Introduction
The Eastern Silk Roads have always been a key region of Central Eurasian mobility and, as the Mongols united most of the region under their rule in the thirteenth century, economic, diplomatic, and cultural connections between the different parts of the united empire (Yeke Mongγol Ulus) reached a level that was previously unseen in human history. This extended interconnectedness naturally influenced mobility patterns, too. For the first time, we have direct evidence that travellers from Europe reached the territories of Eastern Eurasia, and people from Asia visited Europe. Diplomatic interactions between the Mongol uluses on the one hand and between the Mongol Empire and its neighbours on the other, resulted in envoys’ and ambassadors’ regularly making interregional journeys, facilitated by the famous imperial postal relay system (Mong.: ǰam Turk.: yam). The Silk Roads experienced a final heyday, as gradual changes in the conditions of interregional mobility and trade made long-distance exchange lucrative.
Ironically, when compared with the other parts of the Mongol empire, our knowledge about the geographical centre of the united empire—the central stages of this unprecedented overland mobility—is rather limited. The Chaghadaid ulus—that is, the Central Asian part of the imperium—is traditionally the least-studied realm of the Mongol empire due to the relatively limited number of relevant sources and this situation is even more pronounced where the turbulent period of the mid-fourteenth century is concerned.Footnote 1 Due, however, to developments during the last few decades in the philological study of some local source groups—that is, the preserved Old Uyghur and Middle Mongol written artefacts—it is now possible to partially revise our understanding of interregional mobility around this broad area.
This study focuses on the Eastern Silk Roads—more precisely, the mobility between the Eastern Tianshan (天山) region and the Gansu (甘肅) or Hexi Corridor (河西走廊), which comprised a border zone between China proper and Central Asia, and, during the Mongol period, between the Yuan Dynasty (大元) and the Chaghadaid ulus.Footnote 2 Due to the limited quantity of local narrative sources concerning the history of this region during the Mongol period and in preceding centuries, standard modern histories of Central Asia and the Silk Roads are usually based on external literary sources. These include narrative texts that were either jotted down far away in the centres of neighbouring sedentary civilisations, mainly in China or the Islamicate world, or authored by foreign travellers who had only passed by there and thus had short temporary insights. This peculiarity of the historiography of this region is not surprising when one considers the nature of the rich multilingual internal source material, which was produced locally. These written artefacts are usually unique original sources, the majority of which are religious texts. Even those that have historical relevance are mostly documents that have no narrative nature. They are usually preserved only fragmentarily and without context. These peculiarities of the local source material make it challenging to construct a coherent historical narrative based on them. Nevertheless, the philological study of these documentary materials in recent decades has demonstrated their value as complementing, corroborating, or occasionally contradicting the narratives that are constructed on external literary texts. This article demonstrates that, in addition to being supplementary sources of information, coherent historical narratives can be constructed by using these locally produced documents. In doing so, the present article utilises the fruitful discussions, mainly among specialists of the early modern period, on how methodologies and approaches of the two influential historical traditions—global history and microhistory—could be combined in a meaningful way.Footnote 3 This is evident in the selection of topics and sources, as well as in the methodologies employed. Mobility is a pivotal theme in global history. However, the majority of the following analysis focuses on two neighbouring regions of the Eastern Silk Roads: the Eastern Tianshan region and the Gansu Corridor. This geographical restriction is typical for microhistory. Nevertheless, the analysis and the resulting conclusions sometimes extend beyond the geographical boundaries described above, encompassing additional regions of Central and Eastern Asia. The period in question, spanning five centuries from the tenth to the fourteenth, can be described as long durée. It is, however, important to note that most of these sources refer to the Mongol period—specifically the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The majority of the two main source groups, namely the documents and pilgrim inscriptions in Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian languages, were produced locally. The selection of these two source groups is significant, as their combined analysis provides insights into both officially or state-supported mobility patterns, namely postal networks, and more private mobility patterns of pilgrim networks. The methodology used to process the source material combines in-depth philological analysis of individual texts, familiar from microhistory, with a statistical approach that is typical of global history.
Historical background
After the collapse of their steppe empire (East Uyghur Khaganate 742–840 CE) in the Mongol steppe region, most of the Uyghurs migrated to the Gansu Corridor and to the Eastern Tianshan Region, where they established a new polity—so-called West Uyghur Kingdom (mid-ninth to twelfth centuries). Here, the Uyghurs gradually gave up their nomadic lifestyle and settled in the oasis cities of the region. They merged with the local Indo-Iranian (mostly Tocharian and Sogdian) and Chinese population, achieving a unique cultural development, and subsequently became protagonists in the cultural and economic exchanges along the Eastern Silk Roads. Besides their early and voluntary submission to Chinggis Khan in 1209, the Uyghurs were the first settled people with a high cultural and administrative level to become part of the Mongol empire, making them perfect agents for the transmission of knowledge about the governance of settled subjects that was crucial for the Mongols. Because of these circumstances, the Uyghurs enjoyed a highly privileged status among Mongol subjects. This situation changed with the intra-Mongol conflicts that began after the death of Möngke khan (1259). The Uyghur territories were involved in these conflicts and they gradually lost their autonomy through the second half of the thirteenth century, when their polity was integrated into the Chaghadaid ulus. Nevertheless, for shorter periods, the Yuan Dynasty was able to extend its authority over some of their territories.Footnote 4
As a significant portion of the subsequent discourse will concern the consequences of the mid-fourteenth-century crisis, it seems prudent to provide a more comprehensive account of the events of this period. The effects of changing climate and pandemics on history may perhaps need less explanation than at any point during the last century since the spread of Spanish Influenza. Climate change and a series of plague epidemics were also two main environmental factors that shaped the history of Central Asia in the mid-fourteenth century.Footnote 5 According to the traditional narrative, due to these trends, Central Asia has generally been viewed as a particularly unsettled and politically unstable region during this period. In the Chaghadaid khanate, after Kebek's rule (r. 1319/1320–1327), khans changed every few years and the division between the western and eastern parts of the realm became increasingly severe. In 1346, in the western half of the state, Qazaghan (d. 1358), an emir of the Qara'unas, gained power, while, in the eastern parts, the emirs enthroned Tuγluq Temür (r. 1347–1363), who claimed to be the grandson of Du'a (r. 1282–1307). This political separation brought an end to the Chaghadaid khanate and saw the birth of the Ulus Chaghadai in the western territories (i.e. Transoxiana) and Moghulistan (modern Kyrgyzstan, the southern part of Kazakhstan, and most of Xinjiang) in the eastern parts.Footnote 6
In the above-mentioned eastern end of Chaghadaid khanate and the westernmost end of the Yuan empire, the neighbouring territories, namely the Eastern Tianshan region and the Gansu Corridor, had considerable Uyghur populations who were, in the Mongol period, mainly Buddhist with a Christian minority. These regions and their Buddhist Uyghur population had been closely connected for a long time, at least since the turn of the first millennium.Footnote 7 Nonetheless, after the death of Möngke (1259), both territories were drawn into intra-Mongol wars, often on different sides. From the early 1280s, a split developed in the Chaghadaid lineage, too: the so-called ‘Eastern Chaghadaids’ resided in Gansu under Yuan patronage, while the Central Asian Chaghadaids established control over West and East Turkestan from the early fourteenth century until the disruption of their realm, as mentioned above. Although full-scale wars between the two sides were rare, this political opposition fostered further separation between the two regions.Footnote 8
