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Muslim conquest of Transoxiana

The Muslim conquest of Transoxiana or Arab conquest of Transoxiana were the 7th and 8th century conquests, by Umayyad and Abbasid Arabs, of Transoxiana, the land between the Oxus (Amu Darya) and Jaxartes (Syr Darya) rivers, a part of Central Asia that today includes all or parts of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.

Muslim conquest of Transoxiana
Part of the Muslim conquests

Arabs besieging the city of Samarkand, captured in 722 CE. Palace of Devastich (706-722 CE), Penjikent mural.
Date673–751
Location
Result

Umayyad Caliphate and Abbasid Caliphate Victory

Belligerents

Umayyad Caliphate (until 748)
Abbasid Caliphate (from 748)

Battle of Talas:
Tibetan Empire
Principalities of Tokharistan
Sogdian principalities
Khwarazm
Fergana
Türgesh Kaghanate
Second Turkic Khaganate
Tang dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Sa'id ibn Uthman
Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad
Yazid ibn Ziyad
Qutayba ibn Muslim
Al-Hakam ibn Amr al-Ghifari
Al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra
Muslim ibn Sa'id  
Al-Kharashi
Junayd ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Murri
Sawra ibn al-Hurr al-Abani
Sa'id ibn Amr al-Harashi
Asad ibn Abd Allah al-Qasri
Nasr ibn Sayyar
Al-Yashkuri
Al-Saffah
Abu Muslim
Ziyad ibn Salih
Ghurak
Suluk Khagan
Kül-chor
al-Harith ibn Surayj
Qapaghan Qaghan
Bilge Qaghan
Kul Tigin
Divashtich  
Karzanj  
Gao Xianzhi
Map of Transoxiana and Khurasan in the 8th century

Background

The Arabs had reached Central Asia in the decade after their decisive victory in the Battle of Nihavend in 642, when they completed their conquest of the former Sasanian Empire by seizing Sistan and Khurasan. Marv, the capital of Khurasan, fell in 651 to Abdallah ibn Amir, and with it the borders of the nascent Caliphate reached the river Oxus (modern Amu Darya).[1][2] The lands beyond the Oxus—Transoxiana or Transoxania, known simply as "the land beyond the river" (mā wara al-nahr) to the Arabs[3]—were different to what the Arabs had encountered before: not only did they encompass a varied topography, ranging from the remote mountains of the Hindu Kush to fertile river valleys and deserts with oasis cities; they were also settled by a variety of peoples, both sedentary and nomadic, and instead of the imperial administration of the Persians, the region was divided into many small independent principalities.[4]

Geographically, politically, and socially, Transoxiana was divided into four regions: Tokharistan on the upper Oxus, surrounded by the Hissar Mountains to the north and the Hindu Kush to the east and south; Sogdia or Sogdiana, to the east of the middle Oxus and around the Zarafshan river; Khwarezm or Chorasmia, on the lower Oxus and its confluence into the Aral Sea; and the lands north of the Hissar Mountains and along the Jaxartes river (modern Syr Darya), including Zhetysu and the Fergana Valley.[5] As today, the population belonged to two broad linguistic groups: the speakers of Iranian languages, who in the 7th century tended to be urbanized, and the Turkic peoples, who at the time were still mostly nomadic.[3] Indeed, the history of Transoxiana had been dominated by the invasions of nomadic peoples from Central Asia. In the 2nd century BC the Yuezhi destroyed the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom and supplanted it with the Kushan Empire, under which Buddhism entered the area. The Kushans were succeeded by the Hephthalites in the early 5th century, whose dominance lasted until the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate in the mid-6th century. After the great Khaganate became divided in two, the Western Turkic Khaganate retained its position of overlordship over the various principalities of Transoxiana, on occasion even launching raids as far as Balkh.[6]

When the Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang visited Tokharistan in 630, he found no less than 27 different principalities, under the overall authority of a Turkish prince (Shad) at Qunduz, who was the eldest son of the Western Turkic Jabghu. Following the collapse of the Western Turkic Khaganate in the 650s, this viceroy became an independent ruler, claiming the title of Jabghu for himself. The Jabghus maintained some sort of suzerainty over the other principalities of Tokharistan, but this authority was largely nominal, and the local princes—many of whom were Turkish chieftains and local governors who had likewise seized authority in the wake of the Khaganate's collapse—were effectively independent.[7] North of the Oxus, in Upper Tokharistan, the most important principalities from east to west were Badakhshan, Khuttal, Kubadhiyan, and Saghaniyan. South of the Oxus, in Lower Tokharistan, was Balkh, the ancient capital of the entire region, which remained the most important settlement of Tokharistan and its main religious centre, with the famous Buddhist stupa of Nawbahar attracting pilgrims from far and wide. Important principalities were those of Juzjan, Badghis, Herat, and Bamiyan. Behind these, over the Hindu Kish, lay Kabul.[8][9]

North and west of the Hissar range, along the river Zarafshan, lay the region of Sogdia. This was an ancient Iranian land, with its own culture, language, and script, which are well documented through archaeological discoveries and literary references. Sogdia was likewise split into several small principalities, but the two major centres of Bukhara and Samarkand dominated the rest. The Sogdians were particularly active as merchants in the so-called "Silk Road".[10][11] Chinese records seem to suggest that most of the local princes belonged to branches of the same ruling house, and that the head of this house, the ruler of Samarkand, was allied by marriage to the Turkic khagans. Most of these rulers used Persian titles (khudah, shah) but some also had Turkish titles, and the ruler of Samarkand, as the pre-eminent among them, used the Sogdian title of ikhshid (as did the kings of Fargana).[12] Rulership was hereditary, but an important role was played also by the landed gentry (Dihqans) and wealthy merchants, who possessed, according to H. A. R. Gibb, "not only a large measure of independence but also on occasion the power to depose the ruling prince and elect his successor".[13]

 
Ayaz Kala, a fortress of Khwarezm (6th to 8th century CE).

