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Gandhara

Gandhāra was an ancient Indo-Aryan[1] civilization centered in the present-day north-west Pakistan and north-east Afghanistan, roughly in the northwestern part of South Asia.[2][3][4] The core of the region of Gandhara was the Peshawar and Swat valleys, though the cultural influence of "Greater Gandhara" extended across the Indus river to the Taxila region in Potohar Plateau and westwards into the Kabul valley in Afghanistan, and northwards up to the Karakoram range.[5][6][7]

Gandhāra
Gandhara
c. 1500 BCEc. 1000 CE

Gandhara

Location of Gandhara in South Asia (Afghanistan and Pakistan)

Approximate geographical region of Gandhara centered on the Peshawar Basin, in present-day northwest Pakistan
CapitalKapisi (Bagram)
Puṣkalavati (Charsadda)
Puruṣapura (Peshawer)
Takshashila (Taxila)
Udabhandapura (Hund)
History
Government
King 
• c. 550 BCE
Pushkarasarin (first)
• c. 330 BCEc. 316 BCE
Taxiles
• c. 964 CEc. 1001 CE
Jayapala (last)
Historical eraAntiquity
• Established
c. 1500 BCE
• Disestablished
c. 1000 CE
Today part ofAfghanistan
Pakistan

The Gandhara tribe, after which it is named, is attested in the Rigveda (c. 1500 – c. 1200 BCE),[8][9] while the region is mentioned in the Zoroastrian Avesta as Vaēkərəta, the seventh most beautiful place on earth created by Ahura Mazda. It was one of the 16 Great Realms of the second urbanisation.[2][3][4] Gandhara is frequently mentioned in the Ramayana and Mahabharata.[10]

The Iron Age Gandhara kingdom emerged as a major imperial power during the reign of King Pushkarasarin in c. 550 BCE.[11] Gandhara was conquered by Cyrus I in the 6th century BCE and Alexander the Great in 327 BCE. It later became part of the Maurya Empire before being a centre of the Indo-Greek Kingdom. The region was a major centre for Greco-Buddhism under the Indo-Greeks and Gandharan Buddhism under later dynasties, including Indo-Scythians, Indo-Parthians and Kushans. Gandhara was also a central location for the spread of Buddhism to Central Asia and East Asia.[12]

Gāndhārī, an Indo-Aryan language written in Kharosthi script, acted as lingua franca of the region.[13] Famed for its unique Gandharan style of art which is influenced by the classical Hellenistic styles, Gandhara attained its height from the 1st century to the 5th century CE under the Kushan Empire, who had their capital at Peshawar (Puruṣapura) and ushered a period of relative peace known as Pax Kushana. Gandhara "flourished at the crossroads of India, Central Asia, and the Middle East," connecting trade routes and absorbing cultural influences from diverse civilizations; Buddhism thrived until the 8th or 9th centuries, when Islam first began to gain sway in the region.[14]

The region steadily declined after the violent invasion by Alchon Huns in 6th century, and the name Gandhara disappeared after Mahmud Ghaznavi's conquest in 1001 CE.[15]

Etymology edit

Gandhara was known in Sanskrit as Gandhāra (गन्धार), in Avestan as Vaēkərəta, in Old Persian as Gadāra (Old Persian cuneiform: 𐎥𐎭𐎠𐎼, Gadāra, also transliterated as Gandāra since the nasal "n" before consonants was omitted in the Old Persian script, and simplified as Gandara),[16] in Akkadian and Elamite as Paruparaesanna (Para-upari-sena),[17] in Chinese as T: 犍陀羅/S: 犍陀罗 (Pinyin: Jiāntuóluó; Middle Chinese (Zhengzhang Shangfang): /kɨɐn dɑ lɑ/) or T: 罽賓/S: 罽宾 (Pinyin: Jìbīn; Middle Chinese (Zhengzhang Shangfang): /kˠiᴇiᴴ piɪn/), and in Greek as Γανδάρα (Gandhara).[18]

One proposed origin of the name is from the Sanskrit word गन्ध gandha, meaning "perfume" and "referring to the spices and aromatic herbs which they (the inhabitants) traded and with which they anointed themselves".[19][20] The Gandhari people are a tribe mentioned in the Rigveda, the Atharvaveda, and later Vedic texts.[21]

A Persian form of the name, Gandara, mentioned in the Behistun inscription of Emperor Darius I,[22][23] was translated as Paruparaesanna (Para-upari-sena, meaning "beyond the Hindu Kush") in Babylonian and Elamite in the same inscription.[17]

Geography edit

 
A modern satellite view of Gandhara (October 2020)

The boundaries of Gandhara varied throughout history. Sometimes the Peshawar Valley and Taxila were collectively referred to as Gandhara; sometimes the Kabul Valley and Swat (Sanskrit: Suvāstu) were included.[24] The kingdom was ruled from capitals at Kapisi (Bagram),[25] Pushkalavati (Charsadda), Taxila, Puruṣapura (Peshawar) and in its final days from Udabhandapura (Hund) on the River Indus. Historically, it bordered ancient regions of Bactria and Ariana to the north and Arachosia and Sattagydia to the south.[citation needed]

History edit

Stone age edit

 
Mother Goddess (fertility divinity), possibly derived from the Indus Valley civilization, terracotta, Sar Dheri, Gandhara, 1st century BCE, Victoria and Albert Museum

Evidence of human activity in the Middle Palaeolithic has been reported from Sanghao Cave in the Mardan district of Pakistan.[26] The cave was excavated by Ahmad Hasan Dani in 1963. Chipped stone, bones, were found during the excavation.[27] Other items included scrapers, quartz tools, blades, flakes, etc.[28][29][30]

Gandhara grave culture edit

 
Cremation urn, Gandhara grave culture, Swat Valley, c. 1200 BCE

Gandhara's first recorded culture was the Grave Culture that emerged c. 1400 BCE and lasted until 800 BCE,[31] and named for their distinct funerary practices. It was found along the Middle Swat River course, even though earlier research considered it to be expanded to the Valleys of Dir, Kunar, Chitral, and Peshawar.[32] It has been regarded as a token of the Indo-Aryan migrations, but has also been explained by local cultural continuity. Backwards projections, based on ancient DNA analyses, suggest ancestors of Swat culture people mixed with a population coming from Inner Asia Mountain Corridor, which carried Steppe ancestry, sometime between 1900 and 1500 BCE.[33]

Vedic era edit

 
Kingdoms and cities of ancient Buddhism, with Gandhara located in the northwest of this region, during the time of the Buddha (c. 500 BCE)

The first mention of the Gandhārīs is attested once in the Ṛigveda as a tribe that has sheep with good wool. In the Atharvaveda, the Gandhārīs are mentioned alongside the Mūjavants, the Āṅgeyas and the Māgadhīs in a hymn asking fever to leave the body of the sick man and instead go those aforementioned tribes. The tribes listed were the furthermost border tribes known to those in Madhyadeśa, the Āṅgeyas and Māgadhīs in the east, and the Mūjavants and Gandhārīs in the north.[34][35]

The Gāndhārī king Nagnajit and his son Svarajit are mentioned in the Brāhmaṇas, according to which they received Brahmanic consecration, but their family's attitude towards ritual is mentioned negatively,[36] with the royal family of Gandhāra during this period following non-Brahmanical religious traditions. According to the Jain Uttarādhyayana-sūtra, Nagnajit, or Naggaji, was a prominent king who had adopted Jainism and was comparable to Dvimukha of Pāñcāla, Nimi of Videha, Karakaṇḍu of Kaliṅga, and Bhīma of Vidarbha; Buddhist sources instead claim that he had achieved paccekabuddhayāna.[37][11][38]

By the later Vedic period, the situation had changed, and the Gāndhārī capital of Takṣaśila had become an important centre of knowledge where the men of Madhya-desa went to learn the three Vedas and the eighteen branches of knowledge, with the Kauśītaki Brāhmaṇa recording that brāhmaṇas went north to study. According to the Śatapatha Brāhmaṇa and the Uddālaka Jātaka, the famous Vedic philosopher Uddālaka Āruṇi was among the famous students of Takṣaśila, and the Setaketu Jātaka claims that his son Śvetaketu also studied there. In the Chāndogya Upaniṣad, Uddālaka Āruṇi himself favourably referred to Gāndhārī education to the Vaideha king Janaka.[36]

During the 6th century BCE, Gandhāra was an important imperial power in north-west Iron Age South Asia, with the valley of Kaśmīra being part of the kingdom,[37] while the other states of the Punjab region, such as the Kekayas, Madrakas, Uśīnaras, and Shivis being under Gāndhārī suzerainty. The Gāndhārī king Pukkusāti, who reigned around 550 BCE, engaged in expansionist ventures which brought him into conflict with the king Pradyota of the rising power of Avanti. Pukkusāti was successful in this struggle with Pradyota, but war broke out between him and the Pāṇḍava tribe located in the Punjab region, and who were threatened by his expansionist policy.[11][39] Pukkusāti also engaged in friendly relations with the king Bimbisāra of Magadha.[11]

Due to this important position, Buddhist texts listed the Gandhāra kingdom as one of the sixteen Mahājanapadas ("great realms") of Iron Age South Asia. It was the home of Gandhari, the princess of Gandhara kingdom.[40][41]

Achaemenid Gandhara edit

 
Xerxes I tomb, Gandāra soldier, c. 470 BCE

By the later 6th century BCE, the founder of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, Cyrus, soon after his conquests of Media, Lydia, and Babylonia, marched into Gandhara and annexed it into his empire.[42] The scholar Kaikhosru Danjibuoy Sethna advanced that Cyrus had conquered only the trans-Indus borderlands around Peshawar which had belonged to Gandhāra while Pukkusāti remained a powerful king who maintained his rule over the rest of Gandhāra and the western Punjab.[43]

However, according to the scholar Buddha Prakash, Pukkusāti might have acted as a bulwark against the expansion of the Persian Achaemenid Empire into north-west South Asia. This hypothesis posits that the army which Nearchus claimed Cyrus had lost in Gedrosia had in fact been defeated by Pukkusāti's Gāndhārī kingdom. Therefore, following Prakash's position, the Achaemenids would have been able to conquer Gandhāra only after a period of decline of Gandhāra after the reign of Pukkusāti combined the growth of Achaemenid power under the kings Cambyses II and Darius I.[11] However, the presence of Gandhāra, referred to as Gandāra in Old Persian, among the list of Achaemenid provinces in Darius's Behistun Inscription confirms that his empire had inherited this region from conquests carried out earlier by Cyrus.[42]

It is unknown whether Pukkusāti remained in power after the Achaemenid conquest as a Persian vassal or if he was replaced by a Persian satrap (governor),[44] although Buddhist sources claim that he renounced his throne and became a monk after becoming a disciple of the Buddha.[45] The annexation under Cyrus was limited to Gandhāra proper, after which the peoples of the Punjab region previously under Gāndhārī authority took advantage of the new power vacuum to form their own states.[11]

 
Athens coin (c. 500/490–485 BCE) discovered in Pushkalavati. This coin is the earliest known example of its type to be found so far east.[46] Such coins were circulating in the area as currency, at least as far as the Indus, during the reign of the Achaemenids.[47][48][49][50]

Under Persian rule, a system of centralized administration, with a bureaucratic system, was introduced into the Indus Valley for the first time. Provinces or "satrapy" were established with provincial capitals.

