The Armies of the Kushan Empire
The first mention of the Yu-Chi ( the tribal
confederacy the Kushans came to dominate) is in the
second century BC, under pressure from the nomadic Hsiung-nu
they are pushed westwards into the Greek
The Yu-Chi undergo a number of changes in the next
century or so and come to be dominated by one tribe, the Kueh-Shan.
Under the leadership of Wima Takto
this nation overwhelms northern
Due to this long history the next section on the military will be divided into
three sections, the first on the Yu-Chi until they invade India, the second on
the Kushan Empire itself and the third concerning the
kingdoms that followed. Conveniently the periods roughly coincide with those in
Nikonorovs The Armies of
However three key events do dramaticly and very
quickly alter the Yu-Chi. The first is the Yu-Chi invasion of Ta-Shia (
The Yu-Chi Period
The Yu-chi method of fighting when they first appear
in our records is the same as that of the Hsiung-nu.
The Yu-chi fought with the bow and arrow from horseback,
in large waves of troops (Chinese figures say they were hundreds of thousands
strong. The exact numbers cannot be trusted but certainly they were numerous).
The heavily armored cavalry man was known to the west of the region, as the
reports of
When the Yu-chi conquered
The incorporation of foot soldiers in this period is undocumented. One coin of Kajula Kadphises certainly
appears to show a foot soldier, some times attributed as a hoplite. In addition
to the possibility that some Yu-chi nobles dismounted to fight at times it
seems unlikely that the Yu-chi would not have levied soldiers from the various
towns they now controlled. These 'walled towns' as the Chinese call them could
hardly have provided any reasonable number of cavalry, so it is logical that
the Yu-chi armies developed an infantry wing, its importance and size is
debatable.
One other item was certainly added to the army in this period. By the time
Apollonius passes through the region, the nomads he encounters have elephants,
probably traded with the Indian, Greek and Saca kings
to the south. Some may well have been captured from Greek kings when
So what can be surmised of the Yu-chi army at this time.
It is a period during which the army changes though (I assume) not to a very
great extent. The Yu-chi depend on light horsemen
using a bow to harass the enemy at close range in large groups. In addition
they already possess or begin to develop a group of armored horsemen intended
to fight at close range. With greater access to the metal working of
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Great Kushan Empire
A large part of the Kushan nobility at this time
probably fought from horse back with the heavier parts of the Kushan army, the so-called cataphracts.
Nikonorov suggests that this was developed in the
Yu-chi period and continued into the period of Kushan
domination.
The coins of Kajula, Vima Takto, Vima Kadphises
and Kanishka show the king usually unarmored, or with
lighter armor than the later Kushan kings. In many
coins Kanishka still appears to have a bow, but this interpretion is debatable. It is on a coin of Kanishka that we have the first representation I know of,
of an armored horse.
We also have some descriptions of battle tactics. Including
the dubious Buddhist texts and traditions which record elephants leading the
attacks as well as chariots and other Indian forces in the Kushan
army. The Chinese sources now seem to indicate a mixed force of troops.
If this is the case then the period is a transitional one. Kajula
would have had to conquer the other Yabgu with pretty
much the same mix of light horse that the Yu-chi entered
What can be surmised is that a significant change must have occurred after the
conquest of Gandhara and
After the conquest the Kushans would have found
themselves with a lot of new subjects with a great number of very different
fighting techniques. Elephants begin to appear on the coins from Vima Kadphises onward so it is
likely that these either became the mounts of the rulers or increase their
status in Kushan military strategy.
The elephants are depicted with towers and a covering, read by Nikonorov as armor but possibly just padded material. If
Buddhist texts can be trusted enough to infer from them (and they cant) then we might suggest infantry were used to support
these elephants. Regardless the Kushans remained
famed for their horsemanship and the Bactrian plain probably provided most of
the manpower for the Kushan army.
In
Greek elements also remained in the region, and it
might be assumed that these had an independent military strength. As well as
the mercenaries which were certainly used, including possibly Iranian swordsmen
(to bolster an otherwise weak force of foot troops).
The later kings become increasingly heavily armored in this period and it is
more than likely that the heavy cataphracts often
discussed reaches numbers that are truly significant on the battlefield.
The assumption then is this. The Kushan army retains
its original dependence on the light horseman of the Yu-chi but probably to a
much lesser degree (as they now have 3 times as much are
to cover). The nobles and minor nobles of Kushan
origin now form an increasingly significant force of heavy cavalry, most still
on unarmored horses. In addition to this core army, the Kushans
add armies of an Indian origin with chariots and perhaps elephants in addition
to the Kushans own, mountain tribes, Greek and
possibly Saca inhabitants of northern
This concoction belongs to a dozen cultures and speak
an indeterminate number of languages. It must have been as colorful and
fascinating a display as the deities represented on the coins at the time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The lesser Kushans
After the death of Vasu Deva
Kushan fortunes are on the decline. The remaining
period consist essentially of Sassanid domination of
The evidence for this period is much more fragmentary but it would appear that
a lot of the variety of the earlier period was lost. The Kidarites
were predominantly cavalry as were the Sassanids both
it is likely using a mix of light and heavy cavalry as the Yu-chi had done
before them. In addition to which Satraps would have provided them with
additional
The largest change from the time of the Great Kushan
period is the reduction in the size of the empire, at not time did the area
ruled ever return to the size and influence of the period under the Kushan emporers. This must have
resulted in a dimunition of the size of the military
force the various groups could field.