BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Fig. 7 Clay fragments of sculpture
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Fig. 10 Bronze Fragments. Some were discovered by chance
Buddhism in the Chuy Valley (Kyrgyzstan)
in the Middle Ages
Valery А. Kolchenko
Translated by Gulzat Usubalieva
T
HE geographical position of the territory of modern Kyrgyzstan in
Central Asia largely determined its historical and cultural past. Lying
between East Turkestan and the middle flows of the Syr Darya, this
territory was a contact region between the nomadic Steppe (and
mountains) and traditional agricultural regions.
This is most clearly manifested in the Chuy Valley,1 which was an
eternal crossroads where nomadic Turks, farmers and merchants of the
Sogdian world, carriers of the imperial traditions of China met and where
individual impulses from Tibet, India, Iran, the Volga region found their
way. One of the routes of the Great Silk Road passed through it. All of
these factors determined the formation of a culture in the Chuy Valley
that had absorbed elements of different cultural worlds. Before the
Middle Ages, the Chuy Valley was perceived as a peripheral part of the
“former Usun lands”, in which nomads lived and where there was no
settled way of life.2 By the seventh century, practically at the same time,
the Chuy Valley became the political centre of the Western Turkic
Khaganate, and a network of settlements and cities rapidly came up.
Having reached a quantitative peak in the 10th–11th centuries and having
barely survived the invasion of the armies of Genghis Khan at the
beginning of the 13th century, the cities in the Chuy Valley suddenly and
abruptly disappeared. The valley again became the sole territory of the
nomads.
Medieval cities and settlements of the Chuy Valley during the fifth–
seventh centuries, despite all the transformations remained multi-ethnic,
multi-cultural and multi-confessional. According to archaeological data,
adherents of Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism,
Manichaeism, Christianity and Islam lived in the cities and settlements,
coexisting with and replacing each other. This article is devoted to the
monuments of medieval Buddhism in the Chuy Valley.
Data on Buddhism in the Chuy Valley is practically absent in written
sources of the period. The first of such sources could be the work of
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
68
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
69
Xuanzang, the Chinese Buddhist traveller, since he stayed in Suyab (素葉,
碎葉), one of the cities of the valley and the capital of the Western Turks,
on his pilgrimage to India in 629–30. But he does not report anything
about Buddhism here in the record of his travels.3 Even in the biographies
of the pilgrim compiled a little later, there is no data on Buddhism in the
Chuy Valley.4 It can be concluded that Buddhism had not yet been
introduced in the Chuy Valley by the third decade of the seventh century.
Perhaps the only direct mention of Buddhism is included in the
encyclopedia Tongdian 通典 (General Review) by Duyou 杜佑 (766) in
connection with Chinese traveller Duhuan’s 杜環 visit to Suyab in 750. In
this regard, the encyclopedia says that Suyab was occupied in 748 by the
Chinese army of Wang Zhengjiang 王正見, which destroyed the city walls
and the houses of people. It continues, “This is the place where Princess
Jiaohe 交河 used to live. The Dayuan Monastery 大雲寺 built by the Chinese
has survived.”5 Antonio Forte, analysing this passage, came to the
conclusion that the monastery was one of the many temples built on the
orders of Empress Wu Zetian 武則天 between 692 and 705.6
On the other hand, archaeological finds eloquently document the
existence of Buddhism in the medieval Chuy Valley. Based on these
finds, it can be said that the Chuy Valley was a Buddhist oasis in the
desert of non-Buddhist territories in a certain sense. Within a radius of
300–500km from the valley, there were no Buddhist monuments known
to anyone. However, the position of Buddhism in the valley was not
exclusive.
As a result of archaeological research in the Chuy Valley, architectural
remains of medieval Buddhism have been excavated and seem to have
existed at six sites. All of them are concentrated in the eastern, and to an
extent, central part of the valley.7
Ak-Beshim has two remains, Buddhist temples AB-1 and AB-2, which
are well studied. Krasnaya Rechka has three remains: Buddhist temples
KrR-1 and KrR-2 and Buddhist temple and monastery KrR-3. We do not
have complete data on two architectural remains, one of Ak-Beshim
(AB-0) and another near the villages of Novo-Pavlovka on the
northwestern outskirts of modern Bishkek. Based on the finding of a series
of Buddhist artefacts, it is assumed that there are Buddhist buildings at
three more settlements of the Chuy Valley; Burana, Ken-Bulun and
Novopokrovskoe-2. Furthermore, at four more points in the valley: the
upper reaches of the Sokuluk River and a site near the village of Vostok
(or Voroshilovskoe), the settlements of Sokuluk and Aleksandrovskoe,
single Buddhist finds have been discovered. Therefore, it can be said
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
70
that Buddhism in the medieval Chuy Valley was a significant cultural
phenomenon and one of the leading religious systems, and that remains
of religions such as Zoroastrianism / Mazdaism, Christianity and Islam
belonging to the Middle Ages are less prevalent.
Buddhist Monuments of Ak-Beshim and Krasnaya Rechka
Settlements
Records on Buddhist monuments at the sites of Ak-Beshim and Krasnaya
Rechka have been published many times,8 including our article in
Russian and Japanese.9 Therefore, we will try to give some general
analysis on these sites.
It should be noted that all these remains are regarded as not only
individual temples, but also parts of Buddhist monasteries. Almost all of
them except AB-0, are located outside the castle walls of the central city
ruins, but close to them, and have their own strong fortifications. On the
other hand, AB-0 is located a little far from the tortkul (literally square
tell), central ‘inner city’, inside the castle walls of Shakhristan-2, which
may be the ‘Chinese city’ of the ancient settlement (Fig. 1). While in the
case of AB-1 temple, excavated outer walls indicate that the structure
was a Buddhist monastery, in other cases there are only reliefs to
establish the fact. For the monastery with KrR-2 temple, it is difficult to
determine the size (Figs 1 and 2).
In most of these remains — AB-1, AB-2, KrR-1, KrR-2 and KrR-3 —
the structure of the temple was planned in quite a uniform way with a
sanctuary surrounded by corridors and a hall in front of the sanctuary
(Fig. 3). The size of these temples also seems quite similar, ranging from
20m to 25m, with only AB-2 temple almost twice as large as the others
(see Table 1). Further, AB-0 temple has a different structural plan, which
can be seen to originate from other cultural traditions.
Despite the same structural plan, there is a difference in the way the
walls have been built at Ak-Beshim and Krasnaya Rechka. The walls of
the AB-1 and AB-2 temples were built with pakhsa (pressed clay) used
for laying on the ground and large-format raw bricks (42–48×23–25×9–
10cm) for support. On the other hand, the walls of KrR-1 and KrR-2
temples were built with the same bricks on the ruined buildings in the
ground. The walls had to be thick (1.3–2.6m) because the extra margin
was necessary for supporting mud bricks of vaults and domes. Both the
styles were unique to the tradition of building in this area.
The walls of AB-0, which are still only partially explored, seem
totally different. They are thin (from 0.4 to 0.95m) and made of small-
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Fig. 1 Plan view of Ak-Beshim (1) and its Buddhist remains: (2) AB-1, (3) AB-2,
(4) AB-0
71
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Fig. 2 Plan view and relief map of Krasnaya Rechka (1) and its Buddhist remains:
(2) KrR-1, (3) KrR-2, (4) KrR-3
72
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Fig. 3 Buddhist remains of Ak-Beshim and Krasnaya Rechka
73
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
74
Table 1
№
Object
External size of temple
Size of monastery
1
АB-0
14×6.5+m
113×64m / 100×71m
2
АB-1
22×27.5m
76×22m
3
АB-2
38×38.4m
28×28m (inner corridor)
130–140×130–140m
4
KrR-1
18×21+m
62×62m
5
KrR-2
22×22m
?
