Pankaj tandon
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the barbarians who murdered Antiochus III Magnus during his attempted raid to plunder the shrine of Bel in the Elymean Hills.
Isidore of Charax
Stathmoi Parthikoi c.25-1 BC Names the area beyond Sakastene as Paraitakene. Thus Seistan or modern Baluchistan seems to have become the territory of the Pāratas by this time. Pliny
Natural History VI, 116 and 131 c.1 st century AD Locates the territory of the ‘Paraetaceni’ between the Parthi and the Ariani. Thus the Pāratas seem at this time to be located somewhere on the borders of modern Afghanistan and Iran, in the Herat area. Periplus
st century AD Locates the territory of the ‘Paradon’ beyond the Ommanitic region, that is, on the coast of modern Baluchistan. Ptolemy
2 nd century AD Identifi es the interior of Gedrosia as ‘Paradene’, thus placing the Pāratas in the interior of Baluchistan. Refers to a town named Paradabathra on the west bank of the Indus river. Naqsh-i-Rustam inscription Time of Shapur I 262 AD Names P’rtu as one of the provinces of the empire, between Makran and Hindustan, i.e., in eastern Baluchistan. Since the Pārata king is not named by al-Tabari as one of the rulers who submitted to Ardeshir I, it appears that Shapur may have been the one to subjugate the Pāratas. Paikuli inscription Time of Narseh
293-302 Names the Paradanshah as one of the royals who congratulated Narseh on his defeat of Vahran III. Mahabharata ? Several references to the Pāradas as a foreign people ‘beyond’ the Sindhu, i.e., living to the west of the river Indus. Ramayana ? Also refers to the Pāradas along with other tribes in the west. Mahamayuri ? Mentions Parāsara as the yaksha in the land of the Pāratas. Brihatsamhita ? Locates the Pāratas in the west. Source: Summarized from B.N. Mukherjee, op. cit., pp. 35-52. We know that the coins of the Pāratarājas are found in Baluchistan. If all of the references discovered by Mukherjee do indeed refer to the Pāratas, we may infer the following history. The Pāratas were a tribe originating in the 7th century BC in what is now north-western Iran, northern Iraq, or even eastern Turkey, perhaps more or less corresponding to the areas
NEW LIGHT ON THE PĀRATARĀJAS 31 inhabited today by the Kurds. 35 The historical references point to a migration that proceeded in fi ts and starts. Alexander encountered them in the area of Bactria and Sogdiana. In the late fi rst century BC, Isidore of Charax has them in the region of Seistan. By the fi rst century AD, the Periplus places them on the coast of Baluchistan, and, fi nally, in the second century, Ptolemy locates them in the interior of Baluchistan. Indian sources of around this time, such as the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, also place the Pāratas roughly in this area, west of the river Indus. This location appears to be confi rmed by Sasanian inscriptions referring to the Pāratas, which suggest that they came under Sasanian domination around the time of Shapur I, in the middle of the third century AD. The only source who appears to contradict this timetable of migration is Pliny the Elder who, writing in the fi rst century AD, places the Pāratarājas between the Parthi and Ariani, hence in the Herat region. However, Pliny’s source, whoever it was, may well have lived several centuries before his time. From this historical reconstruction, the earliest date at which the Pāratas are placed anywhere in Baluchistan is the end of the fi rst century BC, and the date at which they are placed specifi cally in the interior of Baluchistan, which is where the coins are found, is the second century AD. Thus I would conclude for the time being that the most reasonable date for the Pāratarāja coins under examination is some time in the fi rst to second centuries AD. 7. Metrology, design and dating of the coins Of the 81 coins known for this series, I have the weights for 80. The one missing coin is Mukherjee’s coin no. 5, the Shortt collection coin originally published by Rapson, and excluded from Senior’s Indo-Scythian catalogue. The 80 weights form a reasonable sample to examine the metrology of this series. Table 8 presents the average weights of coins of different denominations, in grams, arranged by ruler. I have excluded two coins from this analysis: T48 and T49, which, at 0.52g and 0.73g, might belong to a different denomination than the other eight fractional coins in the sample. Table 8: Average Weights of different coin denominations, by ruler Didrachms Drachms Hemidrachms Quarter drachms No. Avg. Wt. No. Avg. Wt No.
Avg. Wt No.