Gandhara satrapy, established 518 BCE with its capital at Pushkalavati (Charsadda).[51]

The inscription on Darius' (521–486 BCE) tomb at Naqsh-i-Rustam near Persepolis records Gadāra (Gandāra) along with Hindush (Hənduš, Sindh) in the list of satrapies. By about 380 BC the Persian hold on the region had weakened. Many small kingdoms sprang up in Gandhara.

Macedonian Gandhara edit

In 327 BCE, Alexander the Great conquered Gandhara as well as the Indian satrapies of the Persian Empire. The expeditions of Alexander were recorded by his court historians and by Arrian (c. 175 CE) in his Anabasis Alexandri and by other chroniclers many centuries after the event.

In the winter of 327 BCE, Alexander invited all the chieftains in the remaining five Achaemenid satraps to submit to his authority. Ambhi, then ruler of Taxila in the former Hindush satrapy complied, but the remaining tribes and clans in the former satraps of Gandhara, Arachosia, Sattagydia and Gedrosia rejected Alexander's offer.[citation needed]

The first tribe they encountered were the Aspasioi tribe of the Kunar Valley, who under the leadership of their queen Cleophis initiated a fierce battle against Alexander, in which he himself was wounded in the shoulder by a dart. However, the Aspasioi eventually lost and 40,000 people were enslaved. Alexander then continued in a southwestern direction where he encountered the Assakenoi tribe of the Swat and Buner valleys in April 326 BCE. The Assakenoi fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to Alexander and his army in the cities of Ora, Bazira (Barikot) and Massaga. So enraged was Alexander about the resistance put up by the Assakenoi that he killed the entire population of Massaga and reduced its buildings to rubble. A similar slaughter then followed at Ora,[52] another stronghold of the Assakenoi. The stories of these slaughters reached numerous Assakenians, who began fleeing to Aornos, a hill-fort located between Shangla and Kohistan. Alexander followed close behind their heels and besieged the strategic hill-fort, eventually capturing and destroying the fort and killing everyone inside. The remaining smaller tribes either surrendered or like the Astanenoi tribe of Pushkalavati (Charsadda) were quickly neutralized where 38,000 soldiers and 230,000 oxen were captured by Alexander.[53] Eventually Alexander's smaller force would meet with the larger force which had come through the Khyber Pass met at Attock. With the conquest of Gandhara complete, Alexander switched to strengthening his military supply line, which by now stretched dangerously vulnerable over the Hindu Kush back to Balkh in Bactria.[citation needed]

After conquering Gandhara and solidifying his supply line back to Bactria, Alexander combined his forces with the King Ambhi of Taxila and crossed the River Indus in July 326 BCE to begin the Punjab Campaign. Alexander nominated officers as Satraps of the new provinces, and in Gandhara, Oxyartes was nominated to the position of Satrap in 326 BCE.[citation needed]

Mauryan Gandhara edit

 
Major Rock Edict of Ashoka in Mansehra

After a battle with Seleucus Nicator (Alexander's successor in Asia) in 305 BCE, the Mauryan emperor Chandragupta extended his domain up to and including Gandhara and Arachosia. With the completion of the Empire's Grand Trunk Road, the region prospered as a centre of trade. Gandhara remained a part of the Mauryan Empire for about a century and a half.

Ashoka, the grandson of Chandragupta, was one of the greatest Indian rulers. Like his grandfather, Ashoka also started his career in Gandhara as a governor. Later he became a Buddhist and promoted Buddhism, building many stupas in Gandhara. Mauryan control over the northwestern frontier, including the Yonas, Kambojas, and the Gandharas, is attested from the Rock Edicts left by Ashoka.

According to one school of scholars, the Gandharas and Kambojas were cognate people.[54][55][56] It is also contended[by whom?Discuss] that the Kurus, Kambojas, Gandharas and Bahlikas were cognate people and all had Iranian affinities,[57] or that the Gandhara and Kamboja were nothing but two provinces of one empire and hence influencing each other's language.[58] However, the local language of Gandhara is represented by Panini's conservative bhāṣā ("language"), which is entirely different from the Iranian (Late Avestan) language of the Kamboja that is indicated by Patanjali's quote of Kambojan śavati 'to go' (= Late Avestan šava(i)ti).[note 1]

Indo-Greek Kingdom edit

 
The founder of the Indo-Greek Kingdom Demetrius I (205–171 BCE), wearing the scalp of an elephant, symbol of his conquest of the Indus valley

The Indo-Greek king Menander I (reigned 155–130 BCE) drove the Greco-Bactrians out of Gandhara and beyond the Hindu Kush, becoming king shortly after his victory.

His empire survived him in a fragmented manner until the last independent Greek king, Strato II, disappeared around 10 CE. Around 125 BCE, the Greco-Bactrian king Heliocles, son of Eucratides, fled from the Yuezhi invasion of Bactria and relocated to Gandhara, pushing the Indo-Greeks east of the Jhelum River. The last known Indo-Greek ruler was Theodamas, from the Bajaur area of Gandhara, mentioned on a 1st-century CE signet ring, bearing the Kharoṣṭhī inscription "Su Theodamasa" ("Su" was the Greek transliteration of the Kushan royal title "Shau" ("Shah" or "King")).

It is during this period that the fusion of Hellenistic and South Asian mythological, artistic and religious elements becomes most apparent, especially in the region of Gandhara.[citation needed]

Local Greek rulers still exercised a feeble and precarious power along the borderland, but the last vestige of the Greco-Indian rulers were finished by a people known to the old Chinese as the Yeuh-Chi.[59]

Indo-Scythian Kingdom edit

 
One of the Buner reliefs showing Scythian soldiers dancing. Cleveland Museum of Art.

The Indo-Scythians were descended from the Sakas (Scythians) who migrated from Central Asia into South Asia from the middle of the 2nd century BCE to the 1st century BCE. They displaced the Indo-Greeks and ruled a kingdom that stretched from Gandhara to Mathura. The first Indo-Scythian king Maues established Saka hegemony by conquering Indo-Greek territories.[60] The power of the Saka rulers declined after the defeat to Chandragupta II of the Gupta Empire in the 4th century.[61]

Indo-Parthian Kingdom edit

 
Ancient Buddhist monastery Takht-i-Bahi (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) constructed by the Indo-Parthians

The Indo-Parthian Kingdom was ruled by the Gondopharid dynasty, named after its first ruler Gondophares. For most of their history, the leading Gondopharid kings held Taxila (in the present Punjab province of Pakistan) as their residence, but during their last few years of existence the capital shifted between Kabul and Peshawar. These kings have traditionally been referred to as Indo-Parthians, as their coinage was often inspired by the Arsacid dynasty, but they probably belonged to a wider groups of Iranic tribes who lived east of Parthia proper, and there is no evidence that all the kings who assumed the title Gondophares, which means "Holder of Glory", were even related.

Kushan Gandhara edit

 
Greco-Buddhist standing Buddha from Gandhara (1st–2nd century), Tokyo National Museum
 
Casket of Kanishka the Great, with Buddhist motifs

The Parthian dynasty fell in about 75 to another group from Central Asia. The Kushans, known as Yuezhi in the Chinese source Hou Han Shu (argued by some[who?] to be ethnically Asii) moved from Central Asia to Bactria, where they stayed for a century. Around 75 CE, one of their tribes, the Kushan (Kuṣāṇa), under the leadership of Kujula Kadphises gained control of Gandhara. The Kushan empire began as a Central Asian kingdom, and expanded into South Asia in the early centuries CE.[62]

The Kushan period is considered the Golden Period of Gandhara. Peshawar Valley and Taxila are littered with ruins of stupas and monasteries of this period. Gandharan art flourished and produced some of the best pieces of sculpture from the Indian subcontinent.

Gandhara's culture peaked during the reign of the great Kushan king Kanishka the Great (127 CE – 150 CE). The cities of Taxila (Takṣaśilā) at Sirsukh and Purushapura (modern day Peshawar) reached new heights. Purushapura along with Mathura became the capital of the great empire stretching from Central Asia to Northern India with Gandhara being in the midst of it. Emperor Kanishka was a great patron of the Buddhist faith; Buddhism spread from India to Central Asia and the Far East across Bactria and Sogdia, where his empire met the Han Empire of China. Buddhist art spread from Gandhara to other parts of Asia.

In Gandhara, Mahayana Buddhism flourished and Buddha was represented in human form. Under the Kushans new Buddhists stupas were built and old ones were enlarged. Huge statues of the Buddha were erected in monasteries and carved into the hillsides. Kanishka also built the 400-foot Kanishka stupa at Peshawar. This tower was reported by Chinese monks Faxian, Song Yun, and Xuanzang who visited the country. The stupa was built during the Kushan era to house Buddhist relics, and was among the tallest buildings in the ancient world.[63][64][65]

Kidarites edit

The Kidarites conquered Peshawar and parts of northwest Indian subcontinent including Gandhara probably sometime between 390 and 410 from Kushan empire,[66] around the end of the rule of Gupta Emperor Chandragupta II or beginning of the rule of Kumaragupta I.[67] It is probably the rise of the Hephthalites and the defeats against the Sasanians which pushed the Kidarites into northern India. Their last ruler in Gandhara was Kandik, c. 500 CE.

Alchon Huns edit

Around 430 King Khingila, the most notable Alchon ruler, emerged and took control of the routes across the Hindu Kush from the Kidarites.[68][69][70][71] Coins of the Alchons rulers Khingila and Mehama were found at the Buddhist monastery of Mes Aynak, southeast of Kabul, confirming the Alchon presence in this area around 450–500 CE.[72]

 
The silver bowl in the British Museum
 
Alchon horseman.[73]
The so-called "Hephthalite bowl" from Gandhara, features two Kidarite hunters wearing characteristic crowns, and as well as two Alchon hunters (one of them shown here, with skull deformation), suggesting a period of peaceful coexistence between the two entities.[73] Swat District, Pakistan, 460–479 CE. British Museum.[74][75]

The numismatic evidence as well as the so-called "Hephthalite bowl" from Gandhara, now in the British Museum, suggests a period of peaceful coexistence between the Kidarites and the Alchons, as it features two Kidarite noble hunters, together with two Alchon hunters and one of the Alchons inside a medallion.[73] At one point, the Kidarites withdrew from Gandhara, and the Alchons took over their mints from the time of Khingila.[73]

The Alchons apparently undertook the mass destruction of Buddhist monasteries and stupas at Taxila, a high center of learning, which never recovered from the destruction.[76][77] Virtually all of the Alchon coins found in the area of Taxila were found in the ruins of burned down monasteries, where apparently some of the invaders died alongside local defenders during the wave of destructions.[76] It is thought that the Kanishka stupa, one of the most famous and tallest buildings in antiquity, was destroyed by them during their invasion of the area in the 460s CE. The Mankiala stupa was also vandalized during their invasions.[78]

Mihirakula in particular is remembered by Buddhist sources to have been a "terrible persecutor of their religion" in Gandhara.[79] During the reign of Mihirakula, over one thousand Buddhist monasteries throughout Gandhara are said to have been destroyed.[80] In particular, the writings of Chinese monk Xuanzang from 630 CE explained that Mihirakula ordered the destruction of Buddhism and the expulsion of monks.[81] Indeed, the Buddhist art of Gandhara, in particular Greco-Buddhist art, becomes essentially extinct around that period. When Xuanzang visited Gandhara in c. 630 CE, he reported that Buddhism had drastically declined in favour of Shaivism, and that most of the monasteries were deserted and left in ruins.[82]

