandhara moved west across the Khyber pass where they resettled in Kabulistan under the leadership of Toramana II 103 There their coinage suggests that they merged with the Nezak as coins in Nezak style now bear the Alchon tamga mark 104 71 nbsp Alchon Nezak crossover coinage 580 680 Nezak style bust on the obverse and Alchon tamga nbsp within double border on the reverse 104 During the 7th century continued military encounters are reported between the Hunas and the northern Indian states which followed the disappearance of the Gupta Empire For example Prabhakaravardhana the Vardhana dynasty king of Thanesar in northern India and father of Harsha is reported to have been A lion to the Huna deer a burning fever to the king of the Indus land 105 253 The Alchons in India declined rapidly around the same time that the Hephthalites a related group to the north were defeated by an alliance between the Sassanians and the Western Turkic Kaghanate in 557 565 CE 106 187 The areas of Khuttal and Kapisa Gandhara had remained independent kingdoms under the Alchon Huns under kings such as Narendra but in 625 CE they were taken over by the expanding Western Turks when they established the Yabghus of Tokharistan 107 Eventually the Nezak Alchons were replaced by the Turk Shahi dynasty around 665 CE 106 187 Religion and ethics edit nbsp Alchon devotee Butkara I construction phase 4 5th century CE 108 The four Alchon kings Khingila Toramana Javukha and Mehama are mentioned as donors to a Buddhist stupa in the Talagan copper scroll inscription dated to 492 or 493 CE that is at a time before the Hunnic wars in India started This corresponds to a time when the Alchons had recently taken control of Taxila around 460 CE at the center of the Buddhist regions of northwestern India 108 Numerous Alchon coins were found in the dedication compartment of the Tope Kalan stupa in Hadda 109 Mural with paintings of probable Alchon devotees can be seen in the Buddhist complex of the Butkara Stupa Butkara I construction phase 4 Dated to the 5th century CE they suggest that the Alchon Huns may have been participants to the local Buddhist culture 110 Persecution of Buddhism edit Later however the attitude of the Alchons towards Buddhism is reported to have been negative Mihirakula in particular is remembered by Buddhist sources to have been a terrible persecutor of their religion in Gandhara in northern modern day Pakistan 111 During his reign over one thousand Buddhist monasteries throughout Gandhara are said to have been destroyed 112 In particular the writings of Chinese monk Xuanzang from 630 CE explained that Mihirakula ordered the destruction of Buddhism and the expulsion of monks 45 162 Indeed the Buddhist art of Gandhara in particular Greco Buddhist art becomes essentially extinct around that period When Xuanzang visited northwestern India in c 630 CE he reported that Buddhism had drastically declined and that most of the monasteries were deserted and left in ruins 113 Although the Guptas were traditionally a Hindu dynasty 114 around the period of the invasions of the Alchon the Gupta rulers had apparently been favouring Buddhism According to contemporary writer Paramartha Mihirakula s supposed nemesis Narasimhagupta Baladitya was brought up under the influence of the Mahayanist philosopher Vasubandhu 114 He built a sangharama at Nalanda and a 300 ft 91 m high vihara with a Buddha statue within which according to Xuanzang resembled the great Vihara built under the Bodhi tree According to the Manjushrimulakalpa c 800 CE king Narasimhsagupta became a Buddhist monk and left the world through meditation Dhyana 114 Xuanzang also noted that Narasimhagupta Baladitya s son Vajra who also commissioned a sangharama possessed a heart firm in faith 115 45 116 330 The 12th century Kashmiri historian Kalhana also painted a dreary picture of Mihirakula s cruelty as well as his persecution of the Buddhist faith Solar symbolism nbsp Solar symbol on the coinage of Toramana nbsp Khingila with solar symbol nbsp Alchon king with small male figure wearing solar nimbus In him the northern region brought forth as it were another god of death bent in rivalry to surpass Yama the god of death residing in the southern regions People knew of his approach by noticing the vultures crows and other birds flying ahead eager to feed on those who were being slain within his army s reach The royal Vetala demon was day and night surrounded by thousands of murdered human beings even in his pleasure houses This terrible enemy of mankind had no pity for children no compassion for women no respect for the aged 12th century Kashmiri historian Kalhana 90 Sun cult Vaishnavism and Shivaism edit nbsp Coinage of Khingila with Hindu goddess Lakshmi The Alchons are generally described as sun worshipers a traditional cult of steppe nomads This stems from the appearance of sun symbols on some of their coins combined with the probable influence they received from the worship of Surya in India 117 The Hindu Vaishnavite goddess Lakshmi goddess of wealth fortune power beauty fertility and prosperity and also an ancient goddess of Buddhism also appears on the coinage of some rulers especially Khingila 118 119 and Toramana Mihirakula is also said to have been an ardent worshiper of Shiva 120 121 although he may have been selectively attracted to the