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Guiyi Circuit

The Guiyi Circuit, also known as the Guiyi Army (Chinese: 歸義軍; pinyin: Guīyì Jūn; Wade–Giles: Kui1-i4 Chün1; lit. 'Returning-to-Righteousness Army', 848–1036 AD), Golden Mountain Kingdom of Western Han (西漢金山國; Xīhàn Jīnshān guó; Hsi-han Chin-shan kuo, 909–911), Dunhuang Kingdom of Western Han (西漢敦煌國; Xīhàn Dūnhuáng guó; Hsi-han Tun-huang kuo, 911–914), was a Chinese regional military command and later an autonomous dynastic regime nominally subordinate to the Tang dynasty, the Five Dynasties, and the Northern Song dynasty. The Guiyi Circuit was controlled by the Zhang family from the second half of the 9th century to the 10th century and then the Cao family until the 11th century. The Guiyi Circuit was headquartered in Shazhou (沙州; modern-day Dunhuang).

Guiyi Circuit
Golden Mountain Kingdom of Western Han
Dunhuang Kingdom of Western Han
歸義軍 / 西漢金山國 / 西漢敦煌國
851–1036
StatusCircuit/Kingdom/Tributary to Tang dynasty
CapitalGanzhou (Zhangye)
Shazhou (Dunhuang)
Common languagesChinese, Old Tibetan, Sogdian
GovernmentMonarchy, Military
History 
• Established
851
• Disestablished
1036
Today part ofChina

Background edit

 
The Tibetan Empire at its greatest extent around the 780s and the 790s CE
 
Section of a wall mural commemorating the victory of Zhang Yichao over the Tibetan Empire, Mogao Cave 156, Late Tang Dynasty (9th century).
 
Section of a wall mural commemorating the victory of Zhang Yichao

The Hexi Corridor was an important part of the Silk Road, connecting Central Asia with Northwest China. After the An Lushan Rebellion, the Hexi Corridor was occupied by the Tibetan Empire.[1] Around the 770s or the 780s, Shazhou, otherwise known as Dunhuang, was occupied by the Tibetans.[2]

In respect to their political and social systems, the Tibetans made many changes in Dunhuang according to their own practice. As in many other conquered places, they sent a rtse-rje (Ch. Jieer ) to Dunhuang to be in charge of local administration. Since the Tang institutions in Dunhuang had totally broken down, all of the residents were reorganized into several stong-sdes (literally meaning "thousand households", equal to buluo in Chinese as seen from Dunhuang manuscripts) according to their professions or other standards. It is not very clear yet to what extent the previous social relations and structure were changed, but apparently the great families in Dunhuang remained influential in local affairs during the occupation period. Many members from the Zhang, Yin, Suo, Yan and other clans were appointed by the Tibetan government to important positions.[3]

— Yang Jidong

Zhang family edit

 
Zhang Yichao departing from a fortress

After some 60 years of Tibetan rule, Tibet entered its Era of Fragmentation and was torn by civil war by 851. Tibetans in the Dunhuang region become part of a group known as wamo in Chinese historical sources.

In 848 Zhang Yichao, a resident of Shazhou, led an uprising and captured Shazhou and Guazhou from the Tibetans.[4]

There are some indications that Zhang Yichao's family was kept away from the political sphere of Dunhuang at that time. The surviving text of the famous stone tablet commemorating Zhang Huaishen's (Zhang Yichao's nephew) merits clearly shows that the property and land of the family were confiscated by the new government shortly after Dunhuang surrendered to the Tibetans. In another manuscript, P 3556, we find that Zhang Yichao's father, Zhang Qianyi, became a xiaoyao zhike ["a free man", a word usually used in traditional China to refer to an intellectual who refused to serve the government and lived in seclusion] and was kept out of political power during the Tibetan period.[5]

— Yang Jidong

By 850 Zhang had captured Ganzhou, Suzhou, and Yizhou.[6] Zhang claimed the title of acting prefect of Shazhou and submitted a petition to Emperor Xuānzong of Tang, offering his loyalty and submission.

In 851 Zhang captured Xizhou (Gaochang). Envoys from Shazhou reached the Tang court and the emperor responded by naming Zhang's territory the Guiyi Circuit and made Zhang Yichao the Guiyi Jiedushi (歸義節度使, Governor of the Guiyi Circuit) and Cao Yijin his secretary general.[6]

In 856 Zhang attacked the Tibetans and defeated them.[7]

The bandits [the Tibetan coalition] had not expected that the Chinese troops would arrive so suddenly and were totally unprepared. Our armies proceeded to line up in a “black-cloud formation,” swiftly striking from all four sides. The barbarian bandits were panic-stricken. Like stars they splintered, north and south. The Chinese armies having gained the advantage, they pursued them, pressing close at their backs. Within fifteen miles, they caught up with them. This is the place where their slain corpses were strewn everywhere across the plain.[7]

— Zhang Yichao Transformation Text

By 861 the Guiyi Circuit had extended its authority to Guazhou, Ganzhou, Suzhou, Yizhou, Lanzhou, Shanzhou, Hezhou, Minzhou, Liangzhou, and Kuozhou.[8]

 
A 10th-century mural painting in the Mogao Caves at Dunhuang depicting monastic architecture at Mount Wutai
 
Monastic architecture in a mural painting, Mogao Caves
 
Monastic architecture in a mural painting, Mogao Caves

In 866 Zhang Yichao defeated the Tibetan general bLon Khrom brZhe (Tibetan: བློན་ཁྲོམ་བཞེར་ 論恐熱 Lun Kongre) and seized Luntai (Ürümqi) and Tingzhou. However they were immediately captured by the Kingdom of Qocho afterwards. Xizhou was also captured by the Uyghurs. BLon Khrom brZhe was an attack commissioner in the region. After Langdarma's death in 842, he fought constantly with another commissioner, Shang Bibi.[6] He was captured by Shang Bibi's subordinate, Tuoba Huaiguang, in 866 and sent to the Tang court.[9]

