The
Yuezhi or
Rouzhi (,
Wade–Giles Yüeh-chih) were an ancient
Indo-European people originally settled in an arid grassland area spanning the modern Chinese provinces of
Xinjiang and
Gansu. After the Yuezhi were defeated by the
Xiongnu, in the 2nd century BCE, a small group, known as the Little Yuezhi, fled to the south, while the majority migrated west to the
Ili Valley, where they displaced the
Sakas (
Scythians). Driven from the Ili Valley shortly afterwards by the
Wusun, the Yuezhi migrated to
Sogdia and then
Bactria, where they are often identified with the
Tókharoi (Τοχάριοι) and
Asioi of Classical sources. They then expanded into northern
South Asia, where they became unified under one of their five leading branches, who founded the
Kushan Empire. The Kushan empire stretched from
Turfan in the
Tarim Basin to
Pataliputra on the
Gangetic plain at its greatest extent, and played an important role in the development of the
Silk Road and the
transmission of Buddhism to
China.