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0411 Serindia : vol.1
セリンディア : vol.1
Serindia : vol.1 / 411 ページ(白黒高解像度画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000183
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Sec. y]   LOU-LAN RE-ESTABLISHED AS SHAN-SHAN

339

SECTION V.—LOU-LAN RE-ESTABLISHED AS SHAN-SHAN

We may now resume the synopsis of the events concerning Shan-shan or Lou-lan as recorded by the Annals. Chao Po-nu's successful expedition (A. D. Io8) had resulted in the submission of Lou-lan, which ' presented offerings of tribute to China '. But when the Hsiung-nu, on hearing of this, moved troops to attack Lou-lan, its king characteristically enough is said to have ' sent one son as a hostage to the Hsiung-nu, and another to China '.1 It is easy to understand this uncertain attitude of the small state upon which the Chinese advance westwards had suddenly imposed strategic importance ; for it was only in the time immediately following Chao P'o-nu's expedition that, according to the statement in the Annals, the fortified border line known as the ' Great Wall ' was extended from Chiu-ch'üan or Su-chou to the Yii-men or ' Jade Gate '.2 Of this my explorations have proved that it was established after the end of the second century B. c. on the westernmost part of the Limes beyond Tun-huang, and by the very route which still leads from Tun-huang to the region of Lop.:

A few years later Lou-lan again figured prominently in the events connected with the expeditions which the Emperor Wu-ti dispatched against distant Ta-yuan or Farghana.4 ' Afterwards,' the Han Annals tell us, ' when the Erh-shih General went to attack Ta-yuan, the Hsiung-nu wished to intercept him. The General's troops, however, presented such a formidable appearance that they did not dare to take the initiative, but sent cavalry to wait in Lou-lan till the Chinese envoy should again pass, wishing completely to cut off his return.' The expedition here referred to was in all probability the first which was led westwards, in 104 B.C., by Li Kuang-li, the ' Êrh-shih General ', but which was forced to retire to Tun-huang two years later without having attained its goal and after heavy losses.5

The sequel is thus told in the Annals : ' The Chinese military chief, Jên Wên (   , had then
command of the military colony at the Jade Gate barrier (Yii-mên kuan) ; and when the Êrh-shih General was afterwards obstructed, Jên Wên ascertained the facts from some captives and reported the same to the capital. The Emperor issued a rescript ordering Jên Wên to lead troops by a convenient road and capture the king of Lou-lan. The General proceeded to the city gate, where

he reproached the king for his conduct, but the latter replied : " When a small State lies between two great kingdoms, if it has not an alliance with both, it cannot be at rest. I wish now to place my nation within the bounds of the Chinese empire." The Emperor, confiding in his words, re-established him in his kingdom, and commissioned him to keep a watch over the movements of the Hsiung-nu. From this time the Hsiung-nu had no great intimacy with, or confidence in, Lou-lan.' Sa

The course of events here recorded is in full agreement with the assumption that the position and extent of Lou-lan roughly coincided with that of the territory known later as Shan-shan or Lop. For a Chinese force returning from the direction of Farghana to Tun-huang, the route leading to the north of Lop-nbr and along the foot of the Kuruk-tâgh was obviously the nearest line of retreat.

Lou-lan be-
tween Huns
and Chinese.

Firstexpedition against Ta-yuan.

Chinese ascendancy over Loulan.

Chinese retreat through Lou-lan.

' Cf. Wylie, J. Anthrop. Inst., x. p. 25. Here and in other extracts I am substituting for Mr. Wylie's transcripts of Chinese names those conforming with the Wade system.

2 Cf. Wylie, ibid., pp. 25, 71 (` Guard-houses were planted at intervals, from Chiao-ch'üan to the Yü Gate') ; also Kings-mill, J.R.A.S., r88z, p. r8.

3 See below, chap. xrx—xx.

' Cf. for a detailed account of these operations, which best show the rapid extension of Chinese power into the Tarim Basin and even beyond, Ssû-ma Ch'ien's narrative in Kings-mill, Intercourse of China with Eastern Turkestan, J.R.A.S., i882, pp. 2 2 sqq.

6 See Kingsmill,J.R.A.S., 1882, p. 23.

6a Cf. Wylie, ibid., p. 26.

Tx2