Avg. Wt Yolamira
5 3.76
14 1.81
5 0.88
Arjuna 6 3.71 11 1.75
Kagha 1 1.67 Hvaramira 1 7.53 4 3.59
Mirahvara 1 6.76 8 3.62
9 1.76
2 1.01
Miratakhma 7 3.53 Uncertain 1 3.88 2 1.69
1 0.81
All 2 7.15 31 3.65
37 1.77
8 0.90
35 Today’s Baluchis are also said to have migrated out of this area, and it is curious to note that the Baluchi and Kurdish languages are closely related. According to Harrison, the Baluchi language ‘is classifi ed as a member of the Iranian group of the Indo-European language family, which includes Farsi (Persian), Pushtu, Baluchi, and Kurdish. Baluchi is closely related to only one of the members of the Iranian group, Kurdish’: see Selig S. Harrison,
International Peace, 1981). One naturally wonders therefore if the Baluchis are in some sense or other descendants of the Pāratas.
PANKAJ TANDON 32 It is clear from the table that the coins form a very coherent metrological picture. The numbers fully justify their classifi cation into four (possibly fi ve) denominations: didrachms with an average weight of 7.15g (1.96 times the average drachm weight), drachms with an average weight of 3.65g, hemidrachms with an average weight of 1.77g (48.6% of the average weight of the drachms), and quarter drachms or trihemiobols with an average weight of 0.90g (24.8% of the average weight of the drachms). If the last two fractional drachms (T48 and T49) were included with the other quarter drachms, the average weight would fall to 0.85g (23.2% of the average weight of the drachms). However, viewed as a separate denomination, these two coins average 0.63g in weight. This average is 17.1% of the average weight of the drachms, which would put them quite close to the expected 16.7% of obols. I am inclined to believe that these two coins were indeed intended to be obols, especially as they are the only coins in the sample that do not carry the ruler’s portrait on them. The obols would form the fi fth denomination. A number of factors seem to connect these coins most closely to Parthian coinage. The fabric of the coins most closely resembles that of early Parthian coins, such as those of Arsakes I and II. In particular, the fl ans of the Pāratarāja coins are slightly convex on the obverse and slightly concave on the reverse. Sellwood had pointed out how early Parthian coins had this property. 36 Further, the pattern of denominations also seems to suggest an early Parthian model. Although drachms were issued by practically all the Parthian sovereigns, only some early ones issued fractional denominations. On the basis of Sellwood’s listing of Parthian coins, we see that hemidrachms were issued by four rulers: Mithradates II, Orodes I, Phraates III and Orodes II, covering the period between 123 and 38 BC. According to Sellwood, Mithradates I (171-138 BC) issued triobols, diobols and obols; Phraates II issued obols, and Orodes II (57-38 BC) issued diobols and obols. As we noted in the previous section, there is another factor that connects the Pāratarājas to the early Parthians. Strabo, in his Geography, refers to the ‘Paraitakenoi’ as subject to the Parthians in the late 3rd century BC. Arguably, these ‘Paraitakenoi’ are none other than the Pāratas, and the dating places them as Parthian subjects precisely at the time of Arsakes I and II. On the basis of these parallels with early Parthian coinage, the Pāratarāja coinage discussed here might reasonably be dated to the fi rst or second century BC. However, the metrology itself does not agree with such an early date. At the time of Arsakes I and II, the weight of the Parthian drachm was approximately 4.1g. This is the weight offered by Mitchiner, 37 and is confi rmed by the average weight of recorded examples in the Fred Shore collection. 38 The average observed weight of Pāratarāja coins of 3.65g is thus considerably lower. To try to determine the point of time at which the weight of the Parthian drachm had fallen to 3.65 gm., I looked at all the coins in the Shore collection and plotted the average drachm weights. There were a total of 330 coins in the sample, which is presumably fairly representative. The plot of the weights, and the trend line, 39 are presented in Figure 8. The chart shows clearly the decline in the average weight of the Parthian drachm, from a high of around 4.1g at the time of Arsakes I (c.225 BC) to around 3.5g at the end of the dynasty some 450 years later. The trend line reaches 3.65g around the time of Vardanes I (AD 40-45). 36 D.G. Sellwood, Parthian Coins (London, Pardy & Son, 1980), p. 9. 37 Michael Mitchiner, Oriental Coins and their Values: The Ancient and Classical World (London, Hawkins Publications, 1978), p. 107. 