To the north and east of Sogdia stretched the so-called "Hungry Steppe", an expanse of ca. 160 km, which gave way to the fertile regions around the river Jaxartes. The Jaxartes was smaller than the Oxus and easily fordable. The region encompassed the principality of Shash (modern Tashkent) in the northwest, and the Fergana Valley to the east, bordering the Tien Shan Mountains, behind which lay Kashgar, the westernmost outpost of the Chinese Empire.[14] To the west of Sogdia, likewise isolated amidst the desert, lay Khwarezm. It was inhabited by a sedentary, urbanized Iranian people. The history of the area between the late 3rd century and the onset of the Muslim conquest is often unclear due to the lack of adequate literary and archaeological sources. Modern scholars dispute whether the area came under Kushan rule, notably due to the absence of any traces of Buddhism in the area and the continued prevalence of Zoroastrianism; al-Tabari reports that the area was conquered by the Sasanians under Ardashir I (r. 224–242), and although later Sasanian province lists don't include Khwarezm, the area probably remained in some kind of dependence from Sasanian Persia. From the early 4th century, Khwarezm was ruled by the native Afrighid dynasty, which is known through coins and the narrative of the 11th-century Khwarezmian scholar al-Biruni. It is equally unclear whether Khwarezm came under Turkic dominion in the 6th–7th centuries.[15][16]

Transoxiana, as Hugh N. Kennedy remarks, "was a rich land, full of opportunities and wealth but defended by warlike men who valued their independence very highly", and indeed its subjugation would prove to be the longest and hardest-fought of the early Muslim conquests, not being completed until the Battle of Talas secured Muslim dominance over the region in 751.[2]

First Muslim incursions

 
Male bust from Tokharistan, 7th/8th century CE

Although the Arab sources give the impression that the Arabs began their conquest of the region in the 650s, in reality most of the early warfare in the area were little more than raids aiming at seizing booty and extracting tribute. Indeed, Arab presence was limited to a small garrison at Marw, and armies were sent by the governors of Iraq every year to raid and plunder the native principalities.[17] The first expedition, under Ahnaf ibn Qays, in 652, was repulsed by the united forces of Lower Tokharistan, and returned to Marw al-Rudh. A second expedition under al-Aqra ibn Habis however was able to defeat the prince of Juzjan, and occupy Juzjan, Faryab, Talaqan, and Balkh. Detachments of Arabs plundered far and wide, some reaching as far as Khwarazm. In 654, the town of Mayamurgh in Sogdia was raided.[18] Shortly after, however, the local population, led by Qarin (possibly a member of the House of Karen) rose in revolt. The Arabs evacuated all of Khurasan, and according to Chinese sources, the princes of Tokharistan restored Yazdegerd III's son Peroz as titular king of Persia for a time. Preoccupied with the First Fitna (656–661), the Arabs were unable to react, although raiding expeditions continue to be recorded in 655–658.[19]

After the end of the civil war, Abdallah ibn Amir was again entrusted with restoring Muslim control over Khurasan. The exact events of the next few years are unclear as the historical traditions confuse them with Ibn Amir's original conquest of the area, but what information there is, mostly from tribal accounts, suggests occasional fierce resistance and rebellions, leading to acts like the destruction of the Nawbahar stupa by Ibn Amir's deputy Qays ibn al-Hatham.[20] It was not until the appointment of Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan to the government of Iraq and the eastern Caliphate that the Arabs undertook a systematic pacification campaign in Khurasan. From 667 until his death in 670, Ziyad's deputy in Khurasan, al-Hakam ibn Amr al-Ghifari, led a series of campaigns in Tokharistan, which saw Arab armies crossing the Oxus into Saghaniyan in the process. Peroz was evicted and once again fled to China. Al-Hakam's death was followed by another large-scale uprising, but his successor, Rabi ibn Ziyad al-Harithi, took Balkh and defeated the rebels at Quhistan, before crossing the Oxus to invade Saghaniyan. Other Arab forces secured the crossing-points of Zamm and Amul further west, while the Arab sources mention a conquest of Khwarazm at the same time.[21] More importantly for the future of Muslim presence in the region, in 671 Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan settled 50,000 warriors, mostly drawn from Basra and to a lesser degree from Kufa, with their families in Marw. This move not only bolstered the Muslim element in Khurasan, but also provided the forces necessary for future expansion into Transoxiana.[22][23]

When Ziyad died, his policies were continued by his son, Ubayd Allah, who was appointed governor of Khurasan and arrived at Marw in autumn 673. In the next spring, Ubayd Allah crossed the Oxus and invaded the principality of Bukhara, which at the time was led by the queen-mother, known simply as Khatun (a Turkic title meaning "lady"), as regent for her infant son. The Arabs achieved a first success near the town of Baykand, before marching on to Bukhara itself. The local historical tradition records that the Arabs besieged Bukhara, and that the Turks were called for help, although this is missing in the Arab sources, which simply state that the Arabs won a great victory over the Bukharans. Following a practice that was apparently common at the time, Ubayd Allah recruited 2,000 captives, all "skillful archers", as his personal guard. The fate of Bukhara is left unclear, but according to Gibb this arrangement suggests that it acknowledged some form of Arab suzerainty and became a tributary state.[24]

