Issyk inscription

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Issyk inscription
Issyk dish with inscription.
Drawing of the Issyk inscription.

The Issyk inscription is a yet undeciphered text, possibly in the Kushan script,[1] found in 1969 on a silver bowl in Issyk kurgan in Kazakhstan, dated at approximately the 4th century BC. The context of the burial gifts indicates that it may belong to Saka tribes.

Description

The Issyk inscription is not yet certainly deciphered, and is probably in a

Kushans, tentatively translating:[2]

Issyk Khotanese Saka Translation
Line Transliteration English translation
1 za(ṃ)-ri ko-la(ṃ) mi(ṃ)-vaṃ vaṃ-va pa-zaṃ pa-na de-ka mi(ṃ)-ri-to The vessel should hold wine of grapes, added cooked food, so much, to the mortal,
2 ña-ka mi pa-zaṃ vaṃ-va va-za(ṃ)-na vaṃ. then added cooked fresh butter on

Zaur Hasanov (2015) identifies the script as an ancient Turkic language, related or identical to the Orkhon-Yenisei script, and translates it as:[3]

Issyk Turkic Translation
Line Transliteration English translation
1 *Dört *bul Küz Sïnglïyï ïr (Of the) Four Corners (cardinal directions) (the) tribes Syngly sing (acclaim)
2 Uş yüz yïğ anta ïçïr Three hundred mourners oath drink (give an oath)

It contains a poetic expression of respect for the dead, which is considered significant as the Turks followed Tengrism, in which there is a cult of the ancestors.

A subsequent analysis in 2019 by Ball et al. disagrees with the arguments by Hasanov et al. 2015.[4]

Orçun Ünal (2019) argues that if the Issyk inscription is not an Iranian (Khotanese Saka) language, it may be a Proto-Mongolic language with strong contact to neighbouring Iranian languages, associating them with the 'Argippaei'. Ünal cautions that this does not mean that the "Issyk people" spoke a Mongolic language, but that the artifacts may have been of "foreigen" origin and given to the Saka as form of tribute.[5]

A 2023 analysis by Bonmann et al. identifies the Issyk language with a new sub-branch of the Eastern Iranian languages, particularly a language "situated in between Bactrian-, Sogdian-, Saka- and Old Steppe Iranian". They also argue "since it is not an ‘unknown script’ anymore, we suggest to call the writing system ‘(Issyk-)Kushan script’ from now on".[1]

Photos of the inscription

Inscription close up, right side
Inscription close up, left side

See also

References