38 Fred B. Shore, Parthian Coins and History: Ten Dragons against Rome (Quarryville, PA, Classical Numismatic Group, 1993). The average weight of two specimens of Arsakes I drachms is 4.15 g, and of the two specimens of Arsakes II 4.10 g. 39 The trend line was simply the second-order polynomial offered by Excel. NEW LIGHT ON THE PĀRATARĀJAS 33 Indeed, because of the considerable fl uctuation in the average weight of the Parthian drachm from ruler to ruler, a weight of 3.65g for the Pāratarāja drachm is consistent with the Parthian coinage at any time from around 50 BC to AD 200. Figure 8: Average Weights of Parthian drachms in the Shore Collection Konow (see n. 24 above in section 3 on the name Yolamira) dated the potsherds found in Loralai to c.150, largely on grounds of the letter-forms and the use of the title Shahi, which he said had been revived by Kanishka. If Konow is correct, and considering that Yolamira is chronologically the fi rst among the fi ve Pāratarāja kings whose coins we have, the date for the Pāratarāja coins would be c.150-200. This places the coins at the very end of the period suggested by the metrology. Their rather unusual fabric, similar to early Parthian coins of 350 years earlier, remains unexplained. It is worth noting here a putative connection between the Pāratarāja coins and the silver drachms of the Indo-Parthians issued in Seistan. Although the fabric and style of the Seistan drachms is not similar to the Pāratarāja coins, might their weight standard be linked. Mitchiner 40 lists the notional weight of the silver drachms issued by all rulers from Gondophares to Sanabares as a reduced Attic standard of 3.7g. If this is correct, the standard would fi t neatly with that of the Pāratarāja coins. To test this, I tabulated the weights of the 6 Seistan drachms provided by Mitchiner, the weights of all 24 Seistan drachms reported by Senior in his Indo-Scythian catalogue, 41 and those of 11 coins in my own collection, giving data on a total of 41 coins. The results are given in Table 9, in which the rulers are arranged in the order suggested by Senior in his review of the Seistan coinage. 42 Coins assigned by Mitchiner to Gondophares, surnamed ‘Sah’, have been assigned to Sases as suggested by Senior.
40 Michael Mitchiner, Indo-Greek and Indo-Scythian Coinage, Volume 8: The Indo-Parthians (London, Hawkins Publications, 1976), pp. 727-31 and 775-8. 41 Robert C. Senior, op. cit., Volume II, pp. 148-84. 42 Senior, op. cit., Volume I, pp. 112-13. PANKAJ TANDON 34
Avg Mitchiner Senior
Tandon Gondophares 3.46 3.97 3.27 3.16 3.57 3.76 3.19 3.71 3.85 3.24 2.98 3.31 Orthagnes 3.34 3.18 3.59 3.38 3.20 Sases
3.42 3.20 2.71 3.84 3.62 3.38 3.78
Ubouzanes 2.97
2.59 3.18 3.14
Abdagases 2.86
3.74 2.15 3.52 3.01 2.28 2.89 2.46 Sanabares 3.47
3.55 3.77 3.75 3.54 3.15 3.04
Pakores 3.18 2.24 3.76 3.22 3.49 Group Average 3.28 The table shows that the average weight of the Seistan drachms is signifi cantly lower than the 3.7g notional weight suggested by Mitchiner and the 3.65g average weight of the Pāratarāja drachms. The average of the 41 coins turns out to be 3.28g. The range of weights is rather large, from a low of 2.15g to a high of 3.97g. By comparison, the range of weights for the 26 Pāratarāja drachms in our sample is 2.96 – 4.13g, with an average of 3.65g. Thus the Pāratarāja drachms seem to be signifi cantly heavier than the Seistan drachms, and the metrological link between these two groups seems somewhat tenuous. Although the fabric and metrology of the Pāratarāja coinage seems to indicate a Parthian connection, there are nevertheless several signs of strong Indian infl uences on the coinage as well. The use of the swastika, the overall design involving a central symbolic element along with a circular legend, and the use of patronymics all have strong parallels in Indian coinages of the time. I consider each of these in turn, especially with a view to what they can tell us about the likely date of the Pāratarāja coins. The swastika was a widely used symbol, not only in India but in many other parts of the world. Swastikas have been found in ancient sites ranging from Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa to Sumeria, ancient Egypt and many Greek sites. 43 On coins, there are some swastikas on Greek coins, 44 but swastikas were common only in India, where their earliest appearance seems to be on the punchmark coinage of various ancient janapadas, such as Kashi and Kosala. This use would date to the 5th or 4th century BC, as it pre-dates the conquest of Kosala by Magadha. Swastikas continued to be used at various times by various dynasties through the ensuing centuries. They appear in the Magadha-Maurya series and are widely prevalent in the cast copper coinage of the succeeding Sunga dynasty and also in the coinage of the Satvahanas and of Ujjain. In the north-west, swastikas occur on the city coinages of Pushkalavati and Taxila, dating to the second century BC. They are absent from the Graeco-Bactrian and Indo-Greek coinage, and also from most of the Indo-Scythian coinage. The coins of the very last Scythian rulers, however, Rajuvula and his son Sodasa, did feature swastikas. These were probably from mints in Jammu and Mathura, and date to the early part of the fi rst century AD. Finally, swastikas were a constant element in the coinage of the Kunindas, who ruled in northern India in the foothills of the Himalayas from the late 2nd century BC to some time late in the 1st century AD. 43 Savita Sharma, Early Indian Symbols (Delhi, Agam Kala Prakashan, 1990), pp. 60-78. 