Transoxiana or Transoxania lit Land beyond the Oxus now called the Amu Darya is the Latin name for the region and civili
Transoxania

Transoxiana or Transoxania (lit. 'Land beyond the Oxus', now called the Amu Darya) is the Latin name for the region and civilization located in lower Central Asia roughly corresponding to eastern Uzbekistan, western Tajikistan, parts of southern Kazakhstan, parts of Turkmenistan and southern Kyrgyzstan. The name was first coined by Alexander the Great in the 4th century BC when Alexander's troops conquered the region. The region may have had a similar Greek name in the days of Alexander the Great, but the earlier name is no longer known. Geographically, it is the region between the rivers Amu Darya to its south and the Syr Darya to its north.


The region of Transoxiana was one of the satrapies (provinces) of the Achaemenid Empire of Persia under the name Sogdia. It was defined within the classical world of Persia to distinguish it from Iran proper, especially its northeastern province of Khorasan, a term originating with the Sasanians, although early Arab historians and geographers tended to subsume the region within the loosely defined term "Khorasan" designating a much larger territory. The territories of Khwarazm, Sogdiana, Chaghaniyan, and Khuttal were located in the southern part of Transoxiana; Chach, Osrushana, and Farghana were located in the northern part.
Etymology
Historically known in Persian as Farā-rūd (Persian: فرارود, [fæɾɒːˈɾuːd̪] – 'beyond the [Amu] river'), Faro-rɵd (Tajik: Фарорӯд), and Varaz-rüd (Tajik: Варазрӯд), the area had been known to the ancient Iranians as Turan, a term used in the Persian national epic Shahnameh. The corresponding Chinese term for the region is Hezhong (Chinese: 河中地区; Chinese: land between rivers). The Arabic term Mā Warāʾ an-Nahr (Arabic: ما وراء النهر, [ˈmaː waˈraːʔ anˈnahr], which means "what is beyond the [Jayhūn] river") passed into Persian literary usage and stayed on until post-Mongol times.
History
Pre-Islamic period

The name Transoxiana stuck in Western consciousness because of the exploits of Alexander the Great, who extended Greek culture into the region with his invasion in the 4th century BCE. Alexander's successors would go on to found the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, ushering in a distinct Greek cultural presence within Transoxiana that existed for over two hundred years. The city of Ai-Khanoum on the Oxus in northern Afghanistan remains the only Graeco-Bactrian city found and extensively excavated.
During the Sasanian Empire, it was often called Sogdia, a provincial name taken from the Achaemenid Empire, and used to distinguish it from nearby Bactria.
The Chinese explorer Zhang Qian, who visited the neighbouring countries of Bactria and Parthia along with Transoxiana in 126 BCE, made the first known Chinese report on this region. Zhang Qian identifies Parthia as an advanced urban civilisation that farmed grain and grapes and made silver coins and leather goods. It was ruled successively by Seleucids, the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, the Parthian Empire and the Kushan Empire before Sassanid rule.
In Sasanian times, the region became a major cultural center due to the wealth of the Northern Silk Road. Sassanid rule was interrupted by the Hephthalite invasion at the end of the 5th century and didn't return to the Sassanids until 565.
Islamic period
Many Persian nobles and landlords escaped to this region after the Muslim conquest of Persia. It was also ruled by Göktürks until the Arab conquest between 705 and 715. The area became known by the Arabic phrase Mā warāʼ al-Nahr "what is beyond the river," sometimes rendered as "Mavarannahr."
Transoxiana's major cities and cultural centers are Samarkand and Bukhara. Both are in the southern portion of Transoxiana (though still to the north of the Amu Darya itself, on the Zarafshon) and Uzbekistan. The majority of the region was dry but fertile plains. Both cities remained centres of Persian culture and civilisation after the Muslim conquest. They played a crucial role in the revival of Persian culture by establishing the Samanid Empire.
