Online Encyclopedia

TAJIK, or PARSIWAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 365 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAJIK, or PARSIWAN  , a subject
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race of
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Afghanistan . Underlying the predominant
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Pathan elements in the country, the Tajik (Tajak, or Tausik) represents the
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original Persian possessor of the
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soil, who still speaks his
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mother tongue and therefore calls himself Parsiwan . There are pure Persians in Afghanistan, such as the Kizilbashes of
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Kabul and the Naoshirwanis of Kharan; but the name Tajik " stranger ") appears to be applied only to an admixture of original Arab and Persian stock, who are the slaves of the community—hewers of wood and drawers of
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water . Everywhere the Tajiks are the cultivators in rural districts, and the shopkeepers and clerks in the towns . They are a
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fine, athletic
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people, generally
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fair in complexion, and assimilate in aspect, in dress, and much in manners to the Afghans, but they are never nomadic . The Tajik is as much the slave of the Pathan in Afghanistan as is the
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Hindki (whose origin is similar) in the plains of the
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Indus . Yet the Tajik population of the richly-cultivated districts north of Kabul proved themselves to be of good fighting material in the Afghan war of 1879-80, and the few Kizilbashes that are to be found in the
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Indian army are brave soldiers . The number of the Tajiks in Afghanistan is estimated at 900,000 . The name itself originally occurs in the Pahlavi writings, and is explained to mean, first, the
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Arabs in general, then their descendants born in
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Persia and elsewhere out of
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Arabia, and, lastly, the Persians in general and their descendants born in Turkestan and elsewhere out of Persia . Tajik thus came to be the collective name of all communities of Iranian stock and Persian speech wherever found in Central
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Asia . These are co-extensive with the former eastward and northward limits of the Persian
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empire; but, after the ascendancy of the
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Turki races, they became the subject element in Turkestan, Afghanistan, Bokhara,
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Khiva, Kashgaria, while still politically dominant in
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Badakshan, Wakhan, Darwaz, Kost and
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Karateghin . In most of these places the Tajiks, with the kindred
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Galchas, seem to form the bulk of the population, the distinction being that " Tajik " is applied rather to the settled and more civilized lowlanders of
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modern Persian speech, " Galcha " to the highlanders of Ferghana,
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Kohistan, Wakhan, &c., who speak either archaic forms of Persian or dialects intermediate between the Iranian and Sanskritic branches of the Indo-
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European linguistic
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family .

But, although mainly of Iranian stock, with

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light complexion and
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regular features, the Tajiks claim Arab descent, regarding the
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district about Bagdad as their primeval home, and considering themselves the descendants of the Arabs who overran Central Asia in the first century of the
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Hejira . At the same time, " it is evident that the inhabitants of the greater
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part of this region (Central Asia) must from an early period have come in contact with the successive waves of
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Turkish (Turki) and even Mongol population which broke over them; accordingly we find that, although the type is essentially Iranian, it has undergone a certain modification " (Capt . J . M . Trotter, Bokhdra, p . 169) . The
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term Tajik must be distinguished from Sarte, the latter simply meaning " trader " or " shopkeeper," and being applied indiscriminately to the settled as opposed to the nomad element, and especially to the urban populations, of what-ever race, in Central Asia . The Tajiks are known as rats on the west side of the
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Caspian (
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Baku,
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Lenkoran, &c.) .

End of Article: TAJIK, or PARSIWAN
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PETER GUTHRIE TAIT (1831-1901)
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