History of Afghanistan
AFGHANISTAN'S HISTORY, internal
political development, foreign relations, and very existence
as an independent state have largely been determined by its
geographic location at the crossroads of Central, West, and
South Asia. Over the centuries, waves of migrating peoples
passed through the region--described as a "roundabout of the
ancient world," by historian Arnold Toynbee--leaving behind a
mosaic of ethnic and linguistic groups. In modern times, as
well as in antiquity, vast armies of the world passed through
Afghanistan, temporarily establishing local control and often
dominating Iran and northern India.
Although it was the
scene of great empires and flourishing trade for over two
millennia, Afghanistan did not become a truly independent
nation until the twentieth century. The area's heterogeneous
groups were not bound into a single political entity until the
reign of Ahmad Shah Durrani, who in 1747 founded the monarchy
that ruled the country until 1973. In the nineteenth century,
Afghanistan lay between the expanding might of the Russian and
British empires. In 1900, Abdur Rahman Khan (the "Iron Amir"),
looking back on his twenty years of rule and the events of the
past century, wondered how his country, which stood "like a
goat between these lions [Britain and Tsarist Russia] or a
grain of wheat between two strong millstones of the grinding
mill, [could] stand in the midway of the stones without being
ground to dust?" Constrained by the competing dictates of
powerful British and Russian empires, Abdur Rahman focused
instead on consolidating his power within Afghanistan and
creating the institutions of a modern nation-state.
Islam played a key role
in the formation of Afghan history as well. Despite the Mongol
invasion of Afghanistan in the early thirteenth century which
has been described as resembling "more some brute cataclysm of
the blind forces of nature than a phenomenon of human
history," even a warrior as formidable as Genghis Khan did not
uproot Islamic civilization, and within two generations his
heirs had become Muslims. An often unacknowledged event that
nevertheless played an important role in Afghan history (and
in the politics of Afghanistan's neighbors and the entire
region up to the present) was the rise in the tenth century of
a strong Sunni dynasty--the Ghaznavids. Their power prevented
the eastward spread of Shiism from Iran, thereby insuring that
the majority of the Muslims in Afghanistan and South Asia
would be Sunnis.
THE
PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD
Archaeological exploration began in Afghanistan in earnest
after World War II and proceeded promisingly until the Soviet
invasion disrupted it in December of 1979. Artifacts typical
of the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze, and Iron
ages were found. It is not yet clear, however, to what extent
these periods were contemporaneous with similar stages of
development in other geographic regions. The area that is now
Afghanistan seems in prehistory--as well as ancient and modern
times--to have been closely connected by culture and trade
with the neighboring regions to the east, west, and north.
Urban civilization in the Iranian plateau, which includes most
of Iran and Afghanistan, may have begun as early as 3000 to
2000 B.C. About the middle of the second millennium B.C.
people speaking an Indo-European language may have entered the
eastern part of the Iranian Plateau, but little is known about
the area until the middle of the first millennium B.C., when
its history began to be recorded during the Achaemenid Empire.
Achaemenid Rule, ca. 550-331 B.C.
The area that is present-day
Afghanistan comprised several satrapies (provinces) of the
Achaemenid Empire when it was at its most extensive, under
Darius the Great (ca. 500 B.C.). Bactriana, with its capital
at Bactria (which later became Balkh), was reputedly the home
of Zoroaster, who founded the religion that bears his name.
By the fourth century
B.C., Iranian control of outlying areas and the internal
cohesion of the empire had become tenuous. Although outlying
areas like Bactriana had always been restless under Achaemenid
rule, Bactrian troops nevertheless fought on the Iranian side
in the decisive Battle of Gaugamela (330 B.C.). They were
defeated by Alexander the Great.
Alexander and Greek Rule, 330-ca. 150 B.C.
It took Alexander only three years (from about 330-327 B.C.)
to subdue the area that is now Afghanistan and the adjacent
regions of the former Soviet Union. Moving eastward from the
area of Herat, the Macedonian leader encountered fierce
resistance from local rulers of what had been Iranian satraps.
Although his expedition through Afghanistan was brief, he left
behind a Hellenic cultural influence that lasted several
centuries.
Upon Alexander's death
in 323 B.C., his empire, which had never been politically
consolidated, broke apart. His cavalry commander, Seleucus,
took nominal control of the eastern lands and founded the
Seleucid dynasty. Under the Seleucids, as under Alexander,
Greek colonists and soldiers entered the region of the Hindu
Kush, and many are believed to have remained. At the same
time, the Mauryan Empire was developing in the northern part
of the Indian subcontinent. It took control, thirty years
after Alexander's death, of the southeasternmost areas of the
Seleucid domains, including parts of present-day Afghanistan.
The Mauryans introduced Indian culture, including Buddhism, to
the area. With the Seleucids on one side and the Mauryans on
the other, the people of the Hindu Kush were in what would
become a familiar quandary in ancient as well as modern
history--that is, caught between two empires.