Part of this region was conquered by Qutayba ibn Muslim between 706 and 715 and loosely held by the Umayyad Caliphate from 715 to 738. The conquest was consolidated by Nasr ibn Sayyar between 738 and 740 and continued under the control of the Umayyads until 750, when it was replaced by the Abbasid Caliphate. The Tang dynasty of China also controlled the eastern part of the region until the An Lushan Rebellion broke out.
In the early Islamic period, the people of Transoxania spoke Sogdian (an Iranian language) and were divided among several principalities. The Arab conquest resulted in the spread of Arabic elite culture, and, more paradoxically, of New Persian "as a spoken and eventually written language" in the region. The Arab conquest also resulted in contacts with Tang China, where fragments of the Sasanian ruling elite, including Peroz III, had taken shelter after Iran's conquest by the Arabs. However, it did not result in Transoxania having significant interactions with Chinese culture.
Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol Empire, invaded Transoxiana in 1219 during his conquest of Khwarezm. Before he died in 1227, he assigned the lands of Western Central Asia to his second son, Chagatai Khan, and this region became known as the Chagatai Khanate. In 1369, Timur, of the Barlas tribe, became the effective ruler and made Samarkand the capital of his future empire. Transoxiana was known to be flourishing in the mid-14th century.
Religion
The historian Mark Dickens notes:
Transoxiana's principal pre-Islamic religion was Zoroastrianism, albeit in local manifestations. However, Buddhism, [Nestorian] Christianity, Manichaeism, and Mazdakism also had many adherents, especially in urban areas. This initial religious diversity was gradually eroded after the Arab conquest.
Muslims had conquered Transoxiana by the 7-8th century. Multiple figures in the Muslim world had conquered these lands. Some include the Umayyad and Abbasid Arabs, who took over lands that are now Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.
Apart from a presence in Kushan Bactria, the Mīmāṃsā school of Hinduism, unlike Buddhism, seems to have made little inroads into Central Asia north of Bactria. Even when Brahmins are depicted in the art of Central Asia, this is within the setting of Buddhist art, where we can even observe a tendency to present such figures as caricatures, quite in line with the criticism of them in the Buddhist scriptures.
Transoxania was a great center of Muslim civilization; it was the centre of the Timurid Empire and saw influential Muslim leaders like Oghuz Khan.
An excerpt from a dynastic history commissioned by Eltüzer Khan of Khwarazm: "Oghuz Khan, who could speak at the age of one and whose first word was "Allah." He rebelled against his father, eventually slaying him, before embarking on a series of conquests that brought Islam to all of "Transoxiana and Turkestan."
See also
- Greater Khorasan
- Khwarazm
- Hisar-i Shadman
References
- Zhabagin, Maxat; Balanovska, Elena; Sabitov, Zhaxylyk; Kuznetsova, Marina; Agdzhoyan, Anastasiya; Balaganskaya, Olga; Chukhryaeva, Marina; Markina, Nadezhda; Romanov, Alexey; Skhalyakho, Roza; Zaporozhchenko, Valery; Saroyants, Liudmila; Dalimova, Dilbar; Davletchurin, Damir; Turdikulova, Shahlo (2017). "The Connection of the Genetic, Cultural and Geographic Landscapes of Transoxiana". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 3085. Bibcode:2017NatSR...7.3085Z. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-03176-z. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5465200. PMID 28596519.
In the 4th century BC Alexander the Great turned it into a Hellenistic province, naming it Transoxiana ("area beyond the Ox river"; Ox is the ancient name for Amu Darya).