6
KrR-3
23.5×20.4m
105×100m
7
Tortkul near
Novopavlovka village
?
67×68m
8
Settlement
Novopokrovskoe-2
(NP-2)
?
120×120m
9
Settlement
Ken-Bulun (KBu)
?
?
10
Settlement
Burana (Bu)
30–35×30–35m*
70×60m
* Size on the outer sides of the hill
format raw bricks (24×17×6cm and 33×20×7.5cm); individual burnt
bricks (34×16.5×5.5cm) are used at their base. As far as we understand the
layout, there is a one-way open kiosk, a large pedestal (10×3.5m) covered
with a tiled roof for placing an icon sculpture, and narrow ‘technical’
passages along the side walls. We believe that the style of building has
different cultural roots such as the Chinese or Far Eastern tradition.
The dates of Buddhist architectural remains according to the first
research reports are listed in Table 2.
One of the main criteria for the early dates (sixth–seventh centuries) of
remains AB-1, AB-2 and KrR-2 were the finds of Turgesh and Tukhus
coins excavated on the floors or in the underlying layers. According to
Chinese sources, the beginning of the casting of Turgesh coins dates
not earlier than the early eighth century when this tribe (Turgesh)
became the head of “ten arrows’ folk”. The chronological issue of
Tukhus coins casting has not been solved yet. Based on the stratigraphic
fact that Tukhus coins were found below Turgesh coins during the
excavations of AB-1, O.I. Smirnova surmised the date of Tukhus coins
as being the seventh century which is earlier than Turgesh coins. 10 By
regarding his hypothesis as fact, remains AB-1, AB-2 and KrR-2 could
be so dated. However, Turgesh coins were in circulation with Tukhus
ones until the transition to the Muslim monetary standard, which
happened in the Chuy Valley in the 10th century. This means that
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
75
Table 2
№
Object
Years of field
research
Field research
supervisor
Dating proposed by the first
researchers
Buddhist remains at the Ak-Beshim settlement
1
АB-0
1939–40
A.N. Bernshtam
11th–12th / 9th–10th
centuries
2
АB-1
1953–54
L.R. Kyzlasov
7th–8th centuries
3
АB-2
1954–58
P.L. Zyablin
from 6th–7th centuries till
the end of 7th–beginning of
8th century
Buddhist remains at the Krasnaya Rechka settlement
4
КrR-1
1940
1961–62
A.N. Bernshtam
P.N. Kozhemyako
Second half of 8th–10th
centuries
From the second decade of
the 8th century till ninth
century / 10th century /
middle of 10th century
5
КrR-2
1940
1961–62
1980–2000-е
A.N. Bernshtam
P.N. Kozhemyako
V.D. Goryacheva
did not date
7th–8th centuries
7th–8th / 9th centuries
6
КrR-3
2010–15
A.I. Torgoev V.A. Kolchenko
from the beginning of 8th
century till 10th– beginning
of 11th centuries
Inferred Buddhist remains based on finds at other settlements
7
Tortkul near
Novo-Pavlovka
village
1941,
during the
construction of
the Great Chuy
Channel
8
Settlement
Novopokrovskoe-2
(NP-2)
Early 1960s, a
complex of
random finds
7th–8th centuries
(Goryacheva, Peregudova)
8th–10th centuries
(T.V. Grek)
9
Settlement
Ken-Bulun (KBu)
2000s, a
complex of
random finds
10th–11th centuries
(T.K. Mkrtychev)
10
Settlement Burana
(Bu)
beginning of
2000s
?
A.N. Bernshtam
8th–10th centuries
the noted stratigraphy of the coin finds at AB-1 seems too early from the
chronological perspective. In addition, some modern researchers, based
on important primary sources, view that the casting of Tukhus coins
seems to have started later in the middle of the eighth century.11 Such
analysis of Tukhus coins leads to a reconsideration of Smirnova’s
hypothesis, which automatically influences dating of well-researched
Buddhist remains. As a result of such chronological reconsideration of
numismatic material, we believe that the construction of the five
Buddhist remains under study (AB-1, AB-2, KrR-1, KrR-2 and KrR-3)
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
76
should date to almost same period, that is approximately the beginning
of the eighth century.
The date of establishment of AB-0 temple could, however, be earlier
than the date proposed by A.N. Bernshtam by one or two centuries
(see Table 2). The keys to its dating are fragments of stone stele and a
more intact similar stele which was found accidentally and depicts a
Chinese-type reliquary below the lotus pedestal (Figs 8.2–8.4).12 These
resemble ones which are not known after the first quarter of the eighth
century.13 This may mean that the building itself was erected in the eighth
century. Tiles and God guardians of the Tang tradition belonging to the
same century were found, but along with them were glazed ceramics that
were not known in the Chuy Valley earlier than the 10th century,14 and
coins of the Karakhanids. The burnt brick walls seem to indicate that they
were built in the eighth–10th centuries, as Bernshtam proposed.
Buddhist Monuments in Other Ancient Settlements of
Kyrgyzstan
In addition to the Ak-Beshim and Krasnaya Rechka settlements in the
eastern part of the Chuy Valley where Buddhist architectural monuments
have been studied, there are also a number of other settlements where
Buddhist buildings seem to have existed. While there has been much
debate regarding such an assumption, it has not led to any clear
conclusion.
Remains near the Village of Novopavlovka15
In 1941, during the construction of Big Chuy Canal (BCC), small fortified
tortkul settlements which were 300m away from each other were
demolished in the north-east of Novopavlovka, a suburban village west
of Bishkek. In the western settlement, there was “a building extremely
destroyed” due to late (or modern) Muslim burials, where interior decor
in Buddhist style was seen, such as wall paintings and painted clay reliefs
(or sculptures). Some publications describe nine objects and three images
amongst these fragments.16
Amongst the reliefs are fragments of clothing and “armor balteus with
Sasanian-like buckles on the crosshairs” of the “Buddhist knights,
Śakya”. The face of Dokshit or Vajrapāṇi stands out “with a long, straight
nose and a magnificent long mustache, painted in red” (Fig. 7.11) and it
seems to be a small fragment (13cm high and 13cm wide) of sculpture or
wall relief.17
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
77
Wall paintings are characterized by geometric and plant images, which
were made with “dry” (or glue) paints.18
The tortkul settlement itself was actually square in shape (67×68m)
with the heaped walls (up to 3–3.5m high). The inner space was slightly
lower than the outer walls and the tortkul was oriented to the cardinal
points. It is associated with the district of the large settlement of
ChalaKazak (= Klyuchevskoe, Novopavlovskoe), as Bernshtam
identified it with the medieval city of Juhl.19
The building with Buddhist antiquities was probably located in one
corner of the settlement. It is because there was also another building
which “began in the north-eastern corner of the settlement and reached
the middle of the settlement square”. Based on the destruction traces of
graves, researchers wrote: “[I]t is extremely difficult to make a clear
judgment about the inner plan. One can only assume that there were small
rooms like cells.”20
It is reported that amongst the finds are burnt bricks, ceramic water
pipes, a dastarkhan (place where food was eaten) table, “Muslim
vessels”, as well as a tandoor (cylindrical clay oven) and a
KaiyuanTongbao coin.21 These finds can be dated to the Karakhanid time
(10th– 11th centuries), or pre-Karakhanid time (ninth–10th centuries) at
best. On the other hand, Bernshtam dates them to the “Karluk period”
(i.e. middle of eighth–10th centuries) probably based on the presence of
a Chinese coin. But it is an obvious fact that the single Chinese coin was
found in the layers of the Karakhanid time, therefore, it cannot serve as
firm evidence for dating.
