Cultural
and Cosmological Impact of Iranian Civilization in the Far East
By: Prof. S. Setudeh-Nejad
Sasanid Iran (226-651 CE) played a leading role in the enrichment of
the culture and metamorphoses of Vietnam and other Southeast Asian states
in particular along the peninsular coasts of the Indo-Chinese zone of
maritime trade.
History of contacts between the Iranian world and the Far East dates
from the reign of Mithradates II the Great (123 - 87 BCE), when in 115
BCE, this monarch of the Parthian Dynasty (258 BCE - 226 CE) received
an envoy from the emperor of China [Ghirshman 1971:69]. The arrival
of caravans of goods from Western Central Asia to the oases of the Tarim
Basin and other overland trade routes of the 'Silk Road' as far as Chinese
Turkestan resulted in much intercourse between China and its tributary
states with Western Asia [Arberry 1953:25].
By the third century CE, Parthian Empire's trade routes were extended
in the maritime ports of Southeast Asia as far as the Malay Peninsula's
international port of Tun-sun, where the Iranian merchants had established
settlements with no less than 500 residents [Wheatley 1964:47]. Their
activities extended to the Indo-Chinese port of Tonking as such accounts
on sea trade activities of the Parthians were recorded by K'ang T'ai,
Wu dynasty's envoy to the kingdom of Funan in the delta of the Mekong
in the first period of the third century of the Christian era.
China had been prevented by Parthia to receive envoys from Byzantium
through Iranian territory and was also denied direct access to the Mediterranean
trade on geopolitical considerations. As such the Chinese in pursuit
of an alternative trade route away from Central-Asian overland routes
under Parthian control were keeping an eye on Parthia's trade expansion
on the maritime routes of Southeast Asia [Wolters 1970:20,22,25].
Around this time, a technical innovation in the shipbuilding industry
of the Persian Gulf resulted in the construction of vessels with a rig
that accommodated the ships to sail nearer the wind. The knowledge of
this innovative development spread along the shores of the Indian Ocean
and further East [Wheatley 1964:34] at a time when the Sasanian dynasty
replaced the Parthians in Iran, and a more intensified period of Iranian
cultural presence became felt in Southeast Asia as the Sasanids monopolized
the maritime trade of the Far Eastern routes after the fourth century
CE, having made profitable treaties with the Chinese who referred in
their historical records to the ships of the 'Posse', or the Iranian
trade. The Iranians were the "carriers" of this trade [Moorhead
1965:59] and many vessels traveled from southern China to Vietnam, and
the Malay Pennisula in the direction of India, Roman Orient and Western
Asia. China's Southern Dynasties (420-589 CE) was involved in these
transactions with the Sasanids [Wolters 1970:1].
Under these circumstances, Iranian ships with up to seven sails carrying
as many as 700 seamen and "a thousand metric tons of cargo"
were plying in the Indian Ocean in the direction of sea routes further
East [Quaritch Wales 1965:41]. Vietnam was a major trade destination
for the Iranian ships and many of their merchants were established in
the ports of Nam-Viet [Schafer 1967:180], as there was extensive intercourse
between Sasanid Iran and Vietnam [Buttinger 1958:244] as late as the
Chinese T'ang era when Iranian merchants established settlements in
Canton and other Chinese ports as well [Schafer 1976:28].
Indeed, there is evidence to show that Sasanid Iran exerted strong
influences in Vietnam, China and elsewhere in Southeast Asian world.
These influences were partly inspired by the golden age of Sasanian
civilization which coincided with the reign of Kuusru Anushirwan (531-579
CE) in Iran. Under this Sasanin king, better known as "Anushirwan
The Just", Iranian culture and metamorphosis spread to the Far
East. Anushirwan attracted numerous scholars and artisans to his court
whose splendor and luxury "were unsurpassed by that of any dynasty
in the world's history" [Sykes 1963:465]. Anushirwan promoted the
establishment of universities, where scholars from India, Greece and
Asia Minor indulged in various studies on medicine, agriculture and
sciences.
His court was a center of East-West conferences of philosophers from
various parts of the world. Champa kingdom 150-1471 CE located east
of Cambodia in southern area of Vietnam neighboring Annam benefited
from the reign of Khusru Anushirwan and the presence of Iranian settlers.
As Schafer has pointed out Sasanian cosmology was known to the Chams
who had compiled the 'Book of Anushirwan', a cosmological work which
is said to be "sacred to the Chams" [Schafer 1967:270, 325].
Schafer has further clarified that in contemporary Vietnam, an Islamized
people who reside in the villages of the south, called "Orang Bani"
claim descendency from "Noursavan", who was their first king;
a name which is interpreted to be a term of reference to Sasanid Anushirwan
the Just of Iran [Schafer 1967:11]. There is also a recorded tradition
for the exchange of correspondence between the Khagan of Tibet and Anushirwan
who received a letter from the Khagan, and direct contact of Tibetan
court nobles with the Sasanian dynasty. In this respect, imperial Sasanian
impact on Tibetan court culture has been recognized in the adoption
of Sasanian style robes by the Tibetan nobles [Flood 1991:31].
