Table 1: current Khorezmian periodisation
BRONZE AGE
Suyargan
Ia (early stage) 1
st
half 2
nd
millennium B.C.
Ib (late stage) 11
th
– 9
th
centuries B.C.
Tazabag’yab II 15
th
– 11
th
centuries B.C.
EARLY IRON AGE
Amirabad
III 9
th
– 8
th
centuries B.C.
ARCHAIC
Kiuzeli-g’ir I 7
th
/6
th
century B.C.
Dingil’dzhe II 6
th
/5
th
century B.C.
Kalal’i-g’ir 1 III 5
th
century B.C.
Khazarasp
IV 5
th
/4
th
century B.C.
ANTIQUE
Kangiui
I (early stage) 4
th
– 3
rd
centuries
B.C.
II (late stage) 2
nd
century B.C. – early 1
st
century A.D.
Kushan
I (early) 1
st
– 2
nd
century A.D.
II (late) 3
rd
– 4
th
centuries A.D.
Hephthalite 4
th
– 6
th
centuries A.D.
Turk
4
th
century A.D +
AFRIGHID
4
th
(?) – 9
th
centuries A.D.
In the Neolithic and Bronze Ages the prehistoric
cultures of Khorezm were closely linked to those of the
northern steppes. The population was semi-nomadic,
living largely from hunting and fishing, with some
limited agriculture and herding. By the Iron Age the
more wide ranging and culturally sophisticated Saka
tribes had also established semi-nomadic sites on the
west bank of the Amu Dar’ya. The first links to the
world of the Persians were heralded by the appearance
of large fortified sites on the west bank in the ‘Archaic’
period (7
th
/6
th
c. BC – 5
th
/4
th
c. BC). Two fortresses can
be clearly assigned to the ‘Archaic’ period, Kiuzeli-g’ir
and later Kalal’i-g’ir 1, as well as the site of
Dingil’dzhe, a fortified manor house. Kalal’i-g’ir 1 is
the site with the clearest signs of Persian influence,
including a sculptural fragment of a griffin which has
parallels in ornamental capitals at Susa and Persepolis.
The next stage in Khorezmian chronology is the
‘Antique’ (4
th
c. B.C. – 4
th
c. A.D.), divided into two
phases. The first, to which Tolstov gave the name
‘Kangiui’, sees the full flourishing of an independent
region. Fortresses, farmsteads, ‘urban’ sites and
religious complexes were built at this time, while the
material culture experienced a period of conservatism
lasting until the late 1
st
or early 2
nd
century A.D.,
suggesting limited outside influence until contact with
the Kushan empire effected a major cultural shift.
Independent Khorezmia was clearly strong and
prosperous, albeit fairly small. In the later ‘Antique’
period it is by no means clear whether Khorezmia fell
directly under Kushan rule or if it merely benefited
from contact during the floruit of the empire.
Akshakhan-kala dates to the Antique period of
Khorezmian independence. It is a massive fortified
complex set in a dune field on the east bank of the Amu
Dar’ya in the southern part of the modern delta region.
The dune field is surrounded today by irrigated lands.
To the north lies the range of hills known as Sultan-uiz-
dagh, a volcanic ridge rich in a variety of different
minerals. The land is flat and there are several small
lakes in the general vicinity of the site. Twenty
kilometres to the north east stands the magnificent
Kushan period ruling seat of Toprak-kala and in the far
distance lies the chain of ancient fortresses that ringed
the oasis in the Antique period: Ayaz-kala, Malai
Kirghiz-kala, Bolshoi Kirghiz-kala, Kurganshin-kala
and Djambas-kala.
The site of Akshakhan-kala was first recorded in
Soviet times by the 2
nd
district brigade of the Biruni
region collective farm ‘Kommuna’. It was studied for
the first time in 1956 by the Khorezmian Expedition
under S.P. Tolstov. At that time, as now, the site was
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