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Bagrām (Also '''Begram''', anciently '''Kapici''' or '''Kapisa''') is an antique city 60 kilometers northwest of Kabul in Afghanistan , near today's city of Charikar . It was built at the junction of the Ghorband and the Panjshir valley, acting as a passage point to India on the Silk Road , towards Kabul and Bamiyan .


ORIGINS

The city was destroyed by Cyrus , restored by Darius , and then fortified and rebuilt by Alexander The Great as Alexandria Of The Caucasus . Begram then became one of the capital cities of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom . Begram has a Greek hippodamian plan. The city was walled in bricks, and reinforced with towers at the angles. The central street was bordered with shops and workshops.


THE BEGRAM TREASURE


Begram (Kapisa) became the summer capital of the Kushan Empire from the 1st Century , their other capital being in Mathura in central India.

The emperor , Greco-Roman glasses from Egypt and Syria , Hellenistic statues in the Pompean style, stuc moldings, and Silverware of Mediterranean origin (probably Alexandria ).

The "Begram treasure" as it has been called, is indicative of intense commercial exchanges between all the cultural centers of the Classical time, with the Kushan empire at the junction of the land and sea trade between the east and west. However, the works of art found in Begram are either quite purely Hellenistic, Roman, Chinese or Indian, with only little indications of the cultural syncretism found in Greco-Buddhist Art .

The city was apparently abandoned after the campaigns of the Sassanian emperor Shapur I , in 241 .


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