Iranian cosmology in the Sassanian period was a doctrine which centered
on Mazdean interpretations of the Zoroastrian faith. It was a philosophical
metamorphosis which "supported the power of the ruler, regarded
as just king who preserved harmony between the different classes of
society" [Hourani 1991:9]. In this context, Anushirwan's character
appealed to the Oriental rulers who recognized his reign to symbolize
strength and justice. It is noteworthy that long before the transmission
of Sasanian cultural impact, Vietnam had been receptive to Indo-Iranian
and kin-Iranian influences entering her shores as early as the first
century CE, when Indo-Scythian Buddhist monks reached here to propagate
the Mahayana doctrine.
By the end of the second century CE, K'ang Seng-hui, the famed Sogdian
monk reached Vietnam from China and introduced his teachings and translations
of Central Asian-impulsed Buddhist scriptures [Nguyen 1993:98]. Mahayana
Buddhism as a syncretic religious system was associated with higher
learnings in philosophy and arts, and it is conceivable that the Indo-Scythians,
and Soghdians and other Central-Asiatic peoples of Zoroastrian cultural
orbit had exerted influences on Buddhism some of which had also been
adopted by the Vietnamese aristocrats who welcomed Mahayanist traditions
at a time when the Parthian Empire was increasing its commercial presence
along Southeast Asian coasts. Moreover, Soghdiana from where K'ang Seng-hui
hailed was a Western Central-Asian state whose merchants had established
settlements in the Far East since the pre-Christian Era in places as
far as Mongolia and China [Frye 1963:235]. The discovery of Sogdian
inscriptions in Inner Tibet and in Western Himalayas [Flood 1991:32]
and the spread of its kin-Iranian cultural sphere in Southeast Asia
are among the cultural factors in support of the argument for the impact
of the diffusion of Partho-Sasanid culture and cosmology in Southeast
Asia.
I-tsing (I-Ching), a Chinese Buddhist pilgrim monk who was aboard a
Iranian ship in 671 CE, just a few years after the end of Sassanid Era,
has provided an interesting account of the routes taken by the vessel
on its way to Sre Vijaya where he intended to stay. According to I-tsing,
the Iranian ship left a Chinese port toward Annam in northern Vietnam
and then proceeded to Sri Vijaya. As I-tsing has clarified, the voyage
could involve sailing directly or around the coasts of Cambodia, Siam,
and the Malay Peninsula [Majumdar 1986:27-8]. Thus, from I-tsing's report
we have a vivid picture of the maritime trade of "the ships of
Posse" in Indochina as well as the directions through which cultural
and cosmological sphere of Sasanid Iran reached Southeast Asian ports
of southern Vietnam under Champa rule.
Nowadays archaeological finds around the peninsular areas of Southeast
Asia have also shed light on the extent of Sasanian presence which also
confirms the accuracy of I-tsing's accounts. Discovery of Sasanian coins
in the southern coast of Siam (Thailand) at Yarang in the Pattani area,
which date from the fifth century CE [Srisuchat 1990:28], and two silver
coins of the Abbasid Dynasty (750-1258 CE) at the Merbok estuary near
the city state of Tan-Tan in the Malay Peninsula [Wheatley 1964:75],
and another find of a Sasanian cabochon at Oc Eo port of Funan, situated
in the lower valley of the Mekong [Myers; Trewin 1988:138] are further
testimony to a significant role of the Iranian world in the trade and
cultural enhancements of the states along the peninsular regions of
Southeast Asia.
Iranian sea-borne trade in Southeast Asia was maintained until after
the eighth century in the very same routes as before. In 771 CE, a famous
passenger whose ship was escorted by 35 Iranian vessels to Sri Vijaya
on its way to China was no other than Vajrabodi the Buddhist master
of the Tantric sect [Majumdar 1986:28]. Between 670 to 673 CE, Sasanid
princes and court nobles of Iranian who had survived the Muslim conquest
of their country took refuge in Central Asian states loyal to Sasanian
dynasty and from its overland routes arrived in China, having, thus
"initiated a new wave of Iranian influences" in China [Ghirshman
1971:92], and laid the foundations of "Sino-Persian" arts
some of which "caught the fancy of the Nara court" further
East in the Islands of Japan [Hayashi 1975:85,88,96-8, 129]. Indeed
the extent of this rich cultural impact from the direction of Sasanian
civilization to the Far East was symbolized in the ninth century CE
by the Chinese Wang Chien who wrote: "The families of Lo-yang learn
Iranian music". Inside Iran after the rise of the Abbasids, indigenous
traditions in arts, crafts and other cultural achievements of the Sasanides
were retained to such an extent that the Abbasid rule became known as
the "neo-Sasanian Empire" [Hayashi 1975:85,97].
Altogether since the age of sea trade expansion of Parthian empire
in South East Asia until the reign of Sasanid Khusru Anushirwan, Indochinese
peoples were already familiar with cultural symbols of the Iranian world,
which at the time of Anushirwan's era reached its zenith in Cham-Viet
areas of Southeast Asia thanks to this monarch's cosmopolitan visions
and his 'justice', which took firm roots in Cham cosmology in 'The Book
of Anushirwan', and later on also in the Malay Peninsula where references
to the Justice of Anushirwan can be found in the literary heritage of
Malaysia in 'Sejara Melayu' [Brown 1970:5], where the mention of 'Raja
Nushirwan Adil' probably denotes the Malay term for 'Anushirwan The
Just'.