Pakistan: The Archaeological Marvel

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Haveli of Kanwar Nau Nihal Singh -a jewel in the heart of Lahore (third Maharaja of Sikh dynasty) Grandson of Maharajah Ranjit Singh inside Mori Gate, Lahore.

Built around the late 1830s
Pic 24-11-24



1733006029755.png
 
Conservation work is underway at the 𝗔𝗻𝗮𝗿𝗸𝗮𝗹𝗶 𝗧𝗼𝗺𝗯, led by Walled City Lahore Authority.














470012135_971756484981117_5845314734144041948_n.jpg
 
Kharpocho Fort Skardu, GB

1734468589152.png
 
The Last Suspension Bridge of the Old Silk Route !!!! Located in Badals District Nagar, this bridge has a great history!!!!!

Before the construction of the Karakoram Highway, traffic and trade continued through this bridge on foot and in pockets from Hunza to Gilgit and from Nagar to Gilgit.

Trade caravans of Muslims from Yarkand Tashkhurgan and Kashgar traveled through this Old Silk Route to subcontinent and Saudi Arabia for Hajj.
They have been traveling to Arabia. ..


1739390124210.png
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
The Kanishka stupa was a monumental stupa established by the Kushan king Kanishka during the 2nd century CE in today's Shah-ji-Dheri on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan.

Archaeologists have examined the remains of the structure and determined that it had a diameter of 286 feet. Ancient Chinese manuscripts tell of Buddhist pilgrims reporting that the stupa had a height of 591–689 feet (The measurements they stated were in Chinese units, which were 600–700. This height was equal to about 180–210 meters or 591–689 feet.

Sung Yun describes the stupa in the following terms:

"The king proceeded to widen the foundation of the Great Tower 300 paces and more. To crown all, he placed a roof-pole upright and even. Throughout the building he used ornamental wood, he constructed stairs to lead to the top....there was an iron-pillar, 3-feet high with thirteen gilded circlets. Altogether the height from the ground was 700 feet.”

The stupa was discovered and excavated in 1908–1909 by a British archælogical mission, and led to the discovery in its base of the Kanishka casket, a six-sided rock crystal reliquary containing three small fragments of bone,[1] relics of the Buddha (which were transferred to Mandalay, Burma for safekeeping, where they still remain), and a dedication in Kharoshthi involving Kanishka.[2]

According to Buddhist the building of the stupa was foretold by the Buddha:

"The Buddha, pointing to a small boy making a mud tope….[said] that on that spot Kanishka would erect a tope by his name." Vinaya sutra [3]
The same story is repeated in a Khotanese scroll found at Dunhuang, which first described how Kanishka would arrive 400 years after the death of the Buddha. The account also describes how Kanishka came to raise his stupa:

"A desire thus arose in [Kanishka to build a vast stupa]….at that time the four world-regents learnt the mind of the king. So for his sake they took the form of young boys….[and] began a stupa of mud....the boys said to [Kanishka] ‘We are making the Kanishka-stupa.’….At that time the boys changed their form....[and] said to him, ‘Great king, by you according to the Buddha’s prophecy is a Sangharama to be built wholly (?) with a large stupa and hither relics must be invited which the meritorious good beings...will bring."

8e3d7f892ddbc11e309e3f4cb19cb915.jpg


Remnants of the Kanishka Stupa in Shah-Ji-Ki-Dheri.



f099de6d1542fde7e83272d9fac531c9.jpg


The famous inscribed Kanishka Casket found at the site of the Kanishka Stupa and containing relics of the Buddha.




Buddha relics from Kanishka's stupa in Peshawar, Pakistan, now in Mandalay, Burma. Teresa Merrigan, 2005
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanishka_stupa
 
A 19th century Palace(downtown Saddar Peshawar):
0d06e596d69461a09b2212fe504be651.jpg



Some Old Heritage Buildings:
1)
bb446e94029289899ba874cf8622a94b.jpg



2)

adf85422840620eaf4ee77e498334793.jpg



3) Notice the fine art work on just one of these ancient buildings :woot:

3d85571e0cc9ebf8aabf0a3b5b08ef5c.jpg
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Country Watch Latest

Latest Posts

Back
Top