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Protectorate General to Pacify the West

The Protectorate General to Pacify the West (Anxi Grand Protectorate), initially the Protectorate to Pacify the West (Anxi Protectorate), was a protectorate (640 – c. 790) established by the Chinese Tang dynasty in 640 to control the Tarim Basin.[1] The head office was first established at the prefecture of Xi, now known as Turpan, but was later shifted to Qiuci (Kucha) and situated there for most of the period.[2]

Protectorate General to Pacify the West
Traditional Chinese安西大都護府
Simplified Chinese安西大都护府
Literal meaningPacify-West Grand Metropolitan-Protection Prefecture/Office
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinĀnxī Dàdūhù Fǔ
Protectorate to Pacify the West
Traditional Chinese安西都護府
Simplified Chinese安西都护府
Literal meaningPacify-West Metropolitan-Protection Prefecture/Office
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinĀnxī Dūhù Fǔ
Wade–GilesAnhsi Tuhu Fu

The Four Garrisons of Anxi in Kucha, Khotan, Kashgar, and Karashahr were installed between 648 and 658 as garrisons under the western protectorate. In 659, Sogdia, Ferghana, Tashkent, Bukhara, Samarkand, Balkh, Herat, Kashmir, the Pamirs, Tokharistan, and Kabul all submitted to the protectorate under Emperor Gaozong of Tang.[3][4][5][6][7]

After the An Lushan Rebellion (755–763) was suppressed, the office of Protector General was given to Guo Xin, who defended the area and the four garrisons even after communication had been cut off from Chang'an by the Tibetan Empire. The last five years of the protectorate are regarded as an uncertain period in its history, but most sources agree that the last vestiges of the protectorate and its garrisons were defeated by Tibetan forces by 790, ending nearly 150 years of Tang influence in Central Asia.

History Edit

7th century Edit

 
Map of the major protectorates of the Tang dynasty c. 660, following the campaigns against the Eastern Turks (629), the Western city-states (640-648) and the Western Turks (657). The Protectorate General to Pacify the West is marked as "Anxi Protectorate".[8][9]
 
Emperor Taizong's campaign against Xiyu states
 
Kizil Caves

The Western Regions during the Tang era were known as Qixi (磧西). Qi refers to the Gobi Desert while Xi refers to the west. In 632 the oasis kingdoms of Khotan (Yutian) and Shule (Kashgar) submitted to the Tang dynasty as vassals.[10] In 635 Yarkand (Shache) submitted to the Tang dynasty.[10]

On 19 September 640 Hou Junji of Tang conquered Gaochang and set up Xi Prefecture (西州) in its place.[11][12] Xi Prefecture became the seat of the Anxi Protectorate on 11 October. Qiao Shiwang became the first protector general of the Anxi and served from 640 to 642. Guo Xiaoke received the next post and served from 640 to 648. By 644 Karasahr was also conquered, and was known to the Chinese as Yanqi. Aksu (Gumo) was garrisoned by Tang troops.[13]

In 648, the Tang conquered Kucha, known to the Chinese as Qiuci, and made it the new seat of Anxi under the governance of Chai Zhewei from 649 to 651.[12] By 650 the entire Western Region had submitted to Tang authority.[13] In 651 the seat was moved back to Xi Prefecture where it remained under the governance of Qu Zhizhan from 651 to 658.[12] In 656 the Tibetan Empire attacked Lesser Bolü in Gilgit southwest of the protectorate.[14]

In 658 the seat was moved back to Qiuci after Su Dingfang defeated the Western Turkic Khaganate. Its title was changed to "Grand Protectorate" and granted governorship of former Western Turkic territories, which were further separated into the Mengchi and Kunling protectorates.[12] In 660 the Tibetan Empire and their Turkic allies attacked Shule. The Tibetan Empire also attacked Wakhan to the protectorate's southwest.[14] When the Tang general boasted of the size of his army, Gar Tongtsen Yulsung's son responded in the following manner:

There is no disputing the matter of numbers. But many small birds are the food of a single hawk, and many small fish are the food of a single otter. A pine tree has been growing for a hundred years, but a single axe is its enemy. Although a river runs ceaselessly, it can be crossed in a moment by a boat six feet long. Although barley and rice grow over a whole plain, it is all the grist of a single mill. Although the sky is filled with stars, in the light of a single sun they are nothing.[15]

In 663 the Tibetan Empire conquered Tuyuhun southeast of the protectorate.[14] They also attacked Yutian but were repelled.[16] In 665 the Tibetan Empire and Turkic allies attacked Yutian.[14] The conflict between the Tang and Tibetans was the primary context under which the story of a Khotanese princess striving to rescue Khotan from destruction was formulated. One passage of the story in prayer form reads:

When the red-faced ones and the Chinese battle each other, may Khotan not be destroyed. When monks come from other countries to Khotan, may they not be treated dishonourably. May those who flee here from other countries find a place to stay here and help to rebuild the great stupas and monastic gardens that have been burned by the red-faced ones.[17]

In 670 the Tibetan Empire routed a Tang army at the Battle of Dafei River and attacked Gumo as well as captured Qiuci. The protectorate's seat was moved to Suyab, known as Suiye to the Chinese, in modern Kyrgyzstan.[12][14] In 673 the Tang consolidated control over the Wuduolu Turks living in the area that came to be known as Dzungaria. The Tang also captured Qiuci and established control over the Western Regions in the same year.[18] In 677 the Tibetan Empire captured Qiuci. In the same year Ashina Duzhi, previously a Tang general tasked with controlling the Wuduolu Turks, rebelled and declared himself Onoq Khagan, ruler of all Turks.[19] In 679 the Tang general, Pei Xingjian, defeated Ashina Duzhi as well as the Tibetans and established control over the Western Regions.[20]

In 686 Tang troops withdrew from the Four Garrisons after elements within the court argued for the decrease of military expenditures.[21] In 687 the Tibetan Empire established control over the Western Regions.[22] In 690 the Tibetan Empire defeated a Tang army at Issyk-Kul[22]

In 692 Tang troops under Wang Xiaojie pacified the Western Regions and established the Anxi Protectorate at Qiuci, where it would remain until the protectorate's demise around 790.[13][22][12][23] The importance of the Western Regions was well understood by the Tang court at this point. Its strategic significance is summarized by Cui Rong, an Imperial Diarist of the court:

If we cannot defend these garrisons, barbarians will surely come to destabilize the Western Regions. And various tribes south of the Nanshan Mountain [i.e., the Qilian and the Kunlun Mountains] would feel threatened. If they link up with one another, they would pose a threat to regions west of the Yellow River [i.e., present-day Gansu and Qinghai provinces]. Moreover, if they get in touch with the Turks in the north, our soldiers will be unable to crush them by crossing the Moheyan Desert [the desert northwest of Dunhuang] that extends over 2,000 li, where neither water nor grass can be found. The tribes [loyal to China] in Yizhou, Xiyzhou, Beiting [Beshbalik], and Anxi protectorates will all be eliminated.[22]

— Cui Rong

In 694 the Tibetan Empire attacked the Stone City (Charklik).[24]

8th century Edit

 
Hephthalite envoys 6th century AD.
 
Tributary envoys from Qiemo, 6-7th centuries AD.