The data as a whole allows a number of researchers following
Bernshtam to suggest that there was a Buddhist monastery in this small
settlement in the eighth–10th centuries.22
From our point of view, there was a Buddhist structure near the village
of Novo-Pavlovka. However, we do not have enough data to establish
that the whole tortkul, in which there was a building with Buddhist decor,
was a Buddhist monastery. The building can be classified based on the
size (see Table 1), but still there is insufficient data to classify this
Buddhist structure as a temple, small shrine, monks’ cells, etc. The lack
of stratigraphic description in combination with the data on finds does
not give a clear answer about the dating of the finds. If the object (tortkul)
was in a single layer, then it definitely dates to the ninth–11th centuries.
But it cannot be ruled out that the layer with the Buddhist structure was
covered by layers of the ninth–11th centuries. If this was so, the eighth–
ninth centuries dating proposed by Bernshtam would seem to be correct.
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
78
Findings from the Settlement of Novopokrovskoe-2
During construction work on a hill in the centre of the village of
Novopokrovka, located 11km east of Bishkek, Buddhist artefacts were
collected. The hill where the construction was carried out turned out to
be the settlement of Novopokrovskoe-2. Three items of the collection
were introduced by T.V. Grek and V.D. Goryacheva in 1983.23 Later,
Goryacheva proposed that artefacts of the Buddhist complex could
indicate that the entire settlement had a Buddhist character.24 Such a
statement caused some disagreement, but not because the existence of a
Buddhist architectural object was in dispute but rather that it had been
scaled up to cover the entire settlement. According to B.Ya. Staviskiy,
the whole settlement was not necessarily a monastery and there was
nothing more than a temple or even a small shrine there.25 We concur
with this view.
Seven Buddhist artefacts were the first to be transferred to the museum
from the settlement and later one more was transferred: a fragment of red
stone relief, a miniature head of white stone statuette (not “fragile”
alabaster),26 a bronze vajra (rod), a mirror with four Buddhist relief
images, four figurines27 from surprisingly different portable altars (Figs
4.3–4.9).
Let us note the chronological and cultural-geographical heterogeneity
of these artefacts. The red stone relief was a work of Gandhāra craftsmen
and dates from the second–fourth centuries to the fifth–sixth centuries.28
Regarding the bronze sculpture, there is even less unanimity on the
iconographical attribution. Grek considers the two figurines which
appeared in publications (Figs 4.7 and 4.8) as imports from north India
between the eighth and 10th centuries, and T.K. Mkrtychev sees them as
Chinese products of the Sui era or their locally reproduced copies.29 At
the time, Bernshtam asserted that a bronze mirror found at Krasnaya
Rechka could be identical to the Novopokrovskoe one and belongs to the
“Tang-Song” period.30 In our opinion, these artefacts from the Buddhist
complex show that such heterogeneity continued for a relatively long
period.
Novopokrovskoe-2 where the complex was found is a relatively small
settlement (120×120m) (Fig. 4.1). It is located south-east of the large
settlement of Novopokrovskoe-1, with long perimeter31 walls 1.6 km
away from the citadel [of Novopokrovskoe-2]. P.N. Kozhemyako who
identified two construction layers, proposed on stratigraphic basis that
the site must date to the eighth–12th centuries.32
Our joint excavations of 2004–19 with German explorer F. Rott in the
settlement (Fig. 4.2) furnish grounds to refute that the entire settlement
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
79
Fig. 4 Plan view and Buddhist Artefacts of Novopokrovskoe-2 settlement
showed a Buddhist character. It means that only a separate structure of
the settlement had a Buddhist character and it was completely or partially
excavated during the construction of Big Chuy Canal. So where could
the structure have been? Our excavations clarified that the upper layers
(1.5–2m thick) contained the ruins of a residential building of the 10th–
12th centuries. Moreover, buildings were located not only inside the
castle walls but also outside, and built even on the partially destroyed
walls.33 It seems unlikely that the Buddhist structure existed in the layer
partially destroyed during the construction of Big Chuy Canal throughout
the settlement.
The underlying buildings layer of the ninth–10th centuries has been
little influenced by modern construction. The 0.3–0.5m deep belt-
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
80
like foundation of modern structures and the lower technical trenches
(1–1.3m below the surface) are still positioned in the upper layer and do
not reach the lower layer. There seems to have been only a basement in
the cultural layer (2–3m below the surface) on the central point of
settlement. We have been exploring Excavation 2 near this point since
2009. A road and remains of two houses with tandoors were identified,
but they did not provide reliable evidence of Buddhist architecture or
interior decor. We have not reached the natural ground layers yet.
Another place in the settlement where a Buddhist complex might have
been found was a hill (tell) in the middle of the west wall of the settlement
(Fig. 4.1). According to the description of Kozhemyako, the hill, which
had a 30m-long diameter, rose 2m above the surrounding area.34
Therefore, there is a strong possibility that the tell was the ruins of a
significantly large Buddhist temple. There is no trace of the tell on the
ground in the lower area. Artefacts could have been found during the
demolition of the tell. However, the lower parts of the demolished
structure as well as artefacts were displaced outside the settlement during
the destruction, so the remains cannot serve as evidence at all and it
seems difficult to prove the hypothesis of a Buddhist temple.
As a result, only artefacts of the complex have remained and most of
them are parts of portable altars. According to a study of the latest
artefacts, the entire complex should date to the eighth–ninth centuries.
Buddhist Finds from the Settlement of Ken-Bulun
In 2006, the Historical Museum in Bishkek received several interesting
bronze artefacts from the vicinity of the village of Ken-Bulun (Figs 5.2–
5.7). They were found in clay brought for construction purposes. Later,
archaeologists L.M. Vedutova and V.A. Kolchenko confirmed that there
were clay quarries in front of the floodplain terrace eastwards from the
heaped walls of the central part of the settlement. There was a terrace,
but the 300m hill adjacent to the quarry was completely demolished (Fig.
5.1). Up to now, it has been observed that the Ken-Bulun complex
includes six Buddhist and Jain artefacts. A Buddhist sculpture stands on
a lotus pedestal and stepped stands and ‘thousand Buddhas’ are engraved
on three fragments of plate (Figs 5.2–5.3). Stylistically speaking, both
artefacts are of Chinese origin and could date to the 10th–11th centuries.
Jain artefacts include three portable altars with undeciphered inscriptions
on their back (Figs 5.4–5.7) and similar altars dating to 1128 and 1285
have been found.35
As in case of the Novopokrovka’s findings, these artefacts could
indicate that another Buddhist temple of the Chuy Valley existed on
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
81
Fig. 5 Relief map of Ken-Bulun settlement and Buddhist and Jain artefacts
the site of Ken-Bulun. Later structures may have also existed on this
Buddhist site and would have been very important for purposes of dating,
but they have been completely destroyed over time.