At the same time, the rivalry between the two Tibetan generals, Kongre and Bibi, in the Hexi region worsened in 850. Their troops clashed several times in the eighth and ninth months, and Bibi suffered heavy casualties. The pro-Tang Zhang Yichao seized this opportunity to exert more military pressure on Kongre in 851. Kongre’s followers started to betray him. Desperate to strengthen his position among his dispirited followers, he told them: “I shall pay tributes to the Tang and borrow 500,000 Chinese soldiers to punish those who dare disobey me. I shall then make Weizhou the capital of my state and request Tang to confer on me the title Zanpu.” Kongre came to Chang’an in the fifth month and requested the title Military Commissioner. Emperor Xuanzong, however, had no intention of accepting him as an outer subject. He accorded Kongre an audience but rejected his request. Kongre came back to Weizhou to rally his forces. Many of his former supporters, however, now refused to follow him. With only three hundred companions, Kongre moved farther northwest to Kuozhou and ceased to be a threat to China.[9]

— Wang Zhenping

In 867 Zhang Yichao departed for the Tang court after his brother Yitan, who had been staying in Chang'an as a hostage, died. His nephew Zhang Huaishen succeeded him as Guiyi Jiedushi.[10]

In 869 the Kingdom of Qocho attacked the Guiyi Circuit but was repelled.[11]

In 870 the Kingdom of Qocho attacked the Guiyi Circuit but was repelled.[11]

In 872 Zhang Yichao died at court.[10]

In 876 the Kingdom of Qocho seized Yizhou.[10]

In 867 Zhang Yichao extended his influence to Longyou and Xizhou, when his brother Zhang Yitan 張議潭, who had been sent to the Tang court as a hostage, died in Chang’an. Complying with the order of the court, Zhang Yichao traveled to the court in person. He never returned but eventually died in Chang’an in 872. In his absence, his nephew Zhang Huaishen 張淮深 took over the rule of the Guiyijun, yet the Tang court did not officially appoint him military commissioner. Thus while Zhang Huaishen received no support from the Tang, the Uighurs, as part of their westward expansion, deeply invaded the territories of Ganzhou and Suzhou, and even attacked Guazhou. Even though Zhang Huaishen successfully defeated their scattered attacks, in 876 the Xizhou Uighurs seized Yizhou and with this the Guiyijun lost one of its important garrisons.[10]

— Rong Xinjiang

In 880, Qocho attacked Shazhou, but was repelled.[12]

Around the years 881 and 882, Ganzhou and Liangzhou slipped from the control of the Guiyi Circuit. The Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom would establish itself in Ganzhou by 894.[11] In Liangzhou, the Tibetan state of Xiliangfu established itself by 906.[13]

In another memorial presented to the Emperor Tang Yizong, Zhang Yichao implored the court not to abandon Liangzhou. It seems that the Wamo and Tibetans were trying hard to recapture Liangzhou in the late 860s, and their attacks appear to have been very heavy so that Chang'an was planning to withdraw from Liangzhou. Apparently, weak Tang could not give the Returning to Righteousness Army any practical help.[14]

— Yang Jidong

In 890 Zhang Huaishen was assassinated and his cousin Zhang Huaiding succeeded him.[15]

In 892 Zhang Huaiding died and left his son in the care of Suo Xun (索勳), son-in-law of Zhang Yichao. Suo Xun declared himself Guiyi Jiedushi.[15]

In 894 Suo Xun was killed by a local aristocrat by the name of Li Mingzhen and Zhang Yichao's daughter. Li's sons shared control of Guiyi Circuit afterwards.[15]

In 896 Li Mingzhen's sons were ousted and Zhang Chengfeng (張承奉), a grandson of Zhang Yichao, became jiedushi.[15]

In 904, Zhang Chengfeng attacked Qocho and seized Yizhou (Hami) and Xizhou (Gaochang).[16]

In 910 Zhang Chengfeng received news of the Tang dynasty's demise and declared himself Emperor Baiyi. The Guiyi Circuit was renamed Kingdom of Jinshan.[17]

Kingdom of Jinshan edit

The rulers of Guiyi in Dunhuang briefly called themselves "emperors" for a short period after the final collapse of the Tang dynasty.[18]

In 910 Zhang Chengfeng established a kingdom known as the Xihan Jinshan (西漢金山國 Xīhàn Jīnshānguó), "The Golden Mountain Kingdom of the Western Han," and gave himself the title of "Son of Heaven."[19][20] This was followed by an invasion by the Ganzhou Uyghurs.

In 911 the Ganzhou Uyghurs attacked again and the Kingdom of Jinshan was forced to become a lesser partner in an alliance with the Ganzhou Uyghurs. The Great Chancellor (大宰相) and the elders of Jinshan State made a treaty with the Ganzhou Uyghurs, recognizing their superiority. The relationship between the two was prescribed as

        "...the Khan is the father, and the Son of Heaven is the son..." (...可汗是父,天子是子...)[19]

In 914 Cao Yijin usurped the throne and abolished the kingdom, reverting the name to Guiyi Army.

During the Zhang family’s rule, the Guiyijun basically controlled the entire Hexi region but by the end of the 10th century it was only able to keep the prefectures of Guazhou and Shazhou. During the Cao family’s rule which began in 914, the Guiyijun maintained friendly relations with the Xizhou Uighurs in the west and the kingdom of Khotan. With Khotan they even entered into a marriage alliance, as the Khotanese king Li Shengtian 李聖天 married the daughter of Cao Yijin, and Cao Yanlu also married the third daughter of the king of Khotan. Hence there were very close contacts between the two states. We can even say that in the eyes of the Khotanese people the Hexi-based Guiyijun came to represent China proper. During the late 10th century, as a result of the holy war launched by the Islamic Karakhanid Khanate against Khotanese Buddhists, Khotan increasingly relied on its eastern neighbors to resist hostile invasion.[21]

— Rong Xinjiang

Cao family edit

 
Viśa' Saṃbhava (r. 912–966), the king of Khotan and his queen, the daughter of Cao Yijin
 
Viśa' Saṃbhava and Cao Yijin, Mogao Caves mural
 
Daughter of Viśa' Saṃbhava, the wife of Cao Yanlu (r. 976–1002)

In 914 Cao Yijin (曹議金) usurped the throne and restored the name Guiyi Circuit.[22]

