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{{Short description|Ancient Iranian people of Central Asia}}
{{Infobox tribe {{Infobox tribe
| name = Dahae | name = Dahae
Line 8: Line 9:
| caption = | caption =
| ethnicity = | ethnicity =
| location = present-day Turkmenistan | location = present-day west and northwest Turkmenistan, far southwest Kazakhstan and far west Uzbekistan (most of the ])


| varna = | varna =
| descended = | descended =
| population = | population =
| demonym = | demonym =
| branches = Parni, Xanthii and Pissuri | branches = ], ] and ]
| language = | language =
| religion = | religion =
| surnames = | surnames =
}} }}
{{History of Iran}}
The '''Dahae''', also known as the '''Daae''', '''Dahas''' or '''Dahaeans''' ({{langx|peo|𐎭𐏃𐎠|translit=Dahā}}; {{langx|grc|Δαοι|translit=Daoi}}; {{lang|grc|Δααι}}, {{transl|grc|Daai}}; {{lang|grc|Δαι}}, {{transl|grc|Dai}}; {{lang|grc|Δασαι}}, {{transl|grc|Dasai}}; {{langx|la|Dahae}}; {{lang-zh|t=大益|p=Dàyì}};{{sfn|Yu|2004|p=19}} ]: {{lang|fa|{{script|fa-Arab|داه‍ان}}}} {{transl|fa|Dāhān}}) were an ] ]ic ] ], who inhabited the ]s of ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Daryaee |first=Touraj |author-link=Touraj Daryaee |year=2011 |title=The Oxford Handbook of Iranian History |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K-poAgAAQBAJ |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-199-73215-9 |quote=Our knowledge of the making of the Parthian state and of its chronology is full of gaps. We know that it was started by the nomadic tribe of Parni (or Aparni), belonging to the Dahae group of Iranian peoples.}}</ref>


==Identification==
The '''Dahae''', also known as the '''Daae''', '''Dahas''' or '''Dahaeans'''<!-- allegedly.<ref>{{harvnb|Engels|1978|p=***???***}}</ref> {{Citation |last=Engels|first=Donald W.|authorlink=|title=Alexander the Great and the Logistics of the Macedonian Army |origyear= |year=1978 |publisher=University of California Press|location=California|isbn= 0-520-04272-7|pages=|chapter=}} --> ({{lang-la|Dahae}}; {{lang-fa|داه‍ان}} ''Dahan''; {{lang-grc|Δάοι, Δάαι, Δαι, Δάσαι}} ''Dáoi'', ''Dáai'', ''Dai'', ''Dasai''; ]: ''Dasa''; Chinese ''Dayi'' 大益)<ref name="yu">(, p. 19.</ref><ref>] (1994). ''basileutos – daimōn'', Vol 4, p. 859: </ref> were a people of ancient ]. A ] of three tribes – the ], ] and ] – the Dahae lived in an area now comprising much of modern ]. The area has consequently been known as '''Dahestan''', '''Dahistan''' and '''Dihistan'''.
The Dahae may have been the {{transl|ae|Dāha-}} ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬛𐬁𐬵𐬀}}}}) or {{transl|ae|Dåŋha-}} ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬛𐬂𐬢𐬵𐬀}}}}) people mentioned in the ]s as one of the five peoples following the ] religion, along with the {{transl|ae|Aⁱriia-}} ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬌𐬀}}}}), {{transl|ae|Tūⁱriia-}} ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬙𐬏𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬌𐬀}}}}), ] ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬯𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬨𐬀}}}}), and {{transl|ae|Sāinu-}} ({{lang|ae|{{script|Avst|𐬯𐬁𐬌𐬥𐬎}}}}), although this identification is uncertain.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}