destructive powers of the Indian deity 90 Mihirakula is said to have been the founder of the Shankaracharya Temple a shrine dedicated to Shiva in Srinagar 122 123 a shrine to Shiva named Mihiresvara in Halada and a large city called Mihirapura 123 Consequences on India editSee also Classical India and Decline of Buddhism in India The Alchon invasions although only spanning a few decades had long term effects on India and in a sense brought an end to the middle kingdoms of India 90 Destructions edit nbsp South Asia600 CE nbsp MORISPANDYASLICCHAVISCHOLASZHANGZHUNGCHERASSAMATATASGAUDAKAMARUPAVISHNU KUNDINASPALLAVASALUPASNEZAKSALCHONSKALINGASPANDUVAMSHISSHASHANKASSHAILODBHAVASGONANDASMAUKHARISTAKKAWESTERNTURKSTOCHARIANSMAITRAKASRAISPRATIHARASLATER GUPTASPUSHYA BHUTISCHALUKYASEARLYKALA CHURISSASANIANEMPIRE class notpageimage Political fragmentation of South Asia after the fall of the Gupta Empire and the retreat of the Alchon Huns to the northwest circa 600 CE 124 Indian urban culture was left in decline Major traditional cities such as Kausambi and probably Ujjain were in ruins Vidisha and Mathura fell into decline 125 Buddhism gravely weakened by the destruction of monasteries and the killing of monks started to collapse 90 Great centers of learning were destroyed such as the city of Taxila bringing cultural regression 90 The art of Mathura suffered greatly from the destructions brought by the Hunas as did the art of Gandhara in the northwest and both schools of art were nearly wiped out under the rule of the Huna Mihirakula 126 New cities arose from these destructions such as Dashapura Kanyakubja Sthaneshvara Valabhi and Shripura 125 Political fragmentation edit Soon after the invasions the Gupta Empire already weakened by these invasions and the rise of local rulers ended as well 105 221 Following the invasions northern India was left in disarray with numerous smaller Indian powers emerging after the crumbling of the Guptas 127 Many autonomous regional states rose to prominence following the dislocation of Gupta power the Aulikaras the Maukharis the Maitrakas the Kalacuris or the Vardhanas all in a constant flux of rivalry 125 With the end of Hunnic power some India polities such as the Maukhari dynasty were able to establish direct contacts with Central Asia and the Sasanian Empire the Maukhari King Sarvavarman of Kannauj is said to have introduced the game of chess to the Sasanian court of Khosrow I between the beginning of Sarvavarman s reign in 560 565 and the end of Khosrow s reign in 579 128 129 Rise of Saivism edit Vaisnavism which had been strongly supported by the Gupta Empire was discredited by the decline and the ultimate failure of the Empire 125 All the newly arising regional powers preferred adopting Saivism instead as did the Alchon Huns under Mihirakula giving a strong impetus to the development of the worship of Shiva and its ideology of power 125 Vaisnavism only remained strong in the territories which had not been affected by these events South India and Kashmir 125 International trade edit The Huna invasions are said to have seriously damaged India s trade with Europe and Central Asia 90 particularly Indo Roman trade relations which the Gupta Empire had greatly benefited from The Guptas had been exporting numerous luxury products such as silk leather goods fur iron products ivory pearl and pepper from centers such as Nasik Paithan Pataliputra and Benares The Huna invasion probably disrupted these trade relations and the tax revenues that came with them 130 During their rule of 60 years the Alchons are said to have altered the hierarchy of ruling families and the Indian caste system For example the Hunas are often said to have become the precursors of the Rajputs 90 On the artistic side however the Alchon Huns may have played a role just like the Western Satraps centuries before them in helping spread the art of Gandhara to the western Deccan region 131 Artistic syncretism A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art edit nbsp Fragment of a lid with a hunting scene Gandhara 5 6th century CE 132 The advances of the Alchon Huns in India seems to have fostered a type of syncretic art in Gandhara during the 5th 6th century mixing Gupta art with Sasanian and Hunish inspiration and themes 133 Particularly significant are a type of decorated lids from Gandhara which display courtly or hunting scenes mixing them with Gupta decorative designs 133 nbsp Lid with Combat between a Man and a Lion Cleveland Museum of Art 134 nbsp Box Lid with a Winged Lion Gandhara 5th century CE nbsp Box Lid with a Lion Attacking an Elephant Gandhara 5th century CE 135 nbsp Box Lid with a Phoenix Gandhara 5th century CE 136 The Chilek silver bowl edit nbsp nbsp The Chilek bowl with an Alchon Hun ruler in the central medallion surrounded by naked Indian style dancers Main article Chilek silver bowl Several silver bowls related to the Alchons have been found in the area of Samarkand including the Chilek bowl Cilek bowl which is considered as the best known specimen of Hephthalite art and is similar in composition with the Hephthalite silver bowl but represents six dancers in Indian costume with Iranian ribbons and Hephthalite short heads Each of the dancers is positionned under a pointed arch in Indian style and seems to be derived from contemporary Gupta art 137 This bowl