In both regions, these political events were paired with gradual changes in the religious life of the population. On the one hand, the spread of Islam from the western lands of Central Asia to the east was a major process in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The Chaghadaid khan Tarmaširin (r. 1331–1334) actively promoted Islam in Transoxania, but full-scale Islamisation probably reached the Uyghur territories rather later. The Moghul ruler Tuγluq Temür converted to Islam in 1354, after the division of the Chaghadaid realm. His youngest son Xiḍr Kwhāja (r. 1389–1399) forcedly Islamised the people of Beš Balık (Chin. Beiting 北庭) and Turfan.Footnote 9 Interreligious encounters are also attested in the Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian written sources.Footnote 10 In the religious life of these regions during the Mongol period, besides the spread of Islam, the ever-growing influence of Tibetan Tantric Buddhism played a decisive role, presumably due to the interest in Tantric practices that was shown by the Mongol ruling elite. Not only the Yuan rulers, but also some of the Chaghadaid khans, such as Elǰigidei (r. 1327–1330) or Čangši (r. 1335–1338), were adherents of Tibetan Buddhism. According to some sources, even the above-mentioned Tuγluq Temür asked for Buddhist teachers from Tibet after his conversion. Both the Old Uyghur religious manuscripts and the epigraphic material from the Mongol period mirror this process and, as we will see later on in this article, the secular documents refer to this trend, too.Footnote 11
Under these circumstances, one would expect that, on the one hand, local administration in the Eastern Tianshan region and the Gansu Corridor would face serious difficulties in the mid-fourteenth century and, of course, that the mobility of the populace would have been very limited. On the other hand, it might be expected that the traditional religious contacts and networks might have weakened or even disintegrated. These trends should be especially visible in comparison with the period of the Yeke Mongγol Ulus, as the united Mongol empire had brought a florescence of overland connections between different regions of the Mongol empire in Central Asia. Gansu and East Turkestan—and the Turfan region in particular—played an outstanding role in these connections. Besides the highly important Silk Road routes, some of the main roads of the imperial Mongol postal system also led through this area.Footnote 12
Description of the source materialFootnote 13
The Old Uyghurs developed a rich body of literature with various genres, although most of the extant works are religious texts that are translated from other languages.Footnote 14 It is regrettable that, despite the existence of a number of Old Uyghur works that could be considered historiographic in nature, only a small number of fragments survive. As a consequence, these texts cannot be used to inform our current discussion.Footnote 15 Due to these circumstances, the history of the Uyghur territories in the Mongol period is usually written based on literary sources from the neighbouring cultures and Western sources, with local written sources usually used only as supplementary material. However, concerning the mid-fourteenth century, our narrative source base is also quite limited. Nevertheless, a scrutiny of the available Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian sources can assist us to gain a better understanding of the region even in unsettled times such as the mid-fourteenth century. Moreover, these sources can give us insights into some otherwise unseen aspects of everyday life. The present article examines two kinds of textual sources: Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian administrative texts and pilgrim inscriptions. Over recent decades, research has achieved immense progress in the study of both source groups and thus enabled the examination of new aspects of this material. These aspects include the temporal distribution and geographical dimension of the texts—factors with clear significance in the study of mobility in eastern Central Asia.
Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents
The Old Uyghur orders and the Middle Mongolian decrees were issued by the state administration in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.Footnote 16 They mirror the working of the state administration in various fields. Our material contains especially rich information concerning chancellery activities, taxation, and the postal system, underlining the importance of these institutions within the Mongol state(s).Footnote 17 They are written on paper, typically with the cursive style of the Uyghur (or Uyghur–Mongol) script.Footnote 18 Apart from those documents that were produced for internal usage (e.g. official registers), they were sealed with one or more stamps.Footnote 19 The preserved Old Uyghur official documents are far more numerous than those in Middle Mongolian.Footnote 20 Due to this, their formal peculiarities, and their contents, they can be connected to at least two different levels of the administration. Most of the Uyghur documents were issued at a local or regional administrative level and dealt with more ordinary issues in connection with the everyday functioning of the state and local communities. Meanwhile, the Mongolian documents were issued at the highest bureaucratic level and seemingly dealt with issues that were more important.Footnote 21 A special subgroup of the Old Uyghur administrative documents is especially important for the purpose of this article—namely, that which includes texts that are connected to the imperial Mongol postal system. Besides the 45 recently edited Old Uyghur official documents, five Middle Mongolian decrees (MongHT72–75, B163:42) are also related to the postal system.Footnote 22 These various documents (orders, decrees, accounts, lists, etc.) reflect the operation of this enormous system of communication and transportation in the region, often containing information about travellers, their duties, places of departure, and destinations.Footnote 23
Pilgrim inscriptions
The other type of textual sources for the present article are the Old Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions. After their movement to the Eastern Tianshan region in the mid-ninth century, most of the Uyghurs—including their ruling elite—left Manichaeism and their traditional beliefs, and adopted Buddhism, by the beginning of the eleventh century at the latest.Footnote 24 The Uyghurs of the Gansu Corridor, called also Shazhou (沙州) Uyghurs, had close connections with the West Uyghur Kingdom (i.e. the Uyghurs of the Eastern Tianshan region) from the turn of the first millennium at the latest.Footnote 25 From the earliest times, various linguistic and cultural influences (Tocharian, Sogdian, etc.) affected the Turfan Uyghurs’ Buddhist culture, among which the Chinese and especially the Buddhist culture of Dunhuang were considerable.Footnote 26
Despite the fact that some of the Old Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions that were found by the first expeditions to East Turkestan had been edited and published, they first received substantial scholarly attention in the 1990s, and their study only began to flourish in recent years.Footnote 27 There are multiple reasons for this lasting ignorance. First, these texts are usually preserved without context, so these records, often short, are hard to interpret on their own.Footnote 28 Second, they are written in the barely readable cursive style of the Uyghur script.Footnote 29 Third, they contain, at first sight, much less information than other types of Old Uyghur sources.
Despite these peculiarities, research over recent decades has shown that they are precious sources, containing rich information on many otherwise hidden aspects of the history of the region. The 2017 publication of the most comprehensive edition of pilgrim inscriptions from the Dunhuang Caves so far brought a fundamental change in this field of research.Footnote 30 This volume offers the results of fieldwork that was carried out between 2010 and 2017. This book contains pilgrim inscriptions from six different cave complexes in the vicinity of Dunhuang, written in all of the languages that were in use among the Buddhists of the surrounding regions from the Xi Xia (西夏) and Mongol periods (circa eleventh to fourteenth centuries), namely Chinese, Tibetan, Tangut, Mongolian, and Uyghur. Besides these, the edition also contains inscriptions in Brāhmī script and a study of donor portraits. The first chapter of this book presents editions of 283 Uyghur and Mongolian inscriptions. Most of these texts are Uyghur inscriptions and only 19 graffiti contain Mongolian text.Footnote 31 If we compare this number to the 33 inscriptions that were available to Porció in 2014, the importance of this work is obvious. However, 283 inscriptions are from circa 150 caves, but there are about 800 caves altogether in the vicinity of Dunhuang.Footnote 32 Most recently, study of the Old Uyghur inscriptions from the Toyok Caves in the Turfan region has witnessed an unprecedented development. Thanks to the publication of several sources and case studies, dozens of further inscriptions are now available to researchers. Moreover, in some cases, the content of these inscriptions could be connected to those of the Old Uyghur documents.Footnote 33 To sum up, it can be concluded that the publication of Old Uyghur inscriptions is far from complete, but the present state of research on this source material enables us to study various aspects of mobility in eastern Central Asia in the pre-Mongol and Mongol periods.