In 914, Cao Yijin 曹議金 (also called Cao Rengui 曹仁貴) took over the throne from Zhang Chengfeng, abolished the Jinshan state and the title of king, calling himself once again military commissioner of the Guiyijun. Cao Yijin improved the relationship with neighboring peoples, sent envoys to Ganzhou and married the daughter of the Uighur Khagan, thus reinforcing a positive relationship with the Uighurs. In 918 Cao Yijin, with the support of the Uighur Khagan, the puye 僕射 of Liangzhou and the xianggong 相公 of Lingzhou, sent envoys to the Later Liang and was conferred by the court the title of military commissioner of the Guiyijun. Cao Yijin constructed a large cave (Cave 98) at Mogao in celebration of being acknowledged by the central dynasty. He strengthened his rear by sending envoys to the Yizhou and Xizhou Uighurs, and in 925, took advantage of the change of khagans among the Ganzhou Uighurs and led a military campaign against them, defeating them after heavy fighting. The newly established khagan took Cao Yijin’s daughter as his wife and thus became the military commissioner’s son-in-law.[17]

— Rong Xinjiang

In 916 Cao Yijin married a Ganzhou Uyghur princess and sent delegations to the Later Liang.[23]

In 924 the Ganzhou Uyghur Khagan died and his successors Renmei and Diyin declared war on each other, with Diyin coming out victorious.[22]

In 925 Cao Yijin defeated the Ganzhou Uyghurs.[22]

In 926, Diyin died, and Aduoyu (阿咄欲) became the Khan of the Ganzhou Uyghurs. Aduoyu married a daughter of Cao Yijin.[22]

Kingdom of Guiyi edit

In 931 Cao Yijin declared himself as Lord (令公) and Great King-reclaiming-the-west (拓西大王).[17][24] The Cao rulers continued using the Chinese reign era names, and maintained cordial relations with the Chinese heartland and its socio-political system.[25]

In 934 Cao Yijin married his daughter to the king of Khotan.

The Cao family of Dunhuang and the royal family of Khotan had close ties. The Khotanese king Visa Sambhava, who ruled Khotan from 912 to 966, also used the Chinese name Li Shengtian. Sometime before 936 he married the daughter of Cao Yijin. The Khotanese royal family maintained a residence in Dunhuang where Visa Sambhava’s wife often stayed and where the heir to the Khotanese throne lived. The crown prince’s residence functioned as a representative office for the Khotanese, and it is very possible that the Khotanese language documents found in cave 17 were an archive donated by the crown prince’s residence to the Three Realms Monastery.[26]

— Valerie Hansen

In 935 Cao Yijin died and was succeeded by his son, Cao Yuande.[27]

In 939 Cao Yuande (曹元德) died and was succeeded by his brother Yuanshen (曹元深).[27]

In 944 Cao Yuanshen died and his brother Yuanzhong (曹元忠) succeeded him. Cao Yuanzhong's reign was characterized by progress in agriculture, transportation, and printing.[28] Relationship with the Ganzhou Uyghurs remained relatively stable during this period.[29]

In 950 the first depiction of fire lances appeared in Shazhou.

In 974 Cao Yuanzhong died and his nephew Cao Yangong (曹延恭) succeeded him.[30]

In 976 Cao Yangong died and his brother Yanlu (曹延祿) succeeded him. Yanlu married a Khotanese princess.[31]

During the Cao family’s rule of the Guiyijun in the Five Dynasties and early Song periods, the Yulin caves were also frequently visited by members of the Cao family, as it is attested by the many surviving donor images. For example, in Cave 16 the “Lady Li from Longxi 隴西, Princess Shengtian 聖天公主 of the Northern Uighurs” is the Uighur wife of Cao Yijin 曹議金. Donor figures and inscriptions of Guiyijun military commissioners Cao Yuande 曹元德, Cao Yuanzhong or Cao Yanlu can also be found in the Yulin caves.[32]

— Rong Xinjiang

In 1002 Cao Yanlu's nephew Cao Zongshou rebelled in Shazhou. Cao Yanlu and his brother Cao Yanrui (曹延瑞) committed suicide. Cao Zongshou became ruler of Guiyi.[33][34]

In 1014 Cao Zongshou died and his son Cao Xianshun (曹賢順) succeeded him.[35]

In 1028 the Tanguts defeated the Ganzhou Uyghurs.[36]

In 1030 Cao Xianshun surrendered to the Tanguts.[36]

In 1036 the Tanguts, who later established the Western Xia, annexed the Kingdom of Guiyi.[36]

Religion edit

 
Earliest known representation of a fire lance (upper right), Dunhuang, 950 AD.[37]
 
Mogao Christian painting dating back to the Guiyi era, a multicultural-influenced representation of Jesus Christ or a saint.

Buddhism was prevalent in Dunhuang (Shazhou) during the Guiyi period, and had been before as well under Tibetan rule. Under Tibetan rule, the number of Buddhist temples increased from 6 to 19 and more than 40 new caves were created. Confucian classics were also taught in Buddhist monasteries.[3] Many of Zhang Yichao's family converted to Buddhism. He also studied Buddhism in his youth. A manuscript from Dunhuang contains a signature that reads, "written by Buddha's secular disciple Zhang Yichao."[38] After Zhang Yichao took over, the Buddhists of Dunhuang reconnected with the Tang court and he presented the work of Cheng'en, a monk from the Hexi Corridor, to the Tang court to support the Buddhist restoration movement of emperors Xuanzong and Yizong. Texts that had been lost in Dunhuang due to warfare were reproduced using Tang copies.[39] Despite Zhang's association with Buddhism, due to a shortage of manpower, he made many temple households independent peasants to satisfy the demands of recruitment.[40]

As the Tang dynasty collapsed and entered the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, Buddhism in Dunghuang gravitated towards lay Buddhism and apocryphal sūtras rather than scripture-based tradition. At the beginning of the Guiyi period, the Buddhist master Faheng and his disciples Fajing and Fahai delivered lectures in Dunhuang. After 883, lectures by monks are no longer mentioned in manuscript colophons and only lay devotional practices such as building caves, erecting statues, and addresses to common people are recorded.[39]

In addition to Buddhism, discoveries of Manichaean, Nestorian Christian, and Zoroastrian documents and other artifacts at Mogao Caves dating back to the Guiyi era reveal their coexistence in a multi-religious world.[41]

Sogdians of Dunhuang edit

 
Sogdian Daēnās, a 10th-century line drawing uncovered at the Mogao Caves, which is probably associated with the Zoroastrian cult of the Sogdian people.

