- Huna (people)
).
Obv: Napki Malka type bust, winged headdress with bull head in the center.Pahlavi legend "NAPKI MALKA".
Rev:Zoroastrian fire altar with attendants either side. Sun wheel, or possibly eight-spokedBuddhist Dharmacakra , above left.] The Huna (also known as Indo-Hephthalites orAlchon ), as they were known inSouth Asia , seem to have been part of theHephthalite group, who established themselves inAfghanistan by the first half of the fifth century, with their capital at Bamiyan. They sometimes call themselves "Hono" on their coins, but it is unknown how related they may have been to theHuns who invaded the Western world.History
During their invasion, the Hunas managed to capture the Sassanian king
Peroz I , and exchanged him for a ransom. They used the coins of the ransom to counter mark and copy them, thereby initiating a coinage inspired from Sassanian designs. [ [http://www.anythinganywhere.com/commerce/coins/coinpics/indi-heph.htm Source] ]The "Bhishma Parva" of the "
Mahabharata ", supposed to have been edited around the 4th or 5th century, in one of its verses, mentions the Hunas with the Parasikas and other "Mlechha tribe s" of the northwest including theYavanas ,Chinas ,Kambojas , Darunas, Sukritvahas, Kulatthas etc [:HrishIvidarbhah kantikasta~Nganah parata~Nganah. | :uttarashchapare mlechchhA jana bharatasattama. || 63 |
:YavanAshcha sa Kamboja Daruna mlechchha jatayah.
:Sakahaddruhah Kuntalashcha Hunah Parasikas saha.|| 64 |
:Tathaiva maradhAahchinastathaiva dasha malikah. | :Kshatriyopaniveshashcha vaishyashudra kulani cha.|| 65 |
::(Mahabharata 6.9.63-65) .] . According to Dr V. A. Smith, the verse is reminiscent of the period when the Hunas first came into contact with theSassanian dynasty ofPersia [Early History of India, p 339, Dr V. A. Smith; See also Early Empire of Central Asia (1939), W. M. McGovern.] .Scholars believe that king
Raghu , the hero ofKalidasa 's Sanskrit playRaghuvamsha (4th/5th c AD) was in fact kingChandragupta Vikramaditya of the Gupta Dynasty. He had started a military expedition and after defeating and subjugating the local peoples along the way he reached the Parasikas ofSassanian Iran and defeated them after fierce fighting. Then he proceeded "to north from Iran" and reached river Vamkshu (orOxus ) where he battled with the Hunas. After conquering the Hunas, he crossed the Oxus and encountered theKambojas , an ancient Iranian people who find frequent mention in South Asian texts [Raghuvamsa 4.65-71".] ."Brahat Katha" of Kashmiri Pandit Kshmendra (11th c AD) also claims that king Vikramaditya had slaughtered the
Shakas , Barbaras, Hunas,Kambojas ,Yavanas , Parasikas and theTusharas etc and hence unburdened the earth of these sinful Mlechhas [Brahata Katha 10.285-86.] . There is still another ancient Brahmanical text "Katha-Saritsagara" by Somadeva which also attests that king Vikramaditya had invaded the north-westtribe s including theKashmir as and had destroyed the "Sanghas" of the Mlechhas (reference to "Sanghas here obviously alludes to the Sanghas of the Madrakas, Yaudheyas, Kambojas, Mallas or Malavas, Sibis, Arjunayans, Kulutas and Kunindas etc"). Those who survived accepted his suzerainty and many of them joined his armed forces [Katha-Saritsagara, 18.1.76-78.] .These references suggest that the Guptas indeed had encounters with the Hunas from the north-west.
Skandagupta is stated to have repelled a "Huna" invasion in455 , but they continued to pressure South Asia's northwest frontier (present dayPakistan ), and broke through into northern India by the end of the fifth century, hastening the disintegration of theGupta Empire .According to Litvinsky, the initial Huna or Alxon raids on Gandhara took place in the late 5th and early 6th centuries AD, upon the death of the Gupta ruler,
Skandagupta (455-470), presumably led by the Tegin Khingila. M. Chakravary, based on Chinese and Persian histories believes that the Hunas conquered Gandhara from the Ki-to-lo (Kidarites) in ca. 475 AD. Gandhara had been occupied by various Kidarite principalities from the early 4th century AD, but it is still a subject of debate as to whether rule was transferred from the Kidarites directly to the Hephthalites. It is known that the Huns invaded Gandhara and the Punjab from the Kabul valley after vanquishing the Kidarite principalities.The
Alchon rulerToramana established his rule over Gandhara and western Punjab, and was succeeded by his sonMihirakula in520 whose capital was Sakala or modern daySialkot in the Pakistani Punjab. The Guptas continued to resist the Hunas, and allied with the rulers of the neighboring Indian states.The "Hunas" suffered a defeat by
Yasodharman ofMalwa in528 , and by542 Mihirakula had been driven off the plains of northern India, taking refuge inKashmir , and he is thought to have died soon after. Mihirakula is remembered in contemporary Indian and Chinese histories for his cruelty and his destruction of temples and monasteries, with particular hostility towardsBuddhism .The Huna were further defeated around
565 by a coalition ofSassanian s and Western Turks.After the end of the sixth century little is recorded in India about the Huna, and what happened to them is unclear; some historians surmise that the remaining Huna were assimilated into northern South Asia's population.
The
Gurjara clan appeared in northern India about the time of the "Huna" invasions of northern India, and later established a number of ruling dynasties in northern India, including thePratihara s ofKanauj . Gurjara origins and their relationship to the Hephthalites are not well documented, and subject to considerable debate. However, Huna is one of the prominentgotra s among Gurjars and many Huna (Gurjar) villages can still be found inGhaziabad andBulandshahr .King
Devapala of Pala dynasty of Bengal (810 AD -850 AD) is said to have invaded and received tributes from theVindhya s,Dravidas , Hunas,Gurjara s andKambojas in the West [Ancient India, 2003, p 650, Dr V. D. Mahajan; History and Culture of Indian People, The Age of Imperial Kanauj, p 50, Dr R. C. Majumdar, Dr A. D. Pusalkar.] .The Hunas are mentioned in the Tibetan chronicle "Dpag-bsam-ljon-bzah ("The Excellent Kalpa-Vrksa"), along people like the Yavanas, Kambojas, Tukharas, Khaqsas, Daradas etc [Tho-gar yul dań yabana dań Kambodza dań Khasa dań Huna dań Darta dań...] [Pag-Sam-Jon-Zang (1908), I.9, Sarat Chandra Das; Ancient Kamboja, 1971, p 66,
H. W. Bailey .] ..Notes
References
*Iaroslav Lebedynsky, "Les Nomades", Paris 2007, ISBN 9782877723466
ee also
*
Raghuvamsha (play) External links
* [http://www.anythinganywhere.com/commerce/coins/coinpics/indi-heph.htm Hephthalite coins]
* [http://www.grifterrec.com/coins/huns/huns.html More Hephthalite coins]
* [http://www.geocities.com/ziadnumis/alxonintro Alchon Hunnic History and Coins of the Kashmir Smast Kingdom- Waleed Ziad]
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