In 702 Wu Zetian set up the Beiting Protectorate in Ting Prefecture (Jimsar County) and granted it governorship over Yi Prefecture (Hami) and Xi Prefecture.[25] In 708 the Turgesh attacked Qiuci.[26] In 710 the Tibetan Empire conquered Lesser Bolü.[27]

Arab sources claim Qutayba ibn Muslim briefly took Kashgar from China and withdrew after an agreement[28] but modern historians entirely dismiss this claim.[29][30][31]

In 715 the Tibetan Empire attacked Fergana, a Tang vassal.[26] In 717 the Tibetan Empire attacked Gumo and the Stone City.[32][33]

The Arab Umayyad Caliphate in 715 AD deposed Ikhshid, the king the Fergana Valley, and installed a new king Alutar on the throne. The deposed king fled to Kucha (seat of Anxi Protectorate) and sought Chinese intervention. The Chinese sent 10,000 troops under Zhang Xiaosong to Ferghana. He defeated Alutar and the Arab occupation force at Namangan and reinstalled Ikhshid on the throne.[34]

General Tang Jiahui led the Chinese to defeat the following Arab-Tibetan attack in the Battle of Aksu (717).[35] The attack on Aksu was joined by Turgesh Khan Suluk.[7] Both Uch Turfan and Aksu were attacked by the Turgesh, Arab, and Tibetan force on 15 August 717. Qarluqs serving under Chinese command, under Arsila Xian, a Western Turkic Qaghan serving under the Chinese Assistant Grand Protector General Tang Jiahui defeated the attack. Al-Yashkuri, the Arab commander and his army fled to Tashkent after they were defeated.[36][37]

In 719 the Turgesh captured Suiye.[26] In 720 the Tibetan Empire seized the Stone City.[38] In the same year Tang bestowed titles upon the kings of Khuttal, Chitral, and Oddiyana[39] In 722 Tang restored the king of Lesser Bolü to his throne.[38] In 725 the king of Khotan (Yutian) rebelled but was immediately replaced with a Tang puppet by protectorate forces.[38]

In 726 the Turgesh attempted to engage in horse trade at Qiuci without prior authorization. The Turgesh Khagan Suluk used his marital relation with Princess Jiaohe to issue a decree ordering the Protector-General to engage in trade. However Princess Jiaohe was actually the daughter of Ashina Huaidao, and the Protector-General retorted: "How can an Ashina woman proclaim a decree to me, a military commissioner?!"[40] In response Suluk attacked Qiuci.[26]

In 727 and 728 the Tibetan Empire attacked Qiuci.[26] In 737 the Tibetan Empire conquered Lesser Bolü.[32] In 741 the Tibetan Empire sacked the Stone City.[41] In 745 the Tang general Huangfu Weiming attacked the Stone City but suffered a major defeat.[42] According to Huangfu, the Stone City was one of the most heavily defended bastions of the Tibetan Empire:

Shih-pao is strongly defended. The whole Tibetan nation is guarding it. Now if we array our troops below it, we cannot capture it without several tens of thousands of [our] men being killed. I am afraid that what would be gained is not comparable to what would be lost.[43]

— Huangfu Weiming

In 747 the Tang general Gao Xianzhi captured Lesser Bolü.[26] In 748 the Tang recaptured Suiye and destroyed it.[26] In 749 Tang recovered the Stone City.[41] In 750 the Tang intervened in a dispute between their vassal Fergana and the neighboring kingdom of Chach, located in modern Tashkent. The kingdom of Chach was sacked and their king was taken back to Chang'an, where he was executed.[26] In the same year Tang also defeated Qieshi in Chitral and the Turgesh.[44]

In 751 Tang forces suffered a major defeat at the Battle of Talas against Abbasid and Karluk forces.[26] Although the Battle of Talas saw the limit of Tang expansion to the west, the importance of the defeat at the Battle of Talas has sometimes been exaggerated. Although the Tang army was defeated, the Arabs did not extend their influence into Xinjiang, and the Karluks remained amiable to the Tang. Some Karluks converted to Islam, but the vast majority did not until the mid 10th century under Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan of the Kara-Khanid Khanate. The long-term strategic importance of Talas was overshadowed later on by the An Lushan Rebellion, which devastated the Tang homeland. It is now understood as the primary cause for the Tang retreat from Central Asia.[45][46]

My relative Huan followed Go Seonji [Tang general of Goguryeo (Korean) descent; Gao Xianzhi in Chinese, died 755], the military commissioner of Zhenxi (modern Xinjiang), to go on a western expedition. In the tenth year of Tianbao (751) he reached the Western Sea . At the beginning of the Baoying reign (761) he boarded a merchant ship and returned [to China] through Guangzhou, and wrote his Travel Record .[47]

— Du You (735–812), a relative of Du Huan

In 754 Tang forces defeated Baltistan (Greater Bolü) and Tibetan forces.[44] In 755 the An Lushan Rebellion occurred and the Tang dynasty withdrew 200,000 soldiers from the Western Regions to protect the capital.[44] In 763 the Tibetan Empire conquered Yanqi.[48] In the same year the Tang capital was briefly taken by the Tibetans before they were forced to retreat.[49]

 
Dignitary seized by soldiers. Kumtura painting, 8th-9th century CE.

In 764 the Tibetan Empire invaded the Hexi Corridor and conquered Liang Prefecture,[50] cutting off the Anxi and Beiting protectorates from the Tang dynasty. However Anxi and Beiting were left relatively unmolested under the leadership of Guo Xin and Li Yuanzhong.[51]

In 780 Guo Xin and Li Yuanzhong were officially made protectorate generals after sending secret messages to Emperor Dezong of Tang.[52]

In 787 the Tibetan Empire conquered Qiuci.[48]

In 789 the monk Wukong passed through Shule, Yutian, Gumo, Qiuci, Yanqi, and Ting Prefecture and found that they all had Chinese commanders and were free from Tibetan or Uyghur control. This contradicts the previous conquests of Yanqi and Qiuci by the Tibetan Empire in 763 and 787, assertions made by Yuri Bregel in his An Historical Atlas of Central Asia.[53]

In 792 the Tibetan Empire conquered Yutian.[48] It is unclear what happened to Shule (Kashgar), Shache (Yarkand), or Gumo (Aksu).[48] According to O. Pritsak, Kashgar came under Karluk domination around this time, but this is disputed by Christopher I. Beckwith.[54]

Post-Tibetan domination Edit

 
Qocho, Guiyi Circuit, and the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom post-Tibetan Empire.

Regarding Khurasan and its proximity to the land of China, between the latter and Sogdiana there is a journey of two months. The way, however, is via a forbidding desert of unbroken sand dunes in which there are no water sources and no river valleys, with no habitation nearby. That is what prevents the people of Khurasan from launching an assault on China. Turning to the part of China lying in the direction of the setting sun, namely the place known as Bamdhu, this is located on the borders of Tibet, and fighting never ceases there between the Chinese and the Tibetans.[55]

— Abu Zayd Al-Sirafi

Of the four garrisons that made up the defunct Anxi Protectorate, all eventually ended up freeing themselves or coming under the dominion of other powers by the mid-9th century. Karasahr and Kucha were occupied by the Kingdom of Qocho in 843.[56] Kashgar came under the dominion of the Kara-Khanid Khanate. The earliest approximate date of around the late 8th or early 9th century is disputed, but it was likely before 980.[57] Khotan regained its independence in 851.[58] By 1006 it was also conquered by the Kara-Khanid Khanate.[59]

List of protector generals Edit

List of grand and assistant protector generals of the Protectorate General to Pacify the West (Anxi):[60]

Protectorate:

  • Qiao Shiwang (喬師望) 640–642
  • Guo Xiaoke (郭孝恪) 642–649
  • Chai Zhewei (柴哲威) 649–651
  • Qu Zhizhan (麴智湛) 651–658

Grand Protectorate:

  • Yang Zhou (楊胄) 658–662
  • Su Haizheng (蘇海政) 662
  • Gao Xian (高賢) 663
  • Pilou Shiche (匹婁武徹) 664
  • Pei Xingjian (裴行儉) 665–667

Protectorate:

  • Tao Dayou (陶大有) 667–669
  • Dong Baoliang (董寶亮) 669–671
  • Yuan Gongyu (袁公瑜) 671–677
  • Du Huanbao (杜懷寶) 677–679,
  • Wang Fangyi (王方翼) 679–681
  • Du Huanbao (杜懷寶) 681–682
  • Li Zulong (李祖隆) 683–685

Grand Protectorate:

  • Wang Shiguo (王世果) 686–687
  • Yan Wengu (閻溫古) 687–689

Protectorate:

  • Jiu Bin (咎斌) 689–690
  • Tang Xiujing (唐休璟) 690–693

Grand Protectorate:

  • Xu Qinming (許欽明) 693–695
  • Gongsun Yajing (公孫雅靖) 696–698
  • Tian Yangming (田揚名) 698–704
  • Guo Yuanzhen (郭元振) 705–708,
  • Zhou Yiti (周以悌) 708–709
  • Guo Yuanzhen (郭元振) 709–710
  • Zhang Xuanbiao (張玄表) 710–711
  • Lu Xuanjing (呂玄璟) 712–716
  • Guo Qianguan (郭虔瓘) 715–717,
  • Li Cong (李琮) 716
  • Tang Jiahui (湯嘉惠) 717–719,
  • Guo Qianguan (郭虔瓘) 720–721
  • Zhang Xiaosong (張孝嵩) 721–724
  • Du Xian (杜暹) 724–726
  • Zhao Yizhen (趙頤貞) 726–728
  • Xie Zhixin (謝知信) 728
  • Li Fen (李玢) 727–735
  • Zhao Hanzhang (趙含章) 728–729
  • Lu Xiulin (吕休琳) 729–730
  • Tang Jiahui (湯嘉惠) 730
  • Lai Yao (萊曜) 730–731
  • Xu Qinshi (徐欽識) 731–733
  • Wang Husi (王斛斯) 733–738
  • Ge Jiayun (蓋嘉運) 738–739
  • Tian Renwan (田仁琬) 740–741
  • Fumeng Lingcha (夫蒙靈詧) 741–747
  • Gao Xianzhi (高仙芝) 747–751
  • Wang Zhengjian (王正見) 751–752

Protectorate:

  • Feng Changqing (封常清) 752–755
  • Liang Zai (梁宰) 755–756
  • Li Siye (李嗣業) 756–759
  • Lifei Yuanli (荔非元禮) 759–761
  • Bai Xiaode (白孝德) 761–762
  • Sun Zhizhi (孫志直) 762–765
  • Zhu Mou (朱某) 765–?
  • Er Zhumou (爾朱某) 765–778
  • Guo Xin (郭昕) 762–808

Legacy Edit

 
An 8th-century Tang dynasty Chinese clay figurine of a Sogdian man (an Eastern Iranian person) wearing a distinctive cap and face veil, possibly a camel rider or even a Zoroastrian priest engaging in a ritual at a fire temple, since face veils were used to avoid contaminating the holy fire with breath or saliva; Museum of Oriental Art (Turin), Italy.[61]
 
A painting of Yelü Bei, eldest son of Abaoji, the founder of the Liao dynasty.

Physical remains Edit

In Xinjiang and the Chu valley in Central Asia, Tang era Chinese coins continued to be copied and minted after the Chinese left the area.[62][63] Coins with both Chinese and Karoshthi inscriptions have been found in the southern Tarim Basin.[64]

Linguistic influence Edit

The military dominance of the Tang in Central Asia has been used as an explanation for the Turkic word for China, "Tamghaj", possibly derived from the "House of Tang" (Tangjia) instead of Tabgatch.[65]

Cultural influence Edit

Chinese arts and crafts such as the sancai "three color" glaze left a long lasting impression in Central Asia and Western Eurasia.[63]

In the Persian epic Shahnameh the Chin refers to China or Chinese Turkestan which was under Tang control. The Khan of Turkestan was referred to as the Khan of Chin.[66][67][68]

Aladdin, an Arabic Islamic story which is set in China, may have been referring to Central Asia under Tang influence.[69]

Political influence Edit

Steppe empires often utilized the prestige of the Tang by connecting themselves to the defunct dynasty. The Qara Khitan khans used the title of "Chinese emperor" while the Khara-Khanid khans called themselves Tabgach.[70] Tabgach Khan, or "Khan of China" was a common appellation among Khara-Khanid rulers.[71] Persian, Arab and other western Asian writers came to call China by the name "Tamghaj".[72]

In 1124 the westward migration of the Khitans under Yelü Dashi also consisted of a large population of Han Chinese, Balhae, Jurchen, Mongols, Khitan, in addition to the Xiao consort clan and the Yelü royal family[73] In the 12th century, the Qara Khitai defeated the Kara-Khanid Khanate and conquered their territory in Central Asia. The Khitan rulers, called "the Chinese" by Muslims, governed using Chinese as their official language as well as the Chinese style of imperial government. The effect of their administration was seen with respect and esteem due in part to China's status in Central Asia at the time.[74][75][76][77] The Chinese characteristics appealed to the Muslim Central Asians and helped validate Qara Khitai rule. Han Chinese population among them was comparatively small so it is unlikely that the Chinese characteristics were kept to appease them. Later the Mongols moved more Chinese into Beshbalik, Almaliq and Samarqand in Central Asia to work as artisans and farmers.[78]

The "image of China" played a key role in legitimizing the Khitan rule to the Central Asian Muslims. Prior to the Mongol invasions, the perception of China among Central Asian Muslims was an extremely civilized society, known for its unique script, its expert artisans, justice and religious tolerance. The Chinese, Turk, Arab, Byzantine, and Indian rulers were known as the world's "five great kings". The historical memory of Tang China was powerful enough that anachronistic expressions appeared in Muslim writings long after the end of the Tang. China was known as chīn (چين) in Persian and as ṣīn (صين) in Arabic while the Tang dynasty capital Changan was known as Ḥumdān (خُمدان).[79]

Some Muslim writers like Marwazī, Mahmud Kashghārī and Kashgari viewed Kashgar as part of China. Ṣīn [i.e., China] is originally threefold; Upper, in the east which is called Tawjāch; middle which is Khitāy, lower which is Barkhān in the vicinity of Kashgar. But know Tawjāch is known as Maṣīn and Khitai as Ṣīn" China was called after the Tuoba rulers of the Northern Wei by the Turks, pronounced by them as Tamghāj, Tabghāj, Tafghāj or Tawjāch. India introduced the name Maha Chin (greater China) which influenced the two different names for China in Persian as chīn and māchīn (چين ماچين) and Arabic ṣīn and māṣīn (صين ماصين), Southern China at Guangzhou was known as Chin while Northern China's Chang'an was known as Machin, but the definition switched and the south was referred to as Machin and the north as Chin after the Tang dynasty. As a result of Tang China's control over Kashgar, some Kashghārī placed Kashgar within the definition of China, Ṣīn, whose emperor was titled as Tafghāj or Tamghāj, Yugur (yellow Uighurs or Western Yugur) and Khitai or Qitai were all classified as "China" by Marwazī while he wrote that Ṣīnwas was bordered by placed SNQU and Maṣīn.[80] Machin, Mahachin, Chin, and Sin were all names of China.[81] According to Fakhr al-Dīn Mubārak Shāh, "Turkestan", Balasagun, and Kashghar were identified with where Chīn (China) was located.[82]

Marwazī considered Transoxania to be a former part of China, retaining the legacy of Tang Chinese rule over Transoxania in Muslim writings, In ancient times all the districts of Transoxania had belonged to the kingdom of China [Ṣīn], with the district of Samarqand as its centre. When Islam appeared and God delivered the said district to the Muslims, the Chinese migrated to their [original] centers, but there remained in Samarqand, as a vestige of them, the art of making paper of high quality. And when they migrated to Eastern parts their lands became disjoined and their provinces divided, and there was a king in China and a king in Qitai and a king in Yugur. Some Muslim writers considered the Qara Khitai, the Ganzhou Uighur Kingdom and Kashgar as all parts of "China".[83][84] After Yusuf Qadir Khan's conquest of new land in Altishahr towards the east, he adopted the title "King of the East and China".[85]

Qocho Edit

The Tang era of Gaochang, later Qocho and Turpan, left a lasting legacy upon the Buddhist Uyghur Kingdom of Qocho. Tang names appear on more than 50 Buddhist temples. Emperor Taizong's edicts were stored in the "Imperial Writings Tower" and Chinese dictionaries like the Jingyun, Yuian, Tang yun, and da zang jing (Buddhist scriptures) were also stored inside the Buddhist temples. Persian monks also maintained a Manichaean temple in the Qocho. The Persian Hudud al-'Alam referred to Qocho as the "Chinese town".[86]