During the Tang and subsequent Five Dynasties and Song Dynasty, large communities of Sogdians lived in China, especially in the multicultural entrepôt of Dunhuang, Gansu, a major center of Buddhist learning and home to the Buddhist Mogao Caves.[42] While the region occasionally fell under the rule of different states (the Tang, the Tibetan Empire, and later the Western Xia led by the Tanguts), it retained its multilingual nature as evidenced by an abundance of manuscripts (religious and secular) in Chinese and Tibetan, but also Sogdian, Khotanese (another Eastern Iranian language native to the region), Uyghur, and Sanskrit.[43]

To the east of the Returning to Righteousness Army alone, names of some ten ethnic groups appear in both Chinese literature and Dunhuang manuscripts. Some of them had never been seen before in previous histories, such as the Wamo, the offsprings of the Chinese residents who were totally assimilated to the Tibetans during the century of Tibetan rule, and the Tokharian Longjia who came from Agni (Karashahr) and settled in many oases in the Gansu Corridor.[40]

— Yang Jidong

From the Chinese surnames listed in the Tang-era Dunhuang manuscript Pelliot chinois 3319V (containing the following text: 石定信右全石丑子石定奴福延福全保昌張丑子李千子李定信), the names of the Nine Zhaowu Clans (昭武九姓), the prominent ethnic Sogdian families of China, have been deduced.[44] Of these the most common Sogdian surname throughout China was Shi (i.e. 石), whereas the surnames Shi (i.e. 史), An, Mi (i.e. 米), Kang, Cao, and He appear frequently in Dunhuang manuscripts and registers.[45] Zhang Yichao appointed An Jingmin as vice commissioner of Guiyi, Kang Shijun as prefect of Guazhou, and Kang Tongxin as magistrate of some towns to the east.[46] The influence of Sinicized and multilingual Sogdians during this Guiyijun (歸義軍) period (c. 850 - c. 1000 AD) of Dunhuang is evident in a large number of manuscripts written in Chinese characters from left to right instead of vertically, mirroring the direction of how the Sogdian alphabet is read.[47] Sogdians of Dunhuang also commonly formed and joined lay associations among their local communities, convening at Sogdian-owned taverns in scheduled meetings mentioned in their epistolary letters.[48]

From the beginning of Tibetan rule over Dunhuang (786) through the Guiyijun period (848–1036), descendants of Sogdians were still active in Dunhuang. Zheng Binglin 鄭炳林 has published in succession a series of articles on the Sogdians in the Guiyijun, and on manuscripts written by Sogdians. Although these articles provide a detailed analysis of Sogdians in Dunhuang during this period, it is still questionable whether the sources he utilized indeed refer to Sogdians. Because of the continuous presence of Sogdians in Dunhuang and the substantial influence of Sogdian culture, I have raised the possibility that the Cao family who ruled Dunhuang during part of the Guiyijun period may have also been Sogdian descendants.[49]

— Rong Xinjiang

Mogao Caves edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "补唐书张议潮传" by 罗振玉
  2. ^ "吐蕃和平占領沙州城的宗教因素" by 張延清
  3. ^ a b Yang 1998, p. 101.
  4. ^ Maṇḍalas in the Making: The Visual Culture of Esoteric Buddhism at Dunhuang. BRILL. December 18, 2017. ISBN 9789004360402.
  5. ^ Yang 1998, p. 106.
  6. ^ a b c Rong 2013, p. 40.
  7. ^ a b Hansen 2015, p. 188.
  8. ^ Rong 2013, p. 41.
  9. ^ a b Wang 2013, p. 189.
  10. ^ a b c d Rong 2013, p. 42.
  11. ^ a b c Russell-Smith 2005, p. 57.
  12. ^ Baumer 2012, p. 314.
  13. ^ Ryavec 2015, p. 83.
  14. ^ Yang 1998, p. 130.
  15. ^ a b c d Rong 2013, p. 43.
  16. ^ Baumer 2012, p. 312.
  17. ^ a b c Rong 2013, p. 44.
  18. ^ Xin Wen (2023). The King's Road: Diplomacy and the Remaking of the Silk Road. Princeton University Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780691237831.
  19. ^ a b "归义军史研究——唐宋时代敦煌历史考索" by 荣新江
  20. ^ "羅叔言《補唐書張議潮傳》補正" by 向達
  21. ^ Rong 2013, p. 327-8.
  22. ^ a b c d Russell-Smith 2005, p. 63.
  23. ^ Dunhuang Art: Through the Eyes of Duan Wenjie. Abhinav Publications. 1994. ISBN 9788170173137.
  24. ^ Lilla Russell-Smith (2021). Uygur Patronage in Dunhuang: Regional Art Centres on the Northern Silk Road in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. BRILL. p. 64. ISBN 9789047415695.
  25. ^ Wenjie Duan (1994). Dunhuang Art: Through the Eyes of Duan Wenjie. Abhinav Publications. p. 189. ISBN 9788170173137.
  26. ^ Hansen 2015, p. 222.
  27. ^ a b Russell-Smith 2005, p. 64.
  28. ^ "中国古代印刷史" by 罗树宝
  29. ^ "敦煌历史上的曹元忠时代" by 荣新江
  30. ^ Russell-Smith 2005, p. 65.
  31. ^ Russell-Smith 2005, p. 23, 65.
  32. ^ Rong 2013, p. 477.
  33. ^ "宋会要辑稿" by 徐松
  34. ^ "续资治通鉴长编" by 李焘
  35. ^ Russell-Smith 2005, p. 46.
  36. ^ a b c "西夏紀" by 戴锡章
  37. ^ "The Genius of China", Robert Temple
  38. ^ Yang 1998, p. 108.
  39. ^ a b Rong 2013, p. 346-7.
  40. ^ a b Yang 1998, p. 124.
  41. ^ Rong 2013, p. 73–5.
  42. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, pp 870-71.
  43. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, p 871.
  44. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, pp 871-72.
  45. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, p. 872.
  46. ^ Yang 1998, p. 121.
  47. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, pp 870, 873.
  48. ^ Galambos, Imre (2015), "She Association Circulars from Dunhuang", in Antje Richter, A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture, Brill: Leiden, Boston, pp 872-73.
  49. ^ Rong 2013, p. 331.