44 Swastikas are featured on a few coins of Syracuse, Leucas, Corinth and Ionia: see Leo Anson, Numismata Graeca: Greek Coin-Types Classifi ed for Immediate Identifi cation (London, K. Paul, 1910). NEW LIGHT ON THE PĀRATARĀJAS 35 Swastikas next make a prominent appearance in the late second to early third century in the coinage of the Kushan king Vasudeva I. Towards the later part of his reign, his Peshawar coinage begins to feature the swastika as an ancillary symbol. This practice was continued by the Kushano-Sasanian coinage that followed in that region. Thus we see that swastikas were widely used on coinage in north-western India, and their use by the Pāratarājas indicates a clear, albeit slight, affi nity to Indian, rather than Parthian, coinage. However, the use of the swastika spanned such a long period that its presence on the Pāratarāja coinage does not greatly help in dating it. Turning next to the overall design of the coins, we see infl uences from both the Persian and Indian spheres. The canonical form of Parthian coinage had on the obverse a bust left within a dotted border (no legend), 45 and on the reverse a seated king with a legend around in a rectangular arrangement. Thus the obverse of the Pāratarāja coinage seems to be similar to the Parthian prototype; however, the reverse, with its central symbolic element (the swastika) and circular legend, does not match the Parthian pattern. Although the connection between the Pāratarāja coinage and that of Seistan seemed tenuous at best, there are some hints of an affi nity with some other Indo-Parthian coins. 46 Senior’s types 204, 207, 212, 244, 255, 257, and 258 all have obverse busts of a style very similar to the busts on the Pāratarāja coins; Senior has identifi ed most of these types as issuing from Arachosia. Type 207 is particularly interesting, as it has not only a bust of similar style but also a reverse consisting of a central symbolic element surrounded by a legend. Although Senior’s coin is not legible enough to read, Joe Cribb has informed me 47 that he has seen another specimen of that type which clearly reads Gadana. Coins of Gadana are associated with Orthagnes and Ubouzanes; in fact, Senior assigns them to Orthagnes. Thus this coin must be later than Gondophares, but earlier than Sasan, placing it late in the fi rst century. 48
This gives another piece of evidence to help fi x the date for the Pāratarāja coinage. The most obvious comparison group for the Pāratarāja coinage, however, is that of the Western Kshatrapas. Although the Western Kshatrapa coinage seems to have been on a different weight standard, the design of these coins closely matches those of the Pāratarājas. Western Kshatrapa silver coinage featured on the obverse a bust right, surrounded by a mostly blundered circular legend in Greek, 49 and on the reverse a central symbolic element (typically a crescented three-arched hill, with river below and sun and moon above) surrounded by a circular Brahmi legend. 50 Thus, apart from the fact that the Pāratarāja coinage has dispensed with an obverse legend entirely, these two coinages seem closely linked in overall design. A further affi nity between the coinages of the Pāratarājas and the Western Kshatrapas is the use of patronymics in both. As far as I know, patronymics were never used in Parthian coinage. There were a few isolated uses in India, for example, a unique bronze coin of Artemidoros, which names him as the son of Maues. 51 There are also some coins of the Indo- 45 In addition, there are a few coins with front-facing busts and a very few with right-facing busts. 46 My thanks to Joe Cribb for calling my attention to these coins. 47 Personal communication by email, 9 February 2006. 48 Senior would date it early in the fi rst century, as he dates Gondophares earlier than most other historians. 49 The obverse circular legend in Greek was a holdover from the ample Graeco-Bactrian, Indo-Greek and successor Saka coinage that had been issued in Bactria and south of the Hindu Kush, including the Punjab, for the previous several centuries. 50 The reverse design seems to loosely follow the coinage of the Audambaras and Kunindas, dating probably from the 1st century BC. 51 The coin carries a Kharoshthi legend that reads Rajatirajasa Moasaputrasa Artemidorasa; see R.C. Senior and D. MacDonald, The Decline of the Indo-Greeks (Athens, Hellenic Numismatic Society, 1998), p. 55. PANKAJ TANDON 36 Parthian ruler Abdagases which name him as the son of Gondophares’s brother. 52 And there is a single bronze coin of the Kushan king Huvishka, naming him as the son of Kanishka. 53
In neither of these cases, however, did the use of the patronymic become a regular feature of the dynastic coinage. Download 316.61 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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