Dating of the sources
To be able to follow up on the changes that have occurred in overland mobility through time, we have to take into account the dating of our source material. The Old Uyghur material covers the period between the tenth and the late fourteenth centurieş while the Middle Mongolian texts originate from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries—that is, the Mongol period. However, more precise dating is required for a historical analysis, as dates are often missing from both source types (documents and pilgrim inscriptions), so the periodisation of these texts is far from self-evident. Moreover, the most widespread chronological systems of the Uyghur (and Mongol) literary tradition are not sufficient to provide an absolute age determination.Footnote 34 This means that, even when a date is presented, in most cases, it is expressed according to the twelve-year animal-cycle calendar and an absolute dating of the documents is impossible on this basis.Footnote 35
Dating of the Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents
Previously, more or less accurate dating was only possible if a personal name known otherwise (e.g. the name of a ruler or the like) was attested in the text. Most of the Mongolian royal decrees (Mong.: ǰarliγ) fall into this group, as their first element is the authorisation—that is, the attestation of the ruler in whose name the document was issued (e.g. 1yisüntemür-ün ǰ(a)rliγ-iyar ‘By the order of Yisün Temür’ [MongHT74]). From the rulers’ time of reign and the dating according to the 12-year animal circle (e.g. 10moγai ǰ[i]l 11qaburun a̤čüs sar-a-in arban sin-e- 12ṯe ‘in the Snake year, on the tenth new day of the last month of spring’ [MongHT72]), which is the last part of the Mongolian decrees, scholars could in many cases calculate the more or less accurate dating for a certain document.Footnote 36
Dating of the Uyghur texts is more complicated. Based on their formal and content analysis, the vast majority were issued at the lower and middle administrative levels.Footnote 37 They contain usually no authorisation—that is, the name of the ruler in whose name the decree was issued or the name of the issuer is missing.Footnote 38 Consequently, relative dating—a rough determination of age according to the texts’ formal and content-related peculiarities—is crucial for the study of this material. Four kinds of criteria have been distinguished to establish such relative dating, namely grammatical markers, script, terminology, and personal names.Footnote 39 By using these criteria, the material can be divided into two parts: an earlier layer, dating to the West Uyghur period (tenth to twelfth centuries); and a later layer, dating to the Mongol period (thirteenth to fourteenth centuries).Footnote 40 Four kinds of scripts are distinguishable: square, semi-square, semi-cursive, and cursive styles. According to the relative dating, all documents in cursive script can be dated to the Mongol period, while the texts with semi-square writing are from the West Uyghur period.Footnote 41 The dating of a special subgroup of the Old Uyghur documents, namely the administrative orders, has recently undergone substantial development.Footnote 42 Analysis of the various stamping methods that were applied to the official documents led to the establishment of a more accurate, and even in some cases absolute, dating technique. Based on this, seven different groups are distinguishable: (A) the West Uyghur period, (B) the Early Mongol (Pre-Yuan) period (i.e. before 1279), (C) the Early Mongol–Yuan period (from the first decades of the Yuan Dynasty (1279–1368)), (D) the Yuan period (until the late 1320s CE), (E) the Kärsin–Yalın texts (early fourteenth century), (F) the Chaghadai khanate period (after the late 1320s), (G) the ‘Kutlug-seals’ orders (mid-fourteenth century), and (H and Misc) undated fragments.Footnote 43 Thanks to these recent achievements in the study of the Old Uyghur documents, we are now able to grasp the temporal dimensions of this source material, too.
Dating of the pilgrim inscriptions
In the case of the pilgrim inscriptions, we can establish an approximate dating of the texts by means of the various scripts that were employed in the texts and the differing styles of the Uyghur script, but the contents also sometimes allow even more accurate dating. Until recent times, researchers could not prove that Old Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions could be dated to earlier than the Mongol period.Footnote 44 However, a considerable number of inscriptions have been recently dated to the West Uyghur period, namely between the tenth and twelfth centuries. If an inscription is written in or features 'Phags-pa script, it indicates dating to between the late thirteenth and mid-fourteenth centuries.Footnote 45 In most cases, more precise dating is impossible, as the inscriptions usually also employ only the 12-year animal-cycle dating. Fortunately, in some cases, other chronological systems are also used. The Uyghurs borrowed the so-called ‘Second System’—a sexagenary cycle from China, which is a combination of the 12-year animal cycle and the five elements, resulting in a 60-year cycle and providing opportunities for more precise dating.Footnote 46 Alongside this dating form, the Uyghurs and Mongols borrowed another form of dating from China: some transcriptions of Yuan era names are attested, such as Zhizheng 至正 (1341–1370), occurring as či čiŋ on the Old Uyghur and ǰi ǰiŋ on the Mongolian inscriptions. When this system is used alongside the 12-year animal cycle, the exact year can be defined. Furthermore, there are some inscriptions that could not be dated according to their content or format but, due to their connection to other dated inscriptions, they also can be dated with varying degrees of precision.Footnote 47 After the above survey of the available source material, we now turn our attention to the analysis of the temporal distribution of the sources, as well as the geographic and social aspects of mobility.
Temporal distribution of the sources
In the study of the temporal distribution of Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents, our interest is concentrated on two related questions: first, the general operation of administration in the eastern part of the Chaghadaid ulus in the mid-fourteenth century compared with earlier periods of Mongol rule; and second, specific changes in the operation of that subsystem of the administration that was responsible for the support of overland communication and mobility, namely the postal system. Meanwhile, the study of the temporal distribution of the inscriptions from the Gansu Corridor will contribute to our knowledge of changes in pilgrim activity.
Temporal distribution of the Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents
In order to fulfil our aims, in the case of the Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian material, we will study the temporal distribution of a broader selection of texts (i.e. the administrative or official documents in general) and, within it, a narrower group of sources (i.e. those administrative documents that are connected to the postal system, hereafter ‘postal documents’) (Figure 1). So far, more or less accurate dating has been provided for 107 administrative documents, which constitute our broader pool.Footnote 48
When we look at the list of these dated manuscripts, the first and probably most outstanding fact is that only three documents can be dated to the pre-Mongol era—that is, the West Uyghur period, which is slightly less than 3 per cent. It means that more than 97 per cent of all datable Old Uyghur administrative documents date back to the Mongol period—that is, to the last two centuries of the six-century-long Old Uyghur strata. Out of these 104 documents from the Mongol period, 21 could not be dated more accurately (groups H and Misc). For a further distribution of the remaining 83 documents, an obvious choice would be a comparison between the united empire era (until 1259) and the later periods. Unfortunately, the division of the source material is not that obvious because it is possible that the formal differences between groups B (early Mongol and pre-Yuan) and C (early Mongol, Yuan) arise from the different levels of their issue and not the temporal gap between them.Footnote 49 Nonetheless, altogether, the two groups contain 19 documents (eight plus 11), while the later four groups up to the mid-fourteenth century (groups D to G) contain 64. This is a significant difference that contradicts the distribution that one would expect in view of the historical background of the region. Moreover, of the 83 Old Uyghur administrative documents that have been dated more accurately, so far, ten can be linked to the Chaghadaid khanate period (i.e. after the late 1320s, group F) and 20 belong to the so-called ‘Kutlug-seals’ orders (group G), namely the mid-fourteenth century.Footnote 50 Consequently, more than one-third of the administrative documents dated so far belong to these later periods or, in other words, to the broader mid-fourteenth century. Unfortunately, more accurate dating of the group F documents has not yet been possible, but the case of the ‘Kutlug-seals’ orders is more promising. These documents were dated at between 1350 and 1362. More precisely, 11 of these 20 documents were dated at between 1355 and 1362, and a further 3 to 1350 with quite high certainty.Footnote 51 These data suggest that local and regional administrations were fairly active in the Eastern Tianshan region until the early 1360s. However, as Matsui has recently argued, many of the Old Uyghur administrative requisition orders may have been tax-conversion certificates—that is, compulsory requisitions, which (in an ideal case) were offset against any ordinary taxes.Footnote 52 How to interpret this phenomenon is a difficult question. On the one hand, it shows the flexibility of the administrative system but, on the other, it seems that this flexibility was necessary due to the constantly changing circumstances.
