Schøyen Copper Scroll
Talagan / Talaqan, Afghanistan · 492/93 CE (Laukika era) · Brahmi · Schøyen Collection
The Schøyen Copper Scroll is the single most important document for the dynastic geography of the late-fifth-century Alkhan empire. Engraved in Brahmi on a copper sheet at Talagan (modern Talaqan in northern Afghanistan), the scroll records a coalition of contemporary Alkhan kings consecrating a Buddhist stupa relic. The text was edited by Gudrun Melzer and Hans T. Bakker in Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia (Barkhuis, 2020).
Who is named
- Talaganika-Devaputra-Sahi — the local king of Talagan
- Sarada-Sahi
- Khingila
- Toramana
- Sasa
- Sahi Mehama
- Sadavıkha
- King Javukha (Zabokho)
Why it matters
Before the Schøyen Scroll’s publication, the relationships between the Alkhan kings named on coins were largely conjectural. The scroll places eight named rulers in a single ritual coalition in 492/93 CE, fixing the dynastic geography in a way no previous source had managed. It also documents the dynasty’s Buddhist patronage at the highest level — the kings consecrating a stupa relic together — which complicates the older European reading of the Alkhans as Buddhist destroyers. See Hephthalites & Alkhans for the wider argument.
Sources
- Melzer & Bakker, in Hunnic Peoples in Central and South Asia (Bakker ed., Barkhuis, 2020)
- Sims-Williams, Bactrian Personal Names (2010)
- Vondrovec, Coinage of the Iranian Huns (2014)
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