World Bulletin of Social Sciences (WBSS) Available Online at: https://www.scholarexpress.net
Vol. 5, December - 2021
ISSN: 2749-361X 144
This includes unique items such as copper
bracelets from the 7th to 8th centuries, small copper
cup-shaped breast pieces, copper female jewelry,
bronze rings and beads with tapered holes for caps.
By the 5th century, in some parts of northern
Tokharistan,
Sassanian
Kushan-Sassanid
coins
established monetary relations. Monetary relations
were mainly established in the Sassanian territories. In
particular,
Chaganian
entered
the
territory.
Academician E.V. Rtveladze, who deeply studied this
period, said: Coins come in 8 different forms and
depict various mythical figures and seals. These coins
were in circulation until the first half of the 6th
century, and later they were replaced by coins minted
by Khisrav I, ”writes E.V. Retveladze. (Money
circulation in North-West Tokharistan in the Early
Middle Ages. Tashkent. Science. 1987. p. 122)
Ardasher's gold coin, one of the Kushan-
Sassanid coins of this period, is on display in the
exhibition hall of the museum.
From the end of the 9th century to the 1920s,
Chaganian was ruled by the Samanids, Karakhanids,
Gaznevids, Seljuk, Karluks, Gurov and Khorezmshahs.
It was during this period that the process of formation
and development of Islamic culture began in
Chaganiyya, as well as in other parts of Northern
Tokharistan.
This process is characterized by the spread of
Islam, the Arabic language and writing, the emergence
of architectural structures typical of the Muslim world,
including
madrasahs,
mosques,
caravanserais,
mausoleums and other types of culture.
The central city of Chaganian (a monument to
Budrach at the confluence of the Red River with
Surkhandarya) covers an area of 6 square kilometers.
At the time of its development, in the first half of the
X-XI centuries, the city occupied both banks of the Red
River.
In the 9th-13th centuries, crafts were
especially developed in Chaganian. This is evidenced
by the exhibits of the museum in the exhibition hall
"Surkhandarya oasis in the Middle Ages".
According to the scientific conclusion of the
famous archaeologist of the oasis T. Annaev, the
treasury of copper vessels found in pottery workshops
in the vicinity of the village of Chaganian / Armalitepa
testifies to the development of copper business in
Chaganian. Weighing about 300 kilograms in the 11th
century, the treasure consists of various utensils,
including large and small pots, pots, candlesticks and
jugs. The most unique examples of this treasure are
displayed in the central part of the room.
From the end of the 9th century, Chaganian
mastered the manufacture of glazed dishes. Ceramics
from the 10th century, especially bowls, bowls, plates
and jugs, are painted with green, brown and yellow
glazes. The rest of the crockery is painted white and
decorated with black and brown, painted in the Kufic
style.
In the XI-XII centuries, types of ceramics were
enriched with more colorful paints and covered with
glaze patterns.
Samples of the material culture of the
Chaganian region will be presented in the hall of the
museum “Termez and Chaganian Amir Temur and the
culture of the Timurid state”. During the reign of Amir
Temur, Chaganian, the capital of the Chaganian
region, did not lose its status. Archaeological evidence
suggests that by the end of the 15th - early 16th
century, life in Chaganion shifted from Shahristan to
Rabat. Another Chaganion center is Navand. (Navand-
chopar, the city of messengers) There were mints in
Chaganian and Navand, where dirhams (copper coins)
were minted in circulation on the territory of Amir
Temur and the Temurid state. Copper coins presented
in the central part of the hall are copper dirhams
minted on behalf of Amir Temur, Shokhrukh, Ulugbek,
Abu Said Mirzo, as well as on behalf of local emirs, and
have special historical significance.
Monument Navandaktepa (Uzun district) XIV-
XVI centuries, like other monuments of this period in
Chaganian, served as a village, trade route, customs.
The material resources presented at the exhibitions in
these halls, in particular, armored protective chain
mail, bowls and bowls, jugs and lamps, glassware,
architectural tiles of Chaganian practicality, which are
not inferior in quality to Chinese and Damascus
porcelain, are unique examples of art. It should be
noted that the material culture of the Timurid period
has one thing in common in the production of raw
materials, especially in the production of ceramics.
This commonality lies in the widespread use of the
color of air in all industrial products and even in all
historical monuments built during the Timurid period.
Because the color of the air is the color of the sky,
which means greatness.