too is considered as an Alchon object but was possibly manufactured in India at the request of the Alchons It is now in the Samarkand Museum 138 139 137 The man in the medallion at the bottom of the Chilek bowl has a clearly elongated skull characteristic of the Alchons Huns at that time and place 140 Coinage legacy 6th 12th century CE edit Main article Indo Sasanian coinage As they invaded northern and central India circa 500 CE the Alchon Huns issued several types of coinage on the model of the Sasanian Empire with ruler in profile on the obverse and sacred fire with attendants on the reverse 141 It is thought that in the process of minting coins in occupied lands they transmitted Sasanian coin designs to northern and western India 141 This created a major type of Indian coinage called Indo Sasanian coinage which lasted in degraded form until the 12th century CE as far as the Gangetic region 141 Ethnic legacy edit nbsp Coin of the Gurjara Confederacy Peroz I type Sindh circa 570 712 CE The Gurjaras and Gurjara Pratiharas suddenly emerged as a political power in north India around sixth century CE shortly after the Hunas invasion of that region 142 The Gujara Pratihara were likely formed from a fusion of the Alchon Huns White Huns and native Indian element and can probably be considered as a Hunnic state although its precise origins remain unclear 143 In Bana s Harshacharita 7th century CE the Gurjaras are associated with the Hunas 144 Some of the Hunas may also have contributed to the formation of the warlike Rajputs 143 Sources edit nbsp The Talagan copper scrollAncient sources refer to the Alchons and associated groups ambiguously with various names such as Huna in Indian texts and Xionites in Greek texts Xuanzang chronicled some of the later history of the Alchons 89 Modern archeology has provided valuable insights into the history of the Alchons The most significant cataloguing of the Alchon dynasty came in 1967 with Robert Gobl s analysis of the coinage of the Iranian Huns 145 This work documented the names of a partial chronology of Alchon kings beginning with Khingila In 2012 the Kunsthistorisches Museum completed a reanalysis Archived 17 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine of previous finds together with a large number of new coins that appeared on the antiquities market during the Second Afghan Civil War redefining the timeline and narrative of the Alchons and related peoples 106 Talagan copper scroll edit Main article Talagan copper scroll A significant contribution to our understanding of Alchon history came in 2006 when Gudrun Melzer and Lore Sander published their finding of the Talagan copper scroll also known as the Schoyen Copper Scroll dated to 492 or 493 that mentions the four Alchon kings Khingila Toramana Javukha and Mehama who was reigning at the time as donors to a Buddhist reliquary stupa 146 Note 4 Note 5 Rulers editThe rulers of the Alchons practiced skull deformation as evidenced from their coins a practice shared with the Huns that migrated into Europe The names of the first Alchon rulers do not survive Starting from 430 CE names of Alchon kings survive on coins 145 and religious inscriptions 146 anonymous kings 400 430 CE Khingila c 430 490 CE Javukha Zabocho c mid 5th early 6th CE Mehama c 461 493 CE Lakhana Udayaditya c 490 s CE Aduman Toramana c 490 515 CE Mihirakula c 515 540 CE Toramana II c 530 570 CE Pravarasena c 530 590 CE Gokarna c 570 590 CE Narendraditya Khinkhila c 590 630 CE Yudhishthira 630 670 CE Coinage edit nbsp An early Alchon Huns coin based on a Sasanian design with bust imitating Sasanian king Shapur III Only the legend Alchono appears on the obverse in the Greco Bactrian script 22 41 147 Early Bactrian coinage based on Sasanian designsThe earliest Alchon Hun coins were based on Sasanian designs often with the simple addition of the Alchon tamgha and a mention of Alchon or Alkhan 32 Various coins minted in Bactria and based on Sasanian designs are known often with busts imitating Sasanian kings Shapur II r 309 to 379 CE and Shapur III r 383 to 388 CE with attendants to a fire altar on the reverse 41 42 It is thought that the Sasanids lost control of Bactria to the Kidarites during the reign of Shapur II circa 370 CE followed by the Hephthalites and subsequently by the Alchon 34 Later original coinageLater Alchon coinage became original and differed from predecessors in that it was devoid of Iranian Sasanian symbolism 12 The rulers are depicted with elongated skulls apparently a result of artificial cranial deformation 12 After their invasion of India the coins of the Alchon were numerous and varied as they issued copper silver and gold coins sometimes roughly following the Gupta pattern The Alchon empire in India must have been quite significant and rich with the ability to issue a significant volume of gold coins 148 Coinage edit nbsp Silver coin of Toramana in Western Gupta style with the Gupta peacock and Brahmi legend on the reverse Similar to the silver coin type of Skandagupta On the obverse the date 52 is also inscribed 149 A modern Image 1 nbsp Alchon Tamgha symbol on a coin of Khingila nbsp Khingila with the word Alchono in Bactrian script alxono and the Tamgha symbol on his coins 24 150 nbsp Silver drachm of Khingila early portrait without headdress mid late 5th century Note 6 nbsp Silver