10. Hephthalites in Bactria

After the Sasanian king Peroz had forced the Kidarites out of Bactria in 467 CE (showcase 3), he was soon threatened by a new danger, another Hunnic group, the Hephthalites. In 474 CE the Persian army under the personal command of Peroz suffered its first defeat against the Hephthalites. Peroz was taken prisoner and had to purchase his own freedom with a ransom of 30 mule-loads of silver drahms (approx. 1500 kg). Following his release the king again began against all warning to mount for war. In 484 CE the decisive battle took place during which Peroz perished. Bactria finally fell to the Hephthalites, who began to strike their own coins in the capital Balkh.

Prior to this event in the first half of the 5th century, probably under the Kidarites (showcase 3), a ruler had come to power in a part of Bactria who labelled himself on his coins "King Tobazini" (Nos. 1, 2). He imitated the coins of the Sasanian king Wahram IV (388–399 CE) and used a clan symbol found among both the Alkhan in Kabulistan and Gandhara (showcase 6) and later the Hephthalites in Bactria (Nos. 5, 6). The drachms of Peroz, which the Hephthalites had received in such great numbers as ransom and tribute and which they countermarked to legitimize circulation in their territory (No. 3), finally served as the model for the Hephthalite's own coinage in Bactria.

At first, the Hephthalite imitations struck in Balkh (Nos. 4, 5) are so deceptively similar to the Sasanian originals that one can assume that they were made by Sasanian die-cutters who had fallen into the hands of the Hephthalites with their victory over Peroz.

Context
  • Symbol (tamga) of the Hephthalites

A. Symbol (tamga) of the Hephthalites

  • Contract (ink on leather, with five clay bullae) in the Bactrian language, from the archive of the kingdom of Rob (Bactria, North Afghanistan). (© Nicholas Sims-Williams)
  • Contract (ink on leather, with five clay bullae) in the Bactrian language, from the archive of the kingdom of Rob (Bactria, North Afghanistan). (© Nicholas Sims-Williams)

B. Contract (ink on leather, with five clay bullae) in the Bactrian language, from the archive of the kingdom of Rob (Bactria, North Afghanistan). (© Nicholas Sims-Williams)

With this contract two residents of Madr, a city in the kingdom of Rob, are forced to sell a piece of agricultural land for eight gold dinars since they are not able to pay the taxes on their house that the Hephthalites had imposed. The contract is dated to 483/484 CE. In 484 CE Peroz fell in battle against the Hephthalites; thereafter Bactria came under Hephthalite rule.

  • Clay seal of a Hephthalite king with the Bactrian inscription "The Lord (Yabgu) of the Hephthalites". End 5th/first half of the 6th century CE. (© Aman ur Rahman)

C. Clay seal of a Hephthalite king with the Bactrian inscription "The Lord (Yabgu) of the Hephthalites". End 5th/first half of the 6th century CE. (© Aman ur Rahman)

  • Silver bowl with a royal couple at a banquet. Probably produced in Bactria, 6th/7th century CE. Found before 1841 in the Ural foothills (Perm' Region). (© St. Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum, Inv.-no. S-75)
  • Silver bowl with a royal couple at a banquet. Probably produced in Bactria, 6th/7th century CE. Found before 1841 in the Ural foothills (Perm' Region). (© St. Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum, Inv.-no. S-75)

D. Silver bowl with a royal couple at a banquet. Probably produced in Bactria, 6th/7th century CE. Found before 1841 in the Ural foothills (Perm' Region). (© St. Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum, Inv.-no. S-75)

The royal couple sits on a throne bench covered by a carpet. Left is a servant with a wine jug, and right two monkeys playing music; a winged camel with a wreath in its mouth floats above the couple. The king, holding a drinking cup, wears Central Asian costume; this depiction is similar to the image of the Hephthalite princes on the coins (No. 6).