in BC, by
William Robert Shepherd (1923) The Carduchii were a group of warlike tribes that inhabited an area stretching from the
Botan River in the south to an area north of the present-day Turkish city of
Cizre. The territory they came to inhabit was situated halfway between the
Assyrian and
Armenian satrapies (provinces) of the
Achaemenid Empire (550 BC – 330 BC). The Mesopotamian lowlands in the south and Armenia in the north were the two primary cultural influences on the region, with the former seemingly have a stronger impact. The area had most likely been incorporated into the Achaemenid Empire during the reign of its first ruler,
Cyrus the Great (). The 4th-century BC historical book
Anabasis by Xenophon is the first historical record to refer to the existence of the Carduchii. Their lands was part of the route that the Greek force known as the
Ten Thousand marched through following the
Battle of Cunaxa in 401 BC. Xenophon described the Carduchii as villagers who worked in agriculture,
viticulture, craftsmanship, and animal husbandry. Due to their lack of weapons, the Carduchii were unwilling to engage the Greeks directly. Instead, they resorted to guerrilla warfare, shooting arrows, throwing stones, and blocking drains against the Greeks. This strategy fit well with the terrain's features. Only small canyons and streamlets pierced the steeply forested mountain folds. Because of this, the Greeks could only approach rocky canyons and limited pathways. As a result, the Carduchii's blockade of these routes and occupation of higher land across the path posed a significant challenge for the Greeks. The Carduchii later expanded their authority beyond the Botan river in the south, eventually gaining the possession of an area adjoining the northern part of the
Tigris River and located between the
Batman and
Khabur rivers in southeast Anatolia. During the Hellenistic period, the Carduchii established the short lived independent kingdom of
Gordyene between 165–95 BC, seemingly as a result of the power vacuum that took place following the weakening of the Greek
Seleucid Empire (312 BC – 63 BC). Although it was frequently argued in the past that the modern
Kurds are the descendants of the Carduchii, it is far more likely that the Kurds descend from the
Cyrtians, who appear in the works of
Polybius,
Livy, and
Strabo. Historian John Limbert, writing in 1968, states that "older scholarship believed that the modern Kurds were direct descendants of the Kardukhoi" but that "this view has been widely disputed since the beginning of the twentieth century." == References ==