Information AboutSogdiana |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT SOGDIANA | |
| iranian peoples | |
| central asia | |
| ancient iranian provinces | |
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The Sogdian states, although never politically united, were centred around their main city of Samarkand . It lay north of Bactria between the Oxus ( Amu Darya ) and the Jaxartes ( Syr Darya ), and embraced the fertile valley of the Zarafshan (anc. ''Polytimetus''). Sogdian territory corresponded to the modern districts of Samarkand and Bokhara in modern Uzbekistan as well as modern Tajikistan . During the High Middle Ages it was extended to the north by a policy of colonial settlements up to the Lake Issyk Kul . Sogdian Rock or Rock of Ariamazes, a fortress in Sogdiana, was captured in 327 BC by the forces of Alexander The Great , who united Sogdiana with Bactria in to one Satrap y. Subsequently it formed part of the Bactria n Greek kingdom, founded by Diodotus , until the Scythia ns occupied it in the middle of the 3rd Century BC . The Sogdians occupied a key position along the ancient Silk Road , and played a major role in facilitating trade between China and Central Asia . They started to have contacts with China following the embassy of the Chinese explorer Zhang Qian during the reign of Wudi in the former Han Dynasty , 141-87 BC. He wrote a report of his visit in Central Asia. , China, 8th century.]] Following Zhang Qian's embassy and report, commercial Chinese relations with Central Asia and Sogdiana flourished, as many Chinese missions were sent throughout the , trans. Burton Watson). However the Sogdian traders were then still less important in the Silk Road trade than their Southern neighbours, Indian and Bactrian. They dominated the East-West trade after the 4th Century AD up to the 8th Century AD. The Sogdians were noted for their tolerance of different religious beliefs. Buddhism , Manichaeism , Nestorian Christianity , and Zoroastrianism all had significant followings. Sogdians were actors in the Silk Road Transmission Of Buddhism , until the period of Muslim invasion in the 8th century. Much of our knowledge of the Sogdians and their language comes from the numerous religious texts that they have left behind. The Sogdians spoke an East Iranian Language called Sogdian -- closely related to Bactrian , another major language of the region in ancient times. Sogdian was written in a variety of Scripts , all of them derived from the Aramaic Alphabet . The valley of the Zarafshan about Samarkand retained even in the Middle Ages the name of the Soghd O Samarkand . Arab ic Geographers reckon it as one of the four fairest districts in the world. The great majority of the Sogdian people gradually mixed with other local groups such as the Bactrians, Chorasmians, Turkics and Persians from Achaemenid empire and came to speak Persian (modern Tajiks ) or (after the Turkic conquest of Central Asia) Turkic Uzbek and are among the origins of the modern Tajik and Uzbek People . Historians Calum MacLeod and Bradley Mayhew in their “Uzbekistan.Golden Road to Samarkand” say “visitors come for a Sogdian culture that predates political boundaries and lies at the ethnic of both the Tajik and Uzbek peoples” (page 182). Numerous Sogdian words can be found in modern Persian and Uzbek as a result of this admixture. SEE ALSO REFERENCES
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