- "Transoxania (historical region, Asia)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
- Svat Soucek, A History of Inner Asia, Cambridge University Press, 2000, p.4
- "Khorāsān". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
- C. Edmund Bosworth, (2002), 'CENTRAL ASIA iv. In the Islamic Period up to the Mongols' Encyclopaedia Iranica "In early Islamic times Persians tended to identify all the lands to the northeast of Khorasan and lying beyond the Oxus with the region of Turan, which in the Šāh-nāma of Ferdowsī is regarded as the land allotted to Ferēdūn's son Tūr... At the outset, however, those nearby parts of Central Asia with which the Arabs were familiar were often subsumed into the vast and ill-defined province of Khorasan, embracing all lands to the east of Ray, Jebāl, and Fārs". (online)
- C. Edmund Bosworth, (2011), 'MĀ WARĀʾ AL-NAHR' Encyclopaedia Iranica "It was defined by the early Arabic historians and geographers as the lands under Muslim control lying to the north of the middle and upper Oxus or Āmu Daryā, in contrast to Iran proper and its eastern province of Khorasan, sometimes called Mā dun al-nahr (lit. 'what lies this side of the river'), although from the perspective of Arab historians writing in distant Iraq, the term "Khorasan" might extend to all lands beyond the Oxus, including Khwarazm and Transoxiana." (online)
- Dickens 2018, pp. 1531–1532.
- Sabloff, Paula L.W. (2011). Mapping Mongolia: Situating Mongolia in the World from Geologic Time to the Present. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. p. 62. ISBN 978-1934536186. OCLC 794700604.
- "Transoxiana" at Encyclopædia Iranica
- Rachel Mairs, The Hellenistic Far East
- Silk Road, North China, C. Michael Hogan, The Megalithic Portal, ed. A. Burnham (2007)
- Cook, Michael (2015). "The centrality of Islamic civilization". In Kedar, Benjamin Z.; Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. (eds.). The Cambridge World History (Vol. V): Expanding Webs of Exchange and Conflict, 500 CE–1500 CE. Cambridge University Press. p. 401. ISBN 978-0-521-19074-9.
- "The Timurid Empire". Archived from the original on August 16, 2009.
- History of civilizations of Central Asia, v. 4: The Age of achievement, A.D. 750 to the end of the fifteenth century; Pt. II: the achievements. UNESCO. 2000. ISBN 978-92-3-103654-5.
- Khalid, Adeeb (2014-02-08). "1. Islam in Central Asia". Islam after Communism. University of California Press. pp. 19–33. doi:10.1525/9780520957862-004. ISBN 978-0-520-95786-2. S2CID 240691206.
- "Islam in Central Asia" (PDF). content.ucpress.edu.
Sources
- Dickens, Mark (2018). "Transoxiana". In Nicholson, Oliver (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-866277-8.
Further reading
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Transoxiana or Transoxania lit Land beyond the Oxus now called the Amu Darya is the Latin name for the region and civilization located in lower Central Asia roughly corresponding to eastern Uzbekistan western Tajikistan parts of southern Kazakhstan parts of Turkmenistan and southern Kyrgyzstan The name was first coined by Alexander the Great in the 4th century BC when Alexander s troops conquered the region The region may have had a similar Greek name in the days of Alexander the Great but the earlier name is no longer known Geographically it is the region between the rivers Amu Darya to its south and the Syr Darya to its north Watershed of the Oxus River in the 8th century showing Transoxiana and its principal localities to the northeast Transoxiana and the neighbouring regions of Greater Khorasan and Khwarazm in Central Asia The region of Transoxiana was one of the satrapies provinces of the Achaemenid Empire of Persia under the name Sogdia It was defined within the classical world of Persia to distinguish it from Iran proper especially its northeastern province of Khorasan a term originating with the Sasanians although early Arab historians and geographers tended to subsume the region within the loosely defined term Khorasan designating a much larger territory The territories of Khwarazm Sogdiana Chaghaniyan and Khuttal were located in the southern part of Transoxiana Chach Osrushana and Farghana were located in the northern part EtymologyHistorically known in Persian as Fara rud Persian فرارود faeɾɒːˈɾuːd beyond the Amu river Faro rɵd Tajik Farorӯd and Varaz rud Tajik