Buddhist Artefacts from the Burana Settlement
At the Burana settlement, two authentic Buddhist finds were excavated
(Fig. 6). The one on the left in Fig. 6 was found from a mud brick in the
mid-1980s, when archaeologist Vedutova was exploring upper layers of
the 10th–12th centuries in the western part of a large hill in the centre of
the settlement. This is a miniature bronze and gilded sculpture of a
bodhisattva on a four-legged pedestal, which is similar to one found in
the reliquary of KRr-2. It seems a reduced image [after repeated casting]
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
82
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
83
from the original of the later Wei or early Tang period (fifth–eighth
centuries). But as a matter of fact, it is impossible to identify where the
clay used for this brick was collected from.
Another find (on the right in Fig. 6) is a round stone sculpture of the
Buddha in samapāda pose on a double lotus pedestal. The height of the
sculpture is three-fourths that of a life-size human. The head, arms and
front of the chest are lost. The remaining parts consist of three fragments:
(1) a lotus base and legs just above the knees, (2) thighs and torso, and
(3) a small part of a shoulder girdle. The first and second fragments fit
together,36 but the third one does not.
The sharp protrusion of the image’s right arm evidently shows that the
elbow is bent at a right angle or even that the arm is raised upward.
Judging by the outline of the figure, the left hand is kept lowered down,
but the lower part (palm?) goes out to the front side. Weak embossed
oblique lines on the back of the sculpture depict folds of clothing, a cape
(Pali uttara sanga), falling from the left shoulder with edges lined up 10–
12cm above the pedestal. Another horizontal line is shown 3–4cm above
the pedestal, which possibly shows a skirt (Pali antaravasaka) covering
the whole legs from behind. The feet are aligned, with toes bare. As a
whole, the sculpture is quite schematically and simply made. The intact
back is essentially pillar-like and there are no curves to depict the back
and legs.
The sculpture was found by chance on an arable 1500m east of the
central part of the ruin, but the excavation point was on the boundaries
of the long walls of the settlement. Nearby, due to the hilly scape, we can
clearly discern the outline of ancient rectangular object. Its dimensions
are 70×60m. In the south-western corner is a tell of a monumental
structure, measuring 30–35×30–35m and 2.5–3m high, and in the
northern and eastern parts is an open space (courtyard) with thick outer
walls. The ruin is attractive enough to give the feeling that a Buddhist
monastery actually existed there.
Analysis of Buddhist Artefacts
When studying all the Buddhist architectural objects of the Chuy Valley,
researchers rightly pointed out similarities with clay and stone sculptures
and wall paintings founded in the monuments of China and East
Turkestan.37 However, there are also similarities with sculptures
excavated in the southern area of Central Asia and Afghanistan.
As far as we can judge from the fragments, all the clay sculptures
were made in either standing, sitting or lying positions, but they are
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
84
always in a static posture. They face to the front and no complicated angle
is used. However, the fragments show that the hands and fingers are
variously formed and they are dynamically positioned. The individual
sculptures were located one by one. It is possible to understand the
interaction of even the triptych compositions arranged in the niches of
temples AB-2 and KrR-3 only based on their size and rank. The side
figures just turn to the main or larger one to some extent, from which we
cannot see anything dynamic. Judging from the size of different
fragments (Fig. 7), it turned out that the height of most sculptures is
almost the same as or slightly less (because they may have been in the
secondary rank) than actual human height.
The sculptures were always decorated with glue paints under which
white ganch primer was used in most cases. For example, the nirvāṇa
Buddha sculpture excavated from KrR-2 is in red robes and the
padmāsana (lotus pose) Buddha sculpture from KrR-3 is in orange robes.
The Buddha’s curls in conical form of same size, were found from almost
all the remains (AB-0, 1, 2, 3 and KrR-2) and they all have traces of blue
paint. A number of figures including Buddhas have different hairstyles,
such as straight or wavy hair combed back (Figs 7.3, 7.6, 7.7 and 7.9)
and some of them were coloured blue. It should also be noted that most
pedestals on which the sculptures were installed were painted red.
Even these fragments of clay sculpture show slight differences in style
and iconography as well as many similarities: face proportions, eye
position and expression of eyebrows and pupils, etc. We can clearly see
such different characteristics once these fragments are placed together
(Fig. 7). But it is still impossible to find any evidence of whether the
differences owe to regional traditions, schools, chronological variations,
or individual figure expressions. What can be declared with a degree of
certainty is that the sculptures are not the handiwork of one particular
group of craftsmen.
Few ancient stone artefacts have been found in the territory of
Kyrgyzstan, which means that stone processing was not widespread
there. In the course of archaeological excavations, stone Buddhist
sculptures were also not commonly found. For example, only 23
fragments were excavated at Ak-Beshim in 1940 during Bernshtam’s
research. Even otherwise, not many stone relics were accidentally found,
but those that were reveal very clear and significant information. Here,
we have selected only stone sculptures that clearly seem to be associated
with Buddhism, and have left aside the steles with Chinese inscriptions,
parts of steles with dragon images, and so on.
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
85
Fig. 8 Fragments of stele
In 2014, a small light granular stele fragment was found near the base
of the temple ruin in the Ak-Beshim settlement, a little south of where
the AB-1 temple was once located. The size is too small
(23+×23+×12cm) to ascertain the characteristics, but it is enough to
surmise that the fragment is a part of large stele and not of a sculpture
(Fig. 8.5).
A red stone stele fragment (62×45×13cm) found at Ak-Beshim by local
residents in 1987 (Fig. 8.4) is much more interesting.38 It depicts the
Buddha in padmāsana on a double lotus pedestal. The left hand rests on
the thigh, fingers are straight and pressed together, and the palm is down
but does not reach the pedestal. The right elbow is bent and the hand
shows the abhaya-mudrā (protection gesture) in front of the chest.
However, the fingers of both hands are not clear. Two lingam shafts
diverge from the base of pedestal, bifurcate and support small lotuses in
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
86
a symmetrical way. It is assumed that two figures must have stood in a
samapāda position on the lotus on either side (the sculpture on the left
side no longer exists; only the part below the knees of the outside figure
on the right side remains while the inside one is missing its head only).
The best-preserved figure has arms bent at both elbows holding a small
object in front of the chest. Under the pedestal of the Buddha, a round
reliquary is shown on a lotus base and guarded by lions on both sides.
The artefact does not date back later than the first quarter of the eighth
century and indicates the development of Chinese Buddhism.39 It can be
emphasized that these two fragments found by Bernshtam in 1940 have
a closeness in terms of material, size and style (but they are not sculptures
of the same object) (Figs 8.2 and 8.3).
In addition, an eight-petalled lotus relief of gray granitoid was
excavated near the same location at Ak-Beshim and stored at a museum
of the Burana settlement (Fig. 8.6). It can be presumed to be the
foundation or base stone of a column. It is slightly more than 50cm in
diameter and 25cm high. In the centre is a through hole, the diameter of
which is 6–8cm. On the back are a 4cm margin, a cornice and poorly
processed recess for more strongly fixing the surface of clay. Amongst
the finds of Bernshtam are similar but smaller lotuses. There are also base
stones of columns which have different lotus styles (Figs 8.7–8.9).