In order to gain a better understanding of how the administration could support physical mobility, we have to look at the postal documents, first at the local and regional levels—that is, the Old Uyghur documents. As mentioned above, most of these documents constitute a subgroup within the administrative documents. The overlap of the two groups is significant: of the 45 official texts that were edited in my recent volume on Old Uyghur documents related to the imperial postal system, there are only three official documents that are not included within the administrative documents category.Footnote 53 Moreover, the recently released edition of the Old Uyghur administrative orders contains 21 additional documents that could be related to the postal system.Footnote 54 This means that 63 out of the 107 (58.87 per cent) administrative documents are somehow connected to the postal system—a fact that shows the importance of the ǰam system in the region.Footnote 55
Of the three administrative documents that date back to the West Uyghur period, two are provision orders for the postal system, making up around 66 per cent. In group B, out of the eight administrative orders, about 87.5 per cent, or seven of them, can be traced back to the postal system. Group C contains seven postal documents and four others, amounting to approximately 63 per cent. As for the Yuan period, the number of documents witnessed a significant increase, yielding a total of 20, among which 13, or roughly 65 per cent, are postal documents. In the early fourteenth-century group E, only four documents out of 14 (approximately 28.5 per cent) were postal in nature. However, in group F, during the Chaghadaid khanate period, eight out of ten documents (80 per cent) are related to the postal system. Group G, which dates back to the mid-fourteenth century, is much richer in terms of the number of documents (20), which is similar to group D, but with a higher proportion of postal documents at 45 per cent, or nine out of 20. Over 36 per cent (30 out of 83) of all datable administrative documents from the Mongol period originate from the period between the late 1320s and the early 1360s. Among these 30 documents, approximately 56 per cent (17) are related to the postal system. If we consider groups B to G, the proportion of postal documents increases to almost 58 per cent (48 out of 83). If we include the 15 documents from group H and the six brief requisition orders (Misc) originating from the Mongol period but with no precise dating, the proportion of postal documents rises to over 58 per cent (61 out of 104).
The Middle Mongolian documents from Turfan and its adjacent regions concerning the postal system are less numerous, but they were issued at the highest administrative level (Figure 2). All the Mongol decrees from the region that are datable and published so far stem from the fourteenth century.
Of nine such documents, four have certain connections to the postal system and a further two might also be connected.Footnote 56 The earliest accurately dated Mongolian document was issued in 1326 (MongHT 76) and the latest in 1369 (MongHT 68). The earliest Mongolian document connected to the postal system is dated to 1331 (MongHT 73) and the latest to the second part of the fourteenth century but before 1374 (B163:42).Footnote 57 Thus, on the basis of the bare numbers, it can be stated that the administration in the eastern part of the Chaghadaid ulus was not just active at all levels in the mid-fourteenth century, but was also quite productive, and a good deal of our extant documents can be connected to the postal system. This means that the postal system was functional and active, and played an important role within state administration. Its importance and functionality might, however, have reduced over time if we consider the ratio of documents concerning the postal system within the administrative texts.
Temporal distribution of the pilgrim inscriptions
Our other group of sources—the Uyghur and Mongolian pilgrim inscriptions in Gansu—show a slightly different picture (Figure 3). As mentioned earlier, contrary to earlier opinions, a considerable number of Old Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions have recently been identified as being likely to belong to the West Uyghur period—that is, the tenth to twelfth centuries.Footnote 58 From the other inscriptions that are dated to the Mongol period, 23 are written with or contain the ‘Phags-pa script, which allows an approximate dating of these texts to between 1269 and the 1360s.Footnote 59 There are 15 inscriptions with more accurate dating—that is, the precise year, or at least one to three possible years of dating are identifiable. All of these inscriptions are dated to the fourteenth century. From the 15 inscriptions 12 were written in the Zhizheng 至正 era (1341–1370) or later.Footnote 60 Three inscriptions certainly stem from the earlier decades of the fourteenth century.Footnote 61
Although it is impossible to accurately date most of the pilgrim inscriptions, the reconstruction of their temporal distribution, as described above, allows some important inferences to be drawn. Although the vast majority of the inscriptions are still being dated to the Mongol period, identification of an earlier strata of inscriptions confirms the existence of pilgrim activities among Uyghur-speaking people in the pre-Mongol period. Unfortunately, more precise dating of these earlier texts is not yet possible; it can only be stated that pilgrims who were writing in the Uyghur language were already visiting the Buddhist caves around Dunhuang during the West Uyghur period—that is, between the tenth and twelfth centuries. Only in the case of 15 of the 241 later texts is it possible to achieve more accurate dating to within the Mongol period. Nevertheless, the fact that all of these texts are dated to the fourteenth century is remarkable. Moreover, 12 of these 15 texts can be dated to the mid-fourteenth century. This suggests not only that pilgrim activities continued despite the crisis, but that traffic might have increased. From the 23 inscriptions with ‘Phags-pa script, two can be dated more precisely (Nos. 104, 131), both to the mid-fourteenth-century group (1341 or later). Due to the historical background, it is conceivable that the other 21 inscriptions with ‘Phags-pa script also stem from the fourteenth century. To sum up, it can be stated that these pilgrim activities were continuous in the fourteenth century and the overwhelming majority (80 per cent) of the datable inscriptions stem from the mid-fourteenth century. In other words, our source material shows no clear sign of a shrinkage in pilgrim activities during the mid-fourteenth-century crisis. In order to gain a comprehensive understanding of mobility, besides the temporal distribution of our sources, we have to look at the geographical aspects of the information that they provide.
Geographic mobility
To grasp the spatial dimensions of mobility, we can lean upon two types of information from our sources: their provenance and the toponyms attested in the texts. As in the case of the temporal distribution, we try both to reconstruct the geographic aspects of the entire administration and to focus especially on the postal system.
Postal relay network and the administration
Our knowledge about the provenance of the Uyghur and Mongolian documents is rather limited (Figure 4). If the manuscripts have a find-signature (Fundortsignatur), then these usually give only limited information, often informing us only of the expedition that acquired the object, such as the roman numerals after a capital T in the case of the Berlin manuscripts (T I–IV) that refer to the four Turfan Expeditions. Sometimes, they provide information about the place of excavation as well, usually determining only the toponym and not the exact finding place. In our material, the most common such sign is D among the Berlin manuscripts, which refers to Dakianusšahri (Idikutšahri)—that is, Kočo.Footnote 62 More precise information is available only in exceptional cases, such as MIK III 6972a, which is a provision order that has been preserved at the Museum of Asian Art in Berlin. This manuscript has the find-signature T I α, which refers to the ruins of the so-called Temple α in Kočo.Footnote 63
Of the 107 Old Uyghur administrative orders, we know the provenance of 50 manuscripts. Among the 63 official texts that concern the postal system, the place of excavation is known in 37 cases—that is, for more than 46 per cent of the administrative and almost 58 per cent of the postal documents. Most of these documents stem from Kočo and its immediate vicinity—that is, from within a circle with a radius of 40 kilometres. The importance of Kočo as an administrative centre for the region and as a central node of the local postal network is shown by the fact that 21 of the 50 administrative and 16 of the 37 postal documents with known provenance were found here—that is, around 42 and 43 per cent of the total. Only two documents in the St. Petersburg collection (SI 4820a–b) were found in Čıkten (near to the modern Čıktım, Chin. Qiketaizhen 七克台镇) circa 83 kilometres to the east along the main road to Kamıl (modern Komul, Chin. Hami 哈密). Of the 12 Mongolian documents, we know the provenance for eight. A majority of the Mongolian documents were found in the same vicinity as the Uyghur pieces—more precisely, in Kočo, circa 30 kilometres to the south-east of Turfan. Additionally, one document (B163:42) stems from Dunhuang and one (G 120) from Khara-Khoto (Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, PRC) but, due to their content, both are connected to the Kočo region.Footnote 64
Most of the toponyms in the Old Uyghur administrative documents have been identified (Figure 5).Footnote 65 An obvious difference between the documents dated to the first three chronological groups of the Mongol period (B, C, and D) and the last three groups (E, F, and G, which date with certainty to the fourteenth century) of the Mongol period is that, although fewer documents belong to the earlier layers (39 compared with 44), they contain considerably more toponyms.
The earlier three document groups from the Mongol period contain nine different identifiable toponyms and all of them can be connected to the postal system, while the latter three groups contain only six different toponyms and only three of these can be attested in documents concerning the postal system.