drachm of Khingila mature portrait Bactrian legend xiggilo alxonno Khiggilo Alchono Note 7 nbsp Silver drachm of Javukha mid late 5th century nbsp Silver drachm of Mehama legend ṣahi mehama mid late 5th century nbsp Silver drachm of Lakhana late 5th early 6th centuries nbsp Gold dinar of Adomano Kushano Sasanian style mid late 5th century nbsp Silver drachm of Mihirakula early mid 6th century nbsp Bronze drachm of Toramana II wearing trident crown late phase Gandharan style mid 6th century nbsp Silver stater of Toramana II Kashmir style mid late 6th century nbsp Bronze drachm of Narana Narenda possibly Toramana II wearing trident crown late 6th century nbsp Khingila as a young king without headdress Artificial cranial deformation clearly visible nbsp Vishnu Nicolo Seal representing Vishnu with a worshipper probably Mihirakula 4th 6th century CE The inscription in cursive Bactrian reads Mihira Vishnu and Shiva British Museum Notes edit Here for the first time the names of Hepthalite Alchon kings are given some of them otherwise known only from coins Another important fact is that it dates all these kings in the same time from Aydogdy Kurbanov 2010 The hephthalites archaeological and historical analysis Berlin Free University of Berlin p 120 OCLC 863884689 Retrieved 17 June 2018 After the successful conclusion of the Eran episode the conquering Hunas ultimately burst out of Eastern Malwa and swooped down upon the very heart of the Gupta empire The eastern countries were overrun and the city of the Gaudas was occupied The Manjusrimulakalpa gives a scintillating account of this phase of Toramana s conquest It says that after Bhanugupta s defeat and discomfiture Toramana led the Hunas against Magadha and obliged Baladitya Narasimha gupta Baladitya the reigning Gupta monarch to retire to Bengal This great monarch Toramana Sudra by caste and possessed of great prowess and armies took hold of that position bank of the Ganges and commanded the country round about That powerful king then invested the town called Tirtha in the Gauda country in Upendra Thakur 1967 The Huṇas in India Vol 58 Varanasi Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office p 122 OCLC 551489665 The earth betook itself for succour when it was afflicted by kings of the present age who manifested pride who were cruel through want of proper training who from delusion transgressed the path of good conduct and who were destitute of virtuous delights from Sondhni pillars where Punjabis met with their Waterloo 1500 years ago Punjab Monitor Amritsar Bhai Nand Lal Foundation 27 April 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2018 Together with the great sahi Khingila together with the god king Toramana together with the mistress of a great monastery Sasa together with the great sahi Mehama together with Sadavikha together with the great king Javukha the son of Sadavikha during the reign of Mehama from Gudrun Melzer Lore Sander 2000 Jens Braarvig ed A Copper Scroll Inscription from the Time of the Alchon Huns Buddhist manuscripts Vol 3 Oslo Hermes Pub pp 251 278 ISBN 9788280340061 For an image of the copper scroll Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Showcase 8 For equivalent coin see CNG Coins This coin is in the collection of the British Museum For equivalent coin see CNG CoinsReferences edit a b c d e Rezakhani Khodadad 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press pp 105 124 ISBN 9781474400305 a b c d e f g h i Bakker Hans 2017 Monuments of Hope Gloom and Glory in the Age of the Hunnic Wars 50 years that changed India Amsterdam J Gonda Fund Foundation of the KNAW pp 484 534 ISBN 978 9069847153 Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 25 ISBN 0226742210 Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 145 map XIV 1 k ISBN 0226742210 a b Bakker Hans 2017 Monuments of Hope Gloom and Glory in the Age of the Hunnic Wars 50 years that changed India 484 534 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Section 4 ISBN 978 90 6984 715 3 archived from the original on 11 January 2020 retrieved 20 May 2019 Bakker Hans 16 July 2014 The World of the Skandapuraṇa BRILL ISBN 9789004277144 Dani Ahmad Hasan 1999 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 9788120815407 Jager Ulf A Unique Alxon Hunnic Horse and Rider Statuette Late Fifth Century CE from Ancient Bactria Modern Afghanistan in the Pritzker Family Collection Chicago PDF Sino Platonic Papers Archived PDF from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2023 The Alchon Huns established themselves as overlords of northwestern India and directly contributed to the downfall of the Guptas in Neelis Jason 2010 Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia BRILL p 162 ISBN 9789004181595 Note 8 It is now clear that the Hephtalites were not part of those Huns who conquered the land south of the Hindu Kush and Sind as well in the early 6th century In fact this latter Hunnic group was the one commonly known as Alkhon because of the inscriptions on their coins Vondrovec 2008 a b c d Rezakhani Khodadad 2021 From the Kushans to the Western Turks King of the Seven Climes 207 a b c d e f Michael Maas 29 September 2014 The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila New York Cambridge University Press p 286 ISBN 978 1 316 06085 8 a b c d Gupta Parmanand 1989 Geography from