-
European sources as
having overrun the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, like the
Tókharoi and Asii.
During the 1st
century BC, one of the five
major Greater Yuezhi...
- inscriptions.
Mistakenly identifying the
speakers of this
language with the
Tokharoi people of
Tokharistan (the
Bactria of the Gr****s),
early authors called...
- In Sanskrit, it
became तुखार (Tukhāra). In
ancient Gr****, the name was
Tokharoi (Ancient Gr****: Τόχαροι ) or Thaguroi.
Tochari for
Latin historians. The...
-
identified their speakers with a
people known in
ancient Gr****
sources as the
Tókharoi (Latin: Tochari), who
inhabited Bactria from the 2nd
century BC. This identification...
- Yueh-chih = Tokharians..."
Beckwith 2009, p. 380 "The
identity of the
Tokharoi and Yüeh-chih
people is
quite certain, and has been
clear for at least...
- down the
Bactrians in the Gr**** and
Roman account – the Asioi, Pasianoi,
Tokharoi and
Sakaraulai – came from land
north of the Syr
Darya where the Ili and...
- m****cripts in the
early 20th
century identified their authors with the
Tokharoi, a name used in
ancient sources for
people of
Bactria (Tokharistan). Although...
-
migrated to
Sogdia and then Bactria,
where they are
often identified with the
Tókharoi (Τοχάριοι) and Asii of
classical sources. They then
expanded into northern...
- onwards. Its
inhabitants were
known later to
Ancient Gr****
scholars as the
Tokharoi and to the
Ancient Romans as Tochari.
Modern scholars appear to have conflated...
- in 23 CE. He
mentions four tribes: the Asioi, Pasianoi, Sakaraulai, and
Tokharoi.
Pliny the Elder, in
about 77–79 CE,
makes a
brief mention of a people...