Turk and Hindu Shahis edit

 
Horseman on a coin of Spalapati, i.e. the "War-lord" of the Hindu Shahis. The headgear has been interpreted as a turban.[83]

The Turk Shahis ruled Gandhara until 870, when they were overthrown by the Hindu Shahis. The Hindu Shahis are believed to belong to the Uḍi/Oḍi tribe, namely the people of Oddiyana in Gandhara.[84][85]

The first king Kallar had moved the capital into Udabandhapura from Kabul, in the modern village of Hund for its new capital.[86][87][88][89] At its zenith, the kingdom stretched over the Kabul Valley, Gandhara and western Punjab under Jayapala.[90] Jayapala saw a danger in the consolidation of the Ghaznavids and invaded their capital city of Ghazni both in the reign of Sebuktigin and in that of his son Mahmud, which initiated the Muslim Ghaznavid and Hindu Shahi struggles.[91] Sebuk Tigin, however, defeated him, and he was forced to pay an indemnity.[91] Jayapala defaulted on the payment and took to the battlefield once more.[91] Jayapala however, lost control of the entire region between the Kabul Valley and Indus River.[92]

However, the army was defeated in battle against the western forces, particularly against the Mahmud of Ghazni.[92] In the year 1001, soon after Sultan Mahmud came to power and was occupied with the Qarakhanids north of the Hindu Kush, Jaipal attacked Ghazni once more and upon suffering yet another defeat by the powerful Ghaznavid forces, near present-day Peshawar. After the Battle of Peshawar, he died because of regretting as his subjects brought disaster and disgrace to the Shahi dynasty.[91][92]

Jayapala was succeeded by his son Anandapala,[91] who along with other succeeding generations of the Shahiya dynasty took part in various unsuccessful campaigns against the advancing Ghaznvids but were unsuccessful. The Hindu rulers eventually exiled themselves to the Kashmir Siwalik Hills.[92]

Rediscovery edit

 
Many stupas, such as the Shingerdar stupa in Ghalegay, are scattered throughout the region near Peshawar.

By the time Gandhara had been absorbed into the empire of Mahmud of Ghazni, Buddhist buildings were already in ruins and Gandhara art had been forgotten. After Al-Biruni, the Kashmiri writer Kalhaṇa wrote his book Rajatarangini in 1151. He recorded some events that took place in Gandhara, and provided details about its last royal dynasty and capital Udabhandapura.

In the 19th century, British soldiers and administrators started taking an interest in the ancient history of the Indian Subcontinent. In the 1830s coins of the post-Ashoka period were discovered, and in the same period Chinese travelogues were translated. Charles Masson, James Prinsep, and Alexander Cunningham deciphered the Kharosthi script in 1838. Chinese records provided locations and site plans for Buddhist shrines. Along with the discovery of coins, these records provided clues necessary to piece together the history of Gandhara. In 1848 Cunningham found Gandhara sculptures north of Peshawar. He also identified the site of Taxila in the 1860s. From then on a large number of Buddhist statues were discovered in the Peshawar valley.

Archaeologist John Marshall excavated at Taxila between 1912 and 1934. He discovered separate Greek, Parthian, and Kushan cities and a large number of stupas and monasteries. These discoveries helped to piece together much more of the chronology of the history of Gandhara and its art.

After 1947 Ahmed Hassan Dani and the Archaeology Department at the University of Peshawar made a number of discoveries in the Peshawar and Swat Valley. Excavation of many of the sites of Gandhara Civilization are being done by researchers from Peshawar and several universities around the world.

Culture edit

Language edit

Gandhara's language was a Prakrit or "Middle Indo-Aryan" dialect, usually called Gāndhārī.[93] Hindko from Peshawar which was the capital of Gandhara, came from Shuraseni prakrit a language spoken in Gandhara.[94][95][96] Under the Kushan Empire, Gāndhārī spread into adjoining regions of South and Central Asia.[93] It used the Kharosthi script, which is derived from the Aramaic script, and it died out about in the 4th century CE.[93][97]

Linguistic evidence links some groups of the Dardic languages with Gandhari.[98][99][100] The Kohistani languages, now all being displaced from their original homelands, were once more widespread in the region and most likely descend from the ancient dialects of the region of Gandhara.[101][102] The last to disappear was Tirahi, still spoken some years ago in a few villages in the vicinity of Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan, by descendants of migrants expelled from Tirah by the Afridi Pashtuns in the 19th century.[103] Georg Morgenstierne claimed that Tirahi is "probably the remnant of a dialect group extending from Tirah through the Peshawar district into Swat and Dir".[104] Nowadays, it must be entirely extinct and the region is now dominated by Iranian languages brought in by later migrants, such as Pashto.[103] Among the modern day Indo-Aryan languages still spoken today, Torwali shows the closest linguistic affinity possible to Niya, a dialect of Gāndhārī.[102][105]

Religion edit

 
Maitreya Bodhisattva, Gautama Buddha, and Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva. 2nd–3rd century CE, Gandhāra.
 
Bronze statue of Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva. Fearlessness mudrā. 3rd century CE, Gandhāra.

Mahāyāna Buddhism edit

Mahāyāna Pure Land sutras were brought from the Gandhāra region to China as early as 147 CE, when the Kushan monk Lokakṣema began translating some of the first Buddhist sutras into Chinese.[106] The earliest of these translations show evidence of having been translated from the Gāndhārī language.[107] Lokakṣema translated important Mahāyāna sūtras such as the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, as well as rare, early Mahāyāna sūtras on topics such as samādhi, and meditation on the Buddha Akṣobhya. Lokaksema's translations continue to provide insight into the early period of Mahāyāna Buddhism. This corpus of texts often includes and emphasizes ascetic practices and forest dwelling, and absorption in states of meditative concentration:[108]

Paul Harrison has worked on some of the texts that are arguably the earliest versions we have of the Mahāyāna sūtras, those translated into Chinese in the last half of the second century AD by the Indo-Scythian translator Lokakṣema. Harrison points to the enthusiasm in the Lokakṣema sūtra corpus for the extra ascetic practices, for dwelling in the forest, and above all for states of meditative absorption (samādhi). Meditation and meditative states seem to have occupied a central place in early Mahāyāna, certainly because of their spiritual efficacy but also because they may have given access to fresh revelations and inspiration.

Some scholars believe that the Mahāyāna Longer Sukhāvatīvyūha Sūtra was compiled in the age of the Kushan Empire in the 1st and 2nd centuries CE, by an order of Mahīśāsaka bhikṣus which flourished in the Gandhāra region.[109][110] However, it is likely that the longer Sukhāvatīvyūha owes greatly to the Mahāsāṃghika-Lokottaravāda sect as well for its compilation, and in this sutra there are many elements in common with the Lokottaravādin Mahāvastu.[109] There are also images of Amitābha Buddha with the bodhisattvas Avalokiteśvara and Mahāsthāmaprāpta which were made in Gandhāra during the Kushan era.[111]

The Mañjuśrīmūlakalpa records that Kaniṣka of the Kushan Empire presided over the establishment of the Mahāyāna Prajñāpāramitā teachings in the northwest.[112] Tāranātha wrote that in this region, 500 bodhisattvas attended the council at Jālandhra monastery during the time of Kaniṣka, suggesting some institutional strength for Mahāyāna in the north-west during this period.[112] Edward Conze goes further to say that Prajñāpāramitā had great success in the north-west during the Kushan period, and may have been the "fortress and hearth" of early Mahāyāna, but not its origin, which he associates with the Mahāsāṃghika branch of Buddhism.[113]

Art edit

 
Lid with seated male figure, Gandhara. (1st–2nd century)

Gandhāra is noted for the distinctive Gandhāra style of Buddhist art, which shows influence of Hellenistic and local Indian influences from the Gangetic Valley.[114] The Gandhāran art flourished and achieved its peak during the Kushan period, from the 1st to the 5th centuries, but it declined and was destroyed after the invasion of the Alchon Huns in the 5th century.

Siddhartha shown as a bejeweled prince (before the Sidhartha renounces palace life) is a common motif.[115] Stucco, as well as stone, were widely used by sculptors in Gandhara for the decoration of monastic and cult buildings.[115][116] Buddhist imagery combined with some artistic elements from the cultures of the Hellenistic world. An example is the youthful Buddha, his hair in wavy curls, similar to statutes of Apollo.[115] Sacred artworks and architectural decorations used limestone for stucco composed by a mixture of local crushed rocks (i.e. schist and granite) which resulted compatible with the outcrops located in the mountains northwest of Islamabad.[117]

The artistic traditions of Gandhara art can be divided into following phases:

Major cities edit

Major cities of ancient Gandhara are as follows:

Notable people edit

In popular culture edit

  • Gandhara:Buddha no Seisen is an action RPG released in Japan in 1987.[118]
  • "Gandhara" is a 1978 song by Japanese rock band Godiego, serving as their 7th single.
  • Gandhara is a Buddhist pacifist organization in the Japanese manga series Shaman King.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ NOTE: See long discussion under mahajanapada from the Ancient Buddhist text Anguttara Nikaya's list of mahajanapadas.

References edit

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  • Bellew, H.W. Kashmir and Kashgar. London, 1875. Reprint: Sang-e-Meel Publications 1999 ISBN 969-35-0738-X
  • Caroe, Sir Olaf, The Pathans, Oxford University Press, Karachi, 1958.
  • Eggermont, Pierre Herman Leonard (1975), Alexander's Campaigns in Sind and Baluchistan and the Siege of the Brahmin Town of Harmatelia, Peeters Publishers, ISBN 978-90-6186-037-2
  • Herodotus (1920). Histories (in Greek and English). With an English translation by A. D. Godley. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Hill, John E. 2003. "Annotated Translation of the Chapter on the Western Regions according to the Hou Hanshu". 2nd Edition: Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes, 1st to 2nd Centuries CE. 2015. John E. Hill. Volume I, ISBN 978-1500696702; Volume II, ISBN 978-1503384620. CreateSpace, North Charleston, S.C.
  • Hussain, J. An Illustrated History of Pakistan, Oxford University Press, Karachi, 1983.
  • "Imperial Gazetteer2 of India, Volume 19– Imperial Gazetteer of India". Digital South Asia Library. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  • Legge, James. Trans. and ed. 1886. A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms: being an account by the Chinese monk Fâ-hsien of his travels in India and Ceylon (A.D. 399–414) in search of the Buddhist Books of Discipline. Reprint: Dover Publications, New York. 1965.
  • Neelis, Jason (2010), Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks: Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia, BRILL, ISBN 978-90-04-18159-5
  • Raychaudhuri, Hemchandra (1953). Political History of Ancient India: From the Accession of Parikshit to the Extinction of Gupta Dynasty. University of Calcutta.
  • Rehman, Abdur (January 1976). The Last Two Dynasties of the Sahis: An analysis of their history, archaeology, coinage and palaeography (Thesis). Australian National University.
  • Shaw, Isobel. Pakistan Handbook, The Guidebook Co., Hong Kong, 1989
  • Watters, Thomas. 1904–5. On Yuan Chwang's Travels in India (A.D. 629–645). Reprint: Mushiram Manoharlal Publishers, New Delhi. 1973.
  • Wynbrandt, James (2009). A Brief History of Pakistan. New York: Infobase Publishing.

