³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ

Oxus chariot model

Contributed by British Museum

A model of a chariot, found as part of a treasure hoard in what is now Tadjikistan. © Trustees of the British Museum

Image 1Ìý´Ç´ÚÌý4

This gold chariot comes from a hoard found near the Oxus river in Central Asia. It depicts a driver and probably a satrap - a governor of the Persian Empire. Satraps kept the peace, regulated the law and collected taxes in one of the empire's administrative provinces. The Persians built many new roads to enable communication and developed the first postal service. Religions freely intermingled in the empire and an image of the Egyptian dwarf-god Bes can be seen on the front of this chariot.

How was such a vast empire ruled?

Cyrus the Great transformed Persia from a small kingdom to the world's first superpower. The Persian Empire was the first to span three continents. Cyrus was a tolerant leader to those who submitted to his rule. He and his successors allowed their subjects to speak their own languages, practise their own religion and follow their own way of life. Rulers throughout history would be influenced by this 200-year period of Persian rule known as the Pax Persica (Persian Peace).

The founding fathers of the USA read about the life of the Persian ruler Cyrus before writing the American constitution

Networks of a vast empire

The image on the front of this chariot represents the Egyptian god Bes, who was adopted by the Persian religion and had a role as a protector.

Images of Bes and other deities were often used at this time on lynchpins to protect the wheels and the chariot, and therefore the lives of passengers. This is similar to the use of ‘protector eyes’ that some people have hanging in their cars today.

The use of an Egyptian god tells us something about the cultural and religious exchange across such a large and multi-cultural empire. There was a harmonious co-existence among the very different peoples within it based on respect, tolerance and dialogue between religions.

The chariot is also a reminder of the massive network of Persian roads and highways which connected remote places in the three continents of the Persian Empire, from Central Asia and India to Europe and Africa. These roads were extremely safe for travellers, even women travelling alone and were also used by merchants, by the military and by the first postal system in the world, called the ‘fast messengers’.

We can’t be entirely sure why this chariot was made. It could be a work of art commissioned by an official, a votive object dedicated to a temple as a religious offering, or it might have been a toy, belonging to the children of an aristocratic family.

Whatever its purpose, the chariot tells us a lot about local metalwork at the time as well as revealing something about artistic and cultural exchange within the Persian Empire as a result of transport, road systems and trade.

Shahrokh Razmjou, Curator, British Museum

How was this tiny chariot made?

This tiny gold model is a very complex work of art whose small size and fineness displays the outstanding level of craftsmanship of the goldsmith who created it.

It is made from an alloy of gold, copper and silver. Several microscopic shiny grey inclusions containing iridium and osmium are embedded in the gold of the bodies of two of the horses. This is typical of gold panned from river sands. The amount of copper, however, is too high to have come with the gold, so it must have been intentionally added by melting the two together. Gold is a very soft metal and the addition of copper hardens it, making the chariot sturdier.

The two men and four horses are hollow. The goldsmith made them from many pieces of gold sheet cut out and soldered together. This used much less gold than a solid casting, but required great skills to create the delicate forms.

He must have created each half of the bodies by hammering pieces of gold into shaped moulds, and added the features on the men’s faces and details like the horses’ manes and heads with a fine tool. The tails and legs of the horses were mechanically inserted and soldered to the horses’ bodies.

To make the chariot the craftsman hammered a single sheet of gold flat, then cut it and folded it to the required shape. He used twisted wires both with round and square sections to produce the reins, the rim and spokes of the wheels. The poles linking the chariot to the yoke are solid gold hammered into round section wires. The two wheels are connected by a wire which runs underneath the chariot and enabled the wheels to turn; a particularly difficult and fiddly part of the work.

Only through scientific investigation have we found the evidence for the skills and art of the anonymous ancient goldsmith in producing a combination of very fine gold working techniques and an exquisite object.

Aude Mongiatti, Conservator, British Museum

Comments are closed for this object

Comments

  • 1 comment
  • 1. At 17:36 on 6 October 2010, Ruth Staines wrote:

    I was first drawn to the existence of this piece in 1999 when I went on a horse riding trip to Northern Iran with an amazing American lady, Louise Firouz, who had married a Persian prince in the 1950's, and had lived in Iran ever since.She told us that in the 60's, while searching for ponies suitable for her children to ride, she came across waht she recognised as an exquisite little stallion, pulling a huge load in a small town near the southern shores of the Caspian Sea. She purchased him, and others she found in the region over several decades, and with careful breeding established the small but elegant animal we know today as the Caspian Horse. Thanks to exports, early on to UK thanks to the Duke of Edinburgh agreeing to accept a pair, the breed is now established across the world, albeit still with small numbers. Louise enlisted the help of experts including archaeologists and historians, and later geneticits, to research into the history of these little horses, and felt that the horses drawing this chariot, being so so obviously small, gave credence to her theory that they were a very ancient type. The horses drawing the chariot in the lion hunt, on the photo below the Oxus chariot, are similarly tiny.

Share this link:

Most of the content on A History of the World is created by the contributors, who are the museums and members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ or the British Museum. The ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site’s House Rules please Flag This Object.

A History of the World in 100 objects

Read the transcript

Part of

About this object

Click a button to explore other objects in the timeline

Location

Takht-I Kuwad, Tadjikistan

Culture
Period

About 500-300 BC

Theme
Size
H:
7.5cm
W:
19.5cm
Colour
Material

View more objects from people in London.

Find out more

Podcast

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ iD

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ navigation

³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Â© 2014 The ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.