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guiyi, circuit, also, known, guiyi, army, chinese, 歸義軍, pinyin, guīyì, jūn, wade, giles, kui1, chün1, returning, righteousness, army, 1036, golden, mountain, kingdom, western, 西漢金山國, xīhàn, jīnshān, guó, chin, shan, dunhuang, kingdom, western, 西漢敦煌國, xīhàn, dū. The Guiyi Circuit also known as the Guiyi Army Chinese 歸義軍 pinyin Guiyi Jun Wade Giles Kui1 i4 Chun1 lit Returning to Righteousness Army 848 1036 AD Golden Mountain Kingdom of Western Han 西漢金山國 Xihan Jinshan guo Hsi han Chin shan kuo 909 911 Dunhuang Kingdom of Western Han 西漢敦煌國 Xihan Dunhuang guo Hsi han Tun huang kuo 911 914 was a Chinese regional military command and later an autonomous dynastic regime nominally subordinate to the Tang dynasty the Five Dynasties and the Northern Song dynasty The Guiyi Circuit was controlled by the Zhang family from the second half of the 9th century to the 10th century and then the Cao family until the 11th century The Guiyi Circuit was headquartered in Shazhou 沙州 modern day Dunhuang Guiyi CircuitGolden Mountain Kingdom of Western HanDunhuang Kingdom of Western Han歸義軍 西漢金山國 西漢敦煌國851 1036StatusCircuit Kingdom Tributary to Tang dynastyCapitalGanzhou Zhangye Shazhou Dunhuang Common languagesChinese Old Tibetan SogdianGovernmentMonarchy MilitaryHistory Established851 Disestablished1036Preceded by Succeeded by Tibetan Empire Dingnan Jiedushi Xiliangfu Ganzhou Uyghur KingdomToday part ofChina Contents 1 Background 2 Zhang family 2 1 Kingdom of Jinshan 3 Cao family 3 1 Kingdom of Guiyi 4 Religion 5 Sogdians of Dunhuang 6 Mogao Caves 7 See also 8 References 9 BibliographyBackground edit nbsp The Tibetan Empire at its greatest extent around the 780s and the 790s CE nbsp Section of a wall mural commemorating the victory of Zhang Yichao over the Tibetan Empire Mogao Cave 156 Late Tang Dynasty 9th century nbsp Section of a wall mural commemorating the victory of Zhang Yichao The Hexi Corridor was an important part of the Silk Road connecting Central Asia with Northwest China After the An Lushan Rebellion the Hexi Corridor was occupied by the Tibetan Empire 1 Around the 770s or the 780s Shazhou otherwise known as Dunhuang was occupied by the Tibetans 2 In respect to their political and social systems the Tibetans made many changes in Dunhuang according to their own practice As in many other conquered places they sent a rtse rje Ch Jieer to Dunhuang to be in charge of local administration Since the Tang institutions in Dunhuang had totally broken down all of the residents were reorganized into several stong sdes literally meaning thousand households equal to buluo in Chinese as seen from Dunhuang manuscripts according to their professions or other standards It is not very clear yet to what extent the previous social relations and structure were changed but apparently the great families in Dunhuang remained influential in local affairs during the occupation period Many members from the Zhang Yin Suo Yan and other clans were appointed by the Tibetan government to important positions 3 Yang JidongZhang family edit nbsp Zhang Yichao departing from a fortress After some 60 years of Tibetan rule Tibet entered its Era of Fragmentation and was torn by civil war by 851 Tibetans in the Dunhuang region become part of a group known as wamo in Chinese historical sources In 848 Zhang Yichao a resident of Shazhou led an uprising and captured Shazhou and Guazhou from the Tibetans 4 There are some indications that Zhang Yichao s family was kept away from the political sphere of Dunhuang at that time The surviving text of the famous stone tablet commemorating Zhang Huaishen s Zhang Yichao s nephew merits clearly shows that the property and land of the family were confiscated by the new government shortly after Dunhuang surrendered to the Tibetans In another manuscript P 3556 we find that Zhang Yichao s father Zhang Qianyi became a xiaoyao zhike a free man a word usually used in traditional China to refer to an intellectual who refused to serve the government and lived in seclusion and was kept out of political power during the Tibetan period 5 Yang Jidong By 850 Zhang had captured Ganzhou Suzhou and Yizhou 6 Zhang claimed the title of acting prefect of Shazhou and submitted a petition to Emperor Xuanzong of Tang offering his loyalty and submission In 851 Zhang captured Xizhou Gaochang Envoys from Shazhou reached the Tang court and the emperor responded by naming Zhang s territory the Guiyi Circuit and made Zhang Yichao the Guiyi Jiedushi 歸義節度使 Governor of the Guiyi Circuit and Cao Yijin his secretary general 6 In 856 Zhang attacked the Tibetans and defeated them 7 The bandits the Tibetan coalition had not expected that the Chinese troops would arrive so suddenly and were totally unprepared Our armies proceeded to line up in a black cloud formation swiftly striking from all four sides The barbarian bandits were panic stricken Like stars they splintered north and south The Chinese armies having gained the advantage they pursued them pressing close at their backs Within fifteen miles they caught up with them This is the place where their slain corpses were strewn everywhere across the plain 7 Zhang Yichao Transformation Text By 861 the Guiyi Circuit had extended its authority to Guazhou Ganzhou Suzhou Yizhou Lanzhou Shanzhou Hezhou Minzhou Liangzhou and Kuozhou 8 nbsp A 10th century mural painting in the Mogao Caves at Dunhuang depicting monastic architecture at Mount Wutai nbsp Monastic architecture in a mural painting Mogao Caves nbsp Monastic architecture in a mural painting Mogao Caves In 866 Zhang Yichao defeated the Tibetan general bLon Khrom brZhe Tibetan བ ན ཁ མ བཞ ར 論恐熱 Lun Kongre and seized Luntai Urumqi and Tingzhou However they were immediately captured by the Kingdom of Qocho afterwards Xizhou was also captured by the Uyghurs BLon Khrom brZhe was an attack commissioner in the region After Langdarma s death in 842 he fought constantly with another commissioner Shang Bibi 6 He was captured by Shang Bibi s subordinate Tuoba Huaiguang in 866 and sent to the Tang court 9 At the same time the rivalry between the two Tibetan generals Kongre and Bibi in the Hexi region worsened in 850 Their troops clashed several times in the eighth and ninth months and Bibi