Further reading edit

  • Lerner, Martin (1984). The flame and the lotus: Indian and Southeast Asian art from the Kronos collections. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0-87099-374-7.
  • Rehman, Abdur (2009). "A Note on the Etymology of Gandhāra". Bulletin of the Asia Institute. 23: 143–146. JSTOR 24049432.
  • Filigenzi, Anna (2000). "Reviewed Work: A Catalogue of the Gandhāra Sculpture in the British Museum, Vol. I: Text, Vol. II: Plates by Wladimir Zwalf". Wladimir Zwalf, Review by: Anna Filigenzi. Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente. 50 (1/4): 584–586. JSTOR 29757475.
  • Rienjang, Wannaporn, and Peter Stewart (eds), The Rediscovery and Reception of Gandharan Art (Archaeopress, 2022) ISBN 978-1-80327-233-7.

External links edit

  • Gandharan Connections Project (Cambridge, 2016–2021)
  • Livius.org: Gandara 19 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Gandhara Civilization- National Fund for Cultural Heritage (Pakistan)

33°45′22″N 72°49′45″E / 33.7560°N 72.8291°E / 33.7560; 72.8291

gandhara, historical, kingdom, proper, gandhāra, kingdom, kingdom, epics, kingdom, other, uses, disambiguation, gandhāra, ancient, indo, aryan, civilization, centered, present, north, west, pakistan, north, east, afghanistan, roughly, northwestern, part, south. For the historical kingdom proper see Gandhara kingdom For the kingdom in Epics see Gandhara Kingdom For other uses see Gandhara disambiguation Gandhara was an ancient Indo Aryan 1 civilization centered in the present day north west Pakistan and north east Afghanistan roughly in the northwestern part of South Asia 2 3 4 The core of the region of Gandhara was the Peshawar and Swat valleys though the cultural influence of Greater Gandhara extended across the Indus river to the Taxila region in Potohar Plateau and westwards into the Kabul valley in Afghanistan and northwards up to the Karakoram range 5 6 7 GandharaGandharac 1500 BCE c 1000 CEGandharaLocation of Gandhara in South Asia Afghanistan and Pakistan PeshawarTaxilaCharsaddaMardanGANDHARAKabulriverIndusriverIndusriverApproximate geographical region of Gandhara centered on the Peshawar Basin in present day northwest PakistanCapitalKapisi Bagram Puṣkalavati Charsadda Puruṣapura Peshawer Takshashila Taxila Udabhandapura Hund HistoryGovernmentKing c 550 BCEPushkarasarin first c 330 BCE c 316 BCETaxiles c 964 CE c 1001 CEJayapala last Historical eraAntiquity Establishedc 1500 BCE Disestablishedc 1000 CEToday part ofAfghanistanPakistanThe Gandhara tribe after which it is named is attested in the Rigveda c 1500 c 1200 BCE 8 9 while the region is mentioned in the Zoroastrian Avesta as Vaekereta the seventh most beautiful place on earth created by Ahura Mazda It was one of the 16 Great Realms of the second urbanisation 2 3 4 Gandhara is frequently mentioned in the Ramayana and Mahabharata 10 The Iron Age Gandhara kingdom emerged as a major imperial power during the reign of King Pushkarasarin in c 550 BCE 11 Gandhara was conquered by Cyrus I in the 6th century BCE and Alexander the Great in 327 BCE It later became part of the Maurya Empire before being a centre of the Indo Greek Kingdom The region was a major centre for Greco Buddhism under the Indo Greeks and Gandharan Buddhism under later dynasties including Indo Scythians Indo Parthians and Kushans Gandhara was also a central location for the spread of Buddhism to Central Asia and East Asia 12 Gandhari an Indo Aryan language written in Kharosthi script acted as lingua franca of the region 13 Famed for its unique Gandharan style of art which is influenced by the classical Hellenistic styles Gandhara attained its height from the 1st century to the 5th century CE under the Kushan Empire who had their capital at Peshawar Puruṣapura and ushered a period of relative peace known as Pax Kushana Gandhara flourished at the crossroads of India Central Asia and the Middle East connecting trade routes and absorbing cultural influences from diverse civilizations Buddhism thrived until the 8th or 9th centuries when Islam first began to gain sway in the region 14 The region steadily declined after the violent invasion by Alchon Huns in 6th century and the name Gandhara disappeared after Mahmud Ghaznavi s conquest in 1001 CE 15 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Stone age 3 2 Gandhara grave culture 3 3 Vedic era 3 4 Achaemenid Gandhara 3 5 Macedonian Gandhara 3 6 Mauryan Gandhara 3 7 Indo Greek Kingdom 3 8 Indo Scythian Kingdom 3 9 Indo Parthian Kingdom 3 10 Kushan Gandhara 3 11 Kidarites 3 12 Alchon Huns 3 13 Turk and Hindu Shahis 3 14 Rediscovery 4 Culture 4 1 Language 4 2 Religion 4 2 1 Mahayana Buddhism 4 3 Art 4 4 Major cities 5 Notable people 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology editGandhara was known in Sanskrit as Gandhara गन ध र in Avestan as Vaekereta in Old Persian as Gadara Old Persian cuneiform 𐎥𐎭𐎠𐎼 Gadara also transliterated as Gandara since the nasal n before consonants was omitted in the Old Persian script and simplified as Gandara 16 in Akkadian and Elamite as Paruparaesanna Para upari sena 17 in Chinese as T 犍陀羅 S 犍陀罗 Pinyin Jiantuoluo Middle Chinese Zhengzhang Shangfang kɨɐn dɑ lɑ or T 罽賓 S 罽宾 Pinyin Jibin Middle Chinese Zhengzhang Shangfang kˠiᴇiᴴ piɪn and in Greek as Gandara Gandhara 18 One proposed origin of the name is from the Sanskrit word गन ध gandha meaning perfume and referring to the spices and aromatic herbs which they the inhabitants traded and with which they anointed themselves 19 20 The Gandhari people are a tribe mentioned in the Rigveda the Atharvaveda and later Vedic texts 21 A Persian form of the name Gandara mentioned in the Behistun inscription of Emperor Darius I 22 23 was translated as Paruparaesanna Para upari sena meaning beyond the Hindu Kush in Babylonian and Elamite in the same inscription 17 Geography edit nbsp A modern satellite view of Gandhara October 2020 The boundaries of Gandhara varied throughout history Sometimes the Peshawar Valley and Taxila were collectively referred to as Gandhara sometimes the Kabul Valley and Swat Sanskrit Suvastu were included 24 The kingdom was ruled from capitals at Kapisi Bagram 25 Pushkalavati Charsadda Taxila Puruṣapura Peshawar and in its final days from Udabhandapura Hund on the River Indus Historically it bordered ancient regions of Bactria and Ariana to the north and Arachosia and Sattagydia to the south citation needed History editStone age edit nbsp Mother Goddess fertility divinity possibly derived from the Indus Valley civilization terracotta Sar Dheri Gandhara 1st century BCE Victoria and Albert MuseumEvidence of human activity in the Middle Palaeolithic has been reported from Sanghao Cave in the Mardan district of Pakistan 26 The cave was excavated by Ahmad Hasan Dani in 1963 Chipped stone bones were found during the excavation 27 Other items included scrapers quartz tools blades flakes etc 28 29 30 Gandhara grave culture edit Main articles Gandhara grave culture and Indo Aryan migration nbsp Cremation urn Gandhara grave culture Swat Valley c 1200 BCEGandhara s first recorded culture was the Grave Culture that emerged c 1400 BCE and lasted until 800 BCE 31 and named for their distinct funerary practices It was found along the Middle Swat River course even though earlier research considered it to be expanded to the Valleys of Dir Kunar Chitral and Peshawar 32 It has been regarded as a token of the Indo Aryan migrations but has also been explained by local cultural continuity Backwards projections based on ancient DNA analyses suggest ancestors of Swat culture people mixed with a population coming from Inner Asia Mountain Corridor which carried Steppe ancestry sometime between 1900 and 1500 BCE 33 Vedic era edit Main articles Gandhara kingdom and Gandhara Kingdom nbsp Kingdoms and cities of ancient Buddhism with Gandhara located in the northwest of this region during the time of the Buddha c 500 BCE The first mention of the Gandharis is attested once in the Ṛigveda as a tribe that has sheep with good wool In the Atharvaveda the Gandharis are mentioned alongside the Mujavants the Aṅgeyas and the Magadhis in a hymn asking fever to leave the body of the sick man and instead go those aforementioned tribes The tribes listed were the furthermost border tribes known to those in Madhyadesa the Aṅgeyas and Magadhis in the east and the Mujavants and Gandharis in the north 34 35 The Gandhari king Nagnajit and his son Svarajit are mentioned in the Brahmaṇa s according to which they received Brahmanic consecration but their family s attitude towards ritual is mentioned negatively 36 with the royal family of Gandhara during this period following non Brahmanical religious traditions According to the Jain Uttaradhyayana sutra Nagnajit or Naggaji was a prominent king who had adopted Jainism and was comparable to Dvimukha of Pancala Nimi of Videha Karakaṇḍu of Kaliṅga and Bhima of Vidarbha Buddhist sources instead claim that he had achieved paccekabuddhayana 37 11 38 By the later Vedic period the situation had changed and the Gandhari capital of Takṣasila had become an important centre of knowledge where the men of Madhya desa went to learn the three Vedas and the eighteen branches of knowledge with the Kausitaki Brahmaṇa recording that brahmaṇa s went north to study According to the Satapatha Brahmaṇa and the Uddalaka Jataka the famous Vedic philosopher Uddalaka Aruṇi was among the famous students of Takṣasila and the Setaketu Jataka claims that his son Svetaketu also studied there In the Chandogya Upaniṣad Uddalaka Aruṇi himself favourably referred to Gandhari education to the Vaideha king Janaka 36 During the 6th century BCE Gandhara was an important imperial power in north west Iron Age South Asia with the valley of Kasmira being part of the kingdom 37 while the other states of the Punjab region such as the Kekayas Madrakas Usinaras and Shivis being under Gandhari suzerainty The Gandhari king Pukkusati who reigned around 550 BCE engaged in expansionist ventures which brought him into conflict with the king Pradyota of the rising power of Avanti Pukkusati was successful in this struggle with Pradyota but war broke out between him and the Paṇḍava tribe located in the Punjab region and who were threatened by his expansionist policy 11 39 Pukkusati also engaged in friendly relations with the king Bimbisara of Magadha 11 Due to this important position Buddhist texts listed the Gandhara kingdom as one of the sixteen Mahajanapada s great realms of Iron Age South Asia It was the home of Gandhari the princess of Gandhara kingdom 40 41 Achaemenid Gandhara edit Main article Gandara See also Achaemenid invasion of the Indus Valley This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Xerxes I tomb Gandara soldier c 470 BCEBy the later 6th century BCE the founder of the Persian Achaemenid Empire Cyrus soon after his conquests of Media Lydia and Babylonia marched into Gandhara and annexed it into his empire 42 The scholar Kaikhosru Danjibuoy Sethna advanced that Cyrus had conquered only the trans Indus borderlands around Peshawar which had belonged to Gandhara while Pukkusati remained a powerful king who maintained his rule over the rest of Gandhara and the western Punjab 43 However according to the scholar Buddha Prakash Pukkusati might have acted as a bulwark against the expansion of the Persian Achaemenid Empire into north west South Asia This hypothesis posits that the army which Nearchus claimed Cyrus had lost in Gedrosia had in fact been defeated by Pukkusati s Gandhari kingdom Therefore following Prakash s position the Achaemenids would have been able to conquer Gandhara only after a period of decline of Gandhara after the reign of Pukkusati combined the growth of Achaemenid power under the kings Cambyses II and Darius I 11 However the presence of Gandhara referred to as Gandara in Old Persian among the list of Achaemenid provinces in Darius s Behistun Inscription confirms that his