Ancient Indian Coins amp Seals Concept Publishing Company pp 174 175 ISBN 9788170222484 Tewari S P Ramesh K V 1983 JOURNAL OF THE EPIGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA Vol 10 THE EPIGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA DHARWAR pp 98 99 Salomon Richard 1989 New Inscriptional Evidence For The History Of The Aulikaras of Mandasor Indo Iranian Journal 32 1 4 and 27 doi 10 1163 000000089790082971 ISSN 0019 7246 JSTOR 24654606 a b c nbsp Khingila with the word Alchono in the Bactrian script alxono and the Tamgha symbol on his coins CNG Coins a b Alemany Agusti 2000 Sources on the Alans A Critical Compilation BRILL p 346 ISBN 9004114424 CNG eAuction 145 HUNNIC TRIBES Alchon Huns Khingila Circa AD 440 490 AR Drachm 30mm 3 62 g www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 Ahmad Hasan Dani B A Litvinsky Unesco 1 January 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 Paris UNESCO p 119 ISBN 978 92 3 103211 0 a b Hyun Jin Kim 19 November 2015 The Huns Abingdon on Thames Routledge p 50 ISBN 978 1 317 34090 4 Alemany Agusti 2000 Sources on the Alans A Critical Compilation BRILL p 345 ISBN 9004114424 a b c Braarvig Jens 2000 Buddhist Manuscripts Vol 3 ed Hermes Pub p 257 ISBN 9788280340061 CNG Feature Auction Triton IX Medieval HUNNIC TRIBES Alchon Huns Anonymous Issue imitating Khosrau II Mid 7th century AD AR Drachm 3 36 g 3h www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Rezakhani Khodadad 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press p 199 ISBN 9781474400312 Kim Hyun Jin 2015 The Huns Routledge p 53 ISBN 9781317340904 a b c d e f Bakker Hans T 12 March 2020 The Alkhan A Hunnic People in South Asia Barkhuis pp 17 46 Note 11 ISBN 978 94 93194 00 7 ALRAM MICHAEL 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 274 ISSN 0078 2696 JSTOR 44710198 Rezakhani Khodadad 15 March 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press p 109 and 123 ISBN 978 1 4744 0030 5 Rezakhani Khodadad 15 March 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press p 124 ISBN 978 1 4744 0030 5 Hermitage Museum Hermitage Museum It is possible that the Sogdian aristocratic culture of that time preserved some memory of the glorious days of Khingila the first Hephthalite conqueror of India The profile of Rustam shown on different paintings at Pendzhikent is very distinct from the other depictions in the Sogdian art and resembles the Hephthalite prototypes The portraits feature narrow skulls V shaped eyebrows hooked noses and heavy jaws and thus closely resemble some portraits of Khingila on the coins Grenet 2002 218 219 Kurbanov Aydogdy 2014 THE HEPHTHALITES ICONOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS PDF Tyragetia 317 334 a b c Tandon Pankaj 2013 Notes on the Evolution of Alchon Coins PDF Journal of the Oriental Numismatic Society 216 24 34 Retrieved 8 July 2018 CNG Feature Auction CNG 69 Medieval HUNNIC TRIBES Alchon Huns Anonymous Circa 400 440 AD AR Drachm 3 43 gm 3h Imitating Sasanian king Shahpur II Kabul or Gandhara mint www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Neelis Jason 2010 Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia BRILL p 159 ISBN 978 9004181595 Scheers Simone Quaegebeur Jan 1982 Studia Paulo Naster Oblata Orientalia antiqua in French Peeters Publishers p 55 ISBN 9789070192105 Ammianus Marcellinus Roman History London Bohn 1862 XVI IX Ammianus Marcellinus Roman History London Bohn 1862 XVII V Cosmo Nicola Di Maas Michael 2018 Empires and Exchanges in Eurasian Late Antiquity Rome China Iran and the Steppe ca 250 750 Cambridge University Press p 698 ISBN 9781108547000 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Ahmad Hasan Dani B A Litvinsky Unesco p 38 sq Alram Michael 1 February 2021 The numismatic legacy of the Sasanians in the East in Sasanian Iran in the Context of Late Antiquity The Bahari Lecture Series at the University of Oxford BRILL p 7 ISBN 978 90 04 46066 9 a b c CNG eAuction 136 HUNNIC TRIBES Kidarites Uncertain King 5th century AD AR Drachm 30mm 4 00 g www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Rienjang Wannaporn Stewart Peter 2018 Problems of Chronology in Gandharan Art Proceedings of the First International Workshop of the Gandhara Connections Project University of Oxford 23rd 24th March 2017 Archaeopress p 23 ISBN 9781784918552 ALRAM MICHAEL 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 268 ISSN 0078 2696 JSTOR 44710198 Alram Michael 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 274 JSTOR 44710198 a b c d Jason Neelis 19 November 2010 Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia Leiden BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 18159 5 Rezakhani Khodadad 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press p 118 ISBN 9781474400305 a b Rezakhani Khodadad 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press pp 120 122 ISBN 9781474400305 Dani Ahmad Hasan Litvinsky B A 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO pp 123 126 ISBN 9789231032110 Bakker Hans T 12 March 2020 The Alkhan A Hunnic People in South Asia Barkhuis p 18 ISBN 978 94 93194 00 7 The Huns Hyun Jin Kim Routledge 2015 p 50 sq a b c d ALRAM MICHAEL 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 274 275 ISSN 0078 2696 JSTOR 44710198 Iaroslav Lebedynsky Les Nomades p172 British Museum notice