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AFGHANISTAN

The history of Afghanistan

The history of Afghanistan, preceding the establishment of the Emirate of Afghanistan in 1823 is shared with that of neighbouring Iran, Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent. The Sadozai monarchy ruled the Afghan Durrani Empire( one of the strongest one in the world), considered the founding state of modern Afghanistan.[1]

Human habitation in Afghanistan dates back to the Middle Paleolithic era, and the country's strategic location along the historic Silk Road has led it to being described, picturesquely, as the ‘roundabout of the ancient world’.[2] The land has historically been home to various peoples and has witnessed numerous military campaigns, including those by the Persians, Alexander the Great, the Maurya Empire, Arab Muslims, the Mongols, the British, the Soviet Union, and most recently by a US-led coalition.[3] The various conquests and periods in both the Indian and Iranian cultural spheres[4][5] made the area a center for, Buddhism, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism and later Islam throughout history.[6]

The Durrani Empire is considered to be the foundational polity of the modern nation state of Afghanistan, with Ahmad Shah Durrani being credited as its Father of the Nation.[7] However, Dost Mohammad Khan is sometimes considered to be the founder of the first modern Afghan state.[8] Following the Durrani Empire's decline and the death of Ahmad Shah Durrani and Timur Shah, it was divided into multiple smaller independent kingdoms, including but not limited to Herat, Kandahar and Kabul. Afghanistan would be reunited in the 19th century after seven decades of civil war from 1793 to 1863, with wars of unification led by Dost Mohammad Khan from 1823 to 1863, where he conquered the independent principalities of Afghanistan under the Emirate of Kabul. Dost Mohammad died in 1863, days after his last campaign to unite Afghanistan, and Afghanistan was consequently thrown back into civil war with fighting amongst his successors. During this time, Afghanistan became a buffer state in the Great Game between the British Raj in South Asia and the Russian Empire. The British Raj attempted to subjugate Afghanistan but was repelled in the First Anglo-Afghan War. However, the Second Anglo-Afghan War saw a British victory and the successful establishment of British political influence over Afghanistan. Following the Third Anglo-Afghan War in 1919, Afghanistan became free of foreign political hegemony, and emerged as the independent Kingdom of Afghanistan in June 1926 under Amanullah Khan. This monarchy lasted almost half a century, until Zahir Shah was overthrown in 1973, following which the Republic of Afghanistan was established.

Since the late 1970s, Afghanistan's history has been dominated by extensive warfare, including coups, invasions, insurgencies, and civil wars. The conflict began in 1978 when a communist revolution established a socialist state, and subsequent infighting prompted the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan in 1979. Mujahideen fought against the Soviets in the Soviet–Afghan War and continued fighting amongst themselves following the Soviets' withdrawal in 1989. The Islamic fundamentalist Taliban controlled most of the country by 1996, but their Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan received little international recognition before its overthrow in the 2001 US invasion of Afghanistan. The Taliban returned to power in 2021 after capturing Kabul and overthrowing the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, thus bringing an end to the 2001–2021 war.[9] Although initially claiming it would form an inclusive government for the country, in September 2021 the Taliban re-established the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan with an interim government made up entirely of Taliban members.[10] The Taliban government remains internationally unrecognized.[11]

Mazar e sharif

The culture of Afghanistan

  Afghanistan is the quintessential “crossroads of cultures” where the civilizations of the Near East, Central Asia, South Asia and China interacted over the millennia in a constantly shifting mixture of trade, cultural borrowings, migration, imperial conquests, and periodic conflict. This complex history of contacts gave rise to some of the most important archaeological, artistic, architectural, and textual treasures in world cultural heritage – encompassing cultures as diverse as the Bronze Age cities of Bactria, the Persian Empire, the easternmost colonies founded by Alexander the Great and his Hellenistic successors, the Kushan empire astride the Silk Road, the monumental Buddhas of Bamiyan, and the Timurid masterpieces of late medieval Islamic architecture in Herat.

Tragically, the cultural heritage of Afghanistan has been devastated by four decades of continuous war from the Soviet invasion of 1979 and continuing up to the present. The National Museum of Afghanistan — the most important repository of cultural heritage in that country — was devastated in this conflict. An estimated 70% of the objects were looted, while 90% of the object registration records were destroyed.

Since 2012, the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures (ISAC) has been carrying four major projects of cultural heritage preservation in Afghanistan, supported by major grants from the US Department of State through the American Embassy in Kabul:

  1. The National Museum of Afghanistan-Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures (NMA-ISAC) Partnership

  2. The Afghan Heritage Mapping Project (AHMP)

  3. The Core Operations Infrastructure Grant

  4. The Mobile Museum Outreach Project

These projects are under the direction of Prof. Gil Stein (Principal Investigator), with administrative support from Brendan Bulger (ISAC Program Administrator) and conservation assistance by Laura D’Alessandro and Alison Whyte from the ISAC Museum. The Program Field Director in Afghanistan is Alejandro Gallego Lopez, while our head conservator in Kabul is Fabio Colombo. Our work in Kabul takes place thanks to the support of our colleagues at the US Department of State Dr. Laura Tedesco, Grachelle Javellana and Vitessa del Prete. 

Publications of the ISAC Cultural Heritage Preservation Work in Afghanistan can be found in ISAC's annual reports (from 2012 to the present), in the ISAC member magazine News & Notes, and in a number of peer reviewed journals.

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