empire had inherited this region from conquests carried out earlier by Cyrus 42 It is unknown whether Pukkusati remained in power after the Achaemenid conquest as a Persian vassal or if he was replaced by a Persian satrap governor 44 although Buddhist sources claim that he renounced his throne and became a monk after becoming a disciple of the Buddha 45 The annexation under Cyrus was limited to Gandhara proper after which the peoples of the Punjab region previously under Gandhari authority took advantage of the new power vacuum to form their own states 11 nbsp Athens coin c 500 490 485 BCE discovered in Pushkalavati This coin is the earliest known example of its type to be found so far east 46 Such coins were circulating in the area as currency at least as far as the Indus during the reign of the Achaemenids 47 48 49 50 Under Persian rule a system of centralized administration with a bureaucratic system was introduced into the Indus Valley for the first time Provinces or satrapy were established with provincial capitals Gandhara satrapy established 518 BCE with its capital at Pushkalavati Charsadda 51 The inscription on Darius 521 486 BCE tomb at Naqsh i Rustam near Persepolis records Gadara Gandara along with Hindush Hendus Sindh in the list of satrapies By about 380 BC the Persian hold on the region had weakened Many small kingdoms sprang up in Gandhara Macedonian Gandhara edit Main article Paropamisadae See also Indian campaign of Alexander the Great and Macedonian Empire In 327 BCE Alexander the Great conquered Gandhara as well as the Indian satrapies of the Persian Empire The expeditions of Alexander were recorded by his court historians and by Arrian c 175 CE in his Anabasis Alexandri and by other chroniclers many centuries after the event In the winter of 327 BCE Alexander invited all the chieftains in the remaining five Achaemenid satraps to submit to his authority Ambhi then ruler of Taxila in the former Hindush satrapy complied but the remaining tribes and clans in the former satraps of Gandhara Arachosia Sattagydia and Gedrosia rejected Alexander s offer citation needed The first tribe they encountered were the Aspasioi tribe of the Kunar Valley who under the leadership of their queen Cleophis initiated a fierce battle against Alexander in which he himself was wounded in the shoulder by a dart However the Aspasioi eventually lost and 40 000 people were enslaved Alexander then continued in a southwestern direction where he encountered the Assakenoi tribe of the Swat and Buner valleys in April 326 BCE The Assakenoi fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to Alexander and his army in the cities of Ora Bazira Barikot and Massaga So enraged was Alexander about the resistance put up by the Assakenoi that he killed the entire population of Massaga and reduced its buildings to rubble A similar slaughter then followed at Ora 52 another stronghold of the Assakenoi The stories of these slaughters reached numerous Assakenians who began fleeing to Aornos a hill fort located between Shangla and Kohistan Alexander followed close behind their heels and besieged the strategic hill fort eventually capturing and destroying the fort and killing everyone inside The remaining smaller tribes either surrendered or like the Astanenoi tribe of Pushkalavati Charsadda were quickly neutralized where 38 000 soldiers and 230 000 oxen were captured by Alexander 53 Eventually Alexander s smaller force would meet with the larger force which had come through the Khyber Pass met at Attock With the conquest of Gandhara complete Alexander switched to strengthening his military supply line which by now stretched dangerously vulnerable over the Hindu Kush back to Balkh in Bactria citation needed After conquering Gandhara and solidifying his supply line back to Bactria Alexander combined his forces with the King Ambhi of Taxila and crossed the River Indus in July 326 BCE to begin the Punjab Campaign Alexander nominated officers as Satraps of the new provinces and in Gandhara Oxyartes was nominated to the position of Satrap in 326 BCE citation needed Mauryan Gandhara edit nbsp Major Rock Edict of Ashoka in MansehraAfter a battle with Seleucus Nicator Alexander s successor in Asia in 305 BCE the Mauryan emperor Chandragupta extended his domain up to and including Gandhara and Arachosia With the completion of the Empire s Grand Trunk Road the region prospered as a centre of trade Gandhara remained a part of the Mauryan Empire for about a century and a half Ashoka the grandson of Chandragupta was one of the greatest Indian rulers Like his grandfather Ashoka also started his career in Gandhara as a governor Later he became a Buddhist and promoted Buddhism building many stupas in Gandhara Mauryan control over the northwestern frontier including the Yonas Kambojas and the Gandharas is attested from the Rock Edicts left by Ashoka According to one school of scholars the Gandharas and Kambojas were cognate people 54 55 56 It is also contended by whom Discuss that the Kurus Kambojas Gandharas and Bahlikas were cognate people and all had Iranian affinities 57 or that the Gandhara and Kamboja were nothing but two provinces of one empire and hence influencing each other s language 58 However the local language of Gandhara is represented by Panini s conservative bhaṣa language which is entirely different from the Iranian Late Avestan language of the Kamboja that is indicated by Patanjali s quote of Kambojan savati to go Late Avestan sava i ti note 1 Indo Greek Kingdom edit nbsp The founder of the Indo Greek Kingdom Demetrius I 205 171 BCE wearing the scalp of an elephant symbol of his conquest of the Indus valleyThe Indo Greek king Menander I reigned 155 130 BCE drove the Greco Bactrians out of Gandhara and beyond the Hindu Kush becoming king shortly after his victory His empire survived him in a fragmented manner until the last independent Greek king Strato II disappeared around 10 CE Around 125 BCE the Greco Bactrian king Heliocles son of Eucratides fled from the Yuezhi invasion of Bactria and relocated to Gandhara pushing the Indo Greeks east of the Jhelum River The last known Indo Greek ruler was Theodamas from the Bajaur area of Gandhara mentioned on a 1st century CE signet ring bearing the Kharoṣṭhi inscription Su Theodamasa Su was the Greek transliteration of the Kushan royal title Shau Shah or King It is during this period that the fusion of Hellenistic and South Asian mythological artistic and religious elements becomes most apparent especially in the region of Gandhara citation needed Local Greek rulers still exercised a feeble and precarious power along the borderland but the last vestige of the Greco Indian rulers were finished by a people known to the old Chinese as the Yeuh Chi 59 Indo Scythian Kingdom edit nbsp One of the Buner reliefs showing Scythian soldiers dancing Cleveland Museum of Art The Indo Scythians were descended from the Sakas Scythians who migrated from Central Asia into South Asia from the middle of the 2nd century BCE to the 1st century BCE They displaced the Indo Greeks and ruled a kingdom that stretched from Gandhara to Mathura The first Indo Scythian king Maues established Saka hegemony by conquering Indo Greek territories 60 The power of the Saka rulers declined after the defeat to Chandragupta II of the Gupta Empire in the 4th century 61 Indo Parthian Kingdom edit nbsp Ancient Buddhist monastery Takht i Bahi a UNESCO World Heritage Site constructed by the Indo ParthiansThe Indo Parthian Kingdom was ruled by the Gondopharid dynasty named after its first ruler Gondophares For most of their history the leading Gondopharid kings held Taxila in the present Punjab province of Pakistan as their residence but during their last few years of existence the capital shifted between Kabul and Peshawar These kings have traditionally been referred to as Indo Parthians as their coinage was often inspired by the Arsacid dynasty but they probably belonged to a wider groups of Iranic tribes who lived east of Parthia proper and there is no evidence that all the kings who assumed the title Gondophares which means Holder of Glory were even related Kushan Gandhara edit nbsp Greco Buddhist standing Buddha from Gandhara 1st 2nd century Tokyo National Museum nbsp Casket of Kanishka the Great with Buddhist motifsThe Parthian dynasty fell in about 75 to another group from Central Asia The Kushans known as Yuezhi in the Chinese source Hou Han Shu argued by some who to be ethnically Asii moved from Central Asia to Bactria where they stayed for a century Around 75 CE one of their tribes the Kushan Kuṣaṇa under the leadership of Kujula Kadphises gained control of Gandhara The Kushan empire began as a Central Asian kingdom and expanded into South Asia in the early centuries CE 62 The Kushan period is considered the Golden Period of Gandhara Peshawar Valley and Taxila are littered with ruins of stupas and monasteries of this period Gandharan art flourished and produced some of the best pieces of sculpture from the Indian subcontinent Gandhara s culture peaked during the reign of the great Kushan king Kanishka the Great 127 CE 150 CE The cities of Taxila Takṣasila at Sirsukh and Purushapura modern day Peshawar reached new heights Purushapura along with Mathura became the capital of the great empire stretching from Central Asia to Northern India with Gandhara being in the midst of it Emperor Kanishka was a great patron of the Buddhist faith Buddhism spread from India to Central Asia and the Far East across Bactria and Sogdia where his empire met the Han Empire of China Buddhist art spread from Gandhara to other parts of Asia In Gandhara Mahayana Buddhism flourished and Buddha was represented in human form Under the Kushans new Buddhists stupas were built and old ones were enlarged Huge statues of the Buddha were erected in monasteries and carved into the hillsides Kanishka also built the 400 foot Kanishka stupa at Peshawar This tower was reported by Chinese monks Faxian Song Yun and Xuanzang who visited the country The stupa was built during the Kushan era to house Buddhist relics and was among the tallest buildings in the ancient world 63 64 65 nbsp Head of a bodhisattva c 4th century CE nbsp The Buddha and Vajrapani under the guise of Herakles c 2nd 3rd century CEKidarites edit The Kidarites conquered Peshawar and parts of northwest Indian subcontinent including Gandhara probably sometime between 390 and 410 from Kushan empire 66 around the end of the rule of Gupta Emperor Chandragupta II or beginning of the rule of Kumaragupta I 67 It is probably the rise of the Hephthalites and the defeats against the Sasanians which pushed the Kidarites into northern India Their last ruler in Gandhara was Kandik c 500 CE Alchon Huns edit Around 430 King Khingila the most notable Alchon ruler emerged and took control of the routes across the Hindu Kush from the Kidarites 68 69 70 71 Coins of the Alchons rulers Khingila and Mehama were found at the Buddhist monastery of Mes Aynak southeast of Kabul confirming the Alchon presence in this area around 450 500 CE 72 nbsp The silver bowl in the British Museum nbsp Alchon horseman 73 The so called Hephthalite bowl from Gandhara features two Kidarite hunters wearing characteristic crowns and as well as two Alchon hunters one of them shown here with skull deformation suggesting a period of peaceful coexistence between the two entities 73 Swat District Pakistan 460 479 CE British Museum 74 75 The numismatic evidence as well as the so called Hephthalite bowl from Gandhara now in the British Museum suggests a period of peaceful coexistence between the Kidarites and the Alchons as it features two Kidarite noble hunters together with two Alchon hunters and one of the Alchons inside a medallion 73 At one point the Kidarites withdrew from Gandhara and the Alchons took over their mints from the time of Khingila 73 The Alchons apparently undertook the mass destruction of