suffered heavy casualties The pro Tang Zhang Yichao seized this opportunity to exert more military pressure on Kongre in 851 Kongre s followers started to betray him Desperate to strengthen his position among his dispirited followers he told them I shall pay tributes to the Tang and borrow 500 000 Chinese soldiers to punish those who dare disobey me I shall then make Weizhou the capital of my state and request Tang to confer on me the title Zanpu Kongre came to Chang an in the fifth month and requested the title Military Commissioner Emperor Xuanzong however had no intention of accepting him as an outer subject He accorded Kongre an audience but rejected his request Kongre came back to Weizhou to rally his forces Many of his former supporters however now refused to follow him With only three hundred companions Kongre moved farther northwest to Kuozhou and ceased to be a threat to China 9 Wang Zhenping In 867 Zhang Yichao departed for the Tang court after his brother Yitan who had been staying in Chang an as a hostage died His nephew Zhang Huaishen succeeded him as Guiyi Jiedushi 10 In 869 the Kingdom of Qocho attacked the Guiyi Circuit but was repelled 11 In 870 the Kingdom of Qocho attacked the Guiyi Circuit but was repelled 11 In 872 Zhang Yichao died at court 10 In 876 the Kingdom of Qocho seized Yizhou 10 In 867 Zhang Yichao extended his influence to Longyou and Xizhou when his brother Zhang Yitan 張議潭 who had been sent to the Tang court as a hostage died in Chang an Complying with the order of the court Zhang Yichao traveled to the court in person He never returned but eventually died in Chang an in 872 In his absence his nephew Zhang Huaishen 張淮深 took over the rule of the Guiyijun yet the Tang court did not officially appoint him military commissioner Thus while Zhang Huaishen received no support from the Tang the Uighurs as part of their westward expansion deeply invaded the territories of Ganzhou and Suzhou and even attacked Guazhou Even though Zhang Huaishen successfully defeated their scattered attacks in 876 the Xizhou Uighurs seized Yizhou and with this the Guiyijun lost one of its important garrisons 10 Rong Xinjiang In 880 Qocho attacked Shazhou but was repelled 12 Around the years 881 and 882 Ganzhou and Liangzhou slipped from the control of the Guiyi Circuit The Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom would establish itself in Ganzhou by 894 11 In Liangzhou the Tibetan state of Xiliangfu established itself by 906 13 In another memorial presented to the Emperor Tang Yizong Zhang Yichao implored the court not to abandon Liangzhou It seems that the Wamo and Tibetans were trying hard to recapture Liangzhou in the late 860s and their attacks appear to have been very heavy so that Chang an was planning to withdraw from Liangzhou Apparently weak Tang could not give the Returning to Righteousness Army any practical help 14 Yang Jidong In 890 Zhang Huaishen was assassinated and his cousin Zhang Huaiding succeeded him 15 In 892 Zhang Huaiding died and left his son in the care of Suo Xun 索勳 son in law of Zhang Yichao Suo Xun declared himself Guiyi Jiedushi 15 In 894 Suo Xun was killed by a local aristocrat by the name of Li Mingzhen and Zhang Yichao s daughter Li s sons shared control of Guiyi Circuit afterwards 15 In 896 Li Mingzhen s sons were ousted and Zhang Chengfeng 張承奉 a grandson of Zhang Yichao became jiedushi 15 In 904 Zhang Chengfeng attacked Qocho and seized Yizhou Hami and Xizhou Gaochang 16 In 910 Zhang Chengfeng received news of the Tang dynasty s demise and declared himself Emperor Baiyi The Guiyi Circuit was renamed Kingdom of Jinshan 17 Kingdom of Jinshan edit The rulers of Guiyi in Dunhuang briefly called themselves emperors for a short period after the final collapse of the Tang dynasty 18 In 910 Zhang Chengfeng established a kingdom known as the Xihan Jinshan 西漢金山國 Xihan Jinshanguo The Golden Mountain Kingdom of the Western Han and gave himself the title of Son of Heaven 19 20 This was followed by an invasion by the Ganzhou Uyghurs In 911 the Ganzhou Uyghurs attacked again and the Kingdom of Jinshan was forced to become a lesser partner in an alliance with the Ganzhou Uyghurs The Great Chancellor 大宰相 and the elders of Jinshan State made a treaty with the Ganzhou Uyghurs recognizing their superiority The relationship between the two was prescribed as the Khan is the father and the Son of Heaven is the son 可汗是父 天子是子 19 In 914 Cao Yijin usurped the throne and abolished the kingdom reverting the name to Guiyi Army During the Zhang family s rule the Guiyijun basically controlled the entire Hexi region but by the end of the 10th century it was only able to keep the prefectures of Guazhou and Shazhou During the Cao family s rule which began in 914 the Guiyijun maintained friendly relations with the Xizhou Uighurs in the west and the kingdom of Khotan With Khotan they even entered into a marriage alliance as the Khotanese king Li Shengtian 李聖天 married the daughter of Cao Yijin and Cao Yanlu also married the third daughter of the king of Khotan Hence there were very close contacts between the two states We can even say that in the eyes of the Khotanese people the Hexi based Guiyijun came to represent China proper During the late 10th century as a result of the holy war launched by the Islamic Karakhanid Khanate against Khotanese Buddhists Khotan increasingly relied on its eastern neighbors to resist hostile invasion 21 Rong XinjiangCao family edit nbsp Visa Saṃbhava r 912 966 the king of Khotan and his queen the daughter of Cao Yijin nbsp Visa Saṃbhava and Cao Yijin Mogao Caves mural nbsp Daughter of Visa Saṃbhava the wife of Cao Yanlu r 976 1002 In 914 Cao Yijin 曹議金 usurped the throne and restored the name Guiyi Circuit 22 In 914 Cao Yijin 曹議金 also called Cao Rengui 曹仁貴 took over the throne from Zhang Chengfeng abolished the Jinshan state and the title of king calling himself once again military commissioner of the Guiyijun Cao Yijin improved the relationship with neighboring peoples sent envoys to Ganzhou and married the daughter of the Uighur Khagan thus reinforcing a positive relationship with the Uighurs In 918 Cao Yijin with the support of the Uighur Khagan the puye 僕射 of Liangzhou and the xianggong 相公 of Lingzhou sent envoys to the