Sampul tapestry | |
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Full length Detail Probable Yuezhi soldier in red jacket and trousers, in the Sampul tapestry. Embroidered in Hellenistic style, with motif of a centaur, 1st century AD, Sampul, Ürümqi Xinjiang Region Museum.[1] | |
Material | Embroided tapestry |
Created | 1st century AD |
Discovered | Sampul, 37°01′13″N 80°06′47″E / 37.020199°N 80.113078°E |
Sampul tapestry is an ancient woolen wall-hanging found at the Tarim Basin settlement of Sampul in Lop County, Hotan Prefecture, Xinjiang, China,[2] close to the ancient city of Khotan.[3] The object has many Hellenistic period features, including a Greek centaur and diadem, linking it to the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom (formed after the conquest of the Achaemenid Empire by Alexander the Great of Macedon and establishment of the Seleucid Empire). It may represent a Yuezhi soldier, in red jacket and trousers, from the 1st century CE.[4][5] Alternatively, the soldier (king) is possibly a Greco-Bactrian,[6] an Hellenized Saka or a Greco-Saka military aristocrat.[7] The man's head features (cheek, mouth, blue eyes,[8] nose, hairband) and the spear representation are modeled similarly with the depiction of Alexander the Great on a medallion found from Roman Egypt (215-243 AD)[9] and could represent the king.[10] Overall, the Sampul tapestry belongs to the Greco-Bactrian culture.