In the earlier period, Kočo stands at the geographical centre of the network that is constituted by eight of these nine places. Four places (Nampe, Turpan, and Yar to the west and Lükčüŋ to the east) fall within a 40-kilometre circle around Kočo. Three further places (Pučaŋ and Čıkten to the east and Tuksin to the west) lie within a radius of slightly over 80 kilometres and an additional settlement, Yürüŋčın, lies more than 180 air kilometres to the north-west from Kočo.Footnote 66 This network shows a clear east–west direction with a conjunction to the north-west to the northern side of the Tianshan mountain range. These data complement Shim's discussion of the postal roads in the Uyghur territories very well. On his map of the postal road in the Uyghur territories, the route comes from the direction of Šaču (Chin. Shazhou 沙州) through Kamıl (Hami) to Beš Balık and then heads west in the direction of Čam Balık (Changbaliq).Footnote 67 What is remarkable is the complete omission from the map of Kočo, Turfan, and the other toponyms of the Old Uyghur documents in the vicinity of these two centres. In a footnote, Shim mentions a certain Yelü Xiliang (耶律希亮), who arrived in Shangdu (上都) via the Kuča‒Kočo‒Kamıl route in 1263.Footnote 68 This traveller surely went through the heartland of the Uyghur territories and probably passed by several places that were attested in the Old Uyghur documents, but they do not feature in this itinerary. Seemingly, the narrative sources mention only the major stations and hubs along the postal routes, while the Old Uyghur documents also mention smaller localities from the Turfan region. This peculiarity of the Old Uyghur documents allows a more sophisticated map of the regional postal network to be drawn.Footnote 69
From the fourteenth century, only three attested toponyms of the Old Uyghur documents can be connected to the postal system: Lükčüŋ (Chin. Lukeqin 魯克沁; U 5285, PO05), Turpan (U 5790 + *U 9261, PO09), and Beš Balık (*U 9247), the latter having once been the (summer) capital of the Uyghur rulers, lying circa 135 kilometres to the north of Kočo on the northern slopes of the Tianshan. Besides this attestation of Lükčüŋ from around 1350, the city is mentioned in three different administrative orders from the early fourteenth century (*U 9234, *U 9233, and Ch/U 6910) that are not connected to the postal system. Considering that it is mentioned in only one document from earlier layers (U 5314, Käz06 from group D), it seems likely that the importance of Lükčüŋ as a local administrative centre emerged in the fourteenth century.
The toponyms of the Mongol decrees show a different picture (Figure 6). From our point of view, there is a very important difference in the structure of the Mongol orders compared with the Old Uyghur decrees: in their closing protocol, they always record their place of issue.Footnote 70 Although only two of these places have been identified with any certainty, their locations are similar in one respect: they fall hundreds of kilometres to the west or north-west of the Turfan region.Footnote 71 Bulad lies circa 630 kilometres to the northwest of Kočo; the closest possible location of Türgen is around 740 kilometres away and the farthest is about 970 kilometres to the north-west.Footnote 72 All of these places are much closer to the Chaghadaid capital Almaliq (Modern Yining/Kulja in Xinjiang, near to the China–Kazakhstan border) than to the Turfan region; none of these was actually issued at the capital, however.Footnote 73
At the same time, many of the identifiable toponyms that were handled in these decrees were within the Turfan region, such as Kočo, Singging, Qongsir, Soim, and Limčin, or the Yogačari Monastery.Footnote 74 Nevertheless, more distant places such as Beš Balık and Bars Köl are also attested.Footnote 75 The fact that these documents were issued hundreds of kilometres from the place where they were excavated and from the region that their instructions concerned seems to affirm the hypothesis that they belong to a higher, interregional administrative level.Footnote 76 With respect to spatial mobility, the Mongolian decrees affirm that the Chaghadaid administration could support the movement of envoys and state officials at the highest levels. Moreover, decree B163:42 is a travel permit that was issued by Kedmen-Baγatur, the governor of the Turfan region under the Chaghadaid khanate in the latter half of the fourteenth century, for a high-ranking Tibetan Buddhist priest who was serving the Yuan court. According to the document, the priest made a pilgrimage in the Bars Köl, Beš-Balık, and Kočo region. This itinerary tallies exactly with the route that is depicted on the map in Shim's article. In other words, the Central Asian Chaghadaid governor ordered their postal system to support the pilgrimage of a high priest who was connected to the Yuan court and, most probably, after his pilgrimage, he brought this permission to Dunhuang, where it was found.
The pilgrim networks
Turning our attention from the geographical aspects of the administrative and postal documents to those of the Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions, first, we must consider the significant development in the number of available sources that led to more attestation of toponyms in the published materials. In 2008, the following toponyms could be identified: Šaču (Chin. Shazhou 沙州), Kaču (Chin. Guazhou 瓜州), Sügčü (Chin. Suzhou 肃州), Yungčang Vuu (Chin. Yongchangfu 永昌府), and Tangut čölgä (‘The Circuit of Tangut’) in the Gansu region, and Kamıl (Hami) and Napčik (Lapčuk) from the Eastern Tianshan region.Footnote 77
Research on Old Uyghur inscriptions over the last 16 years has contributed a great deal to the understanding of Buddhist pilgrimage in the Gansu and Eastern Tianshan region under Mongol rule and broadened the reconstructed pilgrim network considerably, even extending it beyond these two regions (Figure 7). Of the 283 edited Old Uyghur and Mongolian pilgrim inscriptions from the vicinity of Dunhuang, some 52 contain toponyms.
The first type of pilgrim mobility can be described as regional pilgrimage—that is, pilgrims came from neighbouring settlements and visited the cave temples around Dunhuang. In Gansu, the network did not change considerably, but some trends are more visible due to the significantly higher number of inscriptions that have been edited. It is not surprising that Kaču is one of the most frequently attested places of origin for the pilgrims, as, among the attested toponyms, it is the closest, lying circa 55 kilometres to the north of the Yulin Caves. Of its 14 attestations, 12 were found in the Yulin Caves.Footnote 78 From these two cases, we can explicitly exclude Kaču as an author's place of origin.Footnote 79 A Mongolian (No. 230, Y28 Mong 04) and a Uyghur inscription (No. 256, Y35 Uig 03) of the Yulin Caves are too fragmentary to determine the role played by Kaču (Mong. Γaǰu) in the author's pilgrimage. Surprisingly, the second-nearest settlement, Šaču, lying circa 30 kilometres to the north-west of the Mogao Caves, appears far less frequently in the inscriptions. Only four inscriptions from the Yulin cave complex mention Šaču as a place of origin. In a further inscription, which is written in Mongolian, a pilgrim from Yuŋčaŋ mentions Šaču as a farther destination in his pilgrimage.Footnote 80 This clearly shows that the pilgrims visited several sacred places on their pilgrimages.
Another type of pilgrim mobility was the long-distance pilgrimage, which often covered several hundred kilometres. These pilgrims did not necessarily come from other regions; the Gansu Corridor extends about 1,000 kilometres between Lanzhou (蘭州) and the Yumen Pass (or Jade Gate) on the boarder of modern Gansu and Xinjiang. It is notable that the other settlement most often attested (14) is Sügčü, which lies slightly more than 220 kilometres to the east of the Yulin Caves, so the pilgrims who arrived from here clearly belonged to this second group. Four of its attestations were found in the Mogao Caves and the rest in the Yulin Caves. It seems that attestations of Sügčü in the 12 Uyghur as well as the two Mongolian inscriptions refer to it as the place of origin of the authors and their companions. With its seven attestations, Kamıl in the Eastern Tianshan region is the third-most-often attested toponym among the inscriptions. Although Kamıl lies circa 350 kilometres to the north-west of the Dunhuang cave complex, its frequent attestation is not surprising if we take into account that it was a local administrative centre and the junction of several main roads that connected Gansu and the Eastern Tianshan region. The main road between Kočo and Dunhuang went through Kamıl and passed by the northern side of the Kumtag desert.Footnote 81 Kamču (Chin. Ganzhou甘州), which was located about 400 kilometres south-east from the Yulin Caves, has three attestations.Footnote 82 Yungčang Vuu is located approximately 650 kilometres to the south-east of the Yulin Caves, where it is attested in the above-mentioned Mongolian inscription (No. 169, Y12 Mong 12) as the place where the author's pilgrimage started.