The Turpan Buddhist Uyghurs of the Kingdom of Qocho continued to produce the Chinese Qieyun rime dictionary and developed their own pronunciations of Chinese characters, left over from the Tang influence over the area.[87]

In Central Asia the Uyghurs viewed the Chinese script as "very prestigious" so when they developed the Old Uyghur alphabet, based on the Syriac script, they deliberately wrote it vertically like with Chinese writing.[88]

Modern culture Edit

The Anxi Protectorate is featured in the Jade Dragon expansion for the grand strategy game Crusader Kings II.[89]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Drompp 2005, p. 103.
  2. ^ Drompp 2005, p. 104.
  3. ^ Haywood 1998, p. 3.2.
  4. ^ Harold Miles Tanner (13 March 2009). China: A History. Hackett Publishing. pp. 167–. ISBN 978-0-87220-915-2.
  5. ^ Harold Miles Tanner (12 March 2010). China: A History: Volume 1: From Neolithic cultures through the Great Qing Empire 10,000 BCE–1799 CE. Hackett Publishing Company. pp. 167–. ISBN 978-1-60384-202-0.
  6. ^ H. J. Van Derven (1 January 2000). Warfare in Chinese History. BRILL. pp. 122–. ISBN 90-04-11774-1.
  7. ^ a b René Grousset (January 1970). The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia. Rutgers University Press. pp. 119–. ISBN 978-0-8135-1304-1.
  8. ^ Ven, Hans van de (26 July 2021). Warfare in Chinese History. BRILL. p. 119, map 2, p.131, map 3. ISBN 978-90-04-48294-4.
  9. ^ Millward 2007, p. 33.
  10. ^ a b Wang 2013, p. 40.
  11. ^ Xiong 2008, p. cix.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Xiong 2008, p. 45.
  13. ^ a b c Bregel 2003, p. 16.
  14. ^ a b c d e Bregel 2003, p. 17.
  15. ^ van Schaik 2011, p. 17.
  16. ^ Wang 2013, p. 146.
  17. ^ van Schaik 2011, p. 18.
  18. ^ Wang 2013, p. 147.
  19. ^ Wang 2013, p. 148.
  20. ^ Wang 2013, p. 149.
  21. ^ Wang 2013, p. 149-150.
  22. ^ a b c d Wang 2013, p. 150.
  23. ^ 舊唐書 [Old Book of Tang]. Retrieved 3 August 2017. 則天臨朝,長壽元年,武威軍總管王孝傑、阿史那忠節大破吐蕃,克復龜茲、于闐等四鎮,自此復於龜茲置安西都護府,用漢兵三萬人以鎮之。[In the first year of the Changshou era [692], under the reign of Zetian, Area Commander Wang Xiaojie of Wuwei Army and Ashina Zhongjie dealt a great blow to the Tibetans. Quici, Yutian, and the four garrisons were restored. From then on the Anxi Protectorate was restored to Qiuci with 30,000 Han soldiers.] {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  24. ^ Wang 2013, p. 151.
  25. ^ Xiong 2008, p. 58.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bregel 2003, p. 18.
  27. ^ Wang 2013, pp. 157–8.
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  30. ^ Bosworth, C. E. (1986). "Ḳutayba b. Muslim". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Volume V: Khe–Mahi (2nd ed.). Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 541–542. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
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  51. ^ 舊唐書 [Old Book of Tang]. Retrieved 3 August 2017. 上元元年,河西軍鎮多為吐蕃所陷。有舊將李元忠守北庭,郭昕守安西府,二鎮與沙陀、回鶻相依,吐蕃久攻之不下。[In the first year of the Shangyuan era [760], the Hexi Army Defense Command fell to the Tibetans. Beiting and Anxi were guarded by Li Yuanzhong and the old general Guo Xin, who along with the Shatuo and Uyghurs, were able to prevent the Tibetans from taking the two garrisons.] {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
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41°39′N 82°54′E / 41.650°N 82.900°E / 41.650; 82.900

