
The Kushan Empire
The History and Legacy of the Powerful Ancient Kingdom in South Asia
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Narrated by:
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Colin Fluxman
About this listen
Today, Afghanistan is often viewed as a brutal, timeless land that is better left alone and forgotten than dealt with as a modern nation. The Soviet Union and the United States were both unsuccessful in their attempts to occupy the land and reform its society, but the reality is that civilization is an ancient concept in Afghanistan, and it was once one of the wealthiest and most sophisticated countries in the world. Long before it was known as Afghanistan, and even longer before it acquired its current reputation, Afghanistan’s modern borders were fairly congruent with the ancient country known as Bactria.
Bactria was the seat of several different kingdoms during the course of many centuries, but none were as successful as the Kushan Empire, the dominant political entity in Central Asia from the early second century BCE until the early third century CE, during which time the Kushan rulers played a major role in the first iteration of the trade networks known collectively as the Silk Road.
The Kushans began as nomadic steppe warriors who eventually grew tired of constantly migrating and subsequently put their skills and experience to use by conquering Bactria and creating a kingdom that was stronger economically than it was militarily. Taking advantage of their location on the Silk Road trade routes, the Kushan kings charged fees and tolls for goods passing through their empire and developed over-land and sea routes that brought goods from China to Rome and vice versa. But silk, textiles, gold, silver, and other commodities were not the only things that entered the Kushan Empire from the East and West; the Kushan Empire was a focal point for the spread of ideas, diplomats, and diseases.
Although the Romans and the Chinese never had direct contact, they both had diplomatic relations with the Kushan kings, who proved to be outstanding diplomats. The Kushan Empire eventually became a transit point of people and ideas, where enormous wealth was exchanged alongside early forms of monotheism, such as Zoroastrianism and Buddhism. The Kushan kings recognized these cultural benefits and so practiced a policy of patronizing different religious philosophies and maintaining peaceful relations with other powers along the Silk Road to keep the flow of goods moving.
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