Later Liang and was conferred by the court the title of military commissioner of the Guiyijun Cao Yijin constructed a large cave Cave 98 at Mogao in celebration of being acknowledged by the central dynasty He strengthened his rear by sending envoys to the Yizhou and Xizhou Uighurs and in 925 took advantage of the change of khagans among the Ganzhou Uighurs and led a military campaign against them defeating them after heavy fighting The newly established khagan took Cao Yijin s daughter as his wife and thus became the military commissioner s son in law 17 Rong Xinjiang In 916 Cao Yijin married a Ganzhou Uyghur princess and sent delegations to the Later Liang 23 In 924 the Ganzhou Uyghur Khagan died and his successors Renmei and Diyin declared war on each other with Diyin coming out victorious 22 In 925 Cao Yijin defeated the Ganzhou Uyghurs 22 In 926 Diyin died and Aduoyu 阿咄欲 became the Khan of the Ganzhou Uyghurs Aduoyu married a daughter of Cao Yijin 22 Kingdom of Guiyi edit In 931 Cao Yijin declared himself as Lord 令公 and Great King reclaiming the west 拓西大王 17 24 The Cao rulers continued using the Chinese reign era names and maintained cordial relations with the Chinese heartland and its socio political system 25 In 934 Cao Yijin married his daughter to the king of Khotan The Cao family of Dunhuang and the royal family of Khotan had close ties The Khotanese king Visa Sambhava who ruled Khotan from 912 to 966 also used the Chinese name Li Shengtian Sometime before 936 he married the daughter of Cao Yijin The Khotanese royal family maintained a residence in Dunhuang where Visa Sambhava s wife often stayed and where the heir to the Khotanese throne lived The crown prince s residence functioned as a representative office for the Khotanese and it is very possible that the Khotanese language documents found in cave 17 were an archive donated by the crown prince s residence to the Three Realms Monastery 26 Valerie Hansen In 935 Cao Yijin died and was succeeded by his son Cao Yuande 27 In 939 Cao Yuande 曹元德 died and was succeeded by his brother Yuanshen 曹元深 27 In 944 Cao Yuanshen died and his brother Yuanzhong 曹元忠 succeeded him Cao Yuanzhong s reign was characterized by progress in agriculture transportation and printing 28 Relationship with the Ganzhou Uyghurs remained relatively stable during this period 29 In 950 the first depiction of fire lances appeared in Shazhou In 974 Cao Yuanzhong died and his nephew Cao Yangong 曹延恭 succeeded him 30 In 976 Cao Yangong died and his brother Yanlu 曹延祿 succeeded him Yanlu married a Khotanese princess 31 During the Cao family s rule of the Guiyijun in the Five Dynasties and early Song periods the Yulin caves were also frequently visited by members of the Cao family as it is attested by the many surviving donor images For example in Cave 16 the Lady Li from Longxi 隴西 Princess Shengtian 聖天公主 of the Northern Uighurs is the Uighur wife of Cao Yijin 曹議金 Donor figures and inscriptions of Guiyijun military commissioners Cao Yuande 曹元德 Cao Yuanzhong or Cao Yanlu can also be found in the Yulin caves 32 Rong Xinjiang In 1002 Cao Yanlu s nephew Cao Zongshou rebelled in Shazhou Cao Yanlu and his brother Cao Yanrui 曹延瑞 committed suicide Cao Zongshou became ruler of Guiyi 33 34 In 1014 Cao Zongshou died and his son Cao Xianshun 曹賢順 succeeded him 35 In 1028 the Tanguts defeated the Ganzhou Uyghurs 36 In 1030 Cao Xianshun surrendered to the Tanguts 36 In 1036 the Tanguts who later established the Western Xia annexed the Kingdom of Guiyi 36 Religion edit nbsp Earliest known representation of a fire lance upper right Dunhuang 950 AD 37 nbsp Mogao Christian painting dating back to the Guiyi era a multicultural influenced representation of Jesus Christ or a saint Buddhism was prevalent in Dunhuang Shazhou during the Guiyi period and had been before as well under Tibetan rule Under Tibetan rule the number of Buddhist temples increased from 6 to 19 and more than 40 new caves were created Confucian classics were also taught in Buddhist monasteries 3 Many of Zhang Yichao s family converted to Buddhism He also studied Buddhism in his youth A manuscript from Dunhuang contains a signature that reads written by Buddha s secular disciple Zhang Yichao 38 After Zhang Yichao took over the Buddhists of Dunhuang reconnected with the Tang court and he presented the work of Cheng en a monk from the Hexi Corridor to the Tang court to support the Buddhist restoration movement of emperors Xuanzong and Yizong Texts that had been lost in Dunhuang due to warfare were reproduced using Tang copies 39 Despite Zhang s association with Buddhism due to a shortage of manpower he made many temple households independent peasants to satisfy the demands of recruitment 40 As the Tang dynasty collapsed and entered the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period Buddhism in Dunghuang gravitated towards lay Buddhism and apocryphal sutras rather than scripture based tradition At the beginning of the Guiyi period the Buddhist master Faheng and his disciples Fajing and Fahai delivered lectures in Dunhuang After 883 lectures by monks are no longer mentioned in manuscript colophons and only lay devotional practices such as building caves erecting statues and addresses to common people are recorded 39 In addition to Buddhism discoveries of Manichaean Nestorian Christian and Zoroastrian documents and other artifacts at Mogao Caves dating back to the Guiyi era reveal their coexistence in a multi religious world 41 Sogdians of Dunhuang edit nbsp Sogdian Daenas a 10th century line drawing uncovered at the Mogao Caves which is probably associated with the Zoroastrian cult of the Sogdian people During the Tang and subsequent Five Dynasties and Song Dynasty large communities of Sogdians lived in China especially in the multicultural entrepot of Dunhuang Gansu a major center of Buddhist learning and home to the Buddhist Mogao Caves 42 While the region occasionally fell under the rule of different states the Tang the Tibetan Empire and later the Western Xia led by the Tanguts it retained its multilingual nature as evidenced by an abundance of manuscripts religious and secular in Chinese and Tibetan but also Sogdian Khotanese another Eastern Iranian language native to the region Uyghur and Sanskrit 