protectorate, general, pacify, west, anxi, grand, protectorate, initially, protectorate, pacify, west, anxi, protectorate, protectorate, established, chinese, tang, dynasty, control, tarim, basin, head, office, first, established, prefecture, known, turpan, la. The Protectorate General to Pacify the West Anxi Grand Protectorate initially the Protectorate to Pacify the West Anxi Protectorate was a protectorate 640 c 790 established by the Chinese Tang dynasty in 640 to control the Tarim Basin 1 The head office was first established at the prefecture of Xi now known as Turpan but was later shifted to Qiuci Kucha and situated there for most of the period 2 Protectorate General to Pacify the WestTraditional Chinese安西大都護府Simplified Chinese安西大都护府Literal meaningPacify West Grand Metropolitan Protection Prefecture OfficeTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinAnxi Daduhu FǔProtectorate to Pacify the WestTraditional Chinese安西都護府Simplified Chinese安西都护府Literal meaningPacify West Metropolitan Protection Prefecture OfficeTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinAnxi Duhu FǔWade GilesAnhsi Tuhu FuThe Four Garrisons of Anxi in Kucha Khotan Kashgar and Karashahr were installed between 648 and 658 as garrisons under the western protectorate In 659 Sogdia Ferghana Tashkent Bukhara Samarkand Balkh Herat Kashmir the Pamirs Tokharistan and Kabul all submitted to the protectorate under Emperor Gaozong of Tang 3 4 5 6 7 After the An Lushan Rebellion 755 763 was suppressed the office of Protector General was given to Guo Xin who defended the area and the four garrisons even after communication had been cut off from Chang an by the Tibetan Empire The last five years of the protectorate are regarded as an uncertain period in its history but most sources agree that the last vestiges of the protectorate and its garrisons were defeated by Tibetan forces by 790 ending nearly 150 years of Tang influence in Central Asia Contents 1 History 1 1 7th century 1 2 8th century 2 Post Tibetan domination 3 List of protector generals 4 Legacy 4 1 Physical remains 4 2 Linguistic influence 4 3 Cultural influence 4 4 Political influence 4 5 Qocho 5 Modern culture 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 SourcesHistory Edit7th century Edit See also Timeline of the Tang dynasty nbsp Map of the major protectorates of the Tang dynasty c 660 following the campaigns against the Eastern Turks 629 the Western city states 640 648 and the Western Turks 657 The Protectorate General to Pacify the West is marked as Anxi Protectorate 8 9 nbsp Emperor Taizong s campaign against Xiyu states nbsp Kizil CavesThe Western Regions during the Tang era were known as Qixi 磧西 Qi refers to the Gobi Desert while Xi refers to the west In 632 the oasis kingdoms of Khotan Yutian and Shule Kashgar submitted to the Tang dynasty as vassals 10 In 635 Yarkand Shache submitted to the Tang dynasty 10 On 19 September 640 Hou Junji of Tang conquered Gaochang and set up Xi Prefecture 西州 in its place 11 12 Xi Prefecture became the seat of the Anxi Protectorate on 11 October Qiao Shiwang became the first protector general of the Anxi and served from 640 to 642 Guo Xiaoke received the next post and served from 640 to 648 By 644 Karasahr was also conquered and was known to the Chinese as Yanqi Aksu Gumo was garrisoned by Tang troops 13 In 648 the Tang conquered Kucha known to the Chinese as Qiuci and made it the new seat of Anxi under the governance of Chai Zhewei from 649 to 651 12 By 650 the entire Western Region had submitted to Tang authority 13 In 651 the seat was moved back to Xi Prefecture where it remained under the governance of Qu Zhizhan from 651 to 658 12 In 656 the Tibetan Empire attacked Lesser Bolu in Gilgit southwest of the protectorate 14 In 658 the seat was moved back to Qiuci after Su Dingfang defeated the Western Turkic Khaganate Its title was changed to Grand Protectorate and granted governorship of former Western Turkic territories which were further separated into the Mengchi and Kunling protectorates 12 In 660 the Tibetan Empire and their Turkic allies attacked Shule The Tibetan Empire also attacked Wakhan to the protectorate s southwest 14 When the Tang general boasted of the size of his army Gar Tongtsen Yulsung s son responded in the following manner There is no disputing the matter of numbers But many small birds are the food of a single hawk and many small fish are the food of a single otter A pine tree has been growing for a hundred years but a single axe is its enemy Although a river runs ceaselessly it can be crossed in a moment by a boat six feet long Although barley and rice grow over a whole plain it is all the grist of a single mill Although the sky is filled with stars in the light of a single sun they are nothing 15 In 663 the Tibetan Empire conquered Tuyuhun southeast of the protectorate 14 They also attacked Yutian but were repelled 16 In 665 the Tibetan Empire and Turkic allies attacked Yutian 14 The conflict between the Tang and Tibetans was the primary context under which the story of a Khotanese princess striving to rescue Khotan from destruction was formulated One passage of the story in prayer form reads When the red faced ones and the Chinese battle each other may Khotan not be destroyed When monks come from other countries to Khotan may they not be treated dishonourably May those who flee here from other countries find a place to stay here and help to rebuild the great stupas and monastic gardens that have been burned by the red faced ones 17 In 670 the Tibetan Empire routed a Tang army at the Battle of Dafei River and attacked Gumo as well as captured Qiuci The protectorate s seat was moved to Suyab known as Suiye to the Chinese in modern Kyrgyzstan 12 14 In 673 the Tang consolidated control over the Wuduolu Turks living in the area that came to be known as Dzungaria The Tang also captured Qiuci and established control over the Western Regions in the same year 18 In 677 the Tibetan Empire captured Qiuci In the same year Ashina Duzhi previously a Tang general tasked with controlling the Wuduolu Turks rebelled and declared himself Onoq Khagan ruler of all Turks 19 In 679 the Tang general Pei Xingjian defeated Ashina Duzhi as well as the Tibetans and established control over the Western Regions 20 In 686 Tang troops withdrew from the Four Garrisons after elements within the court argued for the decrease of military expenditures 21 In 687 the Tibetan Empire established control over the Western Regions 22 In 690 the Tibetan Empire defeated a Tang army at Issyk Kul 22 In 692 Tang troops under Wang Xiaojie pacified the Western Regions and established the Anxi Protectorate at Qiuci where it would remain until the protectorate s demise around 790 13 22 12 23 The importance of the Western Regions was well understood by the Tang court at this point Its strategic significance is summarized by Cui Rong an Imperial Diarist of the court If we cannot defend these garrisons barbarians will surely come to destabilize the Western Regions And various tribes south of the Nanshan Mountain i e the Qilian and the Kunlun Mountains would feel threatened If they link up with one another they would pose a threat to regions west of the Yellow River i e present day Gansu and Qinghai provinces Moreover if they get in touch with the Turks in the north our soldiers will be unable to crush them by crossing the Moheyan Desert the desert northwest of Dunhuang that extends over 2 000 li where neither water nor grass can be found The tribes loyal to China in Yizhou Xiyzhou Beiting Beshbalik and Anxi protectorates will all be eliminated 22 Cui Rong In 694 the Tibetan Empire attacked the Stone City Charklik 24 8th century Edit nbsp Hephthalite envoys 6th century AD nbsp Tributary envoys from Qiemo 6 7th centuries AD In 702 Wu Zetian set up the Beiting Protectorate in Ting Prefecture Jimsar County and granted it governorship over Yi Prefecture Hami and Xi Prefecture 25 In 708 the Turgesh attacked Qiuci 26 In 710 the Tibetan Empire conquered Lesser Bolu 27 Arab sources claim Qutayba ibn Muslim briefly took Kashgar from China and withdrew after an agreement 28 but modern historians entirely dismiss this claim 29 30 31 In 715 the Tibetan Empire attacked Fergana a Tang vassal 26 In 717 the Tibetan Empire attacked Gumo and the Stone City 32 33 The Arab Umayyad Caliphate in 715 AD deposed Ikhshid the king the Fergana Valley and installed a new king Alutar on the throne The deposed king fled to Kucha seat of Anxi Protectorate and sought Chinese intervention The Chinese sent 10 000 troops