Ubayd Allah's success was not followed up by his successors, Aslam ibn Zur'a and Abd al-Rahman ibn Ziyad, apart from launching summer raids across the Oxus. Only during the brief governorship of Sa'id ibn Uthman in 676 did the Arabs launch a major expedition into Sogdia. According to al-Baladhuri and Narshakhi, Sa'id defeated a local coalition comprising the cities of Kish, Nasaf, Bukhara, and the Turks, compelled the Khatun to re-affirm Bukhara's allegiance to the Caliphate, and then marched onto Samarkand, which he besieged an captured. He then took 50 young nobles as hostages, who were later executed at Medina, and on his return journey captured Tirmidh on the Oxus and received the surrender of the prince of Khuttal.[25]

The first Arab attacks across the Oxus ranged as far as Shash and Khwarazm, and were interrupted by the intertribal warfare that broke out in Khurasan during the Second Fitna (683–692). Subsequent governors, most notably Sa'id ibn Uthman and al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra, made attempts to conquer territory across the river, but they failed.[26] The native princes, for their part, tried to exploit the Arabs' rivalries, and with the aid of the Arab renegade Musa ibn Abdallah ibn Khazim, who in 689 seized the fortress of Tirmidh for his own domain, they managed to eject the Arabs from their holdings.[27] Nevertheless, the Transoxianian princes remained riven by their own feuds, and failed to unite in the face of the Arab conquest, a fact which would be suitably exploited by Qutayba after 705.[28]

Umayyad–Türgesh Wars

 
Letter of an Arab Emir to Devashtich, found in Mount Mugh
 
Wealthy Arab, Palace of Devashtich, Penjikent murals

The larger part of Transoxiana was finally conquered by the Umayyad leader Qutayba ibn Muslim in the reign of al-Walid I (r. 705–715).[29][30][31] The loyalties of Transoxiana's native Iranian and Turkic populations and those of their autonomous local sovereigns remained questionable, as demonstrated in 719, when the Transoxianian sovereigns sent a petition to the Chinese and their Turgesh overlords for military aid against the Caliphate's governors.[32]

Qutayba's campaigns have been mixed up with a diplomatic mission. They sent to China in chronicles written by Arabs. Documents in Chinese give 713 as the year the Arab diplomatic delegation was sent. China was asked for help by Shah's Prince against Qutayba.[33]

The Turgesh responded by launching a series of attacks against the Muslims in Transoxiana, beginning in 720. These incursions were coupled with uprisings against the Caliphate among the local Sogdians. The Umayyad governor of Khurasan, Sa'id ibn Amr al-Harashi, harshly suppressed the unrest and restored the Muslim position almost to what it had been during the time of Qutayba, except for the Ferghana Valley, control over which was lost.[34][35]

The Chinese and Turks were reported to have come to aid the Sogdians in their war against the Arabs which raised the hopes of Divashtich.[clarification needed] After the Arabs seized Penjikent, the rebel leader Divashtich retreated to his fortress on Mount Mugh. Archives in the Sogdian language found at Divashtich's fortress reveal his precarious position and the events leading up to his capture. After Divashtich's capture, the governor of Khurasan, Said al-Harashi, ordered his crucifixion on a na'us (burial mound).[36]

 
A calcinated wooden gate from the fortress of Kafir-kala, near Samarkand, which was probably destroyed by Islamic forces in 712 CE. It features adorations scenes of the Goddess Nana.[37][38]

Samarkand, Bukhara and Paikent fell to Qutayba ibn Muslim.[39] In response, the Arabs were almost beaten back by the Turgesh, who were partners with the Sogdians.[40] Sulaiman most likely executed Qutayba, who, after seizing Samarkand and Bukhara, had crushed Sassanian remnants and had Khorezmian scholars slaughtered.[when?] Ferghana, Khojand and Chach had fallen to Qutayba.[citation needed]

In 721, Turgesh forces, led by Kül Chor, defeated the Caliphate army commanded by Sa'id ibn Abdu'l-Aziz near Samarkand. Sa'id's successor, Al-Kharashi, massacred Turks and Sogdian refugees in Khujand, causing an influx of refugees towards the Turgesh. In 724, Caliph Hisham sent a new governor to Khurasan, Muslim ibn Sa'id, with orders to crush the "Turks" once and for all, but, confronted by Suluk, Muslim hardly managed to reach Samarkand with a handful of survivors after the so-called "Day of Thirst".

In 724, the Muslims were defeated by the Turks of the Turgesh as the Sogdians and Turks fought against the Umayyads.[clarification needed] The Sogdians were pacified by Nasr ibn Sayyar after Sulu, Khagan of the Turgesh, died.[41]

Islam did not widely spread until the Abbasid rule.[42]

Samarkand was taken by Qutayba after they achieved victory over the army of the Eastern Turks under Kul Tegin Qapaghan Qaghan came to assist against the Arabs after his vassal, the Tashkent King, received plea from the Samarkand Prince Ghurak against the Arab attack by Qutayba bin Muslim.[43]

Qutayba's Muslims obliterated and triumphed over the union of several Ferghana states as fierce fighting took place in Sogdian Samarkand and Khorezm against Qutayba ibn Muslim. An easier time was had in the conquest of Bukhara.[44] Under Ghurak, Sogdian Samarkand was forced to capitulate to the joint Arab-Khwarazmian and Bukharan forces of Qutayba. The obliteration of idols was ordered by Qutayba along with the construction of a Mosque, 30,000 slaves and 2,200,000 dirhams.[45] Dewashtich's uprising was an example of anti Islamification sentiment felt after the conquest of the region by the Arabs.[46]

A string of subsequent appointees of Hisham were defeated by Suluk, who in 728 took Bukhara and later on still inflicted tactical defeats such as the Battle of the Defile upon the Arabs. The Turgesh state was at its apex, controlling Sogdiana and the Ferghana Valley. By 732, two large Arab expeditions to Samarkand managed, if with heavy losses, to reestablish Caliphal authority in the area; Suluk renounced his ambitions over Samarkand and abandoned Bukhara, withdrawing north.

