Recent discoveries of coin hoards from Central Asia and Pakistan: new numismatic evidence on the pre-Kushan history of the Silk Road

Coins remain a chief source of information on the history of the Indo-Greeks and their successors in Central Asia and India. Large numismatic treasures of extraordinary historic significance were recently found in several sites in Afghanistan and Pakistan, such as Mir Zakah, Ai Khanum, Bajaur, Wesa, Mian Khan Sanghou, Khauzikhelai, Attock, Siranwali and Sarai Saleh. Thanks to these coins, which are scattered all over the world, it has been possible to gain new insight into the chronology of the rulers of Central Asia and India between Alexander’s conquests in the fourth century BC and the rise of the Kushan Empire in the first century AD.

معلومات ذات صله

  • المؤلفون:
    Osmund Bopearachchi
    المظاهر:
    حقبة:
    4th century BCE to 1st century CE
    لغة المقال:
    English
    مصدر:

    International Seminar Archaeology on the Silk Roads

    شكل:
    PDF
    بلدان:
    Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan

تم إعداد هذا البرنامج وتنفيذه بدعم من

أتصل بنا

مقر منظمة اليونسكو الدولية

قطاع العلوم الاجتماعية والانسانية

قسم البحوث وسياسات التخطيط المستقبلية

برنامج اليونسكو لطرق الحرير

7 Place de Fontenoy

75007 Paris

France

silkroads@unesco.org

تواصل معنا