Thursday, June 25, 2015

Discovering Bronze Age Bactria

Stamp Seal from our Collection of Bactrian Artifacts
published on title page of Necropolis of Gonur by
Dr. Victor Sarianidi, leader of Russian excavations
in the Amu Darya and Murghab regions of the 
Bactria-Margiana Archeological Complex.

In the mid-1970s, my husband and I had the great good fortune to live in Afghanistan for two years.  As we browsed the bazaars of Kabul, we began to find mysterious and obviously ancient carved, drilled, engraved and cast amulets and seals, in addition to miniature carvings of animals and human feet, hands and other parts.  We did not know where they came from, their age, or the civilization that must have produced them.  When we asked the merchants, they said the artifacts were from Balkh, but they did not offer more than that.  Most of our collection came out of the ruins in the province of Bactria, now located in Northeastern Afghanistan.

The ruins of Bactria had been discovered first by the residents of the towns and villages along the Amu Darya.  The artifacts may have been washed out of the ancient ruins by the occasional rains that sent water rushing down the mountain sides.  The old burial sites were then revealed and the casual explorer found interesting objects that he could take to market.  As the merchants in Kabul bought them and displayed them, only a few Westerners interested in ancient arts and culture were buying them.  We only know two other American collectors of such items; that is to say only two other collectors who lived or visited there.

I want to make clear that though I will be speaking often of my family's association with Dr. Victor Sarianidi, the leader of the Russian excavation of ancient Bactria and Margiana, Dr. Sarianidi was not a source of artifacts for us.  All his findings went to museums, not to private collectors.

Victor taught us what he had discovered about the Bactrian civilization and invited us to his excavations in the Murghab region in Turkmenistan.  Margiana, situated along the Murghab, is a part of the widespread proto-Iranian culture, closely related to the Bactrian culture.  My husband visited the digs in the Kara Kum desert on many occasions.

Here Victor leans on a section of the walls of the palace at Gonur Depe North:


The goal of this blog is to share bits of the information on Bactria and Turkmenistan that we learned from Victor's visits at our home and from his valuable publications.  I will also rely on the books based on the Ligabue collection and the recent work of Ms. Sylvia Winkelmann.

I am gratified to see that Ms. Winkelmann has given due notice to the drilled stone images that make up a large part of my family's collection.  For example:


Stone Amulet from Bactria, authenticated and published by Victor Sarianidi
Contact me with questions or for invoice through the private message form at the top right of this page.

I am now in the process of downsizing our collection and will be posting many of the seals and amulets for sale.  Click on the links below the photos to see a more detailed description, price and payment arrangements that I offer.  

Both copper/bronze compartmented seals and engraved amulets in stone or faience such as these are pictured below: 

Cast copper/bronze: 
  
Ancient Bactrian Cruciform Compartmented Seal Authenticated and Published by Sarianidi  
Contact me with questions or for invoice through the private message form at the top right of this page.


Engraved in white stone:     
Bactrian Stamp Seal Bird Image   Published by Sarianidi 

All the linked photographs on this page show artifacts that have been authenticated and published, most of them in V. Sarianidi's book on Myths of Ancient Bactria Margiana on Its Seals and Amulets.

  Contact me with questions or for invoice through the private message form at the top right of this page.





13 comments:

  1. What fascinating experiences you've had, Anna. I find these ancient Bactrian artifacts and your descriptions very interesting. I especially love the image that the bird stamp/seal makes still today.

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    1. I am very fortunate to have lived my adventurous and very educational life, Pamela. I thank God for preserving me through some of the adventures. ;) Thank you for your interest. I am now reserving enough time to write about my travels and my seals collection.

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  2. I get to live vicariously through you, Anna, from a place I have always longed to explore. (Had actually booked a trip to Afghanistan . . .but then the damn Russians invaded and I will never forgive them for having to cancel by trip!). Fascinating, as always - always learn something from you. Peace and joy . . . Catherine

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    1. Thank you very much for finding my blog and commenting so graciously. We could have had a great time together. We left just in the nick of time to miss the invasion, and had moved to Karachi where we weathered the beginning of the uprisings and the influence of the extremists.

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    2. That had to be very interesting and somewhat frightening time, Anna. It would have been a blast to have traveled with you!

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  3. You have already lived soooo many lifetimes, Anna, and have the amazing artifacts to prove it! Thank you for sharing these wonderful journeys with us...I always feel like I'm right there beside you. :)

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    1. Thank you for reading and commenting, Mary Beth. I greatly enjoy reading your blogs, too ;)

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  4. You've lived such an interesting life, Anna! I love your "souveniers" from the adventures. It will be interesting to see all your seals and hear about them. Here, it was interesting to learn that you didn't know about the Bactrian culture beforehand, but sort of stumbled into it. Fascinating that you and that other party seem to be preservers of the culture. Amazing! Anna, it would be great to have a map of Afghanistan added somewhere here, showing where Balkh was. Also what would these tombs have looked like? In any case, really like your design for the blog. :)

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    1. Thank you, Mary, my dear and supportive friend. I will certainly add a map and some photos of the tombs. We have collected so much material over the years since we became fascinated with the miniature art created 3 - 4 thousand years ago, that I really must concentrate on sharing as much as I can with others who like to study art history and ancient cultural traditions and religious beliefs. A truly heartfelt thanks!

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  5. I'll be looking forward to the map and photos! :) Wishing you good luck with all the work ahead - it'll be time consuming but worth doing. You'll be sharing an ancient culture with people - a culture that they wouldn't know about without your help. That's so great! Best always, Anna!

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    1. Here are the maps to Balkh (Bactria) and the wider archeological complex that it belongs to. http://bactria-margiana.blogspot.com/2015/06/shapes-and-styles-of-ancient-bactrian.html

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  6. It is interesting to read your "snippets" of information, Anna. It must have been fun for you and your husband to find and collect such ancient pieces from an almost forgotten culture.

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    1. Come to think of it, I am enjoying the research and writing more than I enjoyed plowing through the crowded bazaars to buy things that I really wondered where on earth they could have come from. ;) Thank you for the comment!

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