 
Turkish officers during an audience with king Varkhuman of Samarkand. 648-651 CE, Afrasiyab murals, Samarkand.[47][48] They are recognizable by their long plaits.[49]

In 734, an early Abbasid follower, al-Harith ibn Surayj, rose in revolt against Umayyad rule and took Balkh and Marv before defecting to the Turgesh three years later, defeated. In winter 737, Suluk along with his allies al-Harith, Gurak (a Turco-Sogdian leader) and men from Usrushana, Tashkent and Khuttal launched a final offensive. He entered Jowzjan but was defeated by the Umayyad governor Asad at the Battle of Kharistan. Next year, Suluk was murdered by his general with Chinese support. Then in 739, the general himself was killed by the Chinese and the Chinese power returned to Transoxiana.

Much of the culture and heritage of the Sogdians was lost due to the war.[50] Geographic names used by Muslims contained reminders of the Sogdians.[51] The role of lingua franca that Sogdian originally played was succeeded by Persian after the arrival of Islam.[52]

Umayyad-Tang China wars

Arab sources claim Qutayba ibn Muslim briefly took Kashgar from China and withdrew after an agreement[53] but modern historians entirely dismiss this claim.[54][55][56]

The Arab Umayyad Caliphate in 715 AD deposed Ikhshid, the king the Fergana Valley, and installed a new king Alutar on the throne. The deposed king fled to Kucha (seat of Anxi Protectorate), and sought Chinese intervention. The Chinese sent 10,000 troops under Zhang Xiaosong to Ferghana. He defeated Alutar and the Arab occupation force at Namangan and reinstalled Ikhshid on the throne.[57]

General Tang Jiahui led the Chinese to defeat the following Arab-Tibetan attack in the Battle of Aksu (717).[58] The attack on Aksu was joined by Turgesh Khan Suluk.[59][60] Both Uch Turfan and Aksu were attacked by the Turgesh, Arab, and Tibetan force on 15 August 717. Qarluqs serving under Chinese command, under Arsila Xian, a Western Turkic Qaghan serving under the Chinese Assistant Grand Protector General Tang Jiahui defeated the attack. Al-Yashkuri (the Arab commander) and his army fled to Tashkent after they were defeated.[61][62]

Last battles

 
Decorated niche from the Abbasid mosque of Afrasiab, Samarkand in Sogdia, 750-825 CE.[63]

Samarra, Baghdad, Nishapur and Merv were destinations for Sogdians who worked for the Abbasids and became Muslims.[39] The coming to power of the Abbasids resulted in the local Sogdian rulers being relocated from the area to become the Caliph's officers.[64]

The last major victory of Arabs in Central Asia occurred at the Battle of Talas (751). The Tibetan Empire was allied to the Arabs during the battle against the Chinese Tang dynasty.[65][66] Because the Arabs did not proceed to Xinjiang at all, the battle was of no importance strategically, and it was An Lushan's rebellion which ended up by forcing the Tang out of Central Asia.[67][68] Despite the conversion of some Karluk Turks after the Battle of Talas, the majority of Karluks did not convert to Islam until the mid-10th century, when they established the Kara-Khanid Khanate.[66][69][70][71][72]

Turks had to wait two and a half centuries before reconquering Transoxiana, when the Karakhanids reconquered the city of Bukhara in 999. Denis Sinor said that it was interference in the internal affairs of the Western Turkic Khaganate which ended Chinese supremacy in Central Asia, since the destruction of the Western Khaganate rid the Muslims of their greatest opponent, and it was not the Battle of Talas which ended the Chinese presence.[73]

Islamization

 
Two folio sheets from a Qur'an, found in the sanctuary of Katta Langar, south of Samarkand, first half of the 8th century.

The process of islamization of local peoples was slow during the Umayyad Caliphate period, but it became more intensive during the following Abbasid period. The Umayyads treated the local non-Muslims as second class citizens and did not encourage conversions,[74] therefore only few Soghdian commoners converted to Islam during their rule.[75] However, during the Abbasid period non-Arabs gained an equal status with conversion and as a result, Islam began spreading across Central Asia.

