- Perozduxt, the
daughter of Peroz, was
captured and
became a lady as the
Hephtalite court, as
Queen of king Kun-khi. She
became pregnant and had a daughter...
-
works mentions the
derivative Afrasiab /
Aspandiat under the name of the
Hephtalite king
Akhshunvar or Akhshunvaz.
Afrasiyab (Samarkand)
Afrasiab Museum of...
-
Between 457 and 509,
Samarkand was part of the
Kidarite state.
After the
Hephtalites ("White Huns")
conquered Samarkand, they
controlled it
until the Göktürks...
- Chinese: 吐火羅葉護; pinyin: Tǔhuǒluó Yèhù) were a
dynasty of
Western Turk–
Hephtalite sub-kings with the
title "Yabghus", who
ruled from 625 CE in the area...
- 1981, p. 16.
Etienne de la Vaissiere, Is
there a „Nationality of the
Hephtalites?" in
Bulletin of the Asia institute. New series.
Volume 17. 2003. [2007]...
- 2011. DE LA VAISSIÈRE, ÉTIENNE (2003). "Is
There a "Nationality of the
Hephtalites"?".
Bulletin of the Asia Institute. 17: 127–128. ISSN 0890-4464. JSTOR 24049310...
- org. DE LA VAISSIÈRE, ÉTIENNE (2003). "Is
There a "Nationality of the
Hephtalites"?".
Bulletin of the Asia Institute. 17: 124. ISSN 0890-4464. JSTOR 24049310...
- pp. 105–124. ISBN 9781474400305. "Note 8: It is now
clear that the
Hephtalites were not part of
those Huns who
conquered the land
south of the Hindu-Kush...
- of Merv the same year. In 659,
Chinese chronicles still mentioned the "
Hephtalite Tarkhans" (悒達太汗 Yida Taihan,
probably related to "Nezak Tarkhan"), as...
-
records of
several joint S****anian and
Chinese efforts against their common Hephtalite enemy.
Following encroachments by the
nomadic Turkic tribes on states...