It is peculiar to think that one of the most astonishing archaeological discoveries of the last sixty years – no less than the discovery of an entirely unrecorded ancient civilisation...
It is peculiar to think that one of the most astonishing archaeological discoveries of the last sixty years – no less than the discovery of an entirely unrecorded ancient civilisation – was entirely hidden from the Western World until the AD 1990s. Yet, this was exactly the case. In the Cold War world of mutual suspicion and state secrecy, the discovery of a new civilisation in Central Asia was kept almost entirely within the Soviet Union, and was not revealed to scholars in the rest of the world until the fall of the Iron Curtain. The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC), so named by Viktor Sarianidi in AD 1976, thrived in the region of what is now Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Afghanistan, from as early as 4600 BC to perhaps 1700 BC. Like its contemporary civilisations in Mesopotamia, BMAC – sometimes referred to, more poetically, as the Oxus Civilisation – was a centre of early urbanisation. Sites like Altyn-Depe in modern Turkmenistan emerged as proto-urban settlements around 2800 BC, and eventually grew to accommodate as many as 20,000 people. Altyn-Depe was a major trading centre, and finds from Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley abound in the find assemblage. The city was well-developed, surrounded by a defensive wall with watch-towers, living quarters divided by class and social function, planned streets, courtyard-houses, and elaborate public buildings. Most impressive was a great pyramidal temple, a ziggurat, of the Mesopotamian model. BMAC was also home to an extraordinary development whose impact on human history cannot be overstated: it is from Altyn-Depe that we get the first models of wheeled vehicles, carts pulled by oxen and camels.
As a source of resources for the Mesopotamians, especially of luxury goods like lapis lazuli, the BMAC had the wealth and the foreign influences which enabled a rich cultural environment. Craftsmen of the BMAC specialised especially in metalworking, producing imaginative sculptural arrangements in bronze, silver, and gold. But, if the BMAC is to be recognised by one artistic or sculptural form, it is the so-called ‘Bactrian Princess’ figures. Visually striking sculptures of females, ‘Bactrian Princesses’ are composite sculptures, usually made of two different types of stone. The body of the figure, depicted in a heavy woollen dress (kaunakes) common to Mesopotamia and its neighbouring regions, along with a hat or hairpiece, is carved in dark chlorite or steatite. The face and, where they survive, the hands and forearms, are carved from a lighter stone, usually calcite. The individual pieces are not attached in any way; instead, the overall composition relies on exact balance, a testament to the skill of the sculptor. It is possible that this balance may have had a ritual or symbolic significance. However, the discovery of red residue on the underside of the necks of some of these figures may suggest that at least some were fixed together with perishable adhesives. The subject or subjects of these sculptures is unknown. Historically, it has been thought that they represented aristocratic figures from the Bactrian elite. This position is supported by the fact that the sculptures vary dramatically in typology and have no common attributes other than their seated position. More recently, however, archaeologists have suggested that the ‘Bactrian Princesses’ are, in fact, goddesses, or rather a single goddess, associated with fertility and protection.
This composite Bactrian idol, of the ‘Bactrian Princess’ type, is an exceptional example of the genre. Her heavy kaunakes is draped over her body from her shoulders down, the tufts of wool indicated by alternately wavy and straight overlapping leaf shapes. The chlorite is a very dark greenish blue, with the incised lines emphasised by the light desert patina. Her torso is separate from her legs – unusual in Bactrian idols – and is an almost perfect rectangle with slight curves for the shoulders. The kaunakes billows out over the legs, forming a shelf in front of the figure. But rather than being limited to the width of the torso, as in most Bactrian figures, the dress of this woman kicks out to the side, in a kind of pointed irregular teardrop shape. Given the shortness of the leg area compared to the torso, the overall effect is not one of a woman seated on a throne, as in most Bactrian idols, but rather of a woman seated on the ground with her legs to the side in a relaxed pose. There is no evidence that this particular figure ever had the small, detached arms which sometimes lay across the lap of the ‘Princess’. The head, which appears to be original to the piece, is made of a light calcite with a slight yellow tinge. The face is beautifully proportioned, with high arching eyebrows, a long straight nose, and a small mouth represented by an incised line. There are no eyes carved into the sculpture, but analyses of other statuettes from the BMAC suggests that certain features were painted rather than carved. The figure wears an unusual, and rather modern-looking, headdress, consisting of a woollen cap over the round cranium, and a tall peaked brim which folds up at the front. Such headwear would be very useful not only for keeping warm in the mountainous regions of the BMAC, but also for protecting the eyes from the harsh sun.