Pa r t h i a n s , S a s a n i a n s , a n d S o g d i a n s
43
known as Muhammad had proclaimed a new religion, Islam. When
news of the goings-on in Iran reached his ears, Muhammad report-
edly commented, “A nation that appoints a woman as its ruler shall
never prosper.”
10
Iran
was
a prosperous country, of course, which is why the Arabs in-
vaded it a few years after Muhammad’s death. Throughout the Sasanian
Period, commercial traffic along the trans-Asian trade routes had con-
tinued to increase. The principal actors and beneficiaries of this traffic
were the Sogdians of Central Asia, whose main city was Samarkand
(in present-day Uzbekistan). Their language, an east Iranian dialect,
became the lingua franca of the Silk Road as far as China, where Sogdian
merchants established expatriate colonies in cities such as Dunhuang,
Luoyang, and Chang’an (modern Xian). A large proportion of China’s
foreign trade depended upon the Sogdians, whom the annals of the Tang
dynasty describe as traders by nature: “They excel in commerce and
love gain; once a man reaches the age of twenty, he goes off to the neigh-
boring realms; wherever there are profits to be made, they go.”
11
From the time of Alexander’s conquests onward the Sogdians were
rarely politically independent, but their distance from imperial centers in
Iran allowed them a measure of self-determination. On the other hand,
their proximity to the Central Asian steppes left them at the front line of
defense against incursions from nomadic raiders. At times the Sogdian
lands were under the de facto control of nomadic groups such as the
Hephthalites and later waves of Turks. But the largely urban Sogdians also
had a kind of symbiotic relationship with the nomads, who provided them
with trade items such as leather and other animal products while receiv-
ing manufactured and luxury goods in return. Also, nomadic individuals
or groups often chose to settle in the towns and integrate themselves into
urban society, which resulted in their adaptation to Sogdian life.
Sogdians were thus purveyors of culture as well as goods. They
were particularly prominent in the transmission of religions, includ-
ing Buddhism, Christianity, and Manichaeism. None of these religions
appears to have become widespread in the Sogdian heartlands, where
local Iranian cults continued to predominate (except in the southern
regions adjacent to Bactria, which became largely Buddhist). Individual
Sogdians, however, adopted these foreign faiths, probably as a way of
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