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Yuezhi

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The migrations of the Yueh-Chih.
The migrations of the Yueh-Chih.

Yuezhi (Chinese 月氏; Wade-Giles: Yüeh-Chih) is the Chinese name for an ancient Central Asian people. They are believed to have been the same as or closely related to the Tocharians, who spoke an Indo-European language called Tocharian. They were settled in the Tarim Basin area, in what is today Gansu and Xinjiang.

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The Yuezhi exodus

Following a defeat in 162 BC by the Xiongnu (Huns), the Yuezhi fled from the Tarim Basin towards the west, crossed the neighbouring urban civilization of the Ta-Yuan in Ferghana, and settled north of the Oxus in modern-day Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. They displaced the Saka Scythians who lived there previously, before being driven out by the Wusun in 132 BC.

Coin of Yuezhi prince Sapadbizes (c. 20 BC)
Coin of Yuezhi prince Sapadbizes (c. 20 BC)

The Yuezhi then fled to the region of Bactria in modern-day Afghanistan, which had been conquered first by the Greeks under Alexander the Great in 330 BC, and had then been settled by the Greek dynasties of the Seleucids and the Greco-Bactrians for the two centuries ever since. The last Greco-Bactrian king Heliocles I retreated and moved his capital to the Kabul valley. The eastern part of Bactria was occupied by Pashtun people.

As they settled in Bactria from around 125 BC, the Yuezhi became Hellenized to some degree, as suggested by their adoption of the Greek alphabet and by some remaining coins, minted in the style of the Greco-Bactrian kings, with the text in Greek.

The Kushan empire

By the end of the 1st century BC, the Yuezhi extended their control over the northwestern area of the Indian subcontinent, founding the Kushan Empire, which was to rule the region for several centuries. They converted to Buddhism and their interactions with Greek civilization helped the Gandharan culture and Greco-Buddhism flourish.

In the early 1st millennium AD, Central Asian peoples including the Yuezhi were among the first to translate Buddhist scriptures into Chinese. Major Yuezhi translators included Lokaksema and Dharmaraksa.

Yuezhi monarchs

References

de:Yüe-tschi

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