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0057 Ancient Khotan : vol.1
Ancient Khotan : vol.1 / Page 57 (Grayscale High Resolution Image)

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doi: 10.20676/00000182
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Sec. i] GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION AND ETHNOGRAPHY OF SARÏKOL   25

It is difficult to judge now, when the whole tract is slowly recovering from the results of long-continued aggression, what its population and resources may have been during periods when the support of a strong paramount power, established in Eastern Turkestan, assured to Sarikol safety from its predatory neighbours to the west and south. The political value of this hill tract as an advanced post guarding the frontier towards Badakhshan, Gilgit, and the Pamirs was, as we shall see, realized early by the Chinese. But far more than the spasmodic assertion of sovereignty, which, as far as the Chinese administration was concerned, is likely to have been often purely nominal 8, the racial tenacity of the inhabitants themselves must have helped to preserve to the little alpine chiefship its continued existence and historical individuality.

The population of Sarikol, apart from the nomadic Kirghiz herdsmen who visit its grazing grounds, consists of hill Tajiks, who by physical appearance and language alike are unmistakably proved to belong to the so-called Galcha stock. The Sarikoli tongue, first recorded by the late Mr. R. Shaw with his usual accuracy and care, is very closely allied to Wakhi, the language of Wakhan, of which it may be said to represent a mere dialect. The Sarikolis whom I saw showed all the racial characteristics of the Iranian ` Tajiks ' who form the bulk of the population in the Oxus region 9, and the knowledge of Persian common among all classes indicates the influence exercised by the culture of Iran even in these distant valleys. To the prevalence of Iranian traditional lore in the local legends I shall have occasion to refer later. The antiquity of these legends, as attested by Hsüan-tsang, the Iranian elements in the local nomenclature, as well as the absence of any historical tradition to the contrary, render it highly probable that the population of Sarikol has from early times borne the same ethnic character as at present.

The geographical position of Sarikol is such that it could never have lain on the route of one of those great waves of invasion which from time to time have swept across the more accessible parts of Central Asia, and in their progress have radically changed the ethnology of those regions. Sarikol, with its severe climate 10—the elevation of the main valleys sinks nowhere below io,000 ft.—and its limited area of productive land, could not possibly attract occupation and settlement by a powerful invader. The predatory inroads to which the main valleys were exposed, during recurring periods, from the petty hill-states to the south and west, no doubt subjected the more peaceable population of Sarikol to great vicissitudes. But considering the passing character of these raids, and the ready shelter offered by the many secluded side-valleys, they were not likely to threaten it with extermination. Experience in any case shows that the Sarikoli settlements during recent times have recovered from severe trials of this kind, including even a forcible transportation of the greater part of the population to Kashgar, which occurred during Yaqûb Bég's rule". It is manifest that this small Iranian community, placed in such close proximity to a great Turki-speaking population, and sharing its political fortunes, could not have preserved its language and racial characteristics intact without the isolating effect of its mountains and that tenacious attachment to inherited lore which is peculiar to hill people.

8 The relations which existed during the period preceding Yaqub Bég's rebellion between the hereditary chief of Sarikol and the Chinese authorities were characteristically indicated in the nominal tribute paid by the former and the valuable presents received in return. The payments in silver and gold made to the Sarikol chief were represented ` as a subsidy for the military protection of the frontier and the road towards Badakhshan' ; see Gordon, Roof of the World, p. r x o.

9 For a photograph see J. Anthr. Inst., 1903, Pl. XXVII, where the individuals in the back row and the central figure

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in the front row are Wakhis settled in Sarikol, the rest Kirghiz. Wakhis and Sarikolis proper are not distinguishable in outward appearance.

'o The character of the climate of Sarikol is well indicated by the saying which Col. T. E. Gordon recorded from the mouth of its governor at the time of his visit ' that there are only two seasons, summer and winter, the former lasting three months, the latter nine '; Roof of the World, p. i 14.

" See Gordon, Roof of the World, p. 111.

E

Ethnic affinity of Sarikolis.

Ethnic individuality of Sarikol.