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Further reading

muslim, conquest, transoxiana, arab, conquest, transoxiana, were, century, conquests, umayyad, abbasid, arabs, transoxiana, land, between, oxus, darya, jaxartes, darya, rivers, part, central, asia, that, today, includes, parts, uzbekistan, tajikistan, kazakhst. The Muslim conquest of Transoxiana or Arab conquest of Transoxiana were the 7th and 8th century conquests by Umayyad and Abbasid Arabs of Transoxiana the land between the Oxus Amu Darya and Jaxartes Syr Darya rivers a part of Central Asia that today includes all or parts of Uzbekistan Tajikistan Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan Muslim conquest of TransoxianaPart of the Muslim conquestsArabs besieging the city of Samarkand captured in 722 CE Palace of Devastich 706 722 CE Penjikent mural Date673 751LocationTransoxiana Central AsiaResultUmayyad Caliphate and Abbasid Caliphate Victory Islamization of Transoxiana End of Chinese dominance and influence in TransoxianaBelligerentsUmayyad Caliphate until 748 Abbasid Caliphate from 748 Battle of Talas Tibetan EmpirePrincipalities of TokharistanSogdian principalitiesKhwarazmFerganaTurgesh KaghanateSecond Turkic KhaganateTang dynastyCommanders and leadersSa id ibn Uthman Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad Yazid ibn Ziyad Qutayba ibn Muslim Al Hakam ibn Amr al Ghifari Al Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra Muslim ibn Sa id Al Kharashi Junayd ibn Abd al Rahman al Murri Sawra ibn al Hurr al Abani Sa id ibn Amr al Harashi Asad ibn Abd Allah al Qasri Nasr ibn Sayyar Al Yashkuri Al Saffah Abu MuslimZiyad ibn SalihGhurakSuluk KhaganKul choral Harith ibn Surayj Qapaghan QaghanBilge QaghanKul TiginDivashtich Karzanj Gao XianzhiMap of Transoxiana and Khurasan in the 8th century Contents 1 Background 2 First Muslim incursions 3 Umayyad Turgesh Wars 4 Umayyad Tang China wars 5 Last battles 6 Islamization 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further readingBackground EditThe Arabs had reached Central Asia in the decade after their decisive victory in the Battle of Nihavend in 642 when they completed their conquest of the former Sasanian Empire by seizing Sistan and Khurasan Marv the capital of Khurasan fell in 651 to Abdallah ibn Amir and with it the borders of the nascent Caliphate reached the river Oxus modern Amu Darya 1 2 The lands beyond the Oxus Transoxiana or Transoxania known simply as the land beyond the river ma wara al nahr to the Arabs 3 were different to what the Arabs had encountered before not only did they encompass a varied topography ranging from the remote mountains of the Hindu Kush to fertile river valleys and deserts with oasis cities they were also settled by a variety of peoples both sedentary and nomadic and instead of the imperial administration of the Persians the region was divided into many small independent principalities 4 Geographically politically and socially Transoxiana was divided into four regions Tokharistan on the upper Oxus surrounded by the Hissar Mountains to the north and the Hindu Kush to the east and south Sogdia or Sogdiana to the east of the middle Oxus and around the Zarafshan river Khwarezm or Chorasmia on the lower Oxus and its confluence into the Aral Sea and the lands north of the Hissar Mountains and along the Jaxartes river modern Syr Darya including Zhetysu and the Fergana Valley 5 As today the population belonged to two broad linguistic groups the speakers of Iranian languages who in the 7th century tended to be urbanized and the Turkic peoples who at the time were still mostly nomadic 3 Indeed the history of Transoxiana had been dominated by the invasions of nomadic peoples from Central Asia In the 2nd century BC the Yuezhi destroyed the Greco Bactrian Kingdom and supplanted it with the Kushan Empire under which Buddhism entered the area The Kushans were succeeded by the Hephthalites in the early 5th century whose dominance lasted until the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate in the mid 6th century After the great Khaganate became divided in two the Western Turkic Khaganate retained its position of overlordship over the various principalities of Transoxiana on occasion even launching raids as far as Balkh 6 When the Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang visited Tokharistan in 630 he found no less than 27 different principalities under the overall authority of a Turkish prince Shad at Qunduz who was the eldest son of the Western Turkic Jabghu Following the collapse of the Western Turkic Khaganate in the 650s this viceroy became an independent ruler claiming the title of Jabghu for himself The Jabghus maintained some sort of suzerainty over the other principalities of Tokharistan but this authority was largely nominal and the local princes many of whom were Turkish chieftains and local governors who had likewise seized authority in the wake of the Khaganate s collapse were effectively independent 7 North of the Oxus in Upper Tokharistan the most important principalities from east to west were Badakhshan Khuttal Kubadhiyan and Saghaniyan South of the Oxus in Lower Tokharistan was Balkh the ancient capital of the entire region which remained the most important settlement of Tokharistan and its main religious centre with the famous Buddhist stupa of Nawbahar attracting pilgrims from far and wide Important principalities were those of Juzjan Badghis Herat and Bamiyan Behind these over the Hindu Kish lay Kabul 8 9 North and west of the Hissar range along the river Zarafshan lay the region of Sogdia This was an ancient Iranian land with its own culture language and script which are well documented through archaeological discoveries and literary references Sogdia was likewise split into several small principalities but the two major centres of Bukhara and Samarkand dominated the rest The Sogdians were particularly active as merchants in the so called Silk Road 10 11 Chinese records seem to suggest that most of the local princes belonged to branches of the same ruling house and that the head of this house the ruler of Samarkand was allied by marriage to the Turkic khagans Most of these rulers used Persian titles khudah shah but some also had Turkish titles and the ruler of Samarkand as the pre eminent among them used the Sogdian title of ikhshid as did the kings of Fargana 