The third and last type of pilgrim mobility can be categorised as interregional pilgrimage, when pilgrims visited the Dunhuang cave complex from neighbouring or more distant regions, their journeys covering several hundred kilometres. The so-called Tangut district (tangut čölge), farther to the east, is mentioned in two Uyghur inscriptions in the Mogao Caves.Footnote 83 From the Eastern Tianshan region, Kočo has three attestations: Napčik and Beš Balık are mentioned twice and Turfan once.Footnote 84 Besides the place names that are already known from pilgrim inscriptions, the attestation of Čam Balık, circa 30 kilometres to the north-west of contemporary Ürümqi, in a Mogao cave inscription (No. 37, M148 Uig 02) is new.Footnote 85 Isinai čölge is mentioned in a very fragmentary Mongolian inscription (No. 255, Y35 Uig 02) without context. It can be located to the vicinity of Khara-Khoto in Inner Mongolia, circa 570 kilometres to the north-east of Dunhuang.Footnote 86 Toponyms in the newly published material broaden this pilgrim network further.
Old Uyghur Buddhist sights and sacred places were present not only near Dunhuang, but also in the Turfan region. The study of these materials is also of primary interest in the reconstruction of interregional mobility between the Gansu Corridor and the Turfan region.Footnote 87 Based on the most recently published inscriptions from the Toyok Caves complex that lies circa 14 kilometres to the east of Kočo, this sight was an important regional centre of Buddhist pilgrimage and place of retreat. The monastery of the Toyok Caves had especially close ties with the Buddhist community in Lükčüŋ. Nevertheless, a Chinese pilgrim inscription (I 8) in Room B of Cave 26 were left by a pilgrim who visited the cave in 1328 from Yuan territories, namely from or via Chengdu (成都)—it is likely that the cave was still the destination of interregional pilgrimage in the fourteenth century.Footnote 88
The material that is preserved in the Central Asian collections worldwide offers further possibilities for conducting research on inscriptions from the Turfan region.Footnote 89 Recently, Raschmann reported that around 130 wall inscriptions from the material of the four German Turfan expeditions (1902–1914) had been rediscovered in the Museum of Asian Art in Berlin and that most of this material remains unpublished.Footnote 90 In a case study, she illustrated how a better understanding of these holy places can be gained through comparative analysis of the multilingual text material and the archaeological findings. Based on the results of her study, the Ruin Q in Kočo was considered a holy place and served as a destination for Buddhist pilgrimage from the seventh or eighth century to the fourteenth century. Unlike the Dunhuang material and the White Pagoda inscriptions in Hohhot, these texts do not usually provide information about pilgrims’ places of origin, suggesting that these pilgrimage sites in the Turfan region were primarily of local or regional interest. Meanwhile, the fact that the dating of the visit is usually the first thing that is included in these inscriptions also makes it probable that the texts stem from people who were from outside the cave complexes and not local monks. Nevertheless, one text (no. III 393) attests a pilgrim's place of origin but, unfortunately, this toponym (Koŋlı) has not yet been located. This Koŋlı is most probably identical to the Qongli of MongHT75. Raschmann's observation that the specification of places of origin in the pilgrim inscriptions refers to interregional pilgrimages fits very well with the above observation of the present article—that is, that the places of issue of the Mongolian decrees fall several hundred kilometres away from the Turfan region. If the two toponyms are identical, then we can surmise, based on the identified places of issue of the Mongolian decrees, that Koŋlı's location was somewhere in the vicinity of the Chaghadaid capital, Almaliq.Footnote 91
The Old Uyghur pilgrim network can be followed up even beyond Gansu and the Eastern Tianshan region. As is well known, Mt. Wutai (Chin. Wutaishan 五台山) had a preeminent importance among the sacred places of Chinese Buddhism and was an important destination for many pilgrims. The Chinese poem Wutaishan zan 五台山贊 (‘Praise of Mt. Wutai’), which was found in the Dunhuang fragments, was only translated into the Uyghur language and the earliest possible date of its translation is the tenth century.Footnote 92 This fact alone would suggest quite early Uyghur interest in the rather distant Mt. Wutai. Furthermore, the early date of the translation of this poem is also indicative of the dissemination of Buddhism among the Uyghur-speaking population at the time. Moreover, transcriptions of the Chinese text with Old Uyghur letters are preserved, too.Footnote 93 These references show that, besides the Buddhist centre of Dunhuang, Mt. Wutai was also very important among the Uyghurs and could have been a possible pilgrim destination. Two of the pilgrim inscriptions in Yulin cave No. 03 confirm this assumption. Both were written in the cursive style of the Uyghur script but, whereas the first is a bilingual Uyghur–Mongolian text (No. 128, Y03 Uig 30), the latter is exclusively written in the Uyghur language (No. 130, Y03 Uig 32). The two texts have different authors (Šakyapal and Täväči Tutuŋ), who wrote these texts on their way to Mt. Wutai (udai-ka barur-ta ‘going to Mt. Wutai’).Footnote 94 Two of the Dunhuang inscriptions refer to Akbalık (‘White city’) as the pilgrims’ place of origin.Footnote 95 This city, attested in Mongolian sources as Čaγan Balγasun, can be identified with modern Zhending 眞定, which is situated circa 130 kilometres to the south-east of Mt. Wutai in China's Hebei province.Footnote 96
The edition of the Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions in the White Pagoda (Chin. Baita 白塔) from the vicinity of modern Hohhot in Inner Mongolia definitely broadened the geographical limits of the Uyghur Buddhist pilgrimage network.Footnote 97 In the 20 inscriptions, pilgrims are attested as coming from Kamıl (Texts E and J), Tuksin (Texts K and L), and Čam Balık (Text T). Based on this information, it seems conceivable that the White Pagoda had its own interregional pilgrim network. However, one cannot exclude the possibility that pilgrims from the Eastern Tianshan region visited this site after veneration in Dunhuang or on their way to Mt. Wutai.
Unfortunately, as we saw in the previous section, a far lower proportion of the inscriptions are datable with accuracy within the Mongol period. Moreover, the number of those datable inscriptions that also contain toponyms is even lower. Nevertheless, some inferences can be drawn concerning temporal changes in the Buddhist pilgrim network of the literate Uyghurs. The attestation of Beš Balık (No. 231), Kamıl (No. 251), and Kaču (No. 256) in inscriptions from the West Uyghur period show early connections between the Eastern Tianshan region and Gansu.Footnote 98 It seems certain that Buddhist holy places already existed in the Eastern Tianshan region in this earlier period, as the example of ruin Q from Kočo shows.Footnote 99 We have substantial detailed information on these connections from the Mongol period and we know that many more settlements were involved. Moreover, the Buddhist pilgrimage network of Uyghur–Mongol literati expanded extensively beyond Gansu and the Eastern Tianshan region in the Mongol period, most notably to the east. New toponyms appear on our map in this period in the Eastern Tianshan region (Čam Balık, Turfan, Kočo, Napčik), in Gansu (Sügčü, Kamču, Yungčang), in Inner Mongolia (Isinai čölge), and in contemporary Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region (Tangut čölge). The farthest place of pilgrim origin attested in the inscriptions is Akbalık (Zhending 眞定, in Hebei province), which is not far from the famous Mt. Wutai. Direct proof of new pilgrim destinations that are far beyond Gansu and the Eastern Tianshan region, namely Mt. Wutai in contemporary Shanxi Province and the White Pagoda near modern Hohhot in Inner Mongolia, is another very important development of the Mongol period pilgrim network. The former is attested in two inscriptions at Yulin cave 03 as the pilgrims’ final destination, while 20 Old Uyghur pilgrim inscriptions from the latter have been published recently. Based on the inscriptions, the existence of connections between the White Pagoda and the whole Eastern Tianshan region (Kamıl, Tuksin, and Čam Balık) seems clear. Simultaneously, one of the latest Mongolian decrees (B163:42), which is dated to the second part of the fourteenth century but before 1374, which served the pilgrimage of a high-ranking priest in the Eastern Tianshan region but was found in Dunhuang, seems to confirm that interregional pious journeys were still possible after the mid-fourteenth century. The Tibetan name of the lama, Dorǰi-Kirešis Bal Sangbo, suggests that there were connections not just between the Eastern Tianshan region and the Gansu Corridor, but also with Tibet, and perhaps China proper, too.Footnote 100 The question of whether a high-ranking priest who connects his official duty with his pious activities can be considered a pilgrim leads us on to our last topic: the social aspects of mobility.