The Iranologist ] has identified the Dahā with the ]/] based on ancient Graeco-Roman authors' mention of the {{transl|peo|Sakā tigraxaudā}} as living between the ] and ] rivers, where ] also located the Massagetae and the Dahae.<ref name="Harmatta">{{cite journal |last=Harmatta |first=János |date=1999 |title=Alexander the Great in Central Asia |url=https://akjournals.com/view/journals/068/39/1-4/article-p129.xml |journal=Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae |volume=39 |issue= 1–4|pages=129–136 |doi=10.1556/aant.39.1999.1-4.11 |s2cid=162246561 |access-date=July 4, 2022}}</ref> The scholars A. Abetekov and H. Yusupov have also suggested that the {{transl|xsc|Dahā}} were a constituent tribe of the Massagetae.{{sfn|Abetekov|Yusupov|1994}}
Relatively little is known about their way of life. For example, according to the Iranologist ], the capital of "the ancient Dahae (if indeed they possessed one) is quite unknown."<ref name="Bivar_1993_27">{{harvnb|Bivar|1993|p=27}}.</ref>


The scholar Y. A. Zadneprovskiy has instead suggested that the Dahae were descendants of the Massagetae.<ref name="Zadneprovskiy">{{cite book |editor-last1=Dani |editor-first1=Ahmad Hasan |editor-link1=Ahmad Hasan Dani |editor-last2=Harmatta |editor-first2=János |editor-link2=János Harmatta | editor-last3=Puri |editor-first3=Baij Nath |editor-link3=Baij Nath Puri |editor-last4=Etemadi |editor-first4=G. F. |editor-last5=Bosworth |editor-first5=Clifford Edmund |editor-link5=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |last=Zadneprovskiy |first=Y. A. |author-link= |date=1994 |title=History of Civilizations of Central Asia |chapter=The Nomads of Northern Central Asia After the Invansion of Alexander |url= |location=], ] |publisher=] |pages=448–463 |isbn=978-9-231-02846-5 |quote=The middle of the third century b.c. saw the rise to power of a group of tribes consisting of the Parni (Aparni) and the Dahae, descendants of the Massagetae of the Aral Sea region. }}</ref>
The Dahae dissolved, apparently, some time before the beginning of the 1st millennium. One of the three tribes of the Dahae confederation, the ], emigrated to ] (present-day north-eastern Iran), where they founded the ].


The scholar Marek Jan Olbrycht, who has also identified the Massagetae with the {{transl|peo|Sakā tigraxaudā}},<ref>{{cite book |last=Olbrycht |first=Marek Jan |date=2000 |title=Collectanea Celto-Asiatica Cracoviensia |chapter=Remarks on the Presence of Iranian Peoples in Europe and Their Asiatic Relations |chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/11934986 |location=] |publisher=] |pages=101–104 |isbn=978-8-371-88337-8 }}</ref> however considers the {{transl|peo|Dahā}} as being a separate group from the Saka to which the Massagetae/{{transl|peo|Sakā tigraxaudā}} belonged.<ref>{{cite book |last=Olbrycht |first=Marek Jan |author-link= |date=2021 |title=Early Arsakid Parthia (ca. 250-165 B.C.): At the Crossroads of Iranian, Hellenistic, and Central Asian History |url= |location=], ] ; ], ] |publisher=] |page=22 |isbn=978-9-004-46076-8 |quote=Apparently the Dahai represented an entity not identical with the other better known groups of the Sakai, i.e. the Sakai (Sakā) Tigrakhaudā (Massagetai, roaming in Turkmenistan), and Sakai (Sakā) Haumavargā (in Transoxania and beyond the Syr Daryā).}}</ref>
== Origins ==
The Dahae may be connected to the ]s (] दास ''Dāsa''), mentioned in ancient Hindu texts such as the '']'' as enemies of the ''Ārya''. The proper noun Dasa appears to share the same root as the Sanskrit ''dasyu'', meaning "hostile people" or "demons" (as well as the ] ''dax́iiu'' and ] ''dahyu'' or ''dahạyu'', meaning "province" or "mass of people"). Because of these pejorative implications, a tribe called the ''Dāhī'' – mentioned in Avestan sources (''Yašt'' 13.144) as adhering to ] – is not generally identified with the Dahae.<ref name="iranica"> (23 May 2015).</ref> Conversely the ] word ''daha-'' meaning "man" or "male" was linked to the Dahae by the Indologist ] (1912). This appears to be cognate with nouns in other Eastern Iranian languages, such as a ] word for "servant", ''dāh'' <!-- Edited out due to lack of relevance: "(= kanīzak کنیزک)" --> and the ] ''dʾyh'' or ''dʾy'', meaning "slave woman".<ref name="iranica" />


