Archaeological
exploration began in Afghanistan in earnest after World War
II and proceeded promisingly until the Soviet invasion
disrupted it in December of 1979. Artifacts typical of the
Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze, and Iron ages
were found. It is not yet clear, however, to what extent
these periods were contemporaneous with similar stages of
development in other geographic regions. The area that is
now Afghanistan seems in prehistory--as well as ancient and
modern times--to have been closely connected by culture and
trade with the neighboring regions to the east, west, and
north. Urban civilization in the Iranian plateau, which
includes most of Iran and Afghanistan, may have begun as
early as 3000 to 2000 B.C. About the middle of the second
millennium B.C. people speaking an Indo-European language
may have entered the eastern part of the Iranian Plateau,
but little is known about the area until the middle of the
first millennium B.C., when its history began to be recorded
during the Achaemenid Empire. The area that is
present-day Afghanistan comprised several satrapies
(provinces) of the Achaemenid Empire when it was at its most
extensive, under Darius the Great (ca. 500 B.C.). Bactriana,
with its capital at Bactria (which later became Balkh), was
reputedly the home of Zoroaster, who founded the religion
that bears his name. By the fourth
century B.C., Iranian control of outlying areas and the
internal cohesion of the empire had become tenuous. Although
outlying areas like Bactriana had always been restless under
Achaemenid rule, Bactrian troops nevertheless fought on the
Iranian side in the decisive Battle of Gaugamela (330 B.C.).
They were defeated by Alexander the Great. It took Alexander
only three years (from about 330-327 B.C.) to subdue the
area that is now Afghanistan and the adjacent regions of the
former Soviet Union. Moving eastward from the area of Herat,
the Macedonian leader encountered fierce resistance from
local rulers of what had been Iranian satraps. Although his
expedition through Afghanistan was brief, he left behind a
Hellenic cultural influence that lasted several
centuries. Upon Alexander's
death in 323 B.C., his empire, which had never been
politically consolidated, broke apart. His cavalry
commander, Seleucus, took nominal control of the eastern
lands and founded the Seleucid dynasty. Under the Seleucids,
as under Alexander, Greek colonists and soldiers entered the
region of the Hindu Kush, and many are believed to have
remained. At the same time, the Mauryan Empire was
developing in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent.
It took control, thirty years after Alexander's death, of
the southeasternmost areas of the Seleucid domains,
including parts of present-day Afghanistan. The Mauryans
introduced Indian culture, including Buddhism, to the area.
With the Seleucids on one side and the Mauryans on the
other, the people of the Hindu Kush were in what would
become a familiar quandary in ancient as well as modern
history--that is, caught between two empires. In the middle of
the third century B.C., an independent, Greek-ruled state
was declared in Bactria. Graeco-Bactrian rule spread until
it included most of the territory from the Iranian deserts
to the Ganges River and from Central Asia to the Arabian Sea
by about 170 B.C. Graeco-Bactrian rule was eventually
defeated by a combination of the internecine disputes that
plagued Greek rulers to the west, the ambitious attempts to
extend control into northern India, and the pressure of two
groups of nomadic invaders from Central Asia--the Parthians
and Sakas (perhaps the Scythians). In the third and
second centuries B.C., the Parthians, a nomadic people
speaking Indo-European languages, arrived on the Iranian
Plateau. The Parthians established control in most of what
is Iran as early as the middle of the third century B.C.;
about 100 years later another Indo-European group from the
north--the Kushans (a subgroup of the tribe called the
Yuezhi by the Chinese)--entered Afghanistan and established
an empire lasting almost four centuries. The Kushan Empire
spread from the Kabul River Valley to defeat other Central
Asian tribes that had previously conquered parts of the
northern central Iranian Plateau once ruled by the
Parthians. By the middle of the first century B.C., the
Kushans' control stretched from the Indus Valley to the Gobi
Desert and as far west as the central Iranian Plateau. Early
in the second century A.D. under Kanishka, the most powerful
of the Kushan rulers, the empire reached its greatest
geographic and cultural breadth to become a center of
literature and art. Kanishka extended Kushan control to the
mouth of the Indus River on the Arabian Sea, into Kashmir,
and into what is today the Chinese-controlled area north of
Tibet. Kanishka was a patron of religion and the arts. It
was during his reign that Mahayana Buddhism, imported to
northern India earlier by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka (ca.
260-232 B.C.), reached its zenith in Central
Asia. In the third
century A.D., Kushan control fragmented into
semi-independent kingdoms that became easy targets for
conquest by the rising Iranian dynasty, the Sassanians (ca.
224-561 A.D.). These small kingdoms were pressed by both the
Sassanians from the west and by the growing strength of the
Guptas, an Indian dynasty established at the beginning of
the fourth century. The disunited
Kushan and Sassanian kingdoms were in a poor position to
meet the threat of a new wave of nomadic, Indo-European
invaders from the north. The Hepthalites (or White Huns)
swept out of Central Asia around the fourth century into
Bactria and to the south, overwhelming the last of the
Kushan and Sassanian kingdoms. Historians believe that their
control continued for a century and was marked by constant
warfare with the Sassanians to the west. By the middle of
the sixth century the Hepthalites were defeated in the
territories north of the Amu Darya (the Oxus River of
antiquity) by another group of Central Asian nomads, the
Western Turks, and by the resurgent Sassanians in the lands
south of the Amu Darya. Up until the advent of Islam, the
lands of the Hindu Kush were dominated up to the Amu Darya
by small kingdoms under Sassanian control but with local
rulers who were Kushans or Hepthalites. Of this great
Buddhist culture and earlier Zoroastrian influence there
remain few, if any, traces in the life of Afghan people
today. Along ancient trade routes, however, stone monuments
of Buddhist culture exist as reminders of the past. The two
great sandstone Buddhas, thirty-five and fifty-three meters
high overlook the ancient route through Bamian to Balkh and
date from the third and fifth centuries A.D. In this and
other key places in Afghanistan, archaeologists have located
frescoes, stucco decorations, statuary, and rare objects
from China, Phoenicia, and Rome crafted as early as the
second century A.D. that bear witness to the influence of
these ancient civilizations on the arts in
Afghanistan.
Library of Congress Country StudyAchaemenid Rule,
ca. 550-331 B.C.
Alexander and
Greek Rule, 330-ca. 150 B.C.
Central Asian
and Sassanian Rule, ca. 150 B.C.-700 A.D.
Library of Congress Country Study
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