The Silk Road: A New History (66 page)

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and the Mongol Empire, 229
and oasis towns, 8
and Silk Road routes, 6, 9–10,
22–23
and Turfan, 82
withdrawal of Chinese military, 160
Tamerlane, 231
Tamjaka, 47
Tamluk, 160, 164
Tang Code, 92, 96, 148, 183–84
Tang dynasty
and art trade, 21
and Central Asian economy, 107
and Chang’an, 141–43, 147–59, 166
and contracts, 103–4, 192–94
and Dunhuang cave
documents, 184–85, 186–88
and Gaochang City,
105
and Khotan, 79, 211, 226
and Kucha, 79–82, 211
military expenditures, 8
monetary system, 184
and moneylending, 151–52
and Samarkand, 137
and Sogdiana, 113, 116, 129
“Tang Barbie,”
color plate 8
and taxation, 184, 187, 214–16
and trade disputes, 149
and Turfan, 21, 82, 85, 88–89, 91–92, 94, 96–98, 103–8,
105
, 111, 211
and volume of Silk Road trade, 237
and Zhang-family rule at Dunhuang, 190
Tanguts, 190–91, 228
Tang Zhangru, 94
Tarim River, 58, 60
Tarxun, 135
taxation
and the An Lushan rebellion, 157
cloth as payment, 106–7
and coins, 95, 97
and Dandan Uiliq, 214–17
and Kroraina Kingdom, 48
and Kucha, 77
and Loulan documents, 43
and payments to soldiers, 215
and the Tang dynasty, 184, 187, 214–16
tax biscuits, 152, 157
tax documents as evidence, 238
and Turfan, 91–92, 96, 99–102,
100–102
, 108
tea, 233
technology
availability of Dunhuang
documents, 176
and locating sites, 212
and migrant populations, 4, 239
paper-making technology, 137–39, 238
silk technology, 238
technological transfer, 137–39
terra-cotta soldiers, 141
textiles
cotton, 38,
39
, 138, 195
and the Dunhuang economy, 195
imported goods, 233
and Kroraina Kingdom, 38,
39
,
40
, 41–43, 49–51
of Mongols, 231
nomadic themes in,
203
Shanpula burial garb,
204
and the Sogdians, 119
and the Tang monetary system, 184
tax cloth, 106–7
and Turfan markets, 106–7
See also
silk
Thailand, 156
Theodosius II, 97
Thierry, François, 76
Thousand Buddha (Quianfodong) site, 172
The Thousand-Character Classic.
180
Three Realms Monastery, Dunhuang, 178–79, 181, 222
Tianshan Mountains, 113–14
Tibet and Tibetan Empire
and the An Lushan rebellion, 184–85, 212
and Buddhist pilgrimages, 221
challenge to Tang dynasty, 80, 107, 108, 157
collapse of, 216
and diplomatic envoys, 192
and Dunhuang cave
documents, 169, 185–87
and Khotan, 212
and the Sogdian Ancient Letters, 119
Tibetan language, 180–81, 186–87, 211, 240–41
Times of London
, 8
Timur the Lame, 231
Tocharian language, 13, 44, 71–74
Tocharoi people, 71, 72
Tokmak, 114, 115
Tongzhou, Shaanxi, 144
topazes, 155–56
tortoiseshell, 20, 165
tourism
and Astana graveyard, 93, 172
and desert ruins, 10
and Jiaohe ruins, 91
and Khotan, 199, 233
and the Kizil caves, 57–58
and
mazar
shrines, 234,
color plate 16A, color plate 16B
and Melikawat ruins, 207
Tragbal Pass, 27
transformation texts, 76–77, 179, 188
translations, 214
travel passes
(guosuo)
and diplomatic envoys, 17
of Kucha,
57
, 77–80,
78
, 82
at Niya, 36–37
and sea travel, 165
as source of evidence, 238
and supervision of trade, 237
and Turfan, 89, 103–4
tribute, 231
Trinkler, Emil, 212
Trombert, Éric, 82, 184
Turco-Sogdian, 195–96
Turdi, 212
Turfan
and Astana graveyard site,
84
,
86

87
, 93–99, 151
burial practices of, 92–94, 98–99
and caravan trade, 88, 103–7, 232
climate of,
11
, 21, 92–93
coinage of, 99,
100–102
, 103–7, 111
coins of,
color plate 4B
and diplomatic envoys, 192
foods of, 83
and Gaochang city,
105
languages of, 72, 74–75
religions of, 182, 228, 231
and Sogdians, 21, 83, 85–86, 91, 98–99
and the Tang dynasty, 21, 82, 85, 88–89, 91–92, 94, 96–98, 103–8,
105
, 111, 211
taxation in, 91–92, 96, 99–102,
100–102
, 108
textile finds from, 14
tomb figurines,
140
and tourism, 10,
color plate 9
and trade regulation, 237
and Uighur refugees, 190–91
and Xuanzang’s travels, 83–91
Turgesh, 135–36
Turkic languages, 182, 233–34
Turkish kaghanates, 75, 79
Turks, 120, 127, 135, 226–27
Twgrhy language, 71–72, 211, 257n30, 258n35
Uddyana Kingdom, 94
Uighur kaghanates, 108–11, 190–92, 196, 216, 220, 222, 224, 226
Uighur language
and Dunhuang cave
documents, 181, 195–96, 241
and Khotanese, 199, 211, 234
and Manichaeism, 108,
109
, 110
and the Qing dynasty, 232–33
spoken, 168–69
and Tocharian, 71–74
and Turfan, 108
from Yarkand, 228
Uighurs
and the An Lushan rebellion, 157
defeat of Tibetans, 218
and diplomatic envoys, 191, 192, 224
and distribution of languages, 73 (
see also
Uighur language)
and Dunhuang, 168, 190–91, 216
and Khotan, 226, 233–34
Kirghiz conquest of, 108, 190, 216, 226
and Kucha, 80
and Manichaeism, 108–11,
109
, 228
mercenaries, 108
tensions with Han population, 93
and Turfan, 83, 108–10
and Zhang Yichao,
189
Umayyad Caliphate, 129
Urumqi Museum, 94
Vagiti Vadhaga, 209
Vaissière, Étienne de la, 119
Vajrayana, 221
Vandak, 85–86, 86–87
Varkhuman, 125, 127, 129
vinaya
law, 51, 79, 221
BOOK: The Silk Road: A New History
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