In the middle of the
third century B.C., an independent, Greek-ruled state was
declared in Bactria. Graeco-Bactrian rule spread until it
included most of the territory from the Iranian deserts to the
Ganges River and from Central Asia to the Arabian Sea by about
170 B.C. Graeco-Bactrian rule was eventually defeated by a
combination of the internecine disputes that plagued Greek
rulers to the west, the ambitious attempts to extend control
into northern India, and the pressure of two groups of nomadic
invaders from Central Asia--the Parthians and Sakas (perhaps
the Scythians).
Central Asian and
Sassanian Rule, ca. 150 B.C.-700 A.D.
In the third and second centuries B.C., the Parthians, a
nomadic people speaking Indo-European languages, arrived on
the Iranian Plateau. The Parthians established control in most
of what is Iran as early as the middle of the third century
B.C.; about 100 years later another Indo-European group from
the north--the Kushans (a subgroup of the tribe called the
Yuezhi by the Chinese)--entered Afghanistan and established an
empire lasting almost four centuries.
The Kushan Empire spread
from the Kabul River Valley to defeat other Central Asian
tribes that had previously conquered parts of the northern
central Iranian Plateau once ruled by the Parthians. By the
middle of the first century B.C., the Kushans' control
stretched from the Indus Valley to the Gobi Desert and as far
west as the central Iranian Plateau. Early in the second
century A.D. under Kanishka, the most powerful of the Kushan
rulers, the empire reached its greatest geographic and
cultural breadth to become a center of literature and art.
Kanishka extended Kushan control to the mouth of the Indus
River on the Arabian Sea, into Kashmir, and into what is today
the Chinese-controlled area north of Tibet. Kanishka was a
patron of religion and the arts. It was during his reign that
Mahayana Buddhism, imported to northern India earlier by the
Mauryan emperor Ashoka (ca. 260-232 B.C.), reached its zenith
in Central Asia.
In the third century
A.D., Kushan control fragmented into semi-independent kingdoms
that became easy targets for conquest by the rising Iranian
dynasty, the Sassanians (ca. 224-561 A.D.). These small
kingdoms were pressed by both the Sassanians from the west and
by the growing strength of the Guptas, an Indian dynasty
established at the beginning of the fourth century.
The disunited Kushan and
Sassanian kingdoms were in a poor position to meet the threat
of a new wave of nomadic, Indo-European invaders from the
north. The Hepthalites (or White Huns) swept out of Central
Asia around the fourth century into Bactria and to the south,
overwhelming the last of the Kushan and Sassanian kingdoms.
Historians believe that their control continued for a century
and was marked by constant warfare with the Sassanians to the
west.
By the middle of the
sixth century the Hepthalites were defeated in the territories
north of the Amu Darya (the Oxus River of antiquity) by
another group of Central Asian nomads, the Western Turks, and
by the resurgent Sassanians in the lands south of the Amu
Darya. Up until the advent of Islam, the lands of the Hindu
Kush were dominated up to the Amu Darya by small kingdoms
under Sassanian control but with local rulers who were Kushans
or Hepthalites.
Of this great Buddhist
culture and earlier Zoroastrian influence there remain few, if
any, traces in the life of Afghan people today. Along ancient
trade routes, however, stone monuments of Buddhist culture
exist as reminders of the past. The two great sandstone
Buddhas, thirty-five and fifty-three meters high overlook the
ancient route through Bamian to Balkh and date from the third
and fifth centuries A.D. In this and other key places in
Afghanistan, archaeologists have located frescoes, stucco
decorations, statuary, and rare objects from China, Phoenicia,
and Rome crafted as early as the second century A.D. that bear
witness to the influence of these ancient civilizations on the
arts in Afghanistan.
ISLAMIC CONQUEST
In 637 A.D., only five years after the death of the Prophet
Muhammad, Arab Muslims shattered the might of the Iranian
Sassanians at the battle of Qadisiya, and the invaders began
to reach into the lands east of Iran. By the middle of the
eighth century, the rising Abbasid Dynasty was able to subdue
the Arab invasion, putting an end to the prolonged struggle.
Peace prevailed under the rule of the caliph Harun al Rashid
(785-809) and his son, and learning flourished in such Central
Asian cities as Samarkand. From the seventh through the ninth
centuries, most inhabitants of what is present-day
Afghanistan, Pakistan, southern parts of the former Soviet
Union, and areas of northern India were converted to Sunni
Islam.
In the eighth and ninth
centuries ancestors of many of today's Turkic-speaking Afghans
settled in the Hindu Kush area (partly to obtain better
grazing land) and began to assimilate much of the culture and
language of the Pashtun tribes already present there (see
Ethnic Groups, ch. 2).
By the middle of the
ninth century, Abbasid rule had faltered, and semi-independent
states began to emerge throughout the empire. In the Hindu
Kush area, three short-lived, local dynasties ascended to
power. The best known of the three, the Samanid, extended its
rule from Bukhara as far south as India and west as Iran.
Although Arab Muslim intellectual life still was centered in
Baghdad, Iranian Muslim scholarship, that is, Shia Islam,
predominated in the Samanid areas at this time. By the
mid-tenth century, the Samanid Dynasty had crumbled in the
face of attacks from Turkish tribes to the north and from the
Ghaznavids, a rising dynasty to the south.
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