Varazrӯd the area had been known to the ancient Iranians as Turan a term used in the Persian national epic Shahnameh The corresponding Chinese term for the region is Hezhong Chinese 河中地区 Chinese land between rivers The Arabic term Ma Waraʾ an Nahr Arabic ما وراء النهر ˈmaː waˈraːʔ anˈnahr which means what is beyond the Jayhun river passed into Persian literary usage and stayed on until post Mongol times HistoryPre Islamic period A Chinese sancai ceramic statuette depicting a Sogdian stableman dated to the Tang dynasty 618 907 The name Transoxiana stuck in Western consciousness because of the exploits of Alexander the Great who extended Greek culture into the region with his invasion in the 4th century BCE Alexander s successors would go on to found the Greco Bactrian Kingdom ushering in a distinct Greek cultural presence within Transoxiana that existed for over two hundred years The city of Ai Khanoum on the Oxus in northern Afghanistan remains the only Graeco Bactrian city found and extensively excavated During the Sasanian Empire it was often called Sogdia a provincial name taken from the Achaemenid Empire and used to distinguish it from nearby Bactria The Chinese explorer Zhang Qian who visited the neighbouring countries of Bactria and Parthia along with Transoxiana in 126 BCE made the first known Chinese report on this region Zhang Qian identifies Parthia as an advanced urban civilisation that farmed grain and grapes and made silver coins and leather goods It was ruled successively by Seleucids the Greco Bactrian Kingdom the Parthian Empire and the Kushan Empire before Sassanid rule In Sasanian times the region became a major cultural center due to the wealth of the Northern Silk Road Sassanid rule was interrupted by the Hephthalite invasion at the end of the 5th century and didn t return to the Sassanids until 565 Islamic period Many Persian nobles and landlords escaped to this region after the Muslim conquest of Persia It was also ruled by Gokturks until the Arab conquest between 705 and 715 The area became known by the Arabic phrase Ma waraʼ al Nahr what is beyond the river sometimes rendered as Mavarannahr Transoxiana s major cities and cultural centers are Samarkand and Bukhara Both are in the southern portion of Transoxiana though still to the north of the Amu Darya itself on the Zarafshon and Uzbekistan The majority of the region was dry but fertile plains Both cities remained centres of Persian culture and civilisation after the Muslim conquest They played a crucial role in the revival of Persian culture by establishing the Samanid Empire Part of this region was conquered by Qutayba ibn Muslim between 706 and 715 and loosely held by the Umayyad Caliphate from 715 to 738 The conquest was consolidated by Nasr ibn Sayyar between 738 and 740 and continued under the control of the Umayyads until 750 when it was replaced by the Abbasid Caliphate The Tang dynasty of China also controlled the eastern part of the region until the An Lushan Rebellion broke out In the early Islamic period the people of Transoxania spoke Sogdian an Iranian language and were divided among several principalities The Arab conquest resulted in the spread of Arabic elite culture and more paradoxically of New Persian as a spoken and eventually written language in the region The Arab conquest also resulted in contacts with Tang China where fragments of the Sasanian ruling elite including Peroz III had taken shelter after Iran s conquest by the Arabs However it did not result in Transoxania having significant interactions with Chinese culture Genghis Khan founder of the Mongol Empire invaded Transoxiana in 1219 during his conquest of Khwarezm Before he died in 1227 he assigned the lands of Western Central Asia to his second son Chagatai Khan and this region became known as the Chagatai Khanate In 1369 Timur of the Barlas tribe became the effective ruler and made Samarkand the capital of his future empire Transoxiana was known to be flourishing in the mid 14th century ReligionThe historian Mark Dickens notes Transoxiana s principal pre Islamic religion was Zoroastrianism albeit in local manifestations However Buddhism Nestorian Christianity Manichaeism and Mazdakism also had many adherents especially in urban areas This initial religious diversity was gradually eroded after the Arab conquest Muslims had conquered Transoxiana by the 7 8th