==Location==
Some scholars also maintain that there were etymological links between the Dahae and ] (Dacii), a people of ancient Eastern Europe.<ref name="white">David Gordon White, 1991, ''Myths of the Dog-Man'', Chicago, University of Chicago Press, pp. 27, 239.</ref> Both were nomadic ] peoples who shared variant names such as ''Daoi''. ], an ] and historian of religion, has reiterated a point made by previous scholars – that the names of both peoples resemble the ] root: ''*dhau'' meaning "]" and/or a euphemism for "]". (Similarly, the ], the northern neighbors of the Dahae, have been linked to the ], a people related to the Dacians.)
The Dahae initially lived in the north-eastern part of the ] ], in the arid steppes of the ] near ], alongside the ] groups and the ]ns and ],{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}} and immediately to the north of ].<ref>{{cite book |editor-last1=Boardman |editor-first1=John |editor-link1=John Boardman (art historian) |editor-last2=Hammond |editor-first2=N. G. L. |editor-link2=N. G. L. Hammond |editor-last3=Lewis |editor-first3=D. M. |editor-link3=David Malcolm Lewis |editor-last4=Ostwald |editor-first4=M. |editor-link4=Martin Ostwald |last=Francfort |first=Henri-Paul |author-link=Henri-Paul Francfort |date=1988 |title=The Cambridge Ancient History |volume=4 |chapter=Central Asia and Eastern Iran |location=], ] |publisher=] |page=173 |isbn=978-0-521-22804-6 |quote=The Dahas of Xerxes' 'Daiva' inscription (XPh) are perhaps to be situated to the north of Hyrcania where the Dahas mentioned by more recent writers are later to be found }}</ref>


During late 4th and early 3rd centuries BCE, the Dahae, and especially their constituent tribe of the ], had settled along the southern and southwestern fringes of the Karakum desert, and by the mid-3rd century BCE they had moved west and had settled along the southeastern shores of the ], in the lands to the north of ]. Two other Dahae tribes, the Xanthioi and the Pissouroi, lived further east till the regions to the north of Areia.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
The country neighbouring the Dahae to the south, '']'' – often known by its ] name, ''Hyrcania'' (Ὑρκανία) – has sometimes been conflated with Dahistan. Like Dahae and Dacia, ''Verkâna'' appears to have a root in an Indo-European word for "wolf", the ]: ''*vrka''.<ref>The ]/] ''verka'' "wolf" was recorded in ]'s ] of 522 BCE), as well as other ] inscriptions. There is evidence for an etymological link between ''Verkāna'' and an ] root meaning "wolf", in related languages including: ] ''vəhrka'', ] and ] ''Verk'', ] ''gorg'', and ] ''Vŗka'' (''वृक'') and ] '']''.</ref> The name of ] (later Zadracarta), the capital of ''Verkâna'', apparently has the same etymological roots, and may be synonymous with one of two modern cities in Iran: ] or ]. (The modern name Gorgan is also derived ultimately from the Proto-Iranian ''*vrka'' for "wolf" and is cognate with the ] ''gorgān'' (i.e. ''v'' > ''g'').<ref>The 'v'' > ''g'' shift is also seen also seen, for example, in two words for "]": ] ''varāza'' and New Persian ''gorāz''.)</ref>