Mobility and society
A comprehensive analysis of the information on society in any of our major source groups would go well beyond the frame of the present article and deserves separate studies, if not a monograph. We thus restrict our discussion to those social aspects of the sources that have an immediate connection to physical mobility: namely, religious groups, social status, and the interconnectedness of various systems of the administration or society.
While the present study concentrates mostly on mobility in connection with the Buddhist community, these societies were multi-religious and multi-ethnic. Besides Buddhism, Islam and the Apostolic Church of the East (i.e. Christianity) were certainly present. References to all three religions and their representatives are attested in both of our source groups. Three main aspects of the relationship between the postal system and these religious communities can be defined: taxation, confiscation and, finally, use of the postal system by those religious groups.Footnote 101 The Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents provide information that concerns all three aspects.
A provision order from the West Uyghur period (U 5329, PO08) shows clearly that the Church of the East was involved in the maintenance of the postal network in the West Uyghur state: 2msydr -lar-nıŋ bir yol at[ın] 3taykay -takı yolčı-ka berzün ‘2–3The Nestorian presbyters (msydr), 3shall give one of their road horses (yol atın) to the travel guide (bound) for Taykay.’ Taykay in the Uyghur text could mean either the main road from Turfan to Dunhuang through Kamıl or the Dahai dao 大海道 leading from Lükčüŋ directly to Dunhuang along the southern edge of the Kumtag desert.Footnote 102 Should either of these possible answers be true, it seems that the Apostolic Church of the East had to support travel between the Eastern Tianshan region and Gansu. From the Mongol period, we have five provision orders, which were unearthed in the Bezeklik caves, in which a certain Bökän šäli, who was presumably a Buddhist monk, had to provide hay and straw for travellers on the postal system.Footnote 103 Two provision orders that stem from Čıkten, a settlement on the main road between Turfan and Dunhuang, confirms that both the Buddhist and Christian communities had to bear expenses that concerned the upkeep of the postal system.Footnote 104 Such information about Muslim communities is not available in the Old Uyghur and Middle Mongolian documents.
For the other two aspects—confiscation and the use of the postal system by representatives of the religious communities—the best example in our material is the above-cited Mongolian decree (B163:42). This was issued to support the travel of Buddhist priests with the postal system and the following passage is indirect proof that clergy had to endure confiscations: ‘…9no one shall hold [them] back [or] shall take their loads, carts, camels and 10horses, saying “[they are] the relay animals or provisions”.’Footnote 105 Muslim and Christian names are also attested in documents that concern the postal system but, as has been pointed out, people who bore Muslim names could also have been Buddhists.Footnote 106
Although names and titles are often false friends to the researcher (as, among other reasons, the former can easily be transformed into the latter), if we want to gain a better understanding of the social status of travellers, we must examine these aspects of our sources. With regard to the social status of those who travelled via the postal system, it is not surprising that they were usually high-ranking officials and military officers. The title most often attested is elči.Footnote 107 Among the civil officers, daruga(či)s are mentioned, too.Footnote 108 Various military officers are also mentioned: leaders (noyin) of tümäns, attendants of envoys (nöker), and officers from the vanguard.Footnote 109
In the pilgrim inscriptions that came from Dunhuang, people with Muslim and Christian names are attested, too.Footnote 110 Moreover, a whole inscription (No. 197) that is written in Syriac script is connected to the Apostolic Church of the East. Furthermore, the names that are mentioned in it (Nathaniel, Yohanan) and the closing formula (yad bolzun amin ‘until all eternity, Amen’) underline the Christian context of the inscription.Footnote 111 Based on this, it seems conceivable that Muslims and Christians also visited the Buddhist holy places.Footnote 112
When looking at the social statuses that are reflected in the Old Uyghur and Mongolian pilgrim inscriptions, it is not surprising that various Buddhist titles such as bahšı or ačari are very often attested. One could consider the frequent appearance of high-ranking officials and other illustrious people in pilgrim inscriptions rather surprising, but the trend for titles to become part of personal names over time must also be kept in mind. For example, in the edition of the Dunhuang inscriptions, all the attestations of tegin (OU ‘prince’) are handled as elements of personal names.Footnote 113 In inscriptions from the West Uyghur period, the word saŋun (< Chin. jiang jun 將軍) comes forth in various forms. The original meaning of this word is ‘army commander, general’ but, in later periods, it, too, was often used as a personal-name element. In inscription No. 89, besides a certain Kutlug Toŋa saŋun, two tarhans, Ishak and Alp Sıŋkur, are also attested, the former being a Christian name.Footnote 114 Due to the rather early dates of those texts in which they are attested, their usage can be interpreted via the original meaning.Footnote 115 The Uyghur inscription No. 80 was written in a cursive style, but the title, el arslan han, clearly refers to the West Uyghur period.Footnote 116 From the Mongol period, tümän bägi, darugači, suŋgon, and han are attested in the Uyghur inscriptions.Footnote 117 In two Mongolian inscriptions (Nos. 15, 62), the word köbegün (‘son’) appears but, in this context, the term seems to refer to Mongol princes of the royal family.Footnote 118 These data seem to underpin the conclusion that, contrary to the common picture of pilgrims, a significant part of the Uyghur and Mongolian inscriptions belong to high-ranking officials and members of the elite. As we have seen in the Mongolian decree that was unearthed in Dunhuang (B163:42), it was possible for a high-ranking priest to enjoy the support of the postal system during his travel, and thus the private sphere (pilgrimage) and official sphere (usage of the postal system) could have been mixed. In summary, it can be concluded that our sources show that, in practice, the different spheres (official and private) and systems (administrative and religious networks) were interconnected and interdependent.Footnote 119 This interconnectedness urges us to apply a comprehensive approach if we want to better understand premodern mobility patterns. In this sense, I would give a rather permissive answer to the question that was raised by Raschmann—that is, whether we can regard those Buddhist laymen of our sources who, besides their other duties, visited holy places and left inscriptions as pilgrims. A personal identity is constituted of several cultural personae and connected to different social groups at the same time. I would recommend trusting the authors of our sources and, if they felt like pilgrims, then we should believe them.Footnote 120
Conclusion
The results of this study contribute to our understanding of mobility along the Eastern Silk Roads in three key areas: temporal, spatial, and social. From a temporal perspective, the long-lasting existence of a postal network in the Turfan region is proven. It is also evident that local and interregional pilgrim networks persisted in the Turfan region, as well as in the Gansu Corridor around Dunhuang, between the tenth and fourteenth centuries. In contrast to previous assumptions, recently, 42 pilgrim inscriptions that are believed to have originated from the West Uyghur period have been identified in Buddhist cave temples around Dunhuang. However, one pilgrim could leave many inscriptions behind. The attested toponyms on pilgrim inscriptions from the West Uyghur period demonstrate the existence of early connections between the Eastern Tianshan region and Gansu, which were maintained until the end of the period under discussion—that is, the late fourteenth century.
