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- Q4689441 subject Q16777276.
- Q4689441 subject Q8700591.
- Q4689441 abstract "The Afrasiab painting, also called the Ambassadors' Painting, is a rare example of Sogdian art. It was discovered in 1965 when the local authorities decided the construction of a road in the middle of Afrāsiāb mound, the old site of pre-Mongol Samarkand. It is now preserved in a special museum on the Afrāsiāb mound.The painting dates back to the middle of the 7th century CE. On the four walls of the room of a private house, three or four different countries neighbouring Central Asia are depicted. On the northern wall China (a Chinese festival, with the Empress on a boat, and the Emperor hunting), on the Southern Wall Samarkand (i.e.; the Iranian world: a religious funerary procession in honor of the ancestors during the Nowruz festival), on the eastern wall India (as the land of the astrologers and of the pygmies, but the painting is much destroyed there).The topic on the main wall, the western wall facing the entrance is debated between specialists. Turkish soldiers are escorting ambassadors coming from various countries of the world (Korea, China, Iranian principalities etc.). There are three main hypotheses. The leading expert on Sogdian painting, the excavator of Panjikent, B. Marshak points out that Sogdian painting, gods are always depicted on the top of the main wall. However, as the Turks are guiding the embassies but are not themselves ambassadors, it has been suggested also that the Turkish Qaghan, then lord of inner and central Asia, might be depicted there. A Chinese text is indeed saying that the idea of the "Four Lords of the World", here China, India, Iran and Turks, is depicted on the walls of palaces near Samarkand precisely during this period, and this would perfectly fit the four walls of this room. The last hypothesis makes use of an inscription mentioning the king of Samarkand to propose the idea that the ambassadors are presenting their gifts to him.In early 2014, France declared that it would finance the restoration of the Afrasiab painting.".
- Q4689441 thumbnail Afrasiab_-_details_from_The_Ambassadors_Painting_3_-_great_procession.JPG?width=300.
- Q4689441 wikiPageExternalLink general.htm.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q11212956.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q12557.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q142.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q148.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q16777276.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q171927.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q18097.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q2167520.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q268218.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q27275.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q28926.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q32120.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q34362.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q43.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q483236.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q486244.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q5753.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q630805.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q6346542.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q668.
- Q4689441 wikiPageWikiLink Q8700591.
- Q4689441 comment "The Afrasiab painting, also called the Ambassadors' Painting, is a rare example of Sogdian art. It was discovered in 1965 when the local authorities decided the construction of a road in the middle of Afrāsiāb mound, the old site of pre-Mongol Samarkand. It is now preserved in a special museum on the Afrāsiāb mound.The painting dates back to the middle of the 7th century CE.".
- Q4689441 label "Afrasiab painting".
- Q4689441 depiction Afrasiab_-_details_from_The_Ambassadors_Painting_3_-_great_procession.JPG.