Vardanzi

Coordinates: 40°09′N 64°26′E / 40.150°N 64.433°E / 40.150; 64.433
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Vardanzi
Type of coin of ruler Asbar, discovered in Vardanzi, Bukhara, Sogdiana. 6th century - first half of the 7th centuries AD.[1] Asbar wears a diadem with frontal crescent.[2]
Vardanzi is located in Uzbekistan
Vardanzi
Shown within Uzbekistan
Vardanzi is located in West and Central Asia
Vardanzi
Vardanzi (West and Central Asia)
Coordinates40°09′N 64°26′E / 40.150°N 64.433°E / 40.150; 64.433
TypeCity

Vardanzi, also Vardanze, is an ancient and medieval town located 40 kilometres (25 mi) north-east of Bukhara, Uzbekistan.[3][4] Today there is a reserve in Shafirkan Bukhara region. Historian Narshakhi recorded that Vardana was a big settlement containing the Kuhandiz Ark, a fortified inner city. From "time immemorial" the rulers of Vardana—the Vardan-khudats—resided here. Vardana was founded much earlier than Bukhara. It was built by an otherwise unknown Sasanian prince named Shapur, son of a Sasanian ruler Khusraw (possibly either Khosrow I (531-578) or Khosrow II (590-628)) and situated on the fringe of Turkestan. Remnants of the old Vardana settlement, now known as Vardanze, have survived as a large hill. Vardana, Narshakhi believed, was older than Bukhara, having been built in the 6th century A.D. At the time, Vardanzi was large and well-known city, but due to the translational motion of sand, in the 19th century it was bombarded by them and became uninhabitable.

Vardanzi was ruled by a dynasty of kings who bore the title of Vardan-khudat. The city in those days was of great strategic, industrial and commercial importance. It was a border crossing point for the nomads. The Arabs, led by Qutayba ibn Muslim in the years 708–709, conquered the Romitan possession of Vartan-haudatov.

According to legend, this town was built by a Sassanian prince who had moved to Bukhara and received land from his ruler more than two thousand years ago. Construction of a canal in the area made the Persian prince Shapur popular. The channel—Shapurkam—was named after the legendary prince.

References

  1. ^ "The Society for the Exploration of EurAsia / www.exploration-eurasia.com". www.exploration-eurasia.com.
  2. ^ Hamid, Nadia (2014). Agency in material? The iconography of headdress at Bamiyan, and what it suggests about relations with neighbouring regions between the 5th and 8th centuries AD. p. 77.
  3. ^ Adylov, Šuhrat T.; Mirzaahmedov, Jamal K. (2006). ON THE HISTORY OF THE ANCIENT TOWN OF VARDĀNA AND THE OBAVIJA FEUD in Ērān ud Anērān. Studies Presented to B. I. Maršak (1st part). Libreria Editrice Cafoscarina. pp. 31–40.
  4. ^ "The Society for the Exploration of EurAsia / www.exploration-eurasia.com". www.exploration-eurasia.com.