12 Rulership was hereditary but an important role was played also by the landed gentry Dihqans and wealthy merchants who possessed according to H A R Gibb not only a large measure of independence but also on occasion the power to depose the ruling prince and elect his successor 13 Ayaz Kala a fortress of Khwarezm 6th to 8th century CE To the north and east of Sogdia stretched the so called Hungry Steppe an expanse of ca 160 km which gave way to the fertile regions around the river Jaxartes The Jaxartes was smaller than the Oxus and easily fordable The region encompassed the principality of Shash modern Tashkent in the northwest and the Fergana Valley to the east bordering the Tien Shan Mountains behind which lay Kashgar the westernmost outpost of the Chinese Empire 14 To the west of Sogdia likewise isolated amidst the desert lay Khwarezm It was inhabited by a sedentary urbanized Iranian people The history of the area between the late 3rd century and the onset of the Muslim conquest is often unclear due to the lack of adequate literary and archaeological sources Modern scholars dispute whether the area came under Kushan rule notably due to the absence of any traces of Buddhism in the area and the continued prevalence of Zoroastrianism al Tabari reports that the area was conquered by the Sasanians under Ardashir I r 224 242 and although later Sasanian province lists don t include Khwarezm the area probably remained in some kind of dependence from Sasanian Persia From the early 4th century Khwarezm was ruled by the native Afrighid dynasty which is known through coins and the narrative of the 11th century Khwarezmian scholar al Biruni It is equally unclear whether Khwarezm came under Turkic dominion in the 6th 7th centuries 15 16 Transoxiana as Hugh N Kennedy remarks was a rich land full of opportunities and wealth but defended by warlike men who valued their independence very highly and indeed its subjugation would prove to be the longest and hardest fought of the early Muslim conquests not being completed until the Battle of Talas secured Muslim dominance over the region in 751 2 First Muslim incursions Edit Male bust from Tokharistan 7th 8th century CE Although the Arab sources give the impression that the Arabs began their conquest of the region in the 650s in reality most of the early warfare in the area were little more than raids aiming at seizing booty and extracting tribute Indeed Arab presence was limited to a small garrison at Marw and armies were sent by the governors of Iraq every year to raid and plunder the native principalities 17 The first expedition under Ahnaf ibn Qays in 652 was repulsed by the united forces of Lower Tokharistan and returned to Marw al Rudh A second expedition under al Aqra ibn Habis however was able to defeat the prince of Juzjan and occupy Juzjan Faryab Talaqan and Balkh Detachments of Arabs plundered far and wide some reaching as far as Khwarazm In 654 the town of Mayamurgh in Sogdia was raided 18 Shortly after however the local population led by Qarin possibly a member of the House of Karen rose in revolt The Arabs evacuated all of Khurasan and according to Chinese sources the princes of Tokharistan restored Yazdegerd III s son Peroz as titular king of Persia for a time Preoccupied with the First Fitna 656 661 the Arabs were unable to react although raiding expeditions continue to be recorded in 655 658 19 After the end of the civil war Abdallah ibn Amir was again entrusted with restoring Muslim control over Khurasan The exact events of the next few years are unclear as the historical traditions confuse them with Ibn Amir s original conquest of the area but what information there is mostly from tribal accounts suggests occasional fierce resistance and rebellions leading to acts like the destruction of the Nawbahar stupa by Ibn Amir s deputy Qays ibn al Hatham 20 It was not until the appointment of Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan to the government of Iraq and the eastern Caliphate that the Arabs undertook a systematic pacification campaign in Khurasan From 667 until his death in 670 Ziyad s deputy in Khurasan al Hakam ibn Amr al Ghifari led a series of campaigns in Tokharistan which saw Arab armies crossing the Oxus into Saghaniyan in the process Peroz was evicted and once again fled to China Al Hakam s death was followed by another large scale uprising but his successor Rabi ibn Ziyad al Harithi took Balkh and defeated the rebels at Quhistan before crossing the Oxus to invade Saghaniyan Other Arab forces secured the crossing points of Zamm and Amul further west while the Arab sources mention a conquest of Khwarazm at the same time 21 More importantly for the future of Muslim presence in the region in 671 Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan settled 50 000 warriors mostly drawn from Basra and to a lesser degree from Kufa with their families in Marw This move not only bolstered the Muslim element in Khurasan but also provided the forces necessary for future expansion into Transoxiana 22 23 SIND720KyrgyzsSECOND TURKICKHAGANATEUMAYYADCALIPHATECHAM PATURGESHKARLUKSYABGHUSIKHSHIDSTURKSHAHISVARMANSTANGEMPIREBYZANTINEEMPIREKHAZARKHANATEDVARA VATIAVARSAnxi ProtectorateTIBETANEMPIRECHENLASRIVIJAYA class notpageimage Main polities in Asia in c 720 When Ziyad died his policies were continued by his son Ubayd Allah who was appointed governor of Khurasan and arrived at Marw in autumn 673 In the next spring Ubayd Allah crossed the Oxus and invaded the principality of Bukhara which at the time was led by the queen mother known simply as Khatun a Turkic title meaning lady as regent for her infant son The Arabs achieved a first success near the town of Baykand before marching on to Bukhara itself The local historical tradition records that the Arabs besieged Bukhara and that the Turks were called for help although this is missing in the Arab sources which simply state that the Arabs won a great victory over the Bukharans Following a practice that was apparently common at the time Ubayd Allah recruited 2 000 captives all skillful archers as his personal guard The fate of Bukhara is left unclear but according to Gibb this arrangement suggests that it acknowledged some form of Arab suzerainty and became a tributary state 24 Ubayd Allah s success was not followed up by his successors Aslam ibn Zur a and Abd al Rahman ibn