under Zhang Xiaosong to Ferghana He defeated Alutar and the Arab occupation force at Namangan and reinstalled Ikhshid on the throne 34 General Tang Jiahui led the Chinese to defeat the following Arab Tibetan attack in the Battle of Aksu 717 35 The attack on Aksu was joined by Turgesh Khan Suluk 7 Both Uch Turfan and Aksu were attacked by the Turgesh Arab and Tibetan force on 15 August 717 Qarluqs serving under Chinese command under Arsila Xian a Western Turkic Qaghan serving under the Chinese Assistant Grand Protector General Tang Jiahui defeated the attack Al Yashkuri the Arab commander and his army fled to Tashkent after they were defeated 36 37 In 719 the Turgesh captured Suiye 26 In 720 the Tibetan Empire seized the Stone City 38 In the same year Tang bestowed titles upon the kings of Khuttal Chitral and Oddiyana 39 In 722 Tang restored the king of Lesser Bolu to his throne 38 In 725 the king of Khotan Yutian rebelled but was immediately replaced with a Tang puppet by protectorate forces 38 In 726 the Turgesh attempted to engage in horse trade at Qiuci without prior authorization The Turgesh Khagan Suluk used his marital relation with Princess Jiaohe to issue a decree ordering the Protector General to engage in trade However Princess Jiaohe was actually the daughter of Ashina Huaidao and the Protector General retorted How can an Ashina woman proclaim a decree to me a military commissioner 40 In response Suluk attacked Qiuci 26 In 727 and 728 the Tibetan Empire attacked Qiuci 26 In 737 the Tibetan Empire conquered Lesser Bolu 32 In 741 the Tibetan Empire sacked the Stone City 41 In 745 the Tang general Huangfu Weiming attacked the Stone City but suffered a major defeat 42 According to Huangfu the Stone City was one of the most heavily defended bastions of the Tibetan Empire Shih pao is strongly defended The whole Tibetan nation is guarding it Now if we array our troops below it we cannot capture it without several tens of thousands of our men being killed I am afraid that what would be gained is not comparable to what would be lost 43 Huangfu Weiming nbsp SIND720KyrgyzsSECOND TURKICKHAGANATEUMAYYADCALIPHATECHAM PATURGESHKARLUKSYABGHUSIKHSHIDSTURKSHAHISVARMANSTANGEMPIREBYZANTINEEMPIREKHAZARKHANATEDVARA VATIAVARSAnxi ProtectorateTIBETANEMPIRECHENLASRIVIJAYA class notpageimage The Anxi Protectorate and main contemporary Asian polities circa 720 In 747 the Tang general Gao Xianzhi captured Lesser Bolu 26 In 748 the Tang recaptured Suiye and destroyed it 26 In 749 Tang recovered the Stone City 41 In 750 the Tang intervened in a dispute between their vassal Fergana and the neighboring kingdom of Chach located in modern Tashkent The kingdom of Chach was sacked and their king was taken back to Chang an where he was executed 26 In the same year Tang also defeated Qieshi in Chitral and the Turgesh 44 In 751 Tang forces suffered a major defeat at the Battle of Talas against Abbasid and Karluk forces 26 Although the Battle of Talas saw the limit of Tang expansion to the west the importance of the defeat at the Battle of Talas has sometimes been exaggerated Although the Tang army was defeated the Arabs did not extend their influence into Xinjiang and the Karluks remained amiable to the Tang Some Karluks converted to Islam but the vast majority did not until the mid 10th century under Sultan Satuq Bughra Khan of the Kara Khanid Khanate The long term strategic importance of Talas was overshadowed later on by the An Lushan Rebellion which devastated the Tang homeland It is now understood as the primary cause for the Tang retreat from Central Asia 45 46 My relative Huan followed Go Seonji Tang general of Goguryeo Korean descent Gao Xianzhi in Chinese died 755 the military commissioner of Zhenxi modern Xinjiang to go on a western expedition In the tenth year of Tianbao 751 he reached the Western Sea At the beginning of the Baoying reign 761 he boarded a merchant ship and returned to China through Guangzhou and wrote his Travel Record 47 Du You 735 812 a relative of Du Huan In 754 Tang forces defeated Baltistan Greater Bolu and Tibetan forces 44 In 755 the An Lushan Rebellion occurred and the Tang dynasty withdrew 200 000 soldiers from the Western Regions to protect the capital 44 In 763 the Tibetan Empire conquered Yanqi 48 In the same year the Tang capital was briefly taken by the Tibetans before they were forced to retreat 49 nbsp Dignitary seized by soldiers Kumtura painting 8th 9th century CE In 764 the Tibetan Empire invaded the Hexi Corridor and conquered Liang Prefecture 50 cutting off the Anxi and Beiting protectorates from the Tang dynasty However Anxi and Beiting were left relatively unmolested under the leadership of Guo Xin and Li Yuanzhong 51 In 780 Guo Xin and Li Yuanzhong were officially made protectorate generals after sending secret messages to Emperor Dezong of Tang 52 In 787 the Tibetan Empire conquered Qiuci 48 In 789 the monk Wukong passed through Shule Yutian Gumo Qiuci Yanqi and Ting Prefecture and found that they all had Chinese commanders and were free from Tibetan or Uyghur control This contradicts the previous conquests of Yanqi and Qiuci by the Tibetan Empire in 763 and 787 assertions made by Yuri Bregel in his An Historical Atlas of Central Asia 53 In 792 the Tibetan Empire conquered Yutian 48 It is unclear what happened to Shule Kashgar Shache Yarkand or Gumo Aksu 48 According to O Pritsak Kashgar came under Karluk domination around this time but this is disputed by Christopher I Beckwith 54 Post Tibetan domination Edit nbsp Qocho Guiyi Circuit and the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom post Tibetan Empire Regarding Khurasan and its proximity to the land of China between the latter and Sogdiana there is a journey of two months The way however is via a forbidding desert of unbroken sand dunes in which there are no water sources and no river valleys with no habitation nearby That is what prevents the people of Khurasan from launching an assault on China Turning to the part of China lying in the direction of the setting sun namely the place known as Bamdhu this is located on the borders of Tibet and fighting never ceases there between the Chinese and the Tibetans 55 Abu Zayd Al Sirafi Of the four garrisons that made up the defunct Anxi Protectorate all eventually ended up freeing themselves or coming under the dominion of other powers by the mid 9th century Karasahr and Kucha were occupied by the Kingdom of Qocho in 843 56 Kashgar came under the dominion of the Kara Khanid Khanate The earliest approximate date of around the late 8th or early 9th century is disputed but it was likely before 980 57 Khotan regained its independence in 851 58 By 1006 it was also conquered by the Kara Khanid Khanate 59 List of protector generals EditList of grand and assistant protector generals of the Protectorate General to Pacify the West Anxi 60 Protectorate Qiao Shiwang 喬師望 640 642 Guo Xiaoke 郭孝恪 642 649 Chai Zhewei 柴哲威 649 651 Qu Zhizhan 麴智湛 651 658Grand Protectorate Yang Zhou 楊胄 658 662 Su Haizheng 蘇海政 662 Gao Xian 高賢 663 Pilou Shiche 匹婁武徹 664 Pei Xingjian 裴行儉 665 667Protectorate Tao Dayou 陶大有 667 669 Dong Baoliang 董寶亮 669 671 Yuan Gongyu 袁公瑜 671 677 Du Huanbao 杜懷寶 677 679 Wang Fangyi 王方翼 679 681 Du Huanbao 杜懷寶 681 682 Li Zulong 李祖隆 683 685Grand Protectorate Wang Shiguo 王世果 686 687 Yan Wengu 閻溫古 687 689Protectorate Jiu Bin 咎斌 689 690 Tang Xiujing 唐休璟 690 693Grand Protectorate Xu Qinming 許欽明 693 695 Gongsun Yajing 公孫雅靖 696 698 Tian Yangming 田揚名 698 704 Guo Yuanzhen 郭元振 705 708 Zhou Yiti 周以悌 708 709 Guo Yuanzhen 郭元振 709 710 Zhang Xuanbiao 張玄表 710 711 Lu Xuanjing 呂玄璟 712 716 Guo Qianguan 郭虔瓘 715 717 Li Cong 李琮 716 Tang Jiahui 湯嘉惠 717 719 Guo Qianguan 郭虔瓘 720 721 Zhang Xiaosong 張孝嵩 721 724 Du Xian 杜暹 724 726 Zhao Yizhen 趙頤貞 726 728 Xie Zhixin 謝知信 728 Li Fen 李玢 727 735 Zhao Hanzhang 趙含章 728 729 Lu Xiulin 吕休琳 729 730 Tang Jiahui 湯嘉惠 730 Lai Yao 萊曜 730 731 Xu Qinshi 徐欽識 731 733 Wang Husi 王斛斯 733 738 Ge Jiayun 蓋嘉運 738 739 Tian Renwan 田仁琬 740 741 Fumeng Lingcha 夫蒙靈詧 741 747 Gao Xianzhi 高仙芝 747 751 Wang Zhengjian 王正見 751 752Protectorate Feng Changqing 封常清 752 755 Liang Zai 梁宰 755 756 Li Siye 李嗣業 756 759 Lifei Yuanli 荔非元禮 759 761 Bai Xiaode 白孝德 761 762 Sun Zhizhi 孫志直 762 765 Zhu Mou 朱某 765 Er Zhumou 爾朱某 765 778 Guo Xin 郭昕 762 808Legacy Edit nbsp An 8th century Tang dynasty Chinese clay figurine of a Sogdian man an Eastern Iranian person wearing a distinctive cap and face veil possibly a camel rider or even a Zoroastrian priest engaging in a ritual at a fire temple since face veils were used to avoid contaminating the holy fire with breath