== History == ==Name==
The name of the Dahae, attested in the ] form {{transl|peo|Dahā}}, is derived from a ] name meaning "man," based on the common practice among various peoples of calling themselves "man" in their own languages. This term is attested in the Khotanese form {{transl|kho|daha}}.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}} The Dahae were a nomadic people, and no known sedentary settlement can be attributed to them.<ref>{{cite book |last=Bivar |first=A. D. H. |author-link=David Bivar |date=1983 |title=The Cambridge History of Iran |volume=3.1. |chapter=The Political History of Iran under the Arsacids |url= |location=], ] |publisher=] |page=27 |isbn=978-0-521-20092-9 }}</ref>
]'s biography of ] (c. 589–530 BCE) claims that he was killed by the Dahae near the ] (Jaxartes) river (modern Uzbekistan/Kazakhstan).<ref>M. A. Dandamaev, ''A political history of the Achaemenid empire'', Leiden, Brill, 1989, p. 67</ref> Later sources, such as ] and ] also claimed that some of the Dahae were located near the Jaxartes. The ''Encyclopedia Iranica'' considers that the Dahae "were said to have lived in ... wastes northeast of Bactria and east of Sogdiana. At least some of the Dahae must thus be placed along the eastern fringes of the ], near ancient ]..."<ref name="iranica"/> This suggests that elements of the Dahae were near neighbours of a now-obscure Bronze Age civilisation known to archaeologists as the ] (BMAC).


The scholar ] has instead suggested that the name of the Dahae meant "Stranglers," and was derived from the ] ] ''{{PIE|*dhau}}'', from which he also derived the name of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last=White |first=David Gordon |author-link=David Gordon White |date=1991 |title=Myths of the Dog-Man |url= |location= |publisher=] |page=239 |isbn=}}</ref>
It is possible that the Dahae were confused in secondary accounts with a contemporaneous, possibly related people from ] (Bactria), who were known in ancient China as '']'' 大夏 (also ''Ta-Hsia'', or ''Ta-Hia''). Whereas the Dahae were known in Chinese sources as ''Dayi'' 大益.<ref name="yu"/> Later historical accounts place the Dahae entirely on the south-eastern shores of the ].


==History==
The first reliable mention of the Dahae is considered to be the '']'' inscription by ] of Persia (reigned 486–465 BCE). In a list in ] of the peoples and provinces of the ], the Daeva identifies the ''Dāha'' as neighboring the ].
A splinter {{transl|peo|Dahā}} might possibly have migrated at an early date across the ] and joined the ] who lived in its southwestern part, with the Greek historian ] later referring to the {{transl|grc|Daoi}} as one of the nomadic Persian tribes, along with the ], Dropicans, and ], although this identification is uncertain.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}


The {{transl|peo|Dahā}} were in control of the traffic between ] in the north and ] and ] in the south.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
It is unclear whether the Dahae are also the ''*Dāha'' or ''*Dåŋha'' (only attested in the feminine ''Dahi'') mentioned by the ]i '']'' (13.144), which may date from the 5th century BCE. Moreover, any etymological relationship would not be proof that both names refer to exactly the same people.<ref name="deBlois_1993_581">{{harvnb|de Blois|1993|p=581}}.</ref>


According to the Babylonian historian ], the founder of the Persian ], ], died fighting against the Dahae.<ref name="Dandamayev">{{cite book |last=Dandamaev |first=M. A. |author-link=Muhammad Dandamayev |date=1989 |title=A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire |url= |location=], ] ; ], ] |publisher=] |page=67 |isbn=978-9-004-09172-6 }}</ref> According to the Iranologist ], Berossus identified the Dahae rather than the Massagetae as Cyrus's killers because they had replaced the Massagetae as the most famous nomadic tribe of Central Asia long before Berossus's time,{{sfn|Dandamayev|1994}}<ref name="Dandamayev"/> although some scholars identified the Dahae as being identical with the Massagetae or as one of their sub-groups.<ref name="Harmatta"/>{{sfn|Abetekov|Yusupov|1994}}<ref name="Zadneprovskiy"/>
Dahae and Saka tribes are known to have fought at the ] (331 BCE), in which the armies of the ] were defeated by ]. After the Achaemenid regime collapsed the following year, Alexander recruited Dahae – famed as ]s – for the ].