43 To the east of the Returning to Righteousness Army alone names of some ten ethnic groups appear in both Chinese literature and Dunhuang manuscripts Some of them had never been seen before in previous histories such as the Wamo the offsprings of the Chinese residents who were totally assimilated to the Tibetans during the century of Tibetan rule and the Tokharian Longjia who came from Agni Karashahr and settled in many oases in the Gansu Corridor 40 Yang Jidong From the Chinese surnames listed in the Tang era Dunhuang manuscript Pelliot chinois 3319V containing the following text 石定信右全石丑子石定奴福延福全保昌張丑子李千子李定信 the names of the Nine Zhaowu Clans 昭武九姓 the prominent ethnic Sogdian families of China have been deduced 44 Of these the most common Sogdian surname throughout China was Shi i e 石 whereas the surnames Shi i e 史 An Mi i e 米 Kang Cao and He appear frequently in Dunhuang manuscripts and registers 45 Zhang Yichao appointed An Jingmin as vice commissioner of Guiyi Kang Shijun as prefect of Guazhou and Kang Tongxin as magistrate of some towns to the east 46 The influence of Sinicized and multilingual Sogdians during this Guiyijun 歸義軍 period c 850 c 1000 AD of Dunhuang is evident in a large number of manuscripts written in Chinese characters from left to right instead of vertically mirroring the direction of how the Sogdian alphabet is read 47 Sogdians of Dunhuang also commonly formed and joined lay associations among their local communities convening at Sogdian owned taverns in scheduled meetings mentioned in their epistolary letters 48 From the beginning of Tibetan rule over Dunhuang 786 through the Guiyijun period 848 1036 descendants of Sogdians were still active in Dunhuang Zheng Binglin 鄭炳林 has published in succession a series of articles on the Sogdians in the Guiyijun and on manuscripts written by Sogdians Although these articles provide a detailed analysis of Sogdians in Dunhuang during this period it is still questionable whether the sources he utilized indeed refer to Sogdians Because of the continuous presence of Sogdians in Dunhuang and the substantial influence of Sogdian culture I have raised the possibility that the Cao family who ruled Dunhuang during part of the Guiyijun period may have also been Sogdian descendants 49 Rong XinjiangMogao Caves edit nbsp Dunhuang woman in Tang dress nbsp Dunhuang Buddhist woman nbsp Lady Liangguo a Buddhist donor nbsp Buddhist donor and her retinue 983 AD nbsp Dunhuang Buddhist donor nbsp Khotanese donors nbsp Dunhuang Buddhist womenSee also editMogao CavesReferences edit 补唐书张议潮传 by 罗振玉 吐蕃和平占領沙州城的宗教因素 by 張延清 a b Yang 1998 p 101 Maṇḍalas in the Making The Visual Culture of Esoteric Buddhism at Dunhuang BRILL December 18 2017 ISBN 9789004360402 Yang 1998 p 106 a b c Rong 2013 p 40 a b Hansen 2015 p 188 Rong 2013 p 41 a b Wang 2013 p 189 a b c d Rong 2013 p 42 a b c Russell Smith 2005 p 57 Baumer 2012 p 314 Ryavec 2015 p 83 Yang 1998 p 130 a b c d Rong 2013 p 43 Baumer 2012 p 312 a b c Rong 2013 p 44 Xin Wen 2023 The King s Road Diplomacy and the Remaking of the Silk Road Princeton University Press p 6 ISBN 9780691237831 a b 归义军史研究 唐宋时代敦煌历史考索 by 荣新江 羅叔言 補唐書張議潮傳 補正 by 向達 Rong 2013 p 327 8 a b c d Russell Smith 2005 p 63 Dunhuang Art Through the Eyes of Duan Wenjie Abhinav Publications 1994 ISBN 9788170173137 Lilla Russell Smith 2021 Uygur Patronage in Dunhuang Regional Art Centres on the Northern Silk Road in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries BRILL p 64 ISBN 9789047415695 Wenjie Duan 1994 Dunhuang Art Through the Eyes of Duan Wenjie Abhinav Publications p 189 ISBN 9788170173137 Hansen 2015 p 222 a b Russell Smith 2005 p 64 中国古代印刷史 by 罗树宝 敦煌历史上的曹元忠时代 by 荣新江 Russell Smith 2005 p 65 Russell Smith 2005 p 23 65 Rong 2013 p 477 宋会要辑稿 by 徐松 续资治通鉴长编 by 李焘 Russell Smith 2005 p 46 a b c 西夏紀 by 戴锡章 The Genius of China Robert Temple Yang 1998 p 108 a b Rong 2013 p 346 7 a b Yang 1998 p 124 Rong 2013 p 73 5 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston pp 870 71 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston p 871 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston pp 871 72 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston p 872 Yang 1998 p 121 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston pp 870 873 Galambos Imre 2015 She Association Circulars from Dunhuang in Antje Richter A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture Brill Leiden Boston pp 872 73 Rong 2013 p 331 Bibliography editAsimov 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 Barfield Thomas 1989 The Perilous Frontier Nomadic Empires and China Basil Blackwell Baumer Christoph 2012 The History of Central Asia The Age of the Steppe Warriors 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 Bregel Yuri 2003 An Historical Atlas of Central Asia 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 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 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 Latourette Kenneth Scott 1964 The Chinese their history and culture Volumes 1 2 Macmillan Mackerras Colin 1990 Chapter 12 The Uighurs in Sinor Denis ed The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press pp 317 342 ISBN 9780521243049 Millward James A 2007 Eurasian Crossroads A History of Xinjiang Columbia University Press Mackerras Colin The Uighur Empire According to the T ang Dynastic Histories A Study in Sino Uighur Relations 744 840 Publisher Australian National University Press 1972 226 pages ISBN 0 7081 0457 6 Rong Xinjiang 2013 Eighteen Lectures on Dunhuang Brill doi 10 1163 9789004252332 ISBN 9789004250420 Russell Smith Lilla 2005 Uygur Patronage in Dunhuang Ryavec Karl E 2015 A Historical Atlas of Tibet Sinor Denis 1990 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24304 9 Wang Zhenping 2013 Tang China in Multi Polar Asia A History of Diplomacy and War University of Hawaii Press Xiong Victor 2008 Historical Dictionary of Medieval China United States of America Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0810860537 Xue Zongzheng 1992 Turkic peoples 中国社会科学出版社 Yang Jidong 1998 Zhang Yichao and Dunhuang in the 9th Century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guiyi Circuit amp oldid 1218009942 Cao 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