Ziyad apart from launching summer raids across the Oxus Only during the brief governorship of Sa id ibn Uthman in 676 did the Arabs launch a major expedition into Sogdia According to al Baladhuri and Narshakhi Sa id defeated a local coalition comprising the cities of Kish Nasaf Bukhara and the Turks compelled the Khatun to re affirm Bukhara s allegiance to the Caliphate and then marched onto Samarkand which he besieged an captured He then took 50 young nobles as hostages who were later executed at Medina and on his return journey captured Tirmidh on the Oxus and received the surrender of the prince of Khuttal 25 The first Arab attacks across the Oxus ranged as far as Shash and Khwarazm and were interrupted by the intertribal warfare that broke out in Khurasan during the Second Fitna 683 692 Subsequent governors most notably Sa id ibn Uthman and al Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra made attempts to conquer territory across the river but they failed 26 The native princes for their part tried to exploit the Arabs rivalries and with the aid of the Arab renegade Musa ibn Abdallah ibn Khazim who in 689 seized the fortress of Tirmidh for his own domain they managed to eject the Arabs from their holdings 27 Nevertheless the Transoxianian princes remained riven by their own feuds and failed to unite in the face of the Arab conquest a fact which would be suitably exploited by Qutayba after 705 28 Umayyad Turgesh Wars Edit Letter of an Arab Emir to Devashtich found in Mount Mugh Wealthy Arab Palace of Devashtich Penjikent murals The larger part of Transoxiana was finally conquered by the Umayyad leader Qutayba ibn Muslim in the reign of al Walid I r 705 715 29 30 31 The loyalties of Transoxiana s native Iranian and Turkic populations and those of their autonomous local sovereigns remained questionable as demonstrated in 719 when the Transoxianian sovereigns sent a petition to the Chinese and their Turgesh overlords for military aid against the Caliphate s governors 32 Qutayba s campaigns have been mixed up with a diplomatic mission They sent to China in chronicles written by Arabs Documents in Chinese give 713 as the year the Arab diplomatic delegation was sent China was asked for help by Shah s Prince against Qutayba 33 The Turgesh responded by launching a series of attacks against the Muslims in Transoxiana beginning in 720 These incursions were coupled with uprisings against the Caliphate among the local Sogdians The Umayyad governor of Khurasan Sa id ibn Amr al Harashi harshly suppressed the unrest and restored the Muslim position almost to what it had been during the time of Qutayba except for the Ferghana Valley control over which was lost 34 35 The Chinese and Turks were reported to have come to aid the Sogdians in their war against the Arabs which raised the hopes of Divashtich clarification needed After the Arabs seized Penjikent the rebel leader Divashtich retreated to his fortress on Mount Mugh Archives in the Sogdian language found at Divashtich s fortress reveal his precarious position and the events leading up to his capture After Divashtich s capture the governor of Khurasan Said al Harashi ordered his crucifixion on a na us burial mound 36 A calcinated wooden gate from the fortress of Kafir kala near Samarkand which was probably destroyed by Islamic forces in 712 CE It features adorations scenes of the Goddess Nana 37 38 Samarkand Bukhara and Paikent fell to Qutayba ibn Muslim 39 In response the Arabs were almost beaten back by the Turgesh who were partners with the Sogdians 40 Sulaiman most likely executed Qutayba who after seizing Samarkand and Bukhara had crushed Sassanian remnants and had Khorezmian scholars slaughtered when Ferghana Khojand and Chach had fallen to Qutayba citation needed In 721 Turgesh forces led by Kul Chor defeated the Caliphate army commanded by Sa id ibn Abdu l Aziz near Samarkand Sa id s successor Al Kharashi massacred Turks and Sogdian refugees in Khujand causing an influx of refugees towards the Turgesh In 724 Caliph Hisham sent a new governor to Khurasan Muslim ibn Sa id with orders to crush the Turks once and for all but confronted by Suluk Muslim hardly managed to reach Samarkand with a handful of survivors after the so called Day of Thirst In 724 the Muslims were defeated by the Turks of the Turgesh as the Sogdians and Turks fought against the Umayyads clarification needed The Sogdians were pacified by Nasr ibn Sayyar after Sulu Khagan of the Turgesh died 41 Islam did not widely spread until the Abbasid rule 42 Samarkand was taken by Qutayba after they achieved victory over the army of the Eastern Turks under Kul Tegin Qapaghan Qaghan came to assist against the Arabs after his vassal the Tashkent King received plea from the Samarkand Prince Ghurak against the Arab attack by Qutayba bin Muslim 43 Qutayba s Muslims obliterated and triumphed over the union of several Ferghana states as fierce fighting took place in Sogdian Samarkand and Khorezm against Qutayba ibn Muslim An easier time was had in the conquest of Bukhara 44 Under Ghurak Sogdian Samarkand was forced to capitulate to the joint Arab Khwarazmian and Bukharan forces of Qutayba The obliteration of idols was ordered by Qutayba along with the construction of a Mosque 30 000 slaves and 2 200 000 dirhams 45 Dewashtich s uprising was an example of anti Islamification sentiment felt after the conquest of the region by the Arabs 46 A string of subsequent appointees of Hisham were defeated by Suluk who in 728 took Bukhara and later on still inflicted tactical defeats such as the Battle of the Defile upon the Arabs The Turgesh state was at its apex controlling Sogdiana and the Ferghana Valley By 732 two large Arab expeditions to Samarkand managed if with heavy losses to reestablish Caliphal authority in the area Suluk renounced his ambitions over Samarkand and abandoned Bukhara withdrawing north Turkish officers during an audience with king Varkhuman of Samarkand 648 651 CE Afrasiyab murals Samarkand 47 48 They are recognizable by their long plaits 49 In 734 an early Abbasid follower al Harith ibn Surayj rose in revolt against Umayyad rule and took Balkh and Marv before defecting to the Turgesh three years later defeated In winter 737 Suluk along with his allies al Harith Gurak a Turco Sogdian leader and men from Usrushana Tashkent and Khuttal launched a final offensive He