The oldest certain recorded mention of the {{transl|peo|Dahā}} is in the ] of the Achaemenid king ] along with the {{transl|peo|Sakā Haumavargā}} and the {{transl|sa|Sakā tigraxaudā}}.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
Some "Saka" coins from the ] era (312–63 BCE) are sometimes attributed to the Dahae. By the 3rd century BCE, the ] Dahae had risen to prominence under a chief named ] (c. 250 – c. 211 BCE; ]: ارشک ''Arshak''; ] Ἀρσάκης; ] ''Arsaces''). The Parni ], which had just previously declared independence from the ]s, deposed the reigning monarch, and Ashk crowned himself king (Arsaces I in classical sources). His successors are often referred to as the ]; they would eventually assert military control over the entire Iranian plateau. By then, the Parni would be indistinguishable from the Parthians, and would also be called by that name.


The {{transl|peo|Dahā}} fought within the left wing of the Achaemenid army along with the Bactrians and the Saka against ] at ] in 331 BCE.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
During the 1st Century BCE, the Dahae were reported to have sent envoys to China. According to the Chinese historian Yu Taishan, a contemporary Chinese account (the ''Shijii'') mentions separate envoys from ''Huanqian'' 驩潛 (]), ''Dayi'' 大益 (the Dahae) and ''Suxie'' 蘇薤 (]), among others.<ref name="yu"/>


The Dahae may have invaded Margiana and ] around 300 BCE, and during this invasion they destroyed the towns of Alexandreia and Heracleia located in these respective two countries.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
In the 1st century BCE, ] (''Geographika'' 11.8.1) also refers to the Dahae as a "]" people, who were located in the vicinity of present-day ]. However, while the terms Scythians and Saka are usually regarded as synonymous, that is not always the case with Strabo.


During late 4th and early 3rd centuries BCE, the Dahae, and especially their constituent tribe of the ], had settled along the southern and southwestern fringes of the Karakum desert, and by the mid-3rd century BCE they had moved west and had settled along the southeastern shores of the ], in the lands to the north of Hyrcania. Two other Dahae tribes, the Xanthioi and the Pissouroi, lived further east till the regions to the north of Areia.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}
{{History of Iran}}

During the middle of the 3rd century itself, the Parni had moved into ], where they lived along the Ochus river. Their leader, ], would found the ].{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}

During the 2nd century BCE, both the Dahae ({{lang|zh|大益}} {{transl|zh|Dayi}}) who still lived in the steppes and the Parthian Empire ({{lang|zh|安息}} {{transl|zh|Anxi}}), as well as the Chorasmians ({{lang|zh|驩潛}} {{transl|zh|Huanqian}}), and Sogdians ({{lang|zh|蘇薤}} {{transl|zh|Suxie}}) sent embassies to the ] of the ] which was ruling ].{{sfn|Yu|2004|p=19}}

Interesting fact that currently lands of ancient Dahae are known as ] of ] and are inhabited by Adai- one of ] tribes (]).

===Legacy===
The lands to the north of Hyrcania where the Dahae had settled in the 3rd century BCE became known as ] ({{lang|fa|{{script|fa-Arab|دَهستان}}}}) and {{transl|fa|Dahistān}} ({{lang|fa|{{script|fa-Arab|داهستان}}}}) after them.{{sfn|de Blois|Vogelsang|1993}}


== See also == == See also ==
* ] *]
*]
*]
*]