century Multiple figures in the Muslim world had conquered these lands Some include the Umayyad and Abbasid Arabs who took over lands that are now Uzbekistan Tajikistan Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan Apart from a presence in Kushan Bactria the Mimaṃsa school of Hinduism unlike Buddhism seems to have made little inroads into Central Asia north of Bactria Even when Brahmins are depicted in the art of Central Asia this is within the setting of Buddhist art where we can even observe a tendency to present such figures as caricatures quite in line with the criticism of them in the Buddhist scriptures Transoxania was a great center of Muslim civilization it was the centre of the Timurid Empire and saw influential Muslim leaders like Oghuz Khan An excerpt from a dynastic history commissioned by Eltuzer Khan of Khwarazm Oghuz Khan who could speak at the age of one and whose first word was Allah He rebelled against his father eventually slaying him before embarking on a series of conquests that brought Islam to all of Transoxiana and Turkestan See alsoGreater Khorasan Khwarazm Hisar i ShadmanReferencesZhabagin Maxat Balanovska Elena Sabitov Zhaxylyk Kuznetsova Marina Agdzhoyan Anastasiya Balaganskaya Olga Chukhryaeva Marina Markina Nadezhda Romanov Alexey Skhalyakho Roza Zaporozhchenko Valery Saroyants Liudmila Dalimova Dilbar Davletchurin Damir Turdikulova Shahlo 2017 The Connection of the Genetic Cultural and Geographic Landscapes of Transoxiana Scientific Reports 7 1 3085 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 3085Z doi 10 1038 s41598 017 03176 z ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5465200 PMID 28596519 In the 4th century BC Alexander the Great turned it into a Hellenistic province naming it Transoxiana area beyond the Ox river Ox is the ancient name for Amu Darya Transoxania historical region Asia Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2017 11 10 Svat Soucek A History of Inner Asia Cambridge University Press 2000 p 4 Khorasan Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 14 November 2018 C Edmund Bosworth 2002 CENTRAL ASIA iv In the Islamic Period up to the Mongols Encyclopaedia Iranica In early Islamic times Persians tended to identify all the lands to the northeast of Khorasan and lying beyond the Oxus with the region of Turan which in the Sah nama of Ferdowsi is regarded as the land allotted to Feredun s son Tur At the outset however those nearby parts of Central Asia with which the Arabs were familiar were often subsumed into the vast and ill defined province of Khorasan embracing all lands to the east of Ray Jebal and Fars online C Edmund Bosworth 2011 MA WARAʾ AL NAHR Encyclopaedia Iranica It was defined by the early Arabic historians and geographers as the lands under Muslim control lying to the north of the middle and upper Oxus or Amu Darya in contrast to Iran proper and its eastern province of Khorasan sometimes called Ma dun al nahr lit what lies this side of the river although from the perspective of Arab historians writing in distant Iraq the term Khorasan might extend to all lands beyond the Oxus including Khwarazm and Transoxiana online Dickens 2018 pp 1531 1532 Sabloff Paula L W 2011 Mapping Mongolia Situating Mongolia in the World from Geologic Time to the Present Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology p 62 ISBN 978 1934536186 OCLC 794700604 Transoxiana at Encyclopaedia Iranica Rachel Mairs The Hellenistic Far East Silk Road North China C Michael Hogan The Megalithic Portal ed A Burnham 2007 Cook Michael 2015 The centrality of Islamic civilization In Kedar Benjamin Z Wiesner Hanks Merry E eds The Cambridge World History Vol V Expanding Webs of Exchange and Conflict 500 CE 1500 CE Cambridge University Press p 401 ISBN 978 0 521 19074 9 The Timurid Empire Archived from the original on August 16 2009 History of civilizations of Central Asia v 4 The Age of achievement A D 750 to the end of the fifteenth century Pt II the achievements UNESCO 2000 ISBN 978 92 3 103654 5 Khalid Adeeb 2014 02 08 1 Islam in Central Asia Islam after Communism University of California Press pp 19 33 doi 10 1525 9780520957862 004 ISBN 978 0 520 95786 2 S2CID 240691206 Islam in Central Asia PDF content ucpress edu SourcesDickens Mark 2018 Transoxiana In Nicholson Oliver ed The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Further reading