The so-called Unknown Kushan Script has been partially deciphered, and the related Middle Iranian language has been preliminarly named Eteo-Tocharian

The Kushan Empire in Central Asia was one of the most influential states of the ancient world. A research team at the University of Cologne’s Department of Linguistics has now deciphered a writing system that sheds new light on its history / publication in the ‘Transactions of the Philological Society’.

Unknown Kushan Script partially deciphered
The so-called Unknown Kushan Script has been partially deciphered: where the bilingual inscription was discovered in Tajikistan. The archaeologist Dr Bobomullo Bobomulloev documented the finding in 2022 and sent pictures to the linguists at the University of Cologne, leading to the decisive breakthrough in their decipherment of the unknown Kushan script. Photo Credits: © Bobomullo Bobomulloev

A team of early-career researchers at the University of Cologne has succeeded in decoding a script that has been puzzling scholars for over seventy years: the so-called ‘unknown Kushan script’. Over a period of several years, Svenja Bonmann, Jakob Halfmann and Natalie Korobzow examined photographs of inscriptions found in caves as well as characters on bowls and clay pots from various Central Asian countries in order to put the pieces of the puzzle together. On 1 March 2023, they first announced their partial decipherment of the unknown Kushan script at an online conference of the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Tajikistan. Currently, about 60 percent of the characters can be read, and the group is working to decipher the remaining characters. A detailed description of the decipherment has now been published in the journal Transactions of the Philological Society under the title ‘A Partial Decipherment of the Unknown Kushan Script’.

Unknown Kushan Script partially deciphered, language named Eteo-Tocharian
Confirmed and suspected locations of inscriptions in Central Asia. The team is planning research expeditions to document further inscriptions. Credits: © Jakob Halfmann

New discovery led to breakthrough

The ‘unknown Kushan script’ is a writing system that was in use in parts of Central Asia between about 200 BCE and 700 CE. It can be associated with both the early nomadic peoples of the Eurasian steppe, such as the Yuèzhī, and the ruling dynasty of the Kushans. The Kushans founded an empire which, among other things, was responsible for the spread of Buddhism to East Asia. They also created monumental architecture and artworks.

Inscription on a boulder that was discovered at Dasht-i Nawur III, Afghanistan, in 1969. The script was difficult to decipher due to the poor quality of the photo. Credits: © Picture: Collège de France; drawing: Natalie Korobzow
Unknown Kushan Script partially deciphered
Linguistic analysis, same drawing as in previous picture. Credits: © Natalie Korobzow

So far, several dozen mostly short inscriptions are known, most of them originating from the territory of the present-day states of Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan. There is also a longer trilingual that was found by French archaeologists in the 1960s at Dašt-i Nāwur in Afghanistan: on a boulder at 4,320 m altitude on Mount Qarabayu, approximately 100 km southwest of Kabul.

Close-up of the discovery made in the Almosi Gorge in Tajikistan in 2022. Photo Credits: © Bobomullo Bobomulloev

The writing system was has been known since the 1950s, but had never been successfully deciphered. In 2022, a short bilingual was found carved into a rock face in the Almosi Gorge in northwestern Tajikistan, approximately 30 km from the capital Dushanbe. In addition to the unknown Kushan script, it also contains a section in the already known Bactrian language. This discovery led to renewed attempts by several researchers to decode the script – independently of one another. In the end, the linguists at the University of Cologne succeeded in partially deciphering the writing system in collaboration with the Tajik archaeologist Dr Bobomullo Bobomulloev, who was instrumental in the discovery and documentation of the bilingual.

Further details of the finding in the Almosi Gorge: the Bactrian inscription, which uses the Greek alphabet. Photo Credits: © Muhsin Bobomulloev

Success 200 years after the deciphering of the Egyptian hieroglyphs

The team applied a methodology based on the way unknown scripts have been deciphered in the past, i.e. the Egyptian hieroglyphs using the Rosetta Stone, ancient Persian cuneiform script or Greek Linear B script: Thanks to the known content of the bilingual inscription found in Tajikistan (Bactrian and unknown Kushan script) and the trilingual inscription from Afghanistan (Gandhari or Middle Indo-Aryan, Bactrian and unknown Kushan script), Bonmann, Halfmann and Korobzow were able to gradually draw conclusions about the type of writing and language.

Unknown Kushan Script partially deciphered
On the left, the royal name Vema Takhtu on the inscription in Tajikistan, on the right, on the inscription in Afghanistan. It is one of the segments that led to the ‘chain reaction’ which made the decipherment of further characters possible. Credits: © Bobomullo Bobomulloev, Collège de France, Natalie Korobzow

The breakthrough was finally made possible by the royal name Vema Takhtu, which appeared in both Bactrian parallel texts, and the title ‘King of Kings’, which could be identified in the corresponding sections in the unknown Kushan script. The title especially proved to be a good indicator of the underlying language. Step by step, using the Bactrian parallel text, the linguists were able to analyse further character sequences and determine the phonetic values of individual characters.

Unknown Kushan Script partially deciphered
The title ‘King of Kings’, on the left on the inscription found in Tajikistan, on the right on the inscription found in Afghanistan. Credits: © Bobomullo Bobomulloev, Collège de France, Natalie Korobzow

As explained in the paper,

Since it is not an ‘unknown script’ anymore, we suggest to call the writing system ‘(Issyk-)Kushan script’ from now on, because the writing system is first attested in the Issyk Kurgan, but is also clearly associated with Kushan settlement areas and the Kushan emperor Vema Takhtu.

Key to a better understanding of Kushan culture

According to the research group, the Kushan script recorded a completely unknown Middle Iranian language, which is neither identical to Bactrian nor to the language known as Khotanese Saka, which was once spoken in western China. The language probably occupies a middle position in the development between these languages. It could be either the language of the settled population of northern Bactria (on a part of the territory of today’s Tajikistan) or the language of certain nomadic peoples of Inner Asia (the Yuèzhī), who originally lived in northwestern China. For a certain period of time, it apparently served as one of the official languages of the Kushan Empire alongside Bactrian, Gandhari/Middle Indo-Aryan and Sanskrit. As a preliminary name, the researchers propose the term ‘Eteo-Tocharian’ to describe the newly identified Iranian language.

The group is planning future research trips to Central Asia in close cooperation with Tajik archaeologists, as new finds of further inscriptions are to be expected and promising potential sites have already been located. First author Svenja Bonmann remarked,

“Our decipherment of this script can help enhance our understanding of the language and cultural history of Central Asia and the Kushan Empire, similar to the deciphering of the Egyptian hieroglyphs or Mayan glyphs for our understanding of ancient Egypt or Mayan civilization.”

Bibliographic Information:
Svenja Bonmann, Jakob Halfmann, Natalie Korobzow & Bobomullo Bobomulloev. 2023. A Partial Decipherment of the Unknown Kushan Script, Transactions of the Philological Society 121.2, Article DOI: 10.1111/1467-968X.12269
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1467-968X.12269

Press release from the University of Cologne

Dove i classici si incontrano. ClassiCult è una Testata Giornalistica registrata presso il Tribunale di Bari numero R.G. 5753/2018 – R.S. 17. Direttore Responsabile Domenico Saracino, Vice Direttrice Alessandra Randazzo. Gli articoli a nome di ClassiCult possono essere 1) articoli a più mani (in tal caso, i diversi autori sono indicati subito dopo il titolo); 2) comunicati stampa (in tal caso se ne indica provenienza e autore a fine articolo).

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