Buddhist monasteries and stupas at Taxila a high center of learning which never recovered from the destruction 76 77 Virtually all of the Alchon coins found in the area of Taxila were found in the ruins of burned down monasteries where apparently some of the invaders died alongside local defenders during the wave of destructions 76 It is thought that the Kanishka stupa one of the most famous and tallest buildings in antiquity was destroyed by them during their invasion of the area in the 460s CE The Mankiala stupa was also vandalized during their invasions 78 Mihirakula in particular is remembered by Buddhist sources to have been a terrible persecutor of their religion in Gandhara 79 During the reign of Mihirakula over one thousand Buddhist monasteries throughout Gandhara are said to have been destroyed 80 In particular the writings of Chinese monk Xuanzang from 630 CE explained that Mihirakula ordered the destruction of Buddhism and the expulsion of monks 81 Indeed the Buddhist art of Gandhara in particular Greco Buddhist art becomes essentially extinct around that period When Xuanzang visited Gandhara in c 630 CE he reported that Buddhism had drastically declined in favour of Shaivism and that most of the monasteries were deserted and left in ruins 82 Turk and Hindu Shahis edit nbsp Horseman on a coin of Spalapati i e the War lord of the Hindu Shahis The headgear has been interpreted as a turban 83 The Turk Shahis ruled Gandhara until 870 when they were overthrown by the Hindu Shahis The Hindu Shahis are believed to belong to the Uḍi Oḍi tribe namely the people of Oddiyana in Gandhara 84 85 The first king Kallar had moved the capital into Udabandhapura from Kabul in the modern village of Hund for its new capital 86 87 88 89 At its zenith the kingdom stretched over the Kabul Valley Gandhara and western Punjab under Jayapala 90 Jayapala saw a danger in the consolidation of the Ghaznavids and invaded their capital city of Ghazni both in the reign of Sebuktigin and in that of his son Mahmud which initiated the Muslim Ghaznavid and Hindu Shahi struggles 91 Sebuk Tigin however defeated him and he was forced to pay an indemnity 91 Jayapala defaulted on the payment and took to the battlefield once more 91 Jayapala however lost control of the entire region between the Kabul Valley and Indus River 92 However the army was defeated in battle against the western forces particularly against the Mahmud of Ghazni 92 In the year 1001 soon after Sultan Mahmud came to power and was occupied with the Qarakhanids north of the Hindu Kush Jaipal attacked Ghazni once more and upon suffering yet another defeat by the powerful Ghaznavid forces near present day Peshawar After the Battle of Peshawar he died because of regretting as his subjects brought disaster and disgrace to the Shahi dynasty 91 92 Jayapala was succeeded by his son Anandapala 91 who along with other succeeding generations of the Shahiya dynasty took part in various unsuccessful campaigns against the advancing Ghaznvids but were unsuccessful The Hindu rulers eventually exiled themselves to the Kashmir Siwalik Hills 92 Rediscovery edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Many stupas such as the Shingerdar stupa in Ghalegay are scattered throughout the region near Peshawar By the time Gandhara had been absorbed into the empire of Mahmud of Ghazni Buddhist buildings were already in ruins and Gandhara art had been forgotten After Al Biruni the Kashmiri writer Kalhaṇa wrote his book Rajatarangini in 1151 He recorded some events that took place in Gandhara and provided details about its last royal dynasty and capital Udabhandapura In the 19th century British soldiers and administrators started taking an interest in the ancient history of the Indian Subcontinent In the 1830s coins of the post Ashoka period were discovered and in the same period Chinese travelogues were translated Charles Masson James Prinsep and Alexander Cunningham deciphered the Kharosthi script in 1838 Chinese records provided locations and site plans for Buddhist shrines Along with the discovery of coins these records provided clues necessary to piece together the history of Gandhara In 1848 Cunningham found Gandhara sculptures north of Peshawar He also identified the site of Taxila in the 1860s From then on a large number of Buddhist statues were discovered in the Peshawar valley Archaeologist John Marshall excavated at Taxila between 1912 and 1934 He discovered separate Greek Parthian and Kushan cities and a large number of stupas and monasteries These discoveries helped to piece together much more of the chronology of the history of Gandhara and its art After 1947 Ahmed Hassan Dani and the Archaeology Department at the University of Peshawar made a number of discoveries in the Peshawar and Swat Valley Excavation of many of the sites of Gandhara Civilization are being done by researchers from Peshawar and several universities around the world Culture editLanguage edit Main article Gandhari language Gandhara s language was a Prakrit or Middle Indo Aryan dialect usually called Gandhari 93 Hindko from Peshawar which was the capital of Gandhara came from Shuraseni prakrit a language spoken in Gandhara 94 95 96 Under the Kushan Empire Gandhari spread into adjoining regions of South and Central Asia 93 It used the Kharosthi script which is derived from the Aramaic script and it died out about in the 4th century CE 93 97 Linguistic evidence links some groups of the Dardic languages with Gandhari 98 99 100 The Kohistani languages now all being displaced from their original homelands were once more widespread in the region and most likely descend from the ancient dialects of the region of Gandhara 101 102 The last to disappear was Tirahi still spoken some years ago in a few villages in the vicinity of Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan by descendants of migrants expelled from Tirah by the Afridi Pashtuns in the 19th century 103 Georg Morgenstierne claimed that Tirahi is probably the remnant of a dialect group extending from Tirah through the Peshawar district into Swat and Dir 104 Nowadays it must be entirely extinct and the region is now dominated by Iranian languages brought in by later migrants such as Pashto 103 Among the modern day Indo Aryan languages still spoken today Torwali shows the closest linguistic affinity possible to Niya a dialect of Gandhari 102 105 Religion edit Further information Silk Road transmission of Buddhism and Gandharan Buddhism nbsp Maitreya Bodhisattva Gautama Buddha and Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva 2nd 3rd century CE Gandhara nbsp Bronze statue of Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva Fearlessness mudra 3rd century CE Gandhara Mahayana Buddhism editMahayana Pure Land sutras were brought from the Gandhara region to China as early as 147 CE when the Kushan monk Lokakṣema began translating some of the first Buddhist sutras into Chinese 106 The earliest of these translations show evidence of having been translated from the Gandhari language 107 Lokakṣema translated important Mahayana sutras such as the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra as well as rare early Mahayana sutras on topics such as samadhi and meditation on the Buddha Akṣobhya Lokaksema s translations continue to provide insight into the early period of Mahayana Buddhism This corpus of texts often includes and emphasizes ascetic practices and forest dwelling and absorption in states of meditative concentration 108 Paul Harrison has worked on some of the texts that are arguably the earliest versions we have of the Mahayana sutras those translated into Chinese in the last half of the second century AD by the Indo Scythian translator Lokakṣema Harrison points to the enthusiasm in the Lokakṣema sutra corpus for the extra ascetic practices for dwelling in the forest and above all for states of meditative absorption samadhi Meditation and meditative states seem to have occupied a central place in early Mahayana certainly because of their spiritual efficacy but also because they may have given access to fresh revelations and inspiration Some scholars believe that the Mahayana Longer Sukhavativyuha Sutra was compiled in the age of the Kushan Empire in the 1st and 2nd centuries CE by an order of Mahisasaka bhikṣus which flourished in the Gandhara region 109 110 However it is likely that the longer Sukhavativyuha owes greatly to the Mahasaṃghika Lokottaravada sect as well for its compilation and in this sutra there are many elements in common with the Lokottaravadin Mahavastu 109 There are also images of Amitabha Buddha with the bodhisattvas Avalokitesvara and Mahasthamaprapta which were made in Gandhara during the Kushan era 111 The Manjusrimulakalpa records that Kaniṣka of the Kushan Empire presided over the establishment of the Mahayana Prajnaparamita teachings in the northwest 112 Taranatha wrote that in this region 500 bodhisattvas attended the council at Jalandhra monastery during the time of Kaniṣka suggesting some institutional strength for Mahayana in the north west during this period 112 Edward Conze goes further to say that Prajnaparamita had great success in the north west during the Kushan period and may have been the fortress and hearth of early Mahayana but not its origin which he associates with the Mahasaṃghika branch of Buddhism 113 Art edit See also Greco Buddhist art Kushan art Indo Greek art and Indo Scythian art nbsp Lid with seated male figure Gandhara 1st 2nd century Gandhara is noted for the distinctive Gandhara style of Buddhist art which shows influence of Hellenistic and local Indian influences from the Gangetic Valley 114 The Gandharan art flourished and achieved its peak during the Kushan period from the 1st to the 5th centuries but it declined and was destroyed after the invasion of the Alchon Huns in the 5th century Siddhartha shown as a bejeweled prince before the Sidhartha renounces palace life is a common motif 115 Stucco as well as stone were widely used by sculptors in Gandhara for the decoration of monastic and cult buildings 115 116 Buddhist imagery combined with some artistic elements from the cultures of the Hellenistic world An example is the youthful Buddha his hair in wavy curls similar to statutes of Apollo 115 Sacred artworks and architectural decorations used limestone for stucco composed by a mixture of local crushed rocks i e schist and granite which resulted compatible with the outcrops located in the mountains northwest of Islamabad 117 The artistic traditions of Gandhara art can be divided into following phases Indo Greek art 2nd century BCE to 1st century CE Indo Scythian art 1st century BCE to 1st century CE Kushan art 1st century CE to 4th century CE nbsp Standing Bodhisattva 1st 2nd century nbsp Buddha head 2nd century nbsp Buddha head 4th 6th century nbsp Buddha in acanthus capital nbsp The Greek god Atlas supporting a Buddhist monument Hadda nbsp The Bodhisattva Maitreya 2nd century nbsp Wine drinking and music Hadda 1st 2nd century nbsp Maya s white elephant dream 2nd 3rd century nbsp The birth of Siddharta 2nd 3rd century nbsp The Great Departure from the Palace 2nd 3rd century nbsp The end of ascetism 2nd 3rd century nbsp The Buddha preaching at the Deer Park in Sarnath 2nd 3rd century nbsp Scene of the life of the Buddha 2nd 3rd century nbsp The death of the Buddha or parinirvana 2nd 3rd century nbsp A sculpture from Hadda 3rd century nbsp The Bodhisattva and Chandeka Hadda 5th century nbsp Hellenistic decorative scrolls from Hadda Afghanistan nbsp Hellenistic scene Gandhara 1st century nbsp A stone plate 1st century nbsp Laughing boy from Hadda nbsp Bodhisattva seated in meditation nbsp Marine deities Gandhara nbsp The Seated Buddha dating from 300 to 500 CE was found near Jamal Garhi and is now on display at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco nbsp Sharing of the Buddha s relics above a Gandhara fortified cityMajor