British Museum Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Ghosh Amalananda 1965 Taxila CUP Archive p 791 Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol ISBN 9780984404308 Retrieved 24 March 2017 Kurbanov Aydogdy 2010 The hephthalites archaeological and historical analysis PDF Phd thesis Berlin Free University of Berlin p 120 OCLC 863884689 Retrieved 17 June 2018 a b Brancaccio Pia 2010 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad Transformations in Art and Religion BRILL pp 105 106 ISBN 9789004185258 a b Senior R C 1991 The Coinage of Sind from 250 AD up to the Arab Conquest PDF Oriental Numismatic Society 129 June July 1991 3 4 Archived from the original PDF on 26 September 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2019 Schindel Nikolaus Alram Michael Daryaee Touraj Pendleton Elizabeth 2016 The Parthian and Early Sasanian Empires adaptation and expansion Oxbow Books pp 126 129 ISBN 9781785702105 Brancaccio Pia 2010 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad Transformations in Art and Religion BRILL p 106 ISBN 9789004185258 Auctores Varii 2016 Ajanta Dipinta Painted Ajanta Vol 1 e 2 Studio sulla tecnica e sulla conservazione del sito rupestre indiano Studies on the techniques and the conservation of the indian rock art site Gangemi Editore pp 58 59 ISBN 9788849274905 Brancaccio Pia 2010 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad Transformations in Art and Religion BRILL pp 106 107 ISBN 9789004185258 Indian Archaeology 1954 55 A review PDF p 18 a b Hans Bakker 16 July 2014 The World of the Skandapuraṇa Leiden BRILL p 34 ISBN 978 90 04 27714 4 V K Agnihotri ed 2010 Indian History 26 ed New Delhi Allied Publishers p 81 ISBN 978 81 8424 568 4 a b c d Bindeshwari Prasad Sinha 1977 Dynastic History of Magadha Cir 450 1200 A D New Delhi Abhinav Publications GGKEY KR1EJ2EGCTJ Parmanand Gupta 1989 Geography from Ancient Indian Coins amp Seals New DELHI Concept Publishing Company p 175 ISBN 978 81 7022 248 4 a b c d e f g h Radhakumud Mookerji 1997 The Gupta Empire 5th ed Delhi Motilal Banarsidass p 120 ISBN 978 81 208 0440 1 ALRAM MICHAEL 2003 Three Hunnic Bullae from Northwest India PDF Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 180 Figure 11 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049314 Upendra Thakur 1967 The Huṇas in India Vol 58 Varanasi Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series Office p 122 OCLC 551489665 a b c d Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Archived from the original on 1 November 2019 Retrieved 23 July 2017 Fleet John Faithfull 1960 Inscriptions Of The Early Gupta Kings And Their Successors pp 158 161 a b CNG Feature Auction Triton XIX HUNNIC TRIBES Alchon Huns Toramana Circa 490 515 AV Dinar 18mm 9 53 g 12h www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b The Identity of Prakasaditya by Pankaj Tandon Boston University PDF Retrieved 2 April 2023 This makes it quite clear that the Alchon Huns in India must have had a substantial and rich empire with the capacity to issue a relatively large volume of gold coins in TANDON PANKAJ 7 July 2015 The Identity of Prakasaditya Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 25 4 668 doi 10 1017 S1356186315000346 hdl 2144 37851 S2CID 43869990 Full article Om Prakash Misra 2003 Archaeological Excavations in Central India Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh New Delhi Mittal Publications p 7 ISBN 978 81 7099 874 7 S B Bhattacherje 1 May 2009 Encyclopaedia of Indian Events amp Dates Vol A15 New Delhi Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 81 207 4074 7 R K Pruthi 2004 The Classical Age New Delhi Discovery Publishing House p 262 ISBN 978 81 7141 876 3 N K Ojha 2001 The Aulikaras of Central India history and inscriptions Chandigarh Arun Pub House pp 48 50 ISBN 978 81 85212 78 4 Tej Ram Sharma 1978 Personal and Geographical Names in the Gupta Inscriptions Delhi Concept Publishing Company p 232 OCLC 923058151 GGKEY RYD56P78DL9 Hsuan tsang ca 596 664 Beal Samuel 1884 Si yu ki Buddhist records of the Western world London Trubner p 167 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Sondhni pillars where Punjabis met with their Waterloo 1500 years ago Punjab Monitor Amritsar Bhai Nand Lal Foundation 27 April 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2018 The h nbsp is an early variant of the Gupta script The h nbsp is an early variant of the Gupta script Rev Dotted border around Fire altar flanked by attendants a design adopted from Sasanian coinage Verma Thakur Prasad 2018 The Imperial Maukharis History of Imperial Maukharis of Kanauj and Harshavardhana in Hindi Notion Press p 264 ISBN 9781643248813 Sircar D C 2008 Studies in Indian Coins Motilal Banarsidass p 376 ISBN 9788120829732 Tandon Pankaj 2013 Notes on the Evolution of Alchon Coins Journal of the Oriental Numismatic Society No 216 Summer Oriental Numismatic Society pp 24 34 also Coinindia Alchon Coins for an exact description of this coin type John Faithfull Fleet 1888 John Faithfull Fleet ed Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Inscriptions of the early Gupta kings and their successors Vol 3 Calcutta Office of the Superintendent of Government Print pp 147 148 OCLC 69001098 Archived from the original on 1 July 2015 a b Kailash Chand Jain 31 December 1972 Malwa Through The Ages Dewlhi