== References == == References ==
{{reflist|3}} {{reflist|3}}


== Bibliography == == Sources ==
{{refbegin}} {{refbegin}}
* {{cite book |editor-last1=Dani |editor-first1=Ahmad Hasan |editor-link1=Ahmad Hasan Dani |editor-last2=Harmatta |editor-first2=János |editor-link2=János Harmatta | editor-last3=Puri |editor-first3=Baij Nath |editor-link3=Baij Nath Puri |editor-last4=Etemadi |editor-first4=G. F. |editor-last5=Bosworth |editor-first5=Clifford Edmund |editor-link5=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |last1=Abetekov |first1=A. |author-link1=:ky:Абетеков, Асан Кемелович |last2=Yusupov |first2=H. |date=1994 |title=History of Civilizations of Central Asia |chapter=Ancient Iranian Nomads in Western Central Asia |url= |location=], ] |publisher=] |pages=24–34 |isbn=978-9-231-02846-5 }}
* {{citation|title=Cambridge History of Iran|volume=3.1|year=1993|publisher=Cambridge UP|location=London|editor-last=Fischer|editor-first=W.B.|editor2-last=Gershevitch|editor2-first=Ilya|chapter=The Political History of Iran under the Arsacids|last=Bivar|first=A.D.H.|pages=21–99}}
* {{cite book |editor-last1=Dani |editor-first1=Ahmad Hasan |editor-link1=Ahmad Hasan Dani |editor-last2=Harmatta |editor-first2=János |editor-link2=János Harmatta |editor-last3=Puri |editor-first3=Baij Nath |editor-link3=Baij Nath Puri |editor-last4=Etemadi |editor-first4=G. F. |editor-last5=Bosworth |editor-first5=Clifford Edmund |editor-link5=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |last=Dandamayev |first=M. A. |author-link=Muhammad Dandamayev |date=1994 |title=History of Civilizations of Central Asia |chapter=Media and Achaemenid Iran |volume=2 |location=Paris |publisher=] |pages=35–64 |isbn=978-9-231-02846-5 }}
* {{citation|last=de Blois|first=François|chapter=Dahae I: Etymology|title=Encyclopaedia Iranica|volume=6|year=1993|location=Costa Mesa|publisher=Mazda|page=581}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |title=Dahae |encyclopedia=] |date=1993 |last1=de Blois |first1=François |last2=Vogelsang |first2=Willem |publisher=]; ] |location=], ] |url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/dahae |url-access=<!--WP:URLACCESS--> }}
* {{cite book |last=Yu |first=Taishan |date=2004 |title=A History of the Relationship Between the Western & Eastern Han, Wei, Jin, Northern & Southern Dynasties and the Western Regions |url=http://www.sino-platonic.org/complete/spp131_chinese_dynasties_western_region.pdf |series=] |publisher=] |location=], ] |volume=131 |access-date=2022-07-05 }}
{{refend}} {{refend}}


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Latest revision as of 07:39, 12 December 2024

Ancient Iranian people of Central Asia
Dahae
Daae
People
Locationpresent-day west and northwest Turkmenistan, far southwest Kazakhstan and far west Uzbekistan (most of the Ustyurt Plateau)
BranchesParni, Xanthii and Pissuri
Part of a series on the
History of Iran

The Gate of All Nations in Fars
Prehistoric periodBCE / BC
Baradostian culture c. 36,000–18,000
Zarzian culture c. 20,000–10,000
Shulaveri–Shomu culture c. 6000–5000
Zayandeh River Culture c. 6th millennium
Dalma culture c. 5th millennium
Ancient period
Kura–Araxes culture 3400–2000
Helmand culture/Jiroft culture c. 3300–2200
Proto-Elamite 3200–2700
Lullubi Kingdom/Zamua c. 3100-675
Elam 2700–539
Marhaši c. 2550-2020
Oxus Civilization c. 2400–1700
Akkadian Empire 2400–2150
Kassites c. 1500–1155
Avestan period c. 1500–500
Neo-Assyrian Empire 911–609
Urartu 860–590
Mannaea 850–616
Zikirti 750-521
Saparda 720-670
Imperial period
Median Empire 678–550 BC
Scythian Kingdom 652–625 BC
Anshanite Kingdom 635 BC–550 BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire 626 BC–539 BC
Sogdia c. 6th century BC–11th century AD
Achaemenid Empire 550 BC–330 BC
Kingdom of Armenia 331 BC–428 AD
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Kingdom of Cappadocia 320s BC–17 AD
Seleucid Empire 312 BC–63 BC
Kingdom of Pontus 281 BC–62 BC
Fratarakas 3rd-century BC–132 BC
Parthian Empire 247 BC–224 AD
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Paratarajas 125–300
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The Dahae, also known as the Daae, Dahas or Dahaeans (Old Persian: 𐎭𐏃𐎠, romanized: Dahā; Ancient Greek: Δαοι, romanizedDaoi; Δααι, Daai; Δαι, Dai; Δασαι, Dasai; Latin: Dahae; Chinese: 大益; pinyin: Dàyì; Persian: داه‍ان Dāhān) were an ancient Eastern Iranian nomadic tribal confederation, who inhabited the steppes of Central Asia.