cities edit Major cities of ancient Gandhara are as follows Puṣkalavati Charsadda Pakistan Takshashila Taxila Pakistan Puruṣapura Peshawer Pakistan Sagala Sialkot Pakistan Oddiyana Swat Pakistan Kapisi Bagram Afghanistan Jibin appears in the Chinese sourcesNotable people editMain article list of people from GandharaIn popular culture editGandhara Buddha no Seisen is an action RPG released in Japan in 1987 118 Gandhara is a 1978 song by Japanese rock band Godiego serving as their 7th single Gandhara is a Buddhist pacifist organization in the Japanese manga series Shaman King See also editHistory of Pakistan History of Afghanistan History of IndiaNotes edit NOTE See long discussion under mahajanapada from the Ancient Buddhist text Anguttara Nikaya s list of mahajanapadas References edit Bryant Edwin Francis 2002 The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture The Indo Aryan Migration Debate Oxford University Press p 138 ISBN 978 0 19 565361 8 a b Kulke Professor of Asian History Hermann Kulke Hermann Rothermund Dietmar 2004 A History of India Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 32919 4 a b Warikoo K 2004 Bamiyan Challenge to World Heritage Third Eye ISBN 978 81 86505 66 3 a b Hansen Mogens Herman 2000 A Comparative Study of Thirty City state Cultures An Investigation Kgl Danske Videnskabernes Selskab ISBN 978 87 7876 177 4 Neelis Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks 2010 p 232 Eggermont Alexander s Campaigns in Sind and Baluchistan 1975 pp 175 177 Badian Ernst 1987 Alexander at Peucelaotis The Classical Quarterly 37 1 117 128 doi 10 1017 S0009838800031712 JSTOR 639350 S2CID 246878679 Rigveda 1 126 7 English translation by Ralph TH Griffith Arthur Anthony Macdonell 1997 A History of Sanskrit Literature Motilal Banarsidass pp 130 ISBN 978 81 208 0095 3 Schmidt Karl J 1995 An Atlas and Survey of South Asian History p 120 In addition to being a center of religion for Buddhists as well as Hindus Taxila was a thriving center for art culture and learning Srinivasan Doris Meth 2008 Hindu Deities in Gandharan art in Gandhara The Buddhist Heritage of Pakistan Legends Monasteries and Paradise pp 130 143 Gandhara was not cut off from the heartland of early Hinduism in the Gangetic Valley The two regions shared cultural and political connections and trade relations and this facilitated the adoption and exchange of religious ideas It is during the Kushan Era that flowering of religious imagery occurred Gandhara often introduced its own idiosyncratic expression upon the Buddhist and Hindu imagery it had initially come in contact with Blurton T Richard 1993 Hindu Art Harvard University Press The earliest figures of Shiva which show him in purely human form come from the area of ancient Gandhara p 84 and Coins from Gandhara of the first century BC show Lakshmi four armed on a lotus p 176 a b c d e f Prakash Buddha 1951 Poros Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute 32 1 198 233 JSTOR 41784590 Retrieved 12 June 2022 UW Press Ancient Buddhist Scrolls from Gandhara Retrieved April 2018 GANDHARi LANGUAGE Encyclopaedia Iranica Kurt A Behrendt 2007 The Art of Gandhara in the Metropolitan Museum of Art pp 4 5 91 Mohiuddin Yasmeen Niaz 2007 Pakistan A Global Studies Handbook ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851098019 Some sounds are omitted in the writing of Old Persian and are shown with a raised letter Old Persian p 164Old Persian p 13 In particular Old Persian nasals such as n were omitted in writing before consonants Old Persian p 17Old Persian p 25 a b Perfrancesco Callieri INDIA ii Historical Geography Encyclopaedia Iranica 15 December 2004 Herodotus Book III 89 95 Thomas Watters 1904 On Yuan Chwang s travels in India 629 645 A D Royal Asiatic Society p 200 Taken as Gandhavat the name is explained as meaning hsiang hsing or scent action from the word gandha which means scent small perfume At the Internet Archive Adrian Room 1997 Placenames of the World McFarland ISBN 9780786418145 Kandahar City south central Afghanistan At Google Books Macdonell Arthur Anthony Keith Arthur Berriedale 1995 Vedic Index of Names and Subjects Vol 1 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 219 ISBN 9788120813328 At Google Books Gandara Livius Herodotus 1920 3 102 1 Histories 4 44 2 Histories in Greek Translated by A D Godley 3 102 1 Histories 4 44 2 Histories Cambridge Harvard University Press At the Perseus Project Eggermont Pierre Herman Leonard 1975 Alexander s Campaigns in Sind and Baluchistan and the Siege of the Brahmin Town of Harmatelia Peeters Publishers pp 175 177 ISBN 978 90 6186 037 2 Catalogue of coins in the Punjab museum Lahore 1914 Ahmad Hasan Dani Vadim Mikhaĭlovich Masson 1999 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass p 79 ISBN 9788120814073 Some Comments on the Mammalian Fauna of Sanghao Cave a Middle Stone Age Site in Northern Pakistan by M Salim 1 A H Dani 1993 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The Dawn of Civilization Earliest Times to 700 B C UNESCO p 487 Kumkum Roy 2009 Historical Dictionary of Ancient India Rowman amp Littlefield p 282 ISBN 9780810853669 Marta Camps Parth Chauhan September 2009 Sourcebook of Paleolithic Transitions Methods Theories and Interpretations Springer p 131 ISBN 9780387764870 Olivieri Luca M Roberto Micheli Massimo Vidale and Muhammad Zahir 2019 Late Bronze Iron Age Swat Protohistoric Graves Gandhara Grave Culture Swat Valley Pakistan n 99 in Narasimhan Vagheesh M et al Supplementary Materials for the formation of human populations in South and Central Asia Science 365 6 September 2019 pp 137 164 Coningham Robin and Mark Manuel 2008 Kashmir and the Northwest Frontier Asia South in Encyclopedia of Archaeology 2008 Elsevier p 740 Narasimhan Vagheesh M et al 2019 The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia in Science 365 6 September 2019 p 11 we estimate the date of admixture into the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age individuals from the Swat District of northernmost South Asia to be on average 26 generations before the date that they lived corresponding to a 95 confidence interval of 1900 to 1500 BCE Macdonell Arthur Anthony Keith Arthur Berriedale 1912 Vedic Index of Names and Subjects John Murray pp 218 219 Chattopadhyaya Sudhakar 1978 Reflections on the Tantras Motilal Banarsidass Publishers p 4 a b Raychaudhuri 1953 p 59 62 a b Raychaudhuri 1953 p 146 147 Macdonell amp Keith 1912 p 218 219 432 Jain Kailash Chand 1972 Malwa Through the Ages Delhi India Motilal Banarsidass pp 98 104 ISBN 978 8 120 80824 9 Higham Charles 2014 Encyclopedia of Ancient Asian Civilizations Infobase Publishing pp 209 ISBN 978 1 4381 0996 1 Khoinaijam Rita Devi 1 January 2007 History of ancient India on the basis of Buddhist literature Akansha Publishing House ISBN 978 81 8370 086 3 a b Young T Cuyler 1988 The early history of the Medes and the Persians and the Achaemenid empire to the death of Cambyses In Boardman John Hammond N G L Lewis D M Ostwald M eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 4 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 52 ISBN 978 0 521 22804 6 Sethna Kaikhosru Danjibuoy 2000 To Paṇini s Time from Paṇini s Place Problems of Ancient India Aditya Prakashan pp 121 172 ISBN 978 8 177 42026 5 Bivar A D H 1988 The Indus Lands In Boardman John Hammond N G L Lewis D M Ostwald M eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 4 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 194 210 ISBN 978 0 521 22804 6 Pukkusati www palikanon com Retrieved 26 July 2020 O Bopearachchi Premieres frappes locales de l Inde du Nord Ouest nouvelles donnees in Tresors d Orient Melanges offerts a Rika Gyselen Fig 1 CNG Coins Bopearachchi Osmund Coin Production and Circulation in Central Asia and North West India Before and after Alexander s Conquest pp 300 301 US Department of Defense Archived from the original on 10 June 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2018 Errington Elizabeth Trust Ancient India and Iran Museum Fitzwilliam 1992 The Crossroads of Asia transformation in image and symbol in the art of ancient Afghanistan and Pakistan Ancient India and Iran Trust pp 57 59 ISBN 9780951839911 Bopearachchi Osmund Coin Production and Circulation in Central Asia and North West India Before and after Alexander s Conquest pp 308 Rafi U Samad The Grandeur of Gandhara The Ancient Buddhist Civilization of the Swat Peshawar Kabul and Indus Valleys Algora Publishing 2011 p 32 ISBN 0875868592 Mukerjee R K History and Culture of Indian People The Age of Imperial Unity Foreign Invasion p 46 Curtius in McCrindle p 192 J W McCrindle History of Punjab Vol I 1997 p 229 Punjabi University Patiala editors Fauja Singh L M Joshi Kambojas Through the Ages 2005 p 134 Kirpal Singh Revue des etudes grecques 1973 p 131 Ch Em Ruelle Association pour l encouragement des etudes grecques en France Early Indian Economic History 1973 pp 237 324 Rajaram Narayan Saletore Myths of the Dog man 199 p 119 David Gordon White Journal of the Oriental Institute 1919 p 200 Journal of Indian Museums 1973 p 2 Museums Association of India The Paradas A Study in Their Coinage and History 1972 p 52 Dr B N Mukherjee Paradas Journal of the Department of Sanskrit 1989 p 50 Rabindra Bharati University Dept of Sanskrit Sanskrit literature The Journal of Academy of Indian Numismatics amp Sigillography 1988 p 58 Academy of Indian Numismatics and Sigillography Numismatics Cf Rivers of Life Or Sources and Streams of the Faiths of Man in All Lands 2002 p 114 J G R Forlong Journal of the Oriental Institute 1919 p 265 Oriental Institute Vadodara India Oriental studies For Kuru Kamboja connections see Dr Chandra Chakraberty s views in Literary history of ancient India in relation to its racial and linguistic affiliations pp 14 37 Vedas The Racial History of India 1944 p 153 Chandra Chakraberty Ethnology Paradise of Gods 1966 p 330 Qamarud Din Ahmed Pakistan Ancient India History of India for 1000 years four Volumes Vol I 1938 pp 38 98 Dr T L Shah Imperial Gazetteer p 149 The Grandeur of Gandhara Rafi us Samad Algora Publishing 2011 p 64 67 2 Ancient India by Ramesh Chandra Majumdar p 234 Singh Upinder 25 September 2017 Political Violence in Ancient India Harvard University Press p 166 ISBN 9780674981287 Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol p 180 ISBN 9780984404308 Marshall John H 1909 Archaeological Exploration in India 1908 9 Section on The stupa of Kanishka and relics of the Buddha Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1909 pp 1056 1061 Rai Govind Chandra 1 January 1979 Indo Greek Jewellery Abhinav Publications pp 82 ISBN 978 81 7017 088 4 Retrieved 13 December 2012 Dani Ahmad Hasan Litvinsky B A 1996 History of Civilizations of Central Asia The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 UNESCO p 122 ISBN 9789231032110 The entry of the Kidarites into India may firmly be placed some time round about the end of rule of Candragupta II or beginning of the rule of Kumaragupta I circa 410 420 a d in Gupta Parmeshwari Lal Kulashreshtha Sarojini 1994 Kuṣaṇa Coins and History D K Printworld p 122 ISBN 9788124600177 The Alchon Huns established themselves as overlords of northwestern India and directly contributed to the downfall of the Guptas in Neelis Jason 2010 Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia BRILL p 162 ISBN 9789004181595 Bakker Hans 2017 Monuments of Hope Gloom and Glory in the Age of the Hunnic Wars 50 years that changed India 484 534 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Section 4 ISBN 978 90 6984 715 3 archived from the original on 11 January 2020 retrieved 1 May 2021 Atreyi Biswas 1971 The Political History of the Huṇas in India Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers ISBN 9780883863015 Upendra Thakur 1967 The Huṇas in India Chowkhamba Prakashan pp 52 55 Alram Michael 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 274 JSTOR 44710198 