Motilal Banarsidass p 249 ISBN 978 81 208 0824 9 a b c d e f g h i Abraham Eraly 2011 The First Spring The Golden Age of India New Delhi Penguin Books India p 48 ISBN 978 0 670 08478 4 Ashvini Agrawal 1989 Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas Delhi Motilal Banarsidass p 245 ISBN 978 81 208 0592 7 a b GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 145 146 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 Madan A P 1990 The History of the Raṣṭrakuṭas Harman Publishing House p 208 ISBN 978 81 85151 38 0 Willis Michael 2005 Later Gupta History Inscriptions Coins and Historical Ideology Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 15 2 140 and 149 ISSN 1356 1863 JSTOR 25188529 a b c d e f Dani Ahmad Hasan Litvinsky B A 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO p 169 ISBN 9789231032110 a b c Kim Hyun Jin 2015 The Huns Routledge p 58 ISBN 9781317340911 M A Stein 1989 Kalhana s Rajatarangini a chronicle of the kings of Kasmir Motilal Banarsidass pp 439 441 ISBN 978 81 208 0370 1 Dani Ahmad Hasan Litvinsky B A 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO p 170 ISBN 9789231032110 PAL PRATAPADITYA 1973 Bronzes of Kashmir Their Sources and Influences Journal of the Royal Society of Arts 121 5207 727 ISSN 0035 9114 JSTOR 41371150 Before the Karkotas came to the throne Kashmir may have been occupied by a long succession of foreign rulers or tribes Certainly both the Kushanas and the Huns were present in the area for centuries Indeed the history of Kashmir begins to take shape only with the foundation of the Karkota dynasty around AD 625 The immediate predecessors of the Karkotas appear to have been Huns Kim Hyun Jin 19 November 2015 THE HUNS OF CENTRAL ASIA AND SOUTH ASIA THE KIDARITE AND HEPHTHALITE WHITE HUNS The Huns Routledge p 58 doi 10 4324 9781315661704 ISBN 978 1 317 34090 4 Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Kumar Raj 2008 History Of The Chamar Dynasty From 6Th Century A D To 12Th Century A D Gyan Publishing House pp 318 319 ISBN 978 81 7835 635 8 But the name of Toramana is found on a species of Kashmir copper coins of which remarkably large quantities have been preserved to this day The connection of this coinage with Kalhana s notice cannot be doubted Cribb Joe 1 April 2017 Early Medieval Kashmir Coinage A New Hoard and An Anomaly Numismatic Digest 40 99 It seems very likely therefore that the rulers of Kashmir at this period were descendents of the Hun kings who ruled large parts of northwestern India from the mid 4th to the 6th century Alram Michael 2014a From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 278 ISSN 0078 2696 JSTOR 44710198 a b CNG eAuction 369 HUNNIC TRIBES Alkhan Nezak Crossover Circa 580 90 650 80 AE Hemidrachm 23mm 3 10 g 1h www cngcoins com Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Sailendra Nath Sen 1999 Ancient Indian History and Civilization New Delhi New Age International ISBN 978 81 224 1198 0 a b c Klaus Vondrovec 2014 Coinage of the Iranian Huns and Their Successors from Bactria to Gandhara 4th to 8th Century CE Vienna Austrian Academy of Sciences Press ISBN 978 3 7001 7695 4 The definitive annexation of Tokharistan and Gandhara to the Western Turk Empire was to take place some years later in c 625 when Sasanian Iran became involved in the war against Byzantium that ultimately led to its eclipse in Dani Ahmad Hasan Litvinsky B A January 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO pp 370 375 ISBN 978 92 3 103211 0 a b de la Vaissiere Etienne 2007 A Note on the Schoyen Copper Scroll Bactrian or Indian PDF Bulletin of the Asia Institute 21 127 JSTOR i24047314 Retrieved 8 July 2018 Errington Elizabeth 2017 Charles Masson and the Buddhist Sites of Afghanistan Explorations Excavations Collections 1832 1835 British Museum p 34 doi 10 5281 zenodo 3355036 Alram Michael Filigenzi Anna Kinberger Michaela Nell Daniel Pfisterer Matthias Vondrovec Klaus The Countenance of the other The Coins of the Huns and Western Turks in Central Asia and India 2012 2013 exhibit 7 ALKHAN KING KHINGILA AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF HUNNIC POWER IN NORTHWEST INDIA Pro geo univie ac at Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Retrieved 16 July 2017 Rene Grousset 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia New Brunswick Rutgers University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Behrendt Kurt A 2004 Handbuch der Orientalistik Leiden BRILL ISBN 9789004135956 Ann Heirman Stephan Peter Bumbacher 11 May 2007 The Spread of Buddhism Leiden BRILL p 60 ISBN 978 90 474 2006 4 a b c Upinder Singh 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Delhi Pearson Education India p 521 ISBN 978 81 317 1120 0 Sankalia Hasmukhlal Dhirajlal 1934 The University of Nalanda Madras B G Paul amp co OCLC 988183829 Sukumar Dutt 1988 First published in 1962 Buddhist Monks And Monasteries of India Their History And Contribution To Indian Culture London George Allen and Unwin Ltd ISBN 81 208 0498 8 J Gordon Melton 15 January 2014 Faiths Across Time 5 000 Years of Religious History 5 000 Years of Religious History Vol 1 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p 455 ISBN 978 1 61069 026 3 Gobl Robert 1967 Dokumente zur Geschichte der iranischen Hunnen in Baktrien und Indien in German Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 