Identification

The Dahae may have been the Dāha- (𐬛𐬁𐬵𐬀) or Dåŋha- (𐬛𐬂𐬢𐬵𐬀) people mentioned in the Yašts as one of the five peoples following the Zoroastrian religion, along with the Aⁱriia- (𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬌𐬀), Tūⁱriia- (𐬙𐬏𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬌𐬀), Saⁱrima- (𐬯𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬨𐬀), and Sāinu- (𐬯𐬁𐬌𐬥𐬎), although this identification is uncertain.

The Iranologist János Harmatta has identified the Dahā with the Massagetae/Sakā tigraxaudā based on ancient Graeco-Roman authors' mention of the Sakā tigraxaudā as living between the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers, where Arrian also located the Massagetae and the Dahae. The scholars A. Abetekov and H. Yusupov have also suggested that the Dahā were a constituent tribe of the Massagetae.

The scholar Y. A. Zadneprovskiy has instead suggested that the Dahae were descendants of the Massagetae.

The scholar Marek Jan Olbrycht, who has also identified the Massagetae with the Sakā tigraxaudā, however considers the Dahā as being a separate group from the Saka to which the Massagetae/Sakā tigraxaudā belonged.

Location

The Dahae initially lived in the north-eastern part of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, in the arid steppes of the Karakum Desert near Margiana, alongside the Saka groups and the Sogdians and Chorasmians, and immediately to the north of Hyrcania.

During late 4th and early 3rd centuries BCE, the Dahae, and especially their constituent tribe of the Parni, had settled along the southern and southwestern fringes of the Karakum desert, and by the mid-3rd century BCE they had moved west and had settled along the southeastern shores of the Caspian Sea, in the lands to the north of Hyrcania. Two other Dahae tribes, the Xanthioi and the Pissouroi, lived further east till the regions to the north of Areia.

Name

The name of the Dahae, attested in the Old Persian form Dahā, is derived from a Saka language name meaning "man," based on the common practice among various peoples of calling themselves "man" in their own languages. This term is attested in the Khotanese form daha. The Dahae were a nomadic people, and no known sedentary settlement can be attributed to them.

The scholar David Gordon White has instead suggested that the name of the Dahae meant "Stranglers," and was derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dhau, from which he also derived the name of the Dacians.

History

A splinter Dahā might possibly have migrated at an early date across the Iranian plateau and joined the Persian people who lived in its southwestern part, with the Greek historian Herodotus later referring to the Daoi as one of the nomadic Persian tribes, along with the Mardians, Dropicans, and Sagartians, although this identification is uncertain.

The Dahā were in control of the traffic between Chorasmia in the north and Parthia and Hyrcania in the south.

According to the Babylonian historian Berossus, the founder of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, Cyrus, died fighting against the Dahae. According to the Iranologist Muhammad Dandamayev, Berossus identified the Dahae rather than the Massagetae as Cyrus's killers because they had replaced the Massagetae as the most famous nomadic tribe of Central Asia long before Berossus's time, although some scholars identified the Dahae as being identical with the Massagetae or as one of their sub-groups.

The oldest certain recorded mention of the Dahā is in the Daiva Inscription of the Achaemenid king Xerxes I along with the Sakā Haumavargā and the Sakā tigraxaudā.

The Dahā fought within the left wing of the Achaemenid army along with the Bactrians and the Saka against Alexander the Great at Gaugamela in 331 BCE.

The Dahae may have invaded Margiana and Areia around 300 BCE, and during this invasion they destroyed the towns of Alexandreia and Heracleia located in these respective two countries.

