The Silk Road: A New History (62 page)

BOOK: The Silk Road: A New History
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Han Wudi, 65
Hebei Province, 157
Hebrew, 31–32, 181, 217, 218–19,
219
, 241,
color plate 12
Hedin, Sven
and itinerant traders, 11, 237–38
and Khotan, 12, 13, 212
and Kroraina Kingdom, 27
and Kucha, 58–60
Niya and Loulan excavations, 38, 43
and “Silk Road” term, 8
and Taklamakan Desert, 11–12, 242,
color plate 10
Hejiacun Village Hoard, 152–57,
153–54, 155
, 239
Henan Province, 235–36
Henning, W. B., 71
Hephthalites, 75, 120–21
Heraclius, 156
herding, 132.
See also
cattle
Hermitage Museum, 122
Hinayana Buddhism, 68, 69
Hinaza Deva Vijitasimha, 209
The History of the Han Dynasty.
34, 35
The History of the Later Han
, 34, 40
Hoernle, Frederick Rudolf, 209–10
Hongbian, 177,
178
horses, 16,
78
, 80–82, 222–24
house excavations,
37
, 38
Huang Chao, 165–66
Huili, 85, 87, 88–89, 113, 114
Hulu River, 85, 86
human remains, 38–42,
41
, 92–93, 201–2.
See also
burial practices
Huns, 117, 120–21
Huntington, Ellsworth, 212
Hunza River, 32
Husejnov, D., 130
Huvishka, 52
Ibn Hawkal, 122
Ibrahim (guide), 33–34
imperialism, 175
imported goods, 194, 233
incenses, 194
India
and An Jia, 143
Buddhist missionaries, 66
and de Goes’ travels, 231
and Dunhuang cave documents, 186–87
funding for expeditions, 212
gemstones of, 156
influence in Kroraina Kingdom, 25–26, 45
and migrant populations, 200, 236, 239
and pilgrimage routes,
162–63
and religious art, 122, 125–27,
126
and Roman coins, 20
and sea travel, 160–65,
162–63
and silk production, 19
and Stein’s expeditions, 174
and Turfan, 94
Indus River, 32
International Dunhuang Project, 176
inventory documents, 194
Iran
and Chang’an, 150
and Hejiacun Village Hoard, 154,
155
and imported goods, 194
languages of, 210
and Manichaeism,
color plate 11A
and Sasanian refugees, 149
and the Sogdians, 113
trade with Tang dynasty, 97
and Zoroastrianism, 118, 181
Iraq, 165
Isai, Abdullah (Bento de Goes), 231–32
Islam
and coin designs, 97
and Dunhuang caves, 175
and the Huang Chao rebellion, 165
Islamic law, 228, 232
and Khotan, 24, 199, 201, 218, 226–34, 241–42
and
mazar
shrines, 234,
color plate 16A
and Sasanian refugees, 149
and Sogdiana, 116, 129,
131
, 136–37
spread with migrant populations, 139
and Turfan, 95, 98, 111
and use of paper, 138
Ito Toshio, 43
jade
and de Goes, 231–32
and diplomatic envoys, 222–27, 241
and earliest Silk Road trade, 235–36
and Xuanzang’s travels, 207
Jade Gate, 85, 86
Jafar Sadik, Imam, 33
Japan, 167
jataka
stories, 62–63,
63
, 73–74
Jesuit missionaries,
150
, 231–32
Jewish merchants, 31–32, 217–18,
219
, 231
Jiangsu, 164
Jiang Xiaowan, 169, 173–76, 180
Jiaohe, 91
Jiayuguan, 232
Jingjing, 183
Jingjue Kingdom, 35, 36, 40–41
jitumgha
, 44
Jiumoluoshi, 70.
See also
Kumarajiva
Jiuquan, 119
Judaism, 165, 167, 241
Judeo-Persian language,
219
judicial assemblies, 215
Jushi people, 90
Kabul, 231
Kageyama Etsuko, 98
Kaiyuan reign period, 156
Karakash River, 207
Karakhanids, 226–28, 241,
color plate 16A
Karakhoja, 93
Karakorum Highway, 30,
31
, 31–32, 53, 218
karma, 164
Kashgar, 79, 218, 227, 234
Kashmir, 156
Keriya, 33, 53
Khakhsar, 135
Khan, Sher Ali, 196–97
Kharoshthi script
and Endere documents, 207–9
and Kroraina Kingdom
documents,
25
, 26–27, 30, 32–38, 42–43, 45–47
and Kumarajiva, 57
and Niya and Loulan
documents, 202, 237
and Sogdian documents, 117
Khoja Afaq, 232–33
Khorezm, 128
Khotan,
200–201
and Afghan caravans, 196
and Buddhism, 199–200, 203–7, 210–12, 221, 225, 227, 228–29, 231, 240
and diplomatic envoys, 16, 191, 192, 202, 222–26, 241
and Hedin’s explorations, 12, 13, 212
and Islam, 24, 199, 201, 218, 226–34, 241–42
and the jade trade, 235–36
and Kroraina Kingdom, 48, 49–51, 54
and
mazar
shrines, 234
and the Tang dynasty, 79, 211, 226
and Uighur population, 226, 233–34
Khotanese
and Buddhist monasteries, 240
and Dunhuang cave
documents, 24, 181, 199, 210, 220, 226, 241
and Islamic conquest, 199
and legal contracts, 209
and royal documents,
198
and Uighur language, 199, 211, 234
Khotan River, 11, 207
Khubilai Khan, 111
Khujand, 136
Khunjerab Pass, 32
Khusrau II, 156
Khvarnarse, 209
Kidarites, 120
Kirghiz, 108, 190, 216, 226
Kizil caves, 56–58, 60–65,
62, 63, 67
, 77
Koguryo, 128
Kongque (Peacock) River, 27
Korea, 128, 147, 157, 165
Korla, 60, 75
Kratchkovsky, I. Y., 130
Kroraina Kingdom,
28–29
Buddhism in, 26, 30,
31
, 33–35, 47, 51–55,
53
burial practices, 38–42,
41
coins of, 35–36, 42–43, 48–50
Gandhara immigrants, 26–27, 30, 32, 35, 37–38, 44–48, 50–52
and Kharoshthi script,
25
, 26–27, 30, 32–38, 42–43, 45–47
Stein’s explorations of, 12–13, 25–27, 30, 32–38, 42–43, 45–47, 53–54
Kucha
and Buddhism, 56–57, 66–70, 76–77, 80
and Hedin’s explorations, 58–60
and the Kizil caves, 56–58, 60–65,
62, 67
, 77
and Kumarajiva, 21
political control of, 75–82
religions of, 228
BOOK: The Silk Road: A New History
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