90 Em 91 Alram Alchon und Nezak Zur Geschichte der iranischen Hunnen in Mittelasien Krishna Chandra Sagar 1992 Foreign Influence on Ancient India New Delhi Northern Book Centre p 270 ISBN 978 81 7211 028 4 Lal Mani Joshi 1987 Studies in the Buddhistic Culture of India During the Seventh and Eighth Centuries A D Delhi Motilal Banarsidass p 320 ISBN 978 81 208 0281 0 He is credited with the building of the temple named Jyeshteswara on the Gopa Sankaracharya hill in Srinagar in Bamzai Prithivi Nath Kaul 1980 Kashmir and Central Asia Light amp Life Publishers p 63 a b Rezakhani Khodadad 2017 ReOrienting the Sasanians East Iran in Late Antiquity Edinburgh University Press p 112 ISBN 9781474400305 Schwartzberg Joseph E 1978 A Historical atlas of South Asia Chicago University of Chicago Press p 145 map XIV 1 i ISBN 0226742210 a b c d e f Bakker Hans T 12 March 2020 The Alkhan A Hunnic People in South Asia Barkhuis pp 98 99 and 93 ISBN 978 94 93194 00 7 Parmentier Henri 1930 J Ph Vogel La sculpture de Mathura Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient 30 1 457 A Comprehensive History Of Ancient India 3 Vol Set New Delhi Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd 1 December 2003 p 174 ISBN 978 81 207 2503 4 Eder Manfred A J 2010 South Asian Archaeology 2007 Proceedings of the 19th Meeting of the European Association of South Asian Archaeology in Ravenna Italy July 2007 Volume II PDF Archaeopress Archaeology p 69 ISBN 978 1 4073 0674 2 Bakker Hans T 2017 The Huns in Central and South Asia How Two Centuries of War against Nomadic Invaders from the Steps are Concluded by a Game of Chess between the Kings of India and Iran Singh 2010 Longman History amp Civics ICSE 9 New Delhi Pearson Education India p 81 ISBN 978 81 317 2041 7 Brancaccio Pia 2010 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad Transformations in Art and Religion Leiden BRILL p 107 ISBN 978 9004185258 GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 153 Fig 13 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 a b GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 145 158 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 151 Fig 10 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 150 Fig 9 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 GHOSE MADHUVANTI 2003 The Impact of the Hun Invasions A Nomadic Interlude in Indian Art Bulletin of the Asia Institute 17 150 Fig 6 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24049312 a b GRAY BASIL 1991 Post Sasanian Metalwork Bulletin of the Asia Institute 5 61 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24048285 Brentjes B 1971 The Hoard of Hephthalite Silver Vessels Found near Samarkand East and West 21 1 2 77 78 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29755649 Kurbanov Aydogdy 2014 The hephthalites iconographical materials PDF Tyragetia VIII XXIII 328 Bakker Hans T 12 March 2020 The Alkhan A Hunnic People in South Asia Barkhuis p 24 ISBN 978 94 93194 00 7 a b c Ray Himanshu Prabha 2019 Negotiating Cultural Identity Landscapes in Early Medieval South Asian History Taylor amp Francis pp 161 165 ISBN 9781000227932 Puri 1957 p 2 a b Kim Hyun Jin 19 November 2015 The Huns Routledge pp 62 64 ISBN 978 1 317 34091 1 Although it is not certain it also seems likely that the formidable Gurjara Pratihara regime ruled from the seventh eleventh centuries AD of northern India had a powerful White Hunnic element The Gurjara Pratiharas who were likely created from a fusion of White Hunnic and native Indian elements ruled a vast Empire in northern India and they also halted Arab Muslim expansion in India through Sind for centuries Wink Andre 1991 Al hind The Making of the Indo islamic World BRILL p 279 ISBN 978 90 04 09249 5 a b Robert Gobl 1967 Dokumente zur Geschichte der iranischen Hunnen in Baktrien und Indien Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Verlag OCLC 2561645 GGKEY 4TALPN86ZJB a b Gudrun Melzer Lore Sander 2000 Jens Braarvig ed A Copper Scroll Inscription from the Time of the Alchon Huns Buddhist manuscripts Vol 3 Oslo Hermes Pub pp 251 278 ISBN 9788280340061 Tandon Pankaj 2013 Notes on the Evolution of Alchon Coins Journal of the Oriental Numismatic Society No 216 Summer Oriental Numismatic Society pp 24 34 also Coinindia Alchon Coins for an exact description of this coin type Tandon Pankaj 2015 The Identity of Prakasaditya PDF Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 25 4 647 668 doi 10 1017 S1356186315000346 hdl 2144 37851 S2CID 43869990 Retrieved 8 July 2018 Smith Vincent Arthur Edwardes S M Stephen Meredyth 1924 The early history of India from 600 B C to the Muhammadan conquest including the invasion of Alexander the Great Oxford Clarendon Press p Plate 2 CNG CoinsSources editPuri Baij Nath 1957 The history of the Gurjara Pratiharas Munshiram ManoharlalExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Alchon Huns at Wikimedia Commons Nezak Kings in Zabulistan and Kabulistan Archived 26 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Coin Cabinet of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Coinage of the Hephthalites Alchons Grifterrec Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alchon Huns amp oldid 1186452740, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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