a b c d ALRAM MICHAEL 2014 From the Sasanians to the Huns New Numismatic Evidence from the Hindu Kush The Numismatic Chronicle 174 274 275 ISSN 0078 2696 JSTOR 44710198 Iaroslav Lebedynsky Les Nomades p172 British Museum notice British Museum Retrieved 2 April 2023 a b Ghosh Amalananda 1965 Taxila CUP Archive p 791 Upinder Singh 2017 Political Violence in Ancient India Harvard University Press p 241 ISBN 9780674981287 Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol ISBN 9780984404308 Retrieved 24 March 2017 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes Rutgers University Press pp 69 71 ISBN 0 8135 1304 9 Behrendt Kurt A 2004 Handbuch der Orientalistik Leiden BRILL ISBN 9789004135956 Upinder Singh 2017 Political Violence in Ancient India Harvard University Press pp 241 242 ISBN 9780674981287 Ann Heirman Stephan Peter Bumbacher 11 May 2007 The Spread of Buddhism Leiden BRILL p 60 ISBN 978 90 474 2006 4 Rehman 1976 p 187 and Pl V B the horseman is shown wearing a turban like head gear with a small globule on the top Rahman Abdul 2002 New Light on the Khingal Turk and the Hindu Sahis PDF Ancient Pakistan XV 37 42 The Hindu Sahis were therefore neither Bhattis or Janjuas nor Brahmans They were simply Uḍis Oḍis It can now be seen that the term Hindu Sahi is a misnomer and based as it is merely upon religious discrimination should be discarded and forgotten The correct name is Uḍi or Oḍi Sahi dynasty Meister Michael W 2005 The Problem of Platform Extensions at Kafirkot North PDF Ancient Pakistan XVI 41 48 Rehman 2002 41 makes a good case for calling the Hindu Sahis by a more accurate name Uḍi Sahis The Shahi Afghanistan and Punjab 1973 pp 1 45 46 48 80 Dr D B Pandey The Uakas in India and Their Impact on Indian Life and Culture 1976 p 80 Vishwa Mitra Mohan Indo Scythians Country Culture and Political life in early and medieval India 2004 p 34 Daud Ali Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1954 pp 112 ff The Shahis of Afghanistan and Punjab 1973 p 46 Dr D B Pandey The Uakas in India and Their Impact on Indian Life and Culture 1976 p 80 Vishwa Mitra Mohan Indo Scythians India A History 2001 p 203 John Keay Sehrai Fidaullah 1979 Hund The Forgotten City of Gandhara p 2 Peshawar Museum Publications New Series Peshawar Wynbrandt 2009 pp 52 54 a b c d e P M Holt Ann K S Lambton Bernard Lewis eds 1977 The Cambridge history of Islam Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 521 29137 8 Jaypala of Waihind saw danger in the consolidation of the kingdom of Ghazna and decided to destroy it He therefore invaded Ghazna but was defeated a b c d Ferishta s History of Dekkan from the first Mahummedan conquests etc Shrewsbury Eng Printed for the editor by J and W Eddowes 1794 via Internet Archive a b c Foundation Encyclopaedia Iranica GANDHARi LANGUAGE iranicaonline org Retrieved 20 July 2021 Origins of Hindko 23 May 2013 Hindko The Language Of Hind NewsGram 15 April 2021 Origins of Hindko Journal of Language Relationship 15 3 4 228 237 2018 doi 10 31826 jlr 2018 153 409 S2CID 212688313 Rhie Marylin Martin 15 July 2019 Early Buddhist Art of China and Central Asia Volume 2 The Eastern Chin and Sixteen Kingdoms Period in China and Tumshuk Kucha and Karashahr in Central Asia 2 vols BRILL p 327 ISBN 978 90 04 39186 4 Dani Ahmad Hasan 2001 History of Northern Areas of Pakistan Upto 2000 A D Sang e Meel Publications pp 64 67 ISBN 978 969 35 1231 1 Saxena Anju 12 May 2011 Himalayan Languages Past and Present Walter de Gruyter p 35 ISBN 978 3 11 089887 3 Liljegren Henrik 26 February 2016 A grammar of Palula Language Science Press pp 13 14 ISBN 978 3 946234 31 9 Palula belongs to a group of Indo Aryan IA languages spoken in the Hindukush region that are often referred to as Dardic languages It has been and is still disputed to what extent this primarily geographically defined grouping has any real classificatory validity On the one hand Strand suggests that the term should be discarded altogether holding that there is no justification whatsoever for any such grouping in addition to the term itself having a problematic history of use and prefers to make a finer classification of these languages into smaller genealogical groups directly under the IA heading a classification we shall return to shortly Zoller identifies the Dardic languages as the modern successors of the Middle Indo Aryan MIA language Gandhari also Gandhari Prakrit but along with Bashir Zoller concludes that the family tree model alone will not explain all the historical developments Cacopardo Alberto M Cacopardo Augusto S 2001 Gates of Peristan History Religion and Society in the Hindu Kush IsIAO p 253 ISBN 978 88 6323 149 6 This leads us to the conclusion that the ancient dialects of the Peshawar District the country between Tirah and Swat must have belonged to the Tirahi Kohistani type and that the westernmost Dardic language Pashai which probably had its ancient centre in Laghman has enjoyed a comparatively independent position since early times Today the Kohistani languages descendent from the ancient dialects that developed in these valleys have all been displaced from their original homelands as described below a b Burrow T 1936 The Dialectical Position of the Niya Prakrit Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies University of London 8 2 3 419 435 ISSN 1356 1898 JSTOR 608051 It might be going too far to say that Torwali is the direct lineal descendant of the Niya Prakrit but there is no doubt that out of all the modern languages it shows the closest resemblance to it A glance at the map in the Linguistic Survey of India shows that the area at present covered by Kohistani is the nearest to that area round Peshawar where as stated above there is most reason to believe was the original home of the Niya Prakrit That conclusion which was reached for other reasons is thus confirmed by the distribution of the modern dialects a b Dani Ahmad Hasan 2001 History of Northern Areas of Pakistan Upto 2000 A D Sang e Meel Publications p 65 ISBN 978 969 35 1231 1 In the Peshawar district there does not remain any Indian dialect continuing this old Gandhari The last to disappear was Tirahi still spoken some years ago in Afghanistan in the vicinity of Jalalabad by descendants of migrants expelled from Tirah by the Afridis in the 19th century Nowadays it must be entirely extinct and in the NWFP are only to be found modern Iranian languages brought in by later immigrants Baluch Pashto or Indian languages brought in by the paramount political power Urdu Panjabi or by Hindu traders Hindko Jain Danesh Cardona George 26 July 2007 The Indo Aryan Languages Routledge p 991 ISBN 978 1 135 79710 2 Salomon Richard 10 December 1998 Indian Epigraphy A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit Prakrit and the other Indo Aryan Languages Oxford University Press p 79 ISBN 978 0 19 535666 3 The Korean Buddhist Canon A Descriptive Catalogue www acmuller net Mukherjee Bratindra Nath India in Early Central Asia 1996 p 15 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations 2008 p 30 a b Nakamura Hajime Indian Buddhism A Survey With Biographical Notes 1999 p 205 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations 2008 p 239 Gandharan Sculptural Style The Buddha Image Archived from the original on 18 December 2014 Retrieved 7 February 2016 a b Ray Reginald Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations 1999 p 410 Ray Reginald Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations 1999 p 426 Behrendt Kurt 2011 Gandharan Buddhism Archaeology Art and Texts UBC Press p 241 ISBN 978 0774841283 Retrieved 16 August 2019 a b c Buddhism and Buddhist Art Siple Ella S 1931 Stucco Sculpture from Central Asia The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 59 342 140 145 ISSN 0951 0788 JSTOR 864875 Carlo Rosa Thomas Theye Simona Pannuzi 2019 Geological overwiew of Gandharan sites and petrographical analysis on Gandharan stucco and clay artefacts pdf Restauro Archeologico Firenze University Press 27 1 Abstract doi 10 13128 RA 25095 ISSN 1724 9686 OCLC 8349098991 Archived from the original on 15 February 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2020 on DOAJ Gandhara Buddha no Seisen Retrieved 21 March 2023 Sources editBeal Samuel 1884 Si Yu Ki Buddhist Records of the Western World by Hiuen Tsiang 2 vols Trans by Samuel Beal London Reprint Delhi Oriental Books Reprint Corporation 1969 Beal Samuel 1911 The Life of Hiuen Tsiang by the Shaman Hwui Li with an Introduction containing an account of the Works of I Tsing Trans by Samuel Beal London 1911 Reprint Munshiram Manoharlal New Delhi 1973 Bellew H W Kashmir and Kashgar London 1875 Reprint Sang e Meel Publications 1999 ISBN 969 35 0738 X Caroe Sir Olaf The Pathans Oxford University Press Karachi 1958 Eggermont Pierre Herman Leonard 1975 Alexander s Campaigns in Sind and Baluchistan and the Siege of the Brahmin Town of Harmatelia Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 6186 037 2 Herodotus 1920 Histories in Greek and English With an English translation by A D Godley Cambridge Harvard University Press Hill John E 2003 Annotated Translation of the Chapter on the Western Regions according to the Hou Hanshu 2nd Edition Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes 1st to 2nd Centuries CE 2015 John E Hill Volume I ISBN 978 1500696702 Volume II ISBN 978 1503384620 CreateSpace North Charleston S C Hussain J An Illustrated History of Pakistan Oxford University Press Karachi 1983 Imperial Gazetteer2 of India Volume 19 Imperial Gazetteer of India Digital South Asia Library Retrieved 22 April 2015 Legge James Trans and ed 1886 A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms being an account by the Chinese monk Fa hsien of his travels in India and Ceylon A D 399 414 in search of the Buddhist Books of Discipline Reprint Dover Publications New York 1965 Neelis Jason 2010 Early Buddhist Transmission and Trade Networks Mobility and Exchange Within and Beyond the Northwestern Borderlands of South Asia BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 18159 5 Raychaudhuri Hemchandra 1953 Political History of Ancient India From the Accession of Parikshit to the Extinction of Gupta Dynasty University of Calcutta Rehman Abdur January 1976 The Last Two Dynasties of the Sahis An analysis of their history archaeology coinage and palaeography Thesis Australian National University Shaw Isobel Pakistan Handbook The Guidebook Co Hong Kong 1989 Watters Thomas 1904 5 On Yuan Chwang s Travels in India A D 629 645 Reprint Mushiram Manoharlal Publishers New Delhi 1973 Wynbrandt James 2009 A Brief History of Pakistan New York Infobase Publishing Further reading editLerner Martin 1984 The flame and the lotus Indian and Southeast Asian art from the Kronos collections New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0 87099 374 7 Rehman Abdur 2009 A Note on the Etymology of Gandhara Bulletin of the Asia Institute 23 143 146 JSTOR 24049432 Filigenzi Anna 2000 Reviewed Work A Catalogue of the Gandhara Sculpture in the British Museum Vol I Text Vol II Plates by Wladimir Zwalf Wladimir Zwalf Review by Anna Filigenzi Istituto Italiano per l Africa e l Oriente 50 1 4 584 586 JSTOR 29757475 Rienjang Wannaporn and Peter Stewart eds The Rediscovery and Reception of Gandharan Art Archaeopress 2022 ISBN 978 1 80327 233 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gandhara Gandharan Connections Project Cambridge 2016 2021 Livius org Gandara Archived 19 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Buddhist Manuscript project University of Washington s Gandharan manuscript Coins of Gandhara janapada Gandhara Civilization National Fund for Cultural Heritage Pakistan 33 45 22 N 72 49 45 E 33 7560 N 72 8291 E 33 7560 72 8291 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gandhara amp oldid 1187789756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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