or saliva Museum of Oriental Art Turin Italy 61 nbsp A painting of Yelu Bei eldest son of Abaoji the founder of the Liao dynasty Physical remains Edit In Xinjiang and the Chu valley in Central Asia Tang era Chinese coins continued to be copied and minted after the Chinese left the area 62 63 Coins with both Chinese and Karoshthi inscriptions have been found in the southern Tarim Basin 64 Linguistic influence Edit The military dominance of the Tang in Central Asia has been used as an explanation for the Turkic word for China Tamghaj possibly derived from the House of Tang Tangjia instead of Tabgatch 65 Cultural influence Edit Chinese arts and crafts such as the sancai three color glaze left a long lasting impression in Central Asia and Western Eurasia 63 In the Persian epic Shahnameh the Chin refers to China or Chinese Turkestan which was under Tang control The Khan of Turkestan was referred to as the Khan of Chin 66 67 68 Aladdin an Arabic Islamic story which is set in China may have been referring to Central Asia under Tang influence 69 Political influence Edit Steppe empires often utilized the prestige of the Tang by connecting themselves to the defunct dynasty The Qara Khitan khans used the title of Chinese emperor while the Khara Khanid khans called themselves Tabgach 70 Tabgach Khan or Khan of China was a common appellation among Khara Khanid rulers 71 Persian Arab and other western Asian writers came to call China by the name Tamghaj 72 In 1124 the westward migration of the Khitans under Yelu Dashi also consisted of a large population of Han Chinese Balhae Jurchen Mongols Khitan in addition to the Xiao consort clan and the Yelu royal family 73 In the 12th century the Qara Khitai defeated the Kara Khanid Khanate and conquered their territory in Central Asia The Khitan rulers called the Chinese by Muslims governed using Chinese as their official language as well as the Chinese style of imperial government The effect of their administration was seen with respect and esteem due in part to China s status in Central Asia at the time 74 75 76 77 The Chinese characteristics appealed to the Muslim Central Asians and helped validate Qara Khitai rule Han Chinese population among them was comparatively small so it is unlikely that the Chinese characteristics were kept to appease them Later the Mongols moved more Chinese into Beshbalik Almaliq and Samarqand in Central Asia to work as artisans and farmers 78 The image of China played a key role in legitimizing the Khitan rule to the Central Asian Muslims Prior to the Mongol invasions the perception of China among Central Asian Muslims was an extremely civilized society known for its unique script its expert artisans justice and religious tolerance The Chinese Turk Arab Byzantine and Indian rulers were known as the world s five great kings The historical memory of Tang China was powerful enough that anachronistic expressions appeared in Muslim writings long after the end of the Tang China was known as chin چين in Persian and as ṣin صين in Arabic while the Tang dynasty capital Changan was known as Ḥumdan خ مدان 79 Some Muslim writers like Marwazi Mahmud Kashghari and Kashgari viewed Kashgar as part of China Ṣin i e China is originally threefold Upper in the east which is called Tawjach middle which is Khitay lower which is Barkhan in the vicinity of Kashgar But know Tawjach is known as Maṣin and Khitai as Ṣin China was called after the Tuoba rulers of the Northern Wei by the Turks pronounced by them as Tamghaj Tabghaj Tafghaj or Tawjach India introduced the name Maha Chin greater China which influenced the two different names for China in Persian as chin and machin چين ماچين and Arabic ṣin and maṣin صين ماصين Southern China at Guangzhou was known as Chin while Northern China s Chang an was known as Machin but the definition switched and the south was referred to as Machin and the north as Chin after the Tang dynasty As a result of Tang China s control over Kashgar some Kashghari placed Kashgar within the definition of China Ṣin whose emperor was titled as Tafghaj or Tamghaj Yugur yellow Uighurs or Western Yugur and Khitai or Qitai were all classified as China by Marwazi while he wrote that Ṣinwas was bordered by placed SNQU and Maṣin 80 Machin Mahachin Chin and Sin were all names of China 81 According to Fakhr al Din Mubarak Shah Turkestan Balasagun and Kashghar were identified with where Chin China was located 82 Marwazi considered Transoxania to be a former part of China retaining the legacy of Tang Chinese rule over Transoxania in Muslim writings In ancient times all the districts of Transoxania had belonged to the kingdom of China Ṣin with the district of Samarqand as its centre When Islam appeared and God delivered the said district to the Muslims the Chinese migrated to their original centers but there remained in Samarqand as a vestige of them the art of making paper of high quality And when they migrated to Eastern parts their lands became disjoined and their provinces divided and there was a king in China and a king in Qitai and a king in Yugur Some Muslim writers considered the Qara Khitai the Ganzhou Uighur Kingdom and Kashgar as all parts of China 83 84 After Yusuf Qadir Khan s conquest of new land in Altishahr towards the east he adopted the title King of the East and China 85 Qocho Edit The Tang era of Gaochang later Qocho and Turpan left a lasting legacy upon the Buddhist Uyghur Kingdom of Qocho Tang names appear on more than 50 Buddhist temples Emperor Taizong s edicts were stored in the Imperial Writings Tower and Chinese dictionaries like the Jingyun Yuian Tang yun and da zang jing Buddhist scriptures were also stored inside the Buddhist temples Persian monks also maintained a Manichaean temple in the Qocho The Persian Hudud al Alam referred to Qocho as the Chinese town 86 The Turpan Buddhist Uyghurs of the Kingdom of Qocho continued to produce the Chinese Qieyun rime dictionary and developed their own pronunciations of Chinese characters left over from the Tang influence over the area 87 In Central Asia the Uyghurs viewed the Chinese script as very prestigious so when they developed the Old Uyghur alphabet based on the Syriac script they deliberately wrote it vertically like with Chinese writing 88 Modern culture EditThe Anxi Protectorate is featured in the Jade Dragon expansion for the grand strategy game Crusader Kings II 89 Gallery Edit nbsp A feitian playing pipa wall painting from Kizil pigment on stucco Tang dynasty 600 800 nbsp A Buddha statue from Shorchuk nbsp Tang figurine from Kucha nbsp Tang armored horse rider nbsp Tang pottery cavalry nbsp Tang pottery soldier nbsp Tang pottery soldier See also EditShule Kingdom Kingdom of Khotan Kingdom of Qocho Shanshan Protectorate General to Pacify the North Protectorate General to Pacify the East Protectorate General to Pacify the South Chinese Turkestan Chinese military history Horses in East Asian warfare Tang dynasty in Inner Asia Four Garrisons of Anxi Protectorate of the Western Regions Administrative divisions of the Tang dynasty Beiting ProtectorateReferences EditCitations Edit Drompp 2005 p 103 Drompp 2005 p 104 Haywood 1998 p 3 2 Harold Miles Tanner 13 March 2009 China A History Hackett Publishing pp 167 ISBN 978 0 87220 915 2 Harold Miles Tanner 12 March 2010 China A History Volume 1 From Neolithic cultures through the Great Qing Empire 10 000 BCE 1799 CE Hackett Publishing Company pp 167 ISBN 978 1 60384 202 0 H J Van Derven 1 January 2000 Warfare in Chinese History BRILL pp 122 ISBN 90 04 11774 1 a b Rene Grousset January 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press pp 119 ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Ven Hans van de 26 July 2021 Warfare in Chinese History BRILL p 119 map 2 p 131 map 3 ISBN 978 90 04 48294 4 Millward 2007 p 33 a b Wang 2013 p 40 Xiong 2008 p cix a b c d e f Xiong 2008 p 45 a b c Bregel 2003 p 16 a b c d e Bregel 2003 p 17 van Schaik 2011 p 17 Wang 2013 p 146 van Schaik 2011 p 18 Wang 2013 p 147 Wang 2013 p 148 Wang 2013 p 149 Wang 2013 p 149 150 a b c d Wang 2013 p 150 舊唐書 Old Book of Tang Retrieved 3 August 2017 則天臨朝 長壽元年 武威軍總管王孝傑 阿史那忠節大破吐蕃 克復龜茲 于闐等四鎮 自此復於龜茲置安西都護府 用漢兵三萬人以鎮之 In the first year of the Changshou era 692 under the reign of Zetian Area Commander Wang Xiaojie of Wuwei Army and Ashina Zhongjie dealt a great blow to the Tibetans Quici Yutian and the four garrisons were restored From then on the Anxi Protectorate was restored to Qiuci with 30 000 Han soldiers a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Wang 2013 p 151 Xiong 2008 p 58 a b c d e f g h