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0528 On Ancient Central-Asian Tracks : vol.1
中央アジア踏査記 : vol.1
On Ancient Central-Asian Tracks : vol.1 / 528 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000214
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310   BY THE UPPERMOST OXUS

CH. XX

where the cultivated ground at the valley bottom was broken by steep rocky spurs descending close to the river or by stretches of sandy waste along its bank, the eye could rest with joy on the glorious vistas opening to the south.

Towering above narrow side valleys, and seemingly quite near, there showed in magnificent boldness ice-clad peaks

of the Hindukush main range rising to 22,000 feet and more (Fig. 138). They looked indeed, just as Sung Yün, an early Chinese pilgrim who passed here on his way to the Indus, had described them, like peaks of jade.

There offered welcome opportunities for anthropological work by measurements and observations on the Wakhi

population. Of ancient stock, it has preserved, like its Eastern

Iranian language, also its well-marked Homo Alpinus type. The fair hair and fair eyes of the Wakhis had struck already

that observant Jesuit traveller, Benedict Goes, when he passed up Wakhan in 1602 on his way in search of `Cathay' and noted their resemblance to Flemings.

But what claimed my attention most were the ruins of ancient strongholds, some of them of considerable extent and in part remarkably well preserved, to be found on hill spurs overlooking the valley (Fig. 139) . There was much of

antiquarian interest to observe in their plans, the construction and decoration of their bastioned walls. The natural

protection afforded by unscalable rock-faces of spurs and ravines had always been utilized with skill in these defences. This is not the place to describe them in detail, nor need

I set forth the reasons which even in the absence of direct archaeological evidence such as only excavations could

produce lead me to believe, that several of these fastnesses go back to a period roughly corresponding to Sasanian