The most interesting stele was found at the Krasnaya Rechka settlement
in the early 1980s (Fig. 8.1). It is almost complete except for a slight chip
in the lower right corner, missing faces of all the figures and the carving
on the back being slightly worn. Ch.D. Dzhumagulov first studied this
stele found at an arable,40 and since then it has been published many
times.41
The stele is made of red (or pink) sandstone and is 64×33–36×12–
16cm in dimension. It depicts carved images in three-tiered sections on
the obverse. In the lower section, two donors are arranged on both sides
across the inscription (of which only three letters remain).42 In the
middle section, two mythical dog-lion guards are depicted in side view
on the both sides of a reliquary ball on a lotus base. In the upper main
section, there is Buddha triad on lotus pedestals which connect to each
other with their stems. Behind each Buddha head is a mandorle (big
round halo). In the centre, the largest Buddha image in padmāsana
faces to the front, with left hand lying on the thigh, the palm reaching
down to the knee and the right hand in abhaya-mudrā. The image
actually appears a duplicate of the image on the stele excavated from
Ak-Beshim even in details. The side figures are bodhisattvas in
samapāda pose with right hands also held in abhaya-mudrā in front
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
87
of the chests. The left fist of the bodhisattva on the right is lightly
clenched near the groin. The second bodhisattva [on the left] holds a jug
in the downward hand, which indicates that it is an image of Bodhisattva
Avalokiteśvara.
On the surface of the arch-type top and both laterals, Chinese floral
designs unique to the Tang period are carved. On both lateral faces,
lokapāla figures of three-quarters view in tribhaṅga pose are also carved.
They are armed with spears to defeat enemies and there is a round halo
behind the head of each. On the back, an image of the Buddha in
padmāsana surrounded by arabesque design is depicted, but in a poor
state of preservation.
Both stone reliefs and sculptures excavated from the Chuy Valley show
Chinese designs, which can be regarded as a common element. However,
Mkrtychev contended that there is no directly comparable Chinese or
Eastern Turkestan Buddhist relief [sculpture], and suggested that these
reliefs [sculptures] were made by Chinese craftsmen of rural traditions.43
It does not seem unlikely that these were made on site. In the entire
Central Asian region, bronze Buddha statues were perhaps most
commonly excavated from Kyrgyzstan. While the clay sculptures are too
fragmented to reach clear conclusions from the cultural perspective, and
the stone reliefs bear a distinct Chinese influence, the bronze statues are
good evidence of diversity.
Bronze items from the region can be categorized into three groups in
terms of function: (a) individual bronze sculptures, (b) parts of relief with
more complex detailing and (c) ritual objects (vajra-ghanta). Judging
from the similarity in style, all of them seem to have been made in the
eighth–12th centuries.44
Two fragments of the third category will be discussed in detail here.
The first is a vajra-ghanta (ritual bell) fragment (Fig. 9.1) brought from
Issyk-Kul and now kept in the Kyrgyz Russian Slavic University Museum.
The upper part of the bell is designed as vajra crown and the lower part as a
human head from which hangs a bell ring. It was cast at one time as one unit.
The crown is a five-pronged handle: one prong stands straight in the centre,
the other four bow-like prongs surround the central one, and all the prongs
are joined at the top. The vajra bell was said to transmit lightning and it was
put on a plate with notches on the edge. Under the plate is a conical stand of
an eight-petalled lotus. Below this is another plate with notches on the edge,
but with a smaller diameter than that of the one above. It can be understood
as an uṣṇīṣa (crown of hair). The figure’s face is oval. Both eyebrows are
close on the bridge of the nose and the almond-shaped (relief-like) and
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
88
outlined eyes appear closed. The nose is protruding straight and wide
from the flat face. The small mouth is also depicted like a relief. The
large and prominent ears have earring-like ornaments but without rings.
The back of the head is smooth and has no carving of hair.
The second vajra-ghanta fragment is kept in a private collection. It is
reported that it was found at the Ak-Beshim settlement. It was cast at one
time as one unit. A 3.5cm piece survives. It is the middle part of a ritual
bell, representing a head with a crown or headdress (Fig. 9.2). The face
is rounded and parts (especially left side) of the forehead, eye and nose
are lost. The eyes are large, wide and partially open. The nose is flat with
wide nostrils. The full-lipped mouth is closed and has a slight smile. It
has a small, double chin. While straight hair is carved on the back of the
head, two bunches of hair are gathered in a bun in the middle of the lower
part. The hair ornament, that is the base of the vajra crown, is conical
and the top is a plain face. The lateral face around the crown depicts eight
lotus petals in a symmetrical arch shape. The lower part has double
hoops, on which inlaid stones are carved in relief. From these hoops, two
divided bunches of hair hang down from the head, relatively widely
spaced in two symmetrical reliefs. On the plain face at the top, only a
vajra prong base remains in the centre and there are eight holes around
the base matching the position of the eight-lotus arch on the lateral face.
It can be presumed that these holes were used for letting wires through
the vajra. On the bottom face of the fragment, there is an oval-shaped
remain which seems to be upper part of a handle in place of the neck.
These two artefacts were made in the Tibet-Chinese traditional style.
They can broadly be dated to the end of the first millennium, but it is
very difficult to arrive at a more precise date.
There is another vajra (Fig. 4.5) included in Buddhist finds from the
Novopokrovsky complex. It bears similarities to artefacts of the Far
Eastern area and may be related to the Chzhurzhen people.45
One statue standing in the familiar tribhaṅga pose was found
somewhere on the site of Ak-Beshim (Fig. 9.6).46 It was identified as
Buddha Tathāgata Akṣobhya Vitarka Mudrā (imperturbable), whose
image was actively developed in Vajrayāna Buddhism.47 The statue,
which is hollow inside and made of a very thin layer of metal, was cast
in a wax mould. The height is 37cm. Since on the back there is a small
broken protrusion with a hole to attach the halo or fix the body of statue
into an altar, the statue seems to have been a part of a portable altar.
The feet are soldered to a fragment of thin plate which is probably part
of a pedestal. The urna (white hair) and pupils were inlaid with silver.
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
89
Fig. 9 Bronze Fragments. Some were discovered by chance
Judging from the features of the face and style of crown and clothing, it
can be concluded that the statue was made by a craftsman of Gilgit in the
late eighth–10th centuries. It seems to be the latest of the Buddhist
artefacts discovered at Ak-Beshim.
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
90
Another statue in well-known style (Fig. 9.3) was also discovered by
chance at a place 3km north-east from Bishkek.48 It also seems to have
derived from northern India, but from Kashmir or the Swat River (part
of Gilgit) area. This statue is also hollow inside and is 15cm high. A
figure is seated in padmāsana on a throne (singhasan) supported by two
lions, which face the front. The right upper arm from the elbow remains
and it seems to extend down from the shoulder without touching the
body. The lost right hand and fingers may have formed the vitaraka
mudrā. The left hand rests on the thigh with the fingers in kataka mudrā.
Eyes and urna were inlaid with silver. In the left front corner of the
pedestal is a miniature image of a kneeling donor with curly hair hanging
down. At the bottom of pedestal on the front and right lateral sides, a
Sanskrit offering line of 22–23 letters is carved: “This is an offering of a
pious person who prays for the happiness of every living being ... [the
donor’s name is unclear].”49 Different researchers have dated the statue
to different periods, including the 12th century, eighth century and ninth–
10th centuries,50 but the supposition of ninth–10th centuries seems the
most well-reasoned and plausible.
