Kushan Tè-kok

Kushan Tè-kok1 sè-kí ê sî-chūn tùi Tiong-a chit-ê Go̍at-chi (月氏) pō͘-cho̍k hoat-tián chhut-lâi ê kok-ka, pat khok-tiong kàu Ìn-tō͘ chhù-tāi-lio̍k ê pak-pō͘. In khah heng-ōng ê nî-tāi tāi-io̍k sī 105 nî kàu 250 nî.

Kushan Empire
Κοϸανο
Βασιλεία Κοσσανῶν
कुषाण वंश
30 nî–375 nî
A map of India in the 2nd century AD showing the extent of the Kushan Empire (in green) during the reign of Kanishka. Most historians consider the empire to have variously extended as far east as the middle Ganges plain,[1] to Varanasi on the confluence of the Ganges and the Jumna,[2][3] or probably even Pataliputra.[4][5]
A map of India in the 2nd century AD showing the extent of the Kushan Empire (in green) during the reign of Kanishka. Most historians consider the empire to have variously extended as far east as the middle Ganges plain,[1] to Varanasi on the confluence of the Ganges and the Jumna,[2][3] or probably even Pataliputra.[4][5]
Siú-to͘Peshawar (Puruṣapura)
Taxila (Takṣaśilā)
Mathura (Mathurā)
Thong-iōng gí-giânGreek (official until c. 127)[note 1]
Bactrian[note 1] (official from c. 127)[note 2]
Gandhari Prakrit[8]
Hybrid Sanskrit[8]
Chong-kàu
Hinduism[9]
Buddhism[10]
Zoroastrianism[11]
Jîn-bîn hō-miâKushanas (Yuezhi)
Chèng-húMonarchy
Emperor 
• 30–80
Kujula Kadphises
• 350–375
Kipunada
Le̍k-sú sî-kîClassical Antiquity
• Kujula Kadphises unites Yuezhi tribes into a confederation
30 nî
• Subjugated by the Sasanians, Guptas, and Hepthalites[12]
375 nî
Bīn-chek
200 (low-end estimate of peak area)[13]2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi)
200 (high-end estimate of peak area)[14]2,500,000 km2 (970,000 sq mi)
Hoè-pèKushan drachma
í-chêng kok-ka
í-āu kok-ka
Indo-Greek Kingdom
Indo-Parthian Kingdom
Indo-Scythians
Northern Satraps
Western Satraps
Maha-meghavahanas
Sasanian Empire
Kushano-Sasanian Kingdom
Gupta Empire
Kidarites
Nagas of Padmavati
Nagas of Vindhyatabi
Ū Kùi-song ông Heraios lâng-thâu ê gîn-kak-á.

Notes

Tsù-kái