Lost & Found
Ancient gold artifacts from Afghanistan, hidden for more than a decade, dazzle in a new exhibition
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Greeks Bearing Gifts
One of the most important ancient cities in Afghanistan was discovered in 1964 at Ai Khanum, also in the northern region formerly known as Bactria. Founded around 300 b.c. by Seleucus I, a Macedonian general who won a power struggle to control the region following the death of Alexander the Great in 323 b.c., the city became the eastern outpost of Greek culture in Asia. Its artifacts reflect Greek and Indian, as well as local, artistic traditions. Works featured in the exhibition include a seven-inch-high bronze figure of Hercules and a gilded silver plaque that combines Greek and Persian elements. It depicts Cybele, the Greek goddess of nature, riding in a Persian-style chariot, shaded by a large parasol held by a priest.
Like Tillya Tepe and Tepe Fullol, Ai Khanum was also discovered by chance. While out hunting game in 1961 near the border with the then Soviet Tajik Republic (present-day Tajikistan), the last Afghan king, Zahir Shah, was presented with a carved chunk of limestone by local villagers. The king later showed the fragment to Daniel Schlumberger—then the director of a French archaeological expedition in Afghanistan—who recognized it as coming from a Corinthian, likely Greek, capital. (A similar capital is displayed in the show.) In November 1964, Schlumberger led a team to Ai Khanum, where, after digging up shards bearing Greek letters, he began excavations that continued until the Soviet invasion in December 1979.
Shaped like a triangle, roughly a mile on each side, the city, which was strategically located at the junction of the Oxus and Kokcha rivers, was dominated by an acropolis situated on a flat-topped, 200-foot-high bluff. Its huge entry courtyard was surrounded by airy colonnades supported by 126 Corinthian columns. Beyond the courtyard lay reception halls, ceremonial rooms, private residences, a treasury, a large bathhouse, a temple and a theater.
As in nearly every Greek city, there was a gymnasium, or school, and in it excavators found two sundials that appear to have been used to teach astronomy. Unusually, one of them was calibrated for the Indian astronomical center of Ujjain, at a latitude some 14 degrees south of Ai Khanum—an indication, says Paul Bernard, a member of the French excavation team, of scholarly exchanges among Greek and Indian astronomers.
Based on Indian works discovered at the site, Bernard believes that in the second century b.c., Ai Khanum became the Greco-Bactrian capital city Eucratidia, named for the expansionist king Eucratides, who likely brought the pieces back from India as spoils from his military campaigns there. After a century and a half as an outpost of Hellenistic culture in Afghanistan, the city came to a violent end. Eucratides was murdered in 145 b.c., apparently touching off a civil conflict that left the city vulnerable to marauding nomads, who burned and destroyed it the same year. Sadly, the archaeological site of Ai Khanum met a similar fate; it was looted and nearly obliterated during the years of Soviet occupation and civil strife in Afghanistan.
A Fortress in the Hindu Kush
In 329 b.c., Alexander the Great is believed to have established the fortress city of Alexandria of the Caucasus in a lush river valley south of the Hindu Kush mountains about 50 miles north of Kabul. Now known as Begram, the city was an important trading center for the Greco-Bactrian kingdom from about 250 to 100 b.c. and continued to thrive under the Kushan Empire that arose in the first century a.d.
According to Sanjyot Mehendale, a Near Eastern authority at the University of California at Berkeley, the Roman glass and bronze, Chinese lacquer and hundreds of Indian-style ivory plaques and sculptures unearthed at Begram in 1937 and 1939 suggested that the city had been a major commodities juncture along the Silk Road. Although French archaeologists Joseph and Ria Hackin, who excavated the site, concluded that Begram was the summer residence of the Kushan emperors, Mehendale believes that two sealed rooms containing what the Hackins called "royal treasure" were actually a merchant's shop or warehouse.