Some statues were also found by chance at different times in the
Sokuluk settlement,51 located 30 km west of Bishkek. One of them was
identified as the Hindu deity Padmapānī (Fig. 9.5).52 The figure in dhoti
(traditional costume for men) is seated with the left leg hanging down
and the right leg tucked inwards (rājalil). The total height is 13.5cm. The
left hand rests on the knee and an oblong object, one of the Buddhist
treasures (ratna), is depicted in the right palm open at chest level. The
figure sports some ornaments such as bracelets on the forearms and
wrists, anklets, different type of earrings and a complicated threepronged crown. There is a general consensus amongst researchers that
the source area of the creation is Kashmir in north India. While Grek
suggested that the statue dates to the eighth century, Mkrtychev has dated
it as late as the 10th century.53
Another bronze statue is kept in the National Historical Museum of the
Kyrgyz Republic. It was cast at one time as one unit. The figure stands
in alidha (arrow from a bow) pose (Fig. 9.4), with upper part facing front
and lower one almost lateral from the scenographical point of view. Its
height is 13.6cm. The lower part of the legs is lost and face and details
of headdress are missing, which may have been caused by initial
unprofessional work at the time of transfer to the museum. The figure
seems to wear only a short dhoti, which doesn’t even cover the knees.
A long garland hanging down from the elbows is arranged around the
middle of the body. It should have been iconographically decorated
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
91
on the skull (like a crown). Both arms with bracelets are crossed on the
chest in hunkara pose and the left hand is placed on the right wrist with
a vajra in the left hand and ghanta in the right hand. Grek identified the
artefact as an image of Vadjarukhankara made in Kashmir in the ninth
century.54 Mkrtychev found a similarity with another image of
Vajrayāna-Saṃvara from Kashmir. Judging from the individual
expression which is unclear since the figure is damaged, it is assumed
that the artefact is a rough duplicate of a Kashmiri prototype made after
the ninth–10th centuries.55
Amongst the smaller bronze items shown in Fig. 1056 is a statue (8.5cm)
which seems to be from a portable altar (Fig. 10.12).57 It was identified
as an image of a devotee making offerings or a Buddhist mentor.58 It was
modelled on the sculptures of the Tang court. The figure is standing
upright on a small rectangular pedestal, faces the front and has a high
headdress. The face is rounded and in fact poorly modelled. The hands
are joined around the abdomen but details are not clear. It seems that a
cape is thrown on the palm. The figure wears a long anklelength robe
with wide sleeves and rounded neck (or a relief fold fixing the necklace
at the bottom of the neck).
Another independent figure depicts a bodhisattva (Fig. 10.1). The
figure is not round but embossed and the back is flat and smooth. It is
extremely rudimentary to the extent that the small parts are designed with
tubercles and it is difficult to judge whether the posture is samapāda or
tribhaṅga. The figure is on a lotus pedestal with a sharp pin protruding
downwards (for fixing to the ground or food). Behind the head is a round
halo decorated with triangular notches and on the upper edge of halo is
an image of the Buddha in padmāsana. The head sports a tall headdress.
The eyes and mouth are carved simplistically. Both ears have long
earrings with large rings on the edge. The left arm turns slightly outwards
with the elbow bent and the edge of something (which seems clothing)
is covered on the wrist at shoulder level. The right arm hangs down
slightly away from the body with an object (which seems a vessel) in the
hand. It is reminiscent of the Avalokiteśvara statue in the same pose
excavated from the Novopokrovsky complex (Fig. 4.8) and it can be also
said that the ‘canonical pose’ is completely reflected in the statues.
The smallest statue of 4cm (Fig. 10.2) is a gilded one of Bodhisattva
Avalokiteśvara with a flaming halo behind his head. According to our
observation, it is the smallest carved artefact, but the craft technique had
become much more sophisticated. The figure is almost upright in
samapāda pose and the pose actually originated from tribhaṅga, a trace
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
92
of which can be seen. The face has an oval shape. There is a tall but
poorly designed crown on the head. The left hand hangs down holding
an elongated vessel. A soft hada scarf covering both arms and legs is
expressed with dark lines, but it is of seemingly transparent fabric that
does not hide the body. A necklace with a pentahedral jewel is carved
around the neck and bracelets on the wrists.
The figure was placed on a flattened round cushion which once lay on
a cylindrical pedestal. The pedestal had a flattened round base twice as
large as it now is. At the time of miniaturization of the front and back of
the pedestal and base, the diameter of the cushion was shortened for
flattening the cushion. The halo on the top comes from the shoulders.
The edge is decorated with notches and separated from the main part with
lines. It can be presumed that some vertical lines of the halo express
tongues of flame. The halo expands down to the pedestal in rectangular
form and the edge overlaps the scarf in the right hand and the vessel in
the left. On the back of the halo, the stripes go down and the shape of
body is separately expressed at the lower level. The original probably did
not have such a halo, and it was added (along with the head part) at the
time of miniaturization. Based on the evidence of the simply carved
clothing and restrained body proportions, this statue can be concluded to
have originated in the early Tang period.
The last fragment of a Buddhist artefact found in the eastern part of the
Chuy Valley is now kept at the Kyrgyz Russian Slavic University
Museum and it has already been written about (Fig. 10.4).59 This statue
is the lower right part of a very large gilded openwork relief, the height
of which is 7.5cm. The figure stands in tribhaṅga pose with a partially
damaged low column on the right side. Behind the head is a round halo
rimmed with a line. The upper part may have connected with other parts
of a relief which is lost. The face is oval and quite well-developed with a
low prominent forehead, arched eyebrows, heavy eyelids, large
lanceolate eyes, relatively thin and short lips and plump chin. The nose
is damaged. Long earrings with rounded flower rosettes hang down from
hidden ears to the neck. On the head is a conical headdress with slightly
sharp top, from which ribbons hang down to below the shoulders. On the
neck are three strings of a necklace which hangs down till the upper
abdomen. The left hand is placed on the hip, the right elbow is bent
and the hand reaches shoulder. On the open palm, there is an eggshaped object or a large pearl on a pedestal which is similar to that of
the bodhisattvas excavated from Novopokrovsk (Fig. 4.7). Clothing
is depicted in numerous small relief folds but it is not clear that
it covers the body parts. There are the typical bracelets are on the
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
93
wrists and typical anklets on the ankles. The heels are joined together and
toes are open on the disc in the centre of the lotus pedestal. It is especially
noteworthy that the craftsman considered the planar nature of artefacts at
the time of drafts, applied five lotus petals (leaves) not from front side,
and used a method of perspective on front to upper sides. The depicted
figure was identified as a bodhisattva. Considering the detailed
elaboration, this statue does not seem to have been locally duplicated but
was imported.
Amongst the well preserved artefacts made by craftsman in the
Kashmir Valley or Swat River area between the ninth and 10th centuries,
there is a figure standing near two columns which support the flaming
chakra or wheel of the Law (Fig. 10.13).60 Although there are many
differences in details [compared to general artefacts of north-western
India], there can be no doubt that this statue was also produced in
northwestern India at the end of the first millennium CE.
There is another fragment excavated in Chuya area: a miniature yasti
(top of a stupa) with ribbons spreading in different directions (Fig. 10.3).
The size of the fragment is 2cm (2.3cm including ribbons). It has been
written about several times61 and is convincingly identified as the work
of a craftsman from the Swat River (or Kashmir) Valley between the
ninth and10th centuries.62
The two embossed lotuses in Figs 10.6 and 10.7 are regarded as chatras
(umbrellas) which can be categorized as Buddhist artefacts and were
probably part of votive stupas.63 It has been pointed out that the stupas
were also linked to the north Indian principalities.