entered Jowzjan but was defeated by the Umayyad governor Asad at the Battle of Kharistan Next year Suluk was murdered by his general with Chinese support Then in 739 the general himself was killed by the Chinese and the Chinese power returned to Transoxiana Much of the culture and heritage of the Sogdians was lost due to the war 50 Geographic names used by Muslims contained reminders of the Sogdians 51 The role of lingua franca that Sogdian originally played was succeeded by Persian after the arrival of Islam 52 Umayyad Tang China wars EditArab sources claim Qutayba ibn Muslim briefly took Kashgar from China and withdrew after an agreement 53 but modern historians entirely dismiss this claim 54 55 56 The Arab Umayyad Caliphate in 715 AD deposed Ikhshid the king the Fergana Valley and installed a new king Alutar on the throne The deposed king fled to Kucha seat of Anxi Protectorate and sought Chinese intervention The Chinese sent 10 000 troops under Zhang Xiaosong to Ferghana He defeated Alutar and the Arab occupation force at Namangan and reinstalled Ikhshid on the throne 57 General Tang Jiahui led the Chinese to defeat the following Arab Tibetan attack in the Battle of Aksu 717 58 The attack on Aksu was joined by Turgesh Khan Suluk 59 60 Both Uch Turfan and Aksu were attacked by the Turgesh Arab and Tibetan force on 15 August 717 Qarluqs serving under Chinese command under Arsila Xian a Western Turkic Qaghan serving under the Chinese Assistant Grand Protector General Tang Jiahui defeated the attack Al Yashkuri the Arab commander and his army fled to Tashkent after they were defeated 61 62 Last battles Edit Decorated niche from the Abbasid mosque of Afrasiab Samarkand in Sogdia 750 825 CE 63 Samarra Baghdad Nishapur and Merv were destinations for Sogdians who worked for the Abbasids and became Muslims 39 The coming to power of the Abbasids resulted in the local Sogdian rulers being relocated from the area to become the Caliph s officers 64 The last major victory of Arabs in Central Asia occurred at the Battle of Talas 751 The Tibetan Empire was allied to the Arabs during the battle against the Chinese Tang dynasty 65 66 Because the Arabs did not proceed to Xinjiang at all the battle was of no importance strategically and it was An Lushan s rebellion which ended up by forcing the Tang out of Central Asia 67 68 Despite the conversion of some Karluk Turks after the Battle of Talas the majority of Karluks did not convert to Islam until the mid 10th century when they established the Kara Khanid Khanate 66 69 70 71 72 Turks had to wait two and a half centuries before reconquering Transoxiana when the Karakhanids reconquered the city of Bukhara in 999 Denis Sinor said that it was interference in the internal affairs of the Western Turkic Khaganate which ended Chinese supremacy in Central Asia since the destruction of the Western Khaganate rid the Muslims of their greatest opponent and it was not the Battle of Talas which ended the Chinese presence 73 Islamization Edit Two folio sheets from a Qur an found in the sanctuary of Katta Langar south of Samarkand first half of the 8th century The process of islamization of local peoples was slow during the Umayyad Caliphate period but it became more intensive during the following Abbasid period The Umayyads treated the local non Muslims as second class citizens and did not encourage conversions 74 therefore only few Soghdian commoners converted to Islam during their rule 75 However during the Abbasid period non Arabs gained an equal status with conversion and as a result Islam began spreading across Central Asia References EditCitations Edit Litvinsky Jalilov amp Kolesnikov 1996 pp 453 456 a b Kennedy 2007 p 225 a b Kennedy 2007 p 228 Kennedy 2007 pp 225 228 Kennedy 2007 pp 228 232 Gibb 1923 pp 1 4 Gibb 1923 p 8 Gibb 1923 pp 8 9 Kennedy 2007 p 229 Kennedy 2007 pp 230 232 Gibb 1923 p 5 Gibb 1923 pp 5 6 Gibb 1923 p 6 Kennedy 2007 p 232 Kennedy 2007 pp 229 230 Nerazik amp Bulgakov 1996 pp 207 222 Kennedy 2007 pp 236 237 Gibb 1923 p 15 Gibb 1923 pp 15 16 Gibb 1923 p 16 Gibb 1923 pp 16 17 Gibb 1923 p 17 Kennedy 2007 p 237 Gibb 1923 pp 17 19 Gibb 1923 pp 19 21 Kennedy 2007 pp 236 243 Kennedy 2007 pp 243 254 Litvinsky Jalilov amp Kolesnikov 1996 pp 456 457 Blankinship 1994 pp 19 29 30 Gibb 1923 pp 29 58 Stark 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978 0231139243 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Nerazik E E Bulgakov P G 1996 Khwarizm In Litvinsky B A ed History of civilizations of Central Asia Volume III The crossroads of civilizations A D 250 to 750 Paris UNESCO Publishing pp 207 231 ISBN 92 3 103211 9 Pozzi Alessandra Janhunen Juha Antero Weiers Michael eds 2006 Tumen Jalafun Jecen Aku Manchu Studies in Honour of Giovanni Stary Vol 20 of Tunguso Sibirica Giovanni Stary Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 344705378X Retrieved 1 April 2013 Sinor Denis ed 1990 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Volume 1 illustrated reprint ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521243041 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Soucek Svat ed 2000 A History of Inner Asia illustrated reprint ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521657040 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Stark Soren 2018 The Arab Conquest of Bukhara Reconsidering Qutayba b Muslim s Campaigns 87 90 H 706 709 CE Der Islam 95 2 367 400 doi 10 1515 islam 2018 0027 S2CID 165333714 Starr S Frederick ed 2004 Xinjiang China s Muslim Borderland illustrated ed M E Sharpe ISBN 0765613182 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Wink Andre 1997 Al Hind The Making of the Indo Islamic World Volume II The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest 11th 13th Centuries Leiden New York Koln BRILL ISBN 90 04 10236 1 Zeimal E V 1983 The Political History of Transoxiana In Yarshater Ehsan ed The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 3 1 The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian Periods Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 232 262 ISBN 0 521 20092 X Further reading EditMain article Bibliography of the history of Central Asia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muslim conquest of Transoxiana amp oldid 1149277609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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