The glassware and bronze, she says, likely arrived by sea from Roman Egypt and Syria to ports near present-day Karachi, Pakistan, and Gujarat in western India, and were then transported overland by camel caravan. The exhibition's Begram section includes plaster medallions depicting Greek myths; ivory plaques recounting events from the life of Buddha; and whimsical fish-shaped flasks of blown colored glass.
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Related topics: Artifacts Prehistoric Eras Afghanistan
Additional Sources
Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures From the National Museum, Kabul (exhibition catalog) edited by Fredrik Hiebert and Pierre Cambon, National Geographic Society, 2008









Comments (6)
Hello Mr. Fredrik Hiebert, Wanted to know if the "knife handle embossed with an image of a Siberian bear" would be a white siberian bear or not ? Russian native indians folk lord said 'there is great White Siberian Bear' that once roamed Russia. Also were you able to find any writing on the KUSHAN Empire and can you tells us the story on how the "BUDDHAS OF BAMYAN" in the Bamyan Valley looked in the old days when it was painted and could be seen 100 of miles away at night...? Thank you for all your help.
Posted by Michael Kush on February 26,2009 | 04:16 PM
i enjoyed this article very much--anticipating viewing this exhibit next year. thankyou
Posted by on September 25,2008 | 06:39 PM
I was very happy to read the article.I am a Parsi Zoroastrian and am interested in Archeology especially in Ancient Persian History. I am positive there are many sites in Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and several other places in the North. Unfortunately due to political and unstable security conditions research cannot be conducted at such places. We shall be able to learn more about our ancient history and cultures. I wish those few brave people to protect the valuable treasures from the barbaric people there.
Posted by Yezdi Dalal on September 22,2008 | 01:28 AM
This was one of the most fascinating articles in archaeology I have read in some time. I am amazed at the beauty of what was found. I am saddened about the destruction of the sites and the looting and loss of so many wondrous pieces. At the same time it is incredible that there are still so many to be enjoyed and shared. Thanks to all who sacraficed so much so that a beautiful and rich history can be uncovered.
Posted by Nancy Naiukow on September 18,2008 | 12:43 AM
Thanks to the brave people of Afghanistan who risked much to save some of the art. My best wishes for peace in the land and a safe life for all your people. elly
Posted by elly sherman on September 9,2008 | 05:50 PM
A wonderful story and marvelous photographs. I am looking forward to the Afghan treasures "Lost and Found" coming to the Asian Art Museum. I will be showing downloaded pictures to students in my classes on The Silk Road, and telling them the dates of when the show will be in San Francisco.
Posted by Jane Chai on August 27,2008 | 08:35 PM
This is a wonderful and welcome article. I was fascinated by the original discovery as described in the National Geographic in the 1990s. I kept that article for the wonderful crown and the clothing worn on the bodies. I was so glad to see the crown and other artifacts this month in the Smithsonian Magazine. The article was fascinating, and I hope to see more about Afghanistani archaeology in this magazine. I only regret that the traveling exhibit will not be closer to me in Colorado Springs. If we can afford it at the time, I guess my husband and I will try to see the artifacts in Houston --- sigh.
Posted by Penny Tegen on August 27,2008 | 04:30 PM
In your Smithsonian Mag Sept. 2008 page oppsosite p76. You show a Gilded silver Plaque. After Studying the plaque for a while I feel that it commerorates a "stellar event", observed by the "Priest on the step platform to the right. The stellar objects (Sun, Moon, God [or planet it is associated with],are coming into alignment with the "gods" [or planets/celestrial bobies they represent}. The chariot Motief representing the movement, but also indicating the Power / change / time to act ect... of the peoples who put all their stock in the (signs - divinations - harbingers)of the time. In other words it either commemerates a time of Change / Catastrophy, or Conquest / warfare, depending on what end of the "stick" you were on. Or Political or Geological event. Jim. G.
Posted by jim gromko on August 27,2008 | 01:23 PM