A round seal with 3.5cm diameter (Fig. 10.8) is a remarkable find from
the Krasnaya Rechka settlement. It depicts a figure in padmāsana in
reverse relief style, with hands joined around the abdomen as well as
some objects. There is a vessel on the left side. It is obvious that
Buddhists of the Chuy Valley, like anywhere else, invariably marked
privately owned property (by using this seal).
I will now take up separately for discussion three similar miniature reliefs
(3.3–3.6cm) depicting the Buddha (Figs 10.9–10.11), found at the Krasnaya
Rechka settlement. The images are iconographically the same: the Buddha in
padmāsana with a halo behind facing the front, joint hands covered with
Chinese clothes around the abdomen. There is a pin to fix to the base on the back
of one relief. In another relief, there is a prong protruding downwards from the
centre, which suggests us that it may connect with other parts of other artefacts,
details of which lead us to draw many interesting conclusions. We can see
similar halos in the ‘thousand Buddha’ artefact of the Hermitage collection
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
94
which was found in Khara-Khoto and dates between the late 12th and
13th centuries (Fig. 10.14). The quality of these three reliefs varies
greatly. While the cast relief of Fig. 10.9 is of good quality with relatively
finer details and partial traces of gilding, the relief of Fig. 10.10 is too
rough to hold the external shape and the relief of Fig. 10.11 may be more
stereoscopic with characteristics of line drawing. The first relief can be
regarded as an original or a duplicate similar to the original, the second
as a reduced artefact, and the third as a local imitation on a given theme.
At the end of the examination of Buddhist bronze artefacts, it should be
added that researchers see Sogdian touches in the gilding openwork
bronze clamp excavated from the AB-1.64 However, some hold that these
are derived from China.65 They date later than the middle of the eighth
century.
To sum up, all the Buddhist bronze artefacts are not from the same
tradition or made by the same process. Some were high-quality imported
artefacts, others were local duplicates of older models or bulk imitations.
Whether they were imported or local, most of them originated in northern
India including Kashmir and Gilgit (valleys of the Swat and Chamba
rivers). Of course, there were also imports from China and their copies
such as the finds of the Novopokrovsky complex (Figs 4.7–4.9), Burana
(Fig. 6) and KrR-2. It is presumed that most artefacts entered the Chuy
Valley from north India, not through Central Asia (Tokharistan,
Sogdiana and Chach), but through East Turkestan (Khotan, Yarkand and
Kashgar). The artefacts of the latest Buddhist finds of the ninth–11th
centuries have not been covered yet.
To our mind, these bronze Buddhist artefacts of small size and low
quality show that Buddhist followers expanded their social network in a
new way. From the observation of relations around these Buddhist
artefacts from different areas and the cultural aspects of Buddhist
structures,66 the following hypothesis can be offered. The Chinese
initially forced people to have some faith in Buddhism and even
protected Buddhists of different ethnic groups. But when the Chinese left
this area, Buddhists scattered from the capital to many rural areas, as
evidenced by Buddhist artefacts found not only in Suyab (AkBeshim)
but also in Xincheng / Nevaket (Krasnaya Rechka) and the
Novopokrovskoe settlement, and even farther in places such as the
Sokuluk settlement. It means that the seeds sown by the Buddhists also
sprouted in places distant from the central area and this new way of life
coexisted along with other trends like Hinduism.67
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95
Conclusion: How Buddhism Flourished and Survived
A comparison between the archaeological finds discussed in this article
and written sources can help draw some conclusions and clarify what was
previously not articulated. As mentioned, the history of Buddhism in the
Chuy Valley seems to have begun later than the passage of Chinese monk
Xuanzang (629 / 630) who stayed at Suyab, the capital of the Western
Turkic Khaganate, which was identified as the local city at the AkBeshim settlement. In his notes, Xuanzang says nothing about Buddhism
in Suyab, its surroundings and the valley in general. Even in the
biographies of the pilgrim, there is no material on Buddhism in the Chuy
Valley. Therefore, it can be concluded that Buddhism did not exist in the
Chuy Valley in the third decade of the seventh century.
From the second half of the seventh century to the first half of the
eighth, under the policy towards the Western Region, the Tang rulers
seized Suyab several times (some historical sources give the dates of
678, 692 and 748) and incorporated the city into the ‘Four Garrisons of
Anxi’ (administrative military stations) for a period of time. For the
purpose of dominance in the peripheral areas of Suyab, the castle wall
was built in 67968 and the Dayun temples dedicated to Maitreya were
constructed in each district of the empire between 692 and 705 according
to the imperial edict of Empress Wu Zetian.69 These Chinese garrisons
and the momentum of the construction of temples (which initially
accommodated important Chinese guests and officials) led to the gradual
spread of Buddhism and the construction of Buddhist temples in Suyab
(= Ak-Beshim) and nearby cities, as mentioned in this article. In this
context, it seems quite plausible that the Chinese or East Turkestan
version of Buddhism came to the Chuy Valley and that the Chinese
pattern of decor was used in the local construction techniques.
Due to the Chinese influence of 50–70 years, sanghas of local
followers were formed. However, after the Chinese were forced to
withdraw not only from the Chuy valley but also East Turkestan in the
middle of the eighth century, their influence and cultural dominance
inevitably and drastically waned. At that time, the local sanghas were
needed by people of other cultural impulses and products from other
places especially north Indian principalities appeared in the Chuy Valley.
Taking into account the political situation with the whole of Central
Asia drastically Islamized and non-Islamic elements suppressed, there
is high possibility that these products were introduced through Khotan
and Kashgar of East Turkestan. Both these territories, especially
Khotan, had long and strong ties with India, one indication of which is
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
96
that their scripts derived from the Brāhmī script. Khotanese Buddhism
partially (though not completely) withstood the tide of Islamization of
East Turkestan in the beginning of the second millennium. Even after the
destruction and desecration of Buddhist temples, followers continued to
practice and one group produced the so-called Uyghur (i.e. Turkic,
Khakan) version of Xuanzang’s biography in the first half of the 11th
century. In the second stage in the history of Buddhism in the Chuy
Valley, without any potlitical support due to the decentralization of the
Karluk Khaganate, Buddhists were forced to change their style of faith.
Instead of active construction of new temples and monasteries, they
started to move to different places and use portable altars and objects as
discussed in this article. On the other hand, old structures constructed at
the primary stage survived over the century. But from the middle to the
end of the 10th century, when new followers moved in, they seized the
old structures and reconstructed new ones with financial support. The
excavated objects selected for this article can tell the history of how
Buddhism began and survived in the Chuy Valley.
Notes
The Chuy Valley is located in the north of Kyrgyzstan and the south of Kazakhstan,
along the middle course of the Chuy River. It is 250km in length. The valley floor lies
at an altitude of 500–1300m above sea level. The valley is bounded by a ridge of Kyrgyz
Ala-Too in the south and the Chu-Ili mountains in the north-east, and gradually passes
into the in the Moyun-Kum desert in the west and north-west. Therefore, the eastern
part of the valley is closed and has a narrow width of up to 10–12km, and the western
part is open and as wide as 90–100km.
2 Regarding a few settlements which were archaeologically identified as belonging to the
first half of the first millennium CE, the situation basically does not change.
