Nezak Huns | ||||||||||||||
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The Nezak kingdom in 565 CE
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Capital | Ghazna, Kapisa | |||||||||||||
Languages | Pahlavi script (written) | |||||||||||||
Religion | Buddhism, Zoroastrianism | |||||||||||||
Government | Nomadic empire | |||||||||||||
Malka | ||||||||||||||
• | 6-7th century CE | Napki Malka | ||||||||||||
• | 653 - 665 | Ghar-ilchi | ||||||||||||
Historical era | Late Antiquity | |||||||||||||
• | Established | 484 | ||||||||||||
• | Disestablished | 665 | ||||||||||||
Currency | Hunnic Drachm | |||||||||||||
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Today part of | Afghanistan |
The Nezak Huns were one of the four groups of Huna people in the area of the Hindu Kush. The Nezak kings, with their characteristic gold bull's-head crown, ruled from Ghazni and Kapisa. While their history is obscured, the Nezak's left significant coinage documenting their polity's prosperity. They are called Nezak because of the inscriptions on their coins, which often bear the mention "Nezak Shah". They were the last of the four major "Hunic" states known collectively as Xionites or "Hunas", their predecessors being, in chronological order, the Kidarites, the Hephthalites, and the Alchon.
The Nezak's first appear minting coins in Ghazni, previously controlled by the Sassanian Persians, the Indo-Sasanians. Their emergence may have been a consequence of the weakening of Persian influence in the region after the defeat of the Persian king Peroz by the Hephthalites, another Hunnic state, in Bactria in 484 CE.
From that point, the Nezaks consolidated their power in Zabulistan and in the 6th century expanded into Kabulistan, deposing the Alchon Huns from Kapisa.
Nezak coins with the bull's crown appear well into the 8th century, at which time it appears that a confederacy emerges between the Nezaks and the Alchons, possibly against Turkic invaders.
Around the middle of the 6th century CE, the Alchons, after having extensively invaded the heartland of India, had withdrawn from Kashmir, Punjab and Gandhara, and going back west across the Khyber pass they resettled in Kabulistan. There, their coinage suggests that they merged with the Nezak Huns.