The majority of the information that our sources provide is related to the Mongol period—specifically, the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Two particularly noteworthy findings are the high proportion of postal documents among the administrative sources and the resilience of the postal system even during the challenges of the mid-fourteenth century. Ninety-seven per cent of the Old Uyghur administrative documents stem from the Mongol period. This difference in numbers is too big to be explained only by the temporal difference. It might be due to the destruction of the archives of official documents from the earlier period, but also to the fact that the administrative apparatus became significantly larger and more sophisticated under Mongol rule. If we take the material from the Mongol period into account, then we see that the majority of datable Old Uyghur official documents were issued after the dissolution of the united empire—that is, after the mid-thirteenth century. Again, this can be explained by the destruction of earlier materials during intra-Mongol clashes, but later development of the local administration and archives is also conceivable. The administrative documents from the Mongol period show a continuous functionality of administration in the Uyghur language at local and regional bureaucratic levels. Almost 60 per cent of the administrative documents are related to the postal system. In the early Mongol period, the proportion of postal documents within the administrative texts was very high, which may indicate the Mongols' urgent need for an effective communication system in the early phase of their rule. Later, as the total number of administrative documents increased, the proportion of postal documents decreased but, by the middle of the fourteenth century, more than half of the administrative documents were still postal documents. According to the Old Uyghur administrative documents, the state apparatus was functional throughout the Mongol period. Meanwhile, the proportion of those documents that belonged to the postal system is clearly lower—that is, it seems that the administration was less able or willing to support physical mobility on local and regional levels. Due to the idiosyncrasies of dating practices in our sources, it is often not possible to connect their information to specific political events. However, when this is possible, their data can enhance our comprehension of the immediate historical processes.
Due to the very limited number of pilgrim inscriptions for which accurate dating is possible and which contain toponyms, temporal changes across this huge and seemingly complex network are hard to follow up. On the one hand, the fact that most such inscriptions from Dunhuang stem from the mid-fourteenth century suggests that pilgrimages were continuous in this period as well. On the other hand, because all three inscriptions (Nos. 159, 163, 176) contain toponyms from the immediate vicinity of Dunhuang, they may indicate a diminution of the network.
From a spatial perspective, the results can be connected to three distinct spheres of mobility: the local, the interregional, and the global. The local postal and pilgrim networks in the Turfan region are clearly discernible, as are the pilgrim networks around Dunhuang in the Gansu Corridor. The importance of Kočo as an administrative centre of the region and as a central node in the local postal network is shown by the fact that circa 42 per cent of the administrative and circa 43 per cent of the postal documents with known provenance were found here. Most of the attested place names that concern the postal system are in the immediate vicinity of Kočo. They show a clear east–west route with a conjunction to the northern slopes of the Tianshan. If we compare this network that is drawn by the Uyghur toponyms with that of the narrative sources, the former shows a more sophisticated network but on a significantly smaller territory.Footnote 121 If we carry on the analogy of Harris in which the narrative sources show the arteries and veins of the imperial body, then the Old Uyghur documents show the capillary vessels.Footnote 122
The numerous newly published pilgrim inscriptions did not change our picture of the pilgrim network in Gansu considerably but, due to the significantly higher number of edited inscriptions, the trends are more visible.Footnote 123 The reconstructed pilgrim network in Gansu is consistent with the postal roads that are described in the Chinese narrative sources. This may be attributed to the geographical circumstances, but it could also be a consequence of the partial overlap of the individuals who were engaged in travel in both networks. The frequent attestation of Kamıl is also explicable, as it was a major administrative centre and a junction between the Gansu Corridor (and thus China proper) and adjacent territories farther west. Holy places in the Turfan region, such as the Toyok Caves complex or Ruin Q in Kočo, can be identified, too. Nonetheless, we still have only limited clues to the interregional pilgrimage that was being directed to these places, suggesting that they were rather destinations for local pilgrimage.
With regard to the interregional mobility, it can be stated that both the postal and the pilgrim networks were in use between the Turfan region and the Gansu Corridor during the tenth and fourteenth centuries, and the Mongolian documents are of particular interest in this respect. All the Mongolian documents were found in Kočo, except two that were unearthed in Dunhuang and Khara-Khoto, but even these two are tightly connected to the Kočo region by their contents, although they were created hundreds of kilometres to the west and north-west of the Uyghur lands, in the vicinity of the Chaghadaid capital, Almaliq. This peculiarity seems to support the author's earlier assumption that the Mongolian documents were issued at the highest (interregional) levels of the administration, and the Old Uyghur documents at the local and regional levels.Footnote 124 Moreover, these decrees suggest a functional administrative connection between the power centre of the Chaghadaid ulus and its eastern edge. One of the Mongolian decrees (B163:42) is especially interesting, as it connects the Eastern Tianshan region with the Gansu Corridor (and perhaps Tibet), while also connecting the pilgrim activities and the postal system.
The extension of the pilgrim networks during the Mongol period led to the global connectedness of the pilgrims. The pilgrim network in the Mongol period can be followed up even beyond the Eastern Tianshan region and the Gansu Corridor. The territories that once belonged to the Tangut district (tangut čölge), the White Pagoda near contemporary Hohhot and Mt. Wutai, as well as the neighbouring Akbalık area clearly became a part of this network.
Although the postal documents do not contain direct information beyond the areas adjacent to the regions under study, some of the results of the analysis can be interpreted in a global context. Of particular note is the high share of postal documents among administrative documents. The documents examined here are also unique in that a large number of original manuscripts that were produced within the postal network have not survived from other parts of the empire. Consequently, these findings may be particularly important in understanding the history of Mongol Eurasia as a whole. On the one hand, the high share of postal documents among the administrative documents shows the importance of the relay system within the administration. On the other, it makes clear just how enormous burdens the establishment and maintenance of this system were. It is uncertain whether the share of the postal system from the administration was equally high in the other territories of the empire. Since the regions under discussion constituted a central part of the empire and thus could be considered as key junction points, it must have been a strategic interest of the state to organise the most effective communication network here. Nevertheless, even somewhat lower investments in other parts of the empire would have placed a significant burden on the Mongolian budget. We know that the Great Khans repeatedly attempted to restrict access to the postal network by unauthorised individuals, which further supports this conclusion. Overall, it appears that the substantial investments that were made by the Mongols into their postal networks enabled them to establish and rule the largest continuous land empire in premodern history. Nevertheless, these expenditures may have precluded the Mongols from effectively financing other aspects of the state.
Finally, the most significant finding with regard to the social aspects of mobility also invites interpretation on a global scale. Both the Uyghur and Mongol documents, as well as the pilgrim inscriptions, provide examples of the strong interconnectedness of postal networks and infrastructure with pilgrim networks and infrastructure. Furthermore, interlocking with contemporary trade networks also seems plausible. Among those travellers of the postal system and of the pilgrim network who are (to varying degrees) identifiable, high-ranking officials and other members of the elite are over-represented. This indicates that the private and official spheres of interregional mobility cannot be strictly separated. Consequently, the various social and administrative structures that are connected to mobility and communication, such as the religious and postal networks discussed here, or the trade networks should be studied from a holistic perspective and not separately.
Acknowledgements
The research for this article was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germanýs Excellence Strategy—EXC 2176 ‘Understanding Written Artefacts: Material, Interaction and Transmission in Manuscript Cultures’, project no. 390893796. The research was conducted within the scope of the Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC) at Universität Hamburg. The responsibility for the content of this publication remains with the author. The first version of this article was presented in 2019 at the panel ‘Eurasia and the Mid-14th-Century Crisis: The Collapse of the Mongol Empire’, organised by Vered Shurany at the annual AAS Conference in Denver. A developed version was circulated and discussed with the participants of the Mongol Empire Zoominar on 10 July 2020, organised by Michal Biran and Jonathan Brack. Lastly, parts of the article were presented at the Dunhuang & Silk Road Seminar Series on 17 June 2021, organised by Imre Galambos and Kelsey Granger at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Cambridge. The author profited greatly from the lively discussions and from colleagues’ comments. I am especially grateful to Michal Biran and Ishayahu Landa for the insightful comments and editorial work on later versions of the text. I am also indebted to Anna Turanskaya, who assisted me with information concerning the St. Petersburg collection, and Alisher Begmatov, who helped me with the Japanese literature. I would like to express my gratitude to the reviewers for their constructive feedback, which has contributed to enhancing the quality of the article, although I take responsibility for any errors or omissions. This article is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Pál Léderer (1942–2024)—an eminent sociologist and esteemed educator. Ten years ago, he posed a series of thought-provoking questions following one of my first ever talks on the Mongol post. These questions have continued to occupy my mind ever since, and I hope to have addressed them in this article.
Conflicts of interest
None.