3 Xuanzang 2012: 40.
4 Tugusheva 1991: 5–6.
5 Lubo-Lisnichenko 2002: 118.
6 Forte 1994: 42 and 53.
7 We consider the rock image of the Buddha in the Issyk-Ata Gorge, along with Tibetan
inscriptions, six-syllable mantras on the rocks and stones of Issyk-Kul, as well as a
series of Buddhist bronzes from Issyk-Kul, to be connected with the Dzungar people in
the territory of northern Kyrgyzstan in the 16th and early 18th centuries.
8 Hayashi 1996; Kenzheakhmet 2017; Torgoev et al. 2019.
9
Kolchenko 2020.
10 Smirnova 1958.
11 Kamyshev 2002: 6.
12 Bernshtam 1950: table XXIII.2, 3; Tabaldiev 2000; Tabaldiev 2003.
13 Mkrtychev 2002: 121–23.
14 The Kyrgyzstan-Japan excavation led by B.E. Amanbaeva and Kazuya Yamauchi
explored the district of the settelement and clarified that the lower parts of the structure
remained there.
15 In an article by Toshio Hayashi (1996), it is called Klyuchevskoe (KL).
1
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
16
97
Bernshtam 1943: 22; Bernshtam 1950: 92, 131–33, 147.
17 Bernshtam 1950: 92, 132, table XXI.4.
18 Bernshtam 1943: 22, table VI.15–16; Bernshtam 1950: 92, table LXXVII.
19 Ibid., 92–93.
20 Ibid., 131.
21 Ibid., 92.
22 Goryacheva and Peregudova 1996: 183; Staviskiy 1996: 130–32; Hayashi 1996.
23 Pamyatniki 1983: 45, 64–65; Grek 1983: 83.
24 Goryacheva and Peregudova 1996: 183.
25 Staviskiy 1996: 133.
26 Ibid.
27 We know about one of these items only from the museum documentation, where it is
listed as Miniature Buddhist Bodhisattva.
28 Pamyatniki 1983: 45; Mkrtychev 2002: 121–22.
29 Pamyatniki 1983: 64–65; Mkrtychev 2002: 162–64.
30 Bernshtam 1950: 42, table Х.1.
31 Kozhemyako 1959: 107–108, 141.
32 Ibid., 141.
33 Kolchenko and Rott 2019.
34 Kozhemyako 1959: 141.
35 Otchety Imperatoskoy Arkheologicheskoy komissii za 1896 g 1898: 135, fig. 477;
Dzhumagulov 1982: 57.
36 The front sides of these fragments were photographed separately. They turned out to be
different in color.
37 Bernshtam 1950: 55; Bernshtam 1952: 169–71; Kyzlasov 1959: 193–202; Zyablin
1961: 50–52.
38 Tabaldiev, 2003: fig. 1.1; Tabaldiev, 2000.
39 Mkrtychev 2002: 121–23.
40 Dzhumagulov 1982: 57.
41 Goryacheva and Peregudova 1996: 176, figs 11–13; Goryacheva 2004; Mkrtychev
2002: 120–24.
42 Goryacheva and Peregudova 1996: remark 15.
43 Mkrtychev 2002: 124.
44 Several (more than five) statuettes were found in Kyrgyzstan, dating back to the time
of the Dzungarian occupation of part of the territory of Kyrgyzstan in the 16th–18th
centuries and Qing’s influence in early 19th century. For all their interest as a
phenomenon, they are not chronologically the subject of this study.
45 Artem´eva 2004.
46 Stavskaya 1998: 56.
47 Mkrtychev 2002: 168–70.
48 Bernshtam 1950: 91, 139, 148, table LXXXIX.5.
49 Pamyatniki 1983: 65.
50 Bernshtam 1950: 91, 139, 148; Pamyatniki 1983: 63–65; Staviskiy 1996: 150;
Mkrtychev 2002: 168.
51 Kozhemyako 1959: 93–95.
52 Mkrtychev 2002: 124; Pamyatniki 1983: 62.
BUDDHISM IN THE CHUY VALLEY (KYRGYZSTAN) IN THE MIDDLE AGES
98
53
Pamyatniki 1983: 62; Mkrtychev 2002: 124.
54 Pamyatniki 1983: 63.
55 Mkrtychev 2002: 166–67.
56 Almost all small Buddhist sculptures in Fig. 10 are in the private collection of a Bishkek
collector (with the exception of two items he donated to the KRSU museum). Some of
the items were discovered by the collector himself, others were purchased from other
private individuals. According to him, artefacts were found at the sites of Ak-Beshim
and Krasnaya Rechka. But the information coming from him about the settlement of
discovery can be contradictory and mutually exclusive. Therefore, we prefer not to
highlight the place of discovery of each individual object, but to give this generalized
information.
57 The owner of a private collection including an artefact, has doubts about the authenticity
of information that he received when he acquired the artefact from another private
person.
58 Mkrtychev 2002: 164; Goryacheva 2010: 231.
59 Stavskaya et al. 2013: 89.
60 Taking this opportunity, we express our gratitude to T.K. Mkrtychev who showed us
this analogy.
61 Baypakov, Ternovaya and Goryacheva 2007: 192–93, fig. 306 is included.
62 Mkrtychev 2002: 170–71.
63 Baypakov, Ternovaya and Goryacheva 2007: 192, fig. 305; Mkrtychev 2002: 170–71.
64 Kyzlasov 1959: 208–09; Marshak and Raspopova 1996: 129; Mkrtychev 2002: 166.
65 Grek 1983: 81–82.
66 Mkrtychev 2002: 171–72.
67 Kolchenko 2019: 145–46, 161–62.
68 In my opinion, this castle wall should be identified with the wall around Shakhristan-2
/ Khitan section / rabad (names given by different researchers to the same structural part
of the Ak-Beshim settlement), inside which, on the surface and in the excavations, there
is a tile of the Chinese type.
69 Researchers such as G. Clauson identified the Suyab temple Dayun with the remains
AB-1 (Clauson 1961; Forte 1994; Kyzlasov 2006: 298–300). However, partially
excavated by A.N. Bernshtam, Buddhist remains AB-0, taking into account the stated
arguments on possible re-dating based on the stele and its localization inside Shahristan2, can stake a claim to this with good reason.
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About the Author and Translator
Valery A. Kolchenko is a researcher at the Institute of History, Archeology and
Ethnology, the National Academy of Sciences, Kyrgyz Republic. He is a specialist in the
field of archaeological study of the medieval cities of Kyrgyzstan. He leads the
archaeological research of the Kyrgyz-Russian expedition (with the State Hermitage
Museum, St Petersburg) and the Kyrgyz-Chinese expedition (with the Shaanxi Provincial
Institute of Archaeology, Xi’an) at the site of Krasnaya Rechka. He has a special interest
in the religious life of medieval cities, especially coexistence of religions such as
Zoroastrianism, Buddhism and Christianity, on which he has authored numerous
publications primarily in Russian.
Gulzat Usubalieva is an alumna of the FLEX (Future Leaders Exchange) Program
administered by the US Department of State. She specialized in computer-aided design
at Moscow State Mining University and received a DSH (German language examination)
from Rheinland Privatschule in Cologne, Germany. She has worked at international
companies such as ACCELS (American Councils), Michael Page, National Commission
for UNESCO and KAZ Minerals (Kazakhmys Corporation). She is currently working as
an administrator-translator at an intergovernmental grant project financed by the Japanese
International Cooperation Agency.