- Khosho Tsaidam Monuments
The Khosho Tsaidam Monuments, located in the
Tsaidam Valley Lake along the western part of theOrkhon River inMongolia , are two memorial monuments associated with the Gök Türk Empire in the early 8th century. These are theBilge Khan (683-734) andKul-Tegin (684-731) memorials –commemorating a politician and his younger brother who was Commander in Chief of the armed forces. There are two other smaller memorials and a fifth that has recently been revealed.Large numbers of Turkic remains are known across what was the vast Gök Türk Empire, which stretched from the edges of
China (they besieged what is nowXi’an ) east, to what is nowIran in the west. Only however in theMongolia have memorials to kings, lords and aristocrats been found. Those at Khosho Tsaidam are the largest and most impressive monuments of their kind. They consist of huge, vertical stone tablets inscribed with the distinctive Turkicrunic -like script –the earliestInner Asia n known language- first deciphered in 1893 and providing much evidence ofGök Türk culture.The
Bilge Khan memorial is set within a walled enclosure. The inscribed stone has a carved twisted dragon at its top and on one of the faces a carved ibex –the emblem ofGök Türk khans. The slab was set into the back of a carved stone turtle. Found alongside was a beautiful carving of a man and a woman sitting cross-legged– perhaps the Khan and his queen.The
Kul-Tegin memorial, also originally erected on a stone turtle, was similarly set within an enclosure, with walls covered in white adobe and decorated inside with coloured pictures. Fragments of carved figures of perhaps the Khan and his wife have also been found. In both enclosures is there evidence of altars.The sites were first excavated in 1889. Since 2000,
Mongolia n and Turkish archaeologists have collaborated in comprehensive excavation and study of the area. Protective fences have been erected around the site and a purpose built building put up to house recovered items and provide work-space for researchers.These memorials are the most important known archaeological remains of the Gök Türk Empire, which extended through
Central Asia from the 6th - 8th centuries AD. The unique information contained in the extensiverunic inscriptions on the steles located at the memorials has proven extremely valuable to the study ofCentral Asian history and culture; in addition, the memorial sites have supplied particular insight into the world outlook, religious beliefs, architecture, arts, literary development and foreign relations of Central Asian peoples. The monuments are essentially unique insofar as similar memorials to contemporary aristocrats have not been found anywhere outside ofMongolia .See also
*
Orkhon inscriptions
*History of the Turkic peoples
*Türk Empire
*Tonyukuk References
* Report of the 28th Session of the World Heritage Committee
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.