i Bregel 2003 p 18 Wang 2013 pp 157 8 Muhamad S Olimat 27 August 2015 China and Central Asia in the Post Soviet Era A Bilateral Approach Lexington Books pp 10 ISBN 978 1 4985 1805 5 Litvinsky B A Jalilov A H Kolesnikov A I 1996 The Arab Conquest In Litvinsky B A ed History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume III The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 Paris UNESCO Publishing pp 449 472 ISBN 92 3 103211 9 Bosworth C E 1986 Ḳutayba b Muslim In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Lewis B amp Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume V Khe Mahi 2nd ed Leiden E J Brill pp 541 542 ISBN 978 90 04 07819 2 Gibb H A R 1923 The Arab Conquests in Central Asia London The Royal Asiatic Society pp 48 51 OCLC 685253133 a b Bregel 2003 p 19 Wang 2013 p 158 Bai Shouyi et al 2003 A History of Chinese Muslim Vol 2 Beijing Zhonghua Book Company ISBN 7 101 02890 X pp 235 236 Insight Guides 1 April 2017 Insight Guides Silk Road APA ISBN 978 1 78671 699 6 Christopher I Beckwith 28 March 1993 The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia A History of the Struggle for Great Power Among Tibetans Turks Arabs and Chinese During the Early Middle Ages Princeton University Press pp 88 89 ISBN 0 691 02469 3 Marvin C Whiting 2002 Imperial Chinese Military History 8000 BC 1912 AD iUniverse pp 277 ISBN 978 0 595 22134 9 a b c Wang 2013 p 159 Beckwith 1987 p 91 Skaff 2012 p 279 a b Wang 2013 p 166 Beckwith 1987 p 129 Beckwith 1987 p 129 30 a b c Wang 2013 p 167 Wink 2002 pp 68 Soucek 2000 pp 84 Park 2012 p 24 a b c d Bregel 2003 p 21 Xiong 2009 p cxii sfn error no target CITEREFXiong2009 help Beckwith 1987 p 149 舊唐書 Old Book of Tang Retrieved 3 August 2017 上元元年 河西軍鎮多為吐蕃所陷 有舊將李元忠守北庭 郭昕守安西府 二鎮與沙陀 回鶻相依 吐蕃久攻之不下 In the first year of the Shangyuan era 760 the Hexi Army Defense Command fell to the Tibetans Beiting and Anxi were guarded by Li Yuanzhong and the old general Guo Xin who along with the Shatuo and Uyghurs were able to prevent the Tibetans from taking the two garrisons a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help 舊唐書 Old Book of Tang Retrieved 3 August 2017 建中元年 元忠 昕遣使間道奏事 德宗嘉之 以元忠為北庭都護 昕為安西都護 In the first year of the Jianzhong era 780 Yuanzhong and Xin dispatched envoys through a remote path to memorialize the emperor Dezong commended them and Yuanzhong became protector general of Beiting while Xin became protector general of Anxi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help 佛說十力經 Sutta Central Retrieved 4 September 2017 Beckwith 1987 p 153 Al Sirafi 2014 p 104 5 Beckwith 1987 p 168 Bregel 1987 p 23 sfn error no target CITEREFBregel1987 help Beckwith 1987 p 171 Bregel 2003 p 26 Xue p 589 593 Lee Lawrence 3 September 2011 A Mysterious Stranger in China The Wall Street Journal Accessed on 31 August 2016 Belyaev 2014 p 3 a b Millward 2007 p 41 Millward 2007 p 23 Fiaschetti 2014 p 27 28 Pavry 2015 p 86 the heroines of ancient persia CUP Archive 1930 pp 86 ISBN 978 1 00 128789 8 Winchester 1930 p 86 Moon 2005 p 23 Millward 2007 p 42 Millward 2007 p 51 Yule 1915 p 33 Biran 2005 p 146 Michal Biran Michal Biran Khitan Migrations in Inner Asia Central Eurasian Studies 3 2012 85 108 Michal Biran Academia edu Biran 2012 p 90 Archived 2014 04 14 at the Wayback Machine Stary Giovanni 2006 Tumen Jalafun Jecen Aku Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 9783447053785 Biran 2005 p 93 Biran 2005 p 96 Biran 2005 p 97 Biran 2005 p 98 Cordier Henri China The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 3 New York Robert Appleton Company 1908 14 Sept 2015 lt http www newadvent org cathen 03663b htm gt Biran 2005 p 102 Biran 2005 p 99 Schluessel 2014 p 13 Thumb 2012 p 633 Millward 2007 p 49 Takata 2015 p 7 9 Borelova 2002 p 49 CK2 Dev Diary 61 The Dragon Throne Retrieved 8 August 2017 Sources Edit Al Sirafi Abu Zayd 2014 Two Arabic Travel Books New York University Press Algar Ayla Esen 1992 The Dervish Lodge Architecture Art and Sufism in Ottoman Turkey University of California Press Asimov M S 1998 History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume IV The age of achievement A D 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Part One The historical social and economic setting UNESCO Publishing Azad Arezou 2013 Sacred Landscape in Medieval Afghanistan Revisiting the Faḍaʾil i Balkh OUP Oxford Barfield Thomas 1989 The Perilous Frontier Nomadic Empires and China Basil Blackwell Beckwith Christopher I 1987 The Tibetan Empire in Central Asia A History of the Struggle for Great Power among Tibetans Turks Arabs and Chinese during the Early Middle Ages Princeton University Press Belyaev Vladimir 2014 The coinage of Qara Khitay a new evidence on the reign title of the Western Liao Emperor Yelu Yilie Russian Academy of Sciences Benson Linda 1998 China s last Nomads the history and culture of China s Kazaks M E Sharpe Biran Michal 2005 The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History Between China and the Islamic World Cambridge University Press Borelova Liliya M 2002 Manchu Grammar Brill Bosworth Clifford Edmund 2000 The Age of Achievement A D 750 to the End of the Fifteenth Century Vol 4 Part II The Achievements History of Civilizations of Central Asia UNESCO Publishing Bregel Yuri 2003 An Historical Atlas of Central Asia Brill Bughra Imin 1983 The history of East Turkestan Istanbul Istanbul publications Drompp Michael Robert 2005 Tang China And The Collapse Of The Uighur Empire A Documentary History Brill Esposito John L 1999 The Oxford History of Islam Oxford University Press Fiaschetti Francesca 2014 Political Strategies of Identity Building in Non Han Empires in China Harrassowitz Verlag Golden Peter B 2011 Central Asia in World History Oxford University Press Hansen Valerie 2015 The Silk Road A New History Oxford University Press Haywood John 1998 Historical Atlas of the Medieval World AD 600 1492 Barnes amp Noble Lapidus Ira M 2012 Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century A Global History Cambridge University Press Latourette Kenneth Scott 1964 The Chinese their history and culture Volumes 1 2 Macmillan Levi Scott Cameron 2010 Islamic Central Asia An Anthology of Historical Sources Indiana University Press Millward James 2007 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13924 3 Moon Krystyn 2005 Yellowface Rutgers University Press Mote Frederick W 2003 Imperial China 900 1800 Harvard University Press Park Hyunhee 2012 Mapping the Chinese and Islamic Worlds Pavry Bapsy 2015 The Heroines of Ancient Persia Cambridge University Press Rong Xinjiang 2013 Eighteen Lectures on Dunhuang Brill van Schaik Sam 2011 Tibet A History Schluessel Eric T 2014 The World as Seen from Yarkand Ghulam Muḥammad Khan s 1920s Chronicle Ma Tiṭayniŋ wa qiʿasi NIHU Program Islamic Area Studies Sinor Denis 1990 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24304 9 Skaff Jonathan Karam 2012 Sui Tang China and Its Turko Mongol Neighbors Culture Power and Connections 580 800 Oxford Studies in Early Empires Oxford University Press Soucek Svat 2000 A History of Inner Asia Cambridge University Press Takata Tokio 2015 The Chinese Language in Turfan with a special focus on the Qieyun fragments Institute for Research in Humanities Kyoto University Thumb Rian 2012 Modular History Identity Maintenance before Uyghur Nationalism The Association for Asian Studies Inc 2012 Wang Zhenping 2013 Tang China in Multi Polar Asia A History of Diplomacy and War University of Hawaii Press Winchester Bapsy Pavry Paulet Marchioness 1930 The Heroines of Ancient Persia Stories Retold from the Shahnama of Firdausi With Fourteen Illustrations The University Press Wink Andre 1997 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest 11th 13th Centuries BRILL Wink Andre 2002 Al Hind The Slavic Kings and the Islamic conquest 11th 13th centuries BRILL Xiong Victor 2008 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China United States of America Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0810860537 Xue Zongzheng 薛宗正 1992 Turkic peoples 突厥史 Beijing 中国社会科学出版社 ISBN 978 7 5004 0432 3 OCLC 28622013 Yakup Abdurishid 2005 The Turfan Dialect of Uyghur Otto Harrassowitz Verlag Yule Henry 1915 Cathay and the Way Thither Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China Asian Educational Services 41 39 N 82 54 E 41 650 N 82 900 E 41 650 82 900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Protectorate General to Pacify the West amp oldid 1177970716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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