During late 4th and early 3rd centuries BCE, the Dahae, and especially their constituent tribe of the Parni, had settled along the southern and southwestern fringes of the Karakum desert, and by the mid-3rd century BCE they had moved west and had settled along the southeastern shores of the Caspian Sea, in the lands to the north of Hyrcania. Two other Dahae tribes, the Xanthioi and the Pissouroi, lived further east till the regions to the north of Areia.

During the middle of the 3rd century itself, the Parni had moved into Hyrcania, where they lived along the Ochus river. Their leader, Arsaces, would found the Parthian Empire.

During the 2nd century BCE, both the Dahae (大益 Dayi) who still lived in the steppes and the Parthian Empire (安息 Anxi), as well as the Chorasmians (驩潛 Huanqian), and Sogdians (蘇薤 Suxie) sent embassies to the Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty which was ruling China.

Interesting fact that currently lands of ancient Dahae are known as Mangystau Region of Kazakhstan and are inhabited by Adai- one of Kazakh tribes (Jüz).

Legacy

The lands to the north of Hyrcania where the Dahae had settled in the 3rd century BCE became known as Dehestān (دَهستان) and Dahistān (داهستان) after them.

See also

References

  1. ^ Yu 2004, p. 19.
  2. Daryaee, Touraj (2011). The Oxford Handbook of Iranian History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-199-73215-9. Our knowledge of the making of the Parthian state and of its chronology is full of gaps. We know that it was started by the nomadic tribe of Parni (or Aparni), belonging to the Dahae group of Iranian peoples.
  3. ^ de Blois & Vogelsang 1993.
  4. ^ Harmatta, János (1999). "Alexander the Great in Central Asia". Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 39 (1–4): 129–136. doi:10.1556/aant.39.1999.1-4.11. S2CID 162246561. Retrieved July 4, 2022.
  5. ^ Abetekov & Yusupov 1994.
  6. ^ Zadneprovskiy, Y. A. (1994). "The Nomads of Northern Central Asia After the Invansion of Alexander". In Dani, Ahmad Hasan; Harmatta, János; Puri, Baij Nath; Etemadi, G. F.; Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (eds.). History of Civilizations of Central Asia. Paris, France: UNESCO. pp. 448–463. ISBN 978-9-231-02846-5. The middle of the third century b.c. saw the rise to power of a group of tribes consisting of the Parni (Aparni) and the Dahae, descendants of the Massagetae of the Aral Sea region.
  7. Olbrycht, Marek Jan (2000). "Remarks on the Presence of Iranian Peoples in Europe and Their Asiatic Relations". Collectanea Celto-Asiatica Cracoviensia. Kraków: Księgarnia Akademicka. pp. 101–104. ISBN 978-8-371-88337-8.
  8. Olbrycht, Marek Jan (2021). Early Arsakid Parthia (ca. 250-165 B.C.): At the Crossroads of Iranian, Hellenistic, and Central Asian History. Leiden, Netherlands ; Boston, United States: Brill. p. 22. ISBN 978-9-004-46076-8. Apparently the Dahai represented an entity not identical with the other better known groups of the Sakai, i.e. the Sakai (Sakā) Tigrakhaudā (Massagetai, roaming in Turkmenistan), and Sakai (Sakā) Haumavargā (in Transoxania and beyond the Syr Daryā).
  9. Francfort, Henri-Paul (1988). "Central Asia and Eastern Iran". In Boardman, John; Hammond, N. G. L.; Lewis, D. M.; Ostwald, M. (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. 4. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-521-22804-6. The Dahas of Xerxes' 'Daiva' inscription (XPh) are perhaps to be situated to the north of Hyrcania where the Dahas mentioned by more recent writers are later to be found
  10. Bivar, A. D. H. (1983). "The Political History of Iran under the Arsacids". The Cambridge History of Iran. Vol. 3.1. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-521-20092-9.
  11. White, David Gordon (1991). Myths of the Dog-Man. University of Chicago Press. p. 239.
  12. ^ Dandamaev, M. A. (1989). A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire. Leiden, Netherlands ; New York City, United States: Brill. p. 67. ISBN 978-9-004-09172-6.
  13. Dandamayev 1994.

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