Under the original title "De Kaboul à Samarcande. Les archéologues en Asie Centrale”(From Kabul to Samarkand) by Svetlana Gorshenina and Claude Rapin (ISBN 9782070761661), this book is
being edited by Découvertes Gallimard. It is one of the rare books that treat archaeology in Central Asia in a professional
way. It only has the size of a pocketbook but is stuffed with pertaining maps like
Alexander’s route and Central Asia set against today’s countries, with plenty
of illustrations.
After a short introduction about mainly Russian occupancy of Central Asia going back to the Tsarist era, it appears that finds from Central Asia not only wind up at the Hermitage in St Petersburg and its subsidiary museums but also in newly created museums in Samarkand, Tashkent, Fergana, and Ashkhabad, as well as in countless private collections.
The French who excavated inAfghanistan were allowed to keep half their
finds which were eventually moved to the Musée Guimet in Paris ,
but the oriental museums of Rome and Turin got their share
with parts of the reliefs from Gandhara
discovered in the Swat area. Strangely enough, most collections from Western
European museums have vanished unless they dwell in some lost corner of their
basements. Exceptions, however, are the museums in Bern , Copenhagen , Berlin ,
Helsinki, and Stuttgart .
We may remember Ai-Khanoum, once the capital of eastern Bactria at the
confluence of the Amu Daria (Oxus) and the Kokcha Rivers that revealed how a Greek
city in that part of the world looked like, establishing the relation between
the Greeks and the nomads. Also, the role of the philhellenic Parthians is highlighted.
From the sites themselves, especially inBactria , very few remains have survived
simply because the cities were built with mud bricks – examples are Afrasiab,
Shahr-i-Sabz, Erkugan, Bactra, and
Merv.
Headlines were made with the discovery of theOxus treasure, composed of golden and bronze objects like
statues, vases, bracelets, necklaces, rings, gems, votive plaques with
Zoroastrian priests, benefactors, and sacred animals. On top of all that,
they found about 1300 coins ranging from the Achaemenid period to Hellenistic,
probably from a temple treasury. Another exceptional discovery was the
Hellenistic temple of Takht-i-Sangin,
with some 800,000 artifacts from its treasury, similar to the finds at Oxus and
one of the richest collections of its kind in Central Asia .
The hoard counted ex-votos,
instruments tied to the cult, portraits of gods and benefactors, and a plaque
from the 5th century BC showing a dignitary in Bactrian dress holding a dagger, very
much like the procession at Persepolis.
The book also devotes a chapter to religion, starting from early Buddhism during the Kushan Empire (including a handy map) in the first centuries AD with cities like Hadda, Tapa Sardar, Bamyan, Bactra, Dilberdjin, Dalverzine-Tepe, Shahr-i-Nau, Airtam, Adjina-tepe, Karatepe and Fayaz-Tepe, near Termez, and Balalyk-tepe. Matters change dramatically with the arrival of Islam with a high level of cultural and economic renewal.
After a short introduction about mainly Russian occupancy of Central Asia going back to the Tsarist era, it appears that finds from Central Asia not only wind up at the Hermitage in St Petersburg and its subsidiary museums but also in newly created museums in Samarkand, Tashkent, Fergana, and Ashkhabad, as well as in countless private collections.
The French who excavated in
From the sites themselves, especially in
Headlines were made with the discovery of the
The book also devotes a chapter to religion, starting from early Buddhism during the Kushan Empire (including a handy map) in the first centuries AD with cities like Hadda, Tapa Sardar, Bamyan, Bactra, Dilberdjin, Dalverzine-Tepe, Shahr-i-Nau, Airtam, Adjina-tepe, Karatepe and Fayaz-Tepe, near Termez, and Balalyk-tepe. Matters change dramatically with the arrival of Islam with a high level of cultural and economic renewal.
Another turn-around happened when the Soviet Union occupied Central Asia and when
Well, this book shows that there still is a
great deal of work to be done on the historical sites themselves and in the larger context of reciprocal exchanges between East and West.
No comments:
Post a Comment