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Kizil Caves

The Kizil Caves (also romanized as Qizil or Qyzyl; Uyghur: قىزىل مىڭ ئۆي, lit.'The Thousand Red Houses'; Chinese: 克孜尔千佛洞; lit. 'Kizil Caves of the Thousand Buddhas') are a set of Buddhist rock-cut caves located near Kizil Township (克孜尔乡; Kèzī'ěr Xiāng) in Baicheng County, Aksu Prefecture, Xinjiang, China. The site is located on the northern bank of the Muzat River 65 kilometres (75 km by road) west of Kucha.[1][2] This area was a commercial hub of the Silk Road.[3] The caves have an important role in Central Asian art and in the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism, and are said to be the earliest major Buddhist cave complex in China, with development occurring between the 3rd and 8th centuries CE.[3] The caves of Kizil are the earlier of their type in China, and their model was later adopted in the construction of Buddhist caves further east.[4] Another name for the site has been Ming-oi (明屋; 'The Thousand Houses'), although this term is now mainly used for the site of Shorchuk to the east.[5]

Kizil Caves
قىزىل مىڭ ئۆي (Uyghur)
克孜尔千佛洞 (Chinese)
Kizil Caves on the edge of the Tarim Basin. The Western Group of caves (caves 1–80) is seen at the forefront in perspective, while the Eastern Group (caves 136–201) appears far right in the background. The modern structures at the center approximately correspond to Caves 1 to 30.
Shown within Continental Asia
Kizil Caves (China)
Kizil Caves (Xinjiang)
LocationXinjiang, China
Coordinates41°47′04″N 82°30′17″E / 41.78444°N 82.50472°E / 41.78444; 82.50472Coordinates: 41°47′04″N 82°30′17″E / 41.78444°N 82.50472°E / 41.78444; 82.50472
Kizil Caves
Uyghur name
Uyghurقىزىل مىڭ ئۆي
Transcriptions
Latin YëziqiQizil Ming Öy
Yengi YeziⱪⱩizil Ming Ɵy
Siril YëziqiҚизил Миң өй
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese克孜尔千佛洞
Traditional Chinese克孜爾千佛洞

The Kizil Caves were inscribed in 2014 on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang'an-Tianshan Corridor World Heritage Site.[6]

Caves

 
Western Group of Caves (caves 1–80), as far as the entrance of the Central Valley.[7]
 
Map of Kizil Caves (German names)
 
Global panorama of Kizil, from caves 1 to 229.
 
A typical "Central Pillar" cave, with main vaulted hall, central pillar with niche, two side corridors and back room (Cave 219)
 
A side corridor, looking towards the back room. Cave 171.[8]

The Kizil Caves complex is the largest of the ancient Buddhist cave sites that are associated with the ancient Tocharian kingdom of Kucha, as well as the largest in Xinjiang. Other famous sites nearby are the Kizilgaha caves, the Kumtura Caves, Subashi Temple and the Simsim caves.[9][10] The Kizil Caves are "the earliest representative grottoes in China".[11] At the time the caves were created, the area of Kucha was following the orthodox Sarvastivadin school of Hinayana Buddhism, although an early and minority Dharmagupta presence has also been noted.[12] The simpler square caves may have been established by the Dharmagupta from the 4th century CE or earlier, while the "central pillar" caves, which flourished from the mid-6th century CE, can rather be associated with the Sarvastivadin school.[12]

Overview

There are 236 cave temples in Kizil, carved into the cliff stretching from east to west for a length of 2 km.[1] Of these, 135 are still relatively intact.[13] The earliest caves are dated, based in part on radioactive carbon dating, to around the year 300.[14] Most researchers believe that the caves were probably abandoned sometime around the beginning of the 8th century, after Tang influence reached the area.[15] Documents written in Tocharian languages were found in Kizil and a few of the caves contain Tocharian and Sanskrit inscriptions which give the names of a few rulers.

Many of the caves have a central pillar design, whereby pilgrims may circumambulate around a central column incorporating a niche for a statue of the Buddha, which is a representation of the stupa.

There are three other types of caves: square caves, caves "with a colossal image", and monastic cells (kuti). Around two-thirds of the caves are kutis which are monks' living quarters and store-houses and these caves do not contain mural paintings.[10] Chronology remains the subject of debate.[16][10]

"Central pillar" cave structure

In the typical "central pillar" design, pilgrims can circumambulate around a central column incorporating a niche for a statue of the Buddha, which is a representation of the stupa. The so-called "central pillar" which appears on a plan is actually not a pillar at all but only the rock at the back of the cave, into which was bored a circular corridor allowing for circumambulation.[17]

A large vaulted chamber is located in front of the "central pillar" column and a smaller rear chamber behind with two tunnel-like corridors on the sides linking these spaces. In the front chamber, a three-dimensional image of Buddha would have been housed in a large niche serving as the focus of the interior, however, none of these sculptures have survived at Kizil.[18] The rear chamber may feature the parinirvana scene in the form of a mural or large sculpture, and in some cases, a combination of both. The "central pillar" layout is possibly related to the structural design of Kara Tepe in northern Bactria.[19]

The program of the paintings in the "central pillar" caves generally follows a fixed arrangement: the walls of the main cella show sermons of the Buddha, the ceiling has rhomboid vignettes alluding to Jatakas, the central niche has the scene of the Indrasala Cave. The back room or corridor has scenes related to the Parinirvana, and finally the painting over the exit is related to the Tusita Heaven and the future Buddha Maitreya.[20]

Exploration

 
Japanese Expedition to Kizil in 1902–1904: Watanabe and Hori
 
German Expedition at Kizil, in front of Cave 4, in 1906 (colorized). Left to right: assistant H. Pohrt, Theodor Bartus in uniform, Albert Grünwedel seated, and Albert von Le Coq standing.[21][22]
 
Grünwedel recording a painting. Cave 4, 1906
 
Cave 4 Vajrapani, removed original and in-situ drawing by Grunwedel
Grünwedel recording a painting in the left corridor, right wall of Cave 4,[23] and original Vajrapani with his drawing from the same location. The original was sent to Germany, but seized by Russia at the end of World War II, and is now in the Hermitage Museum.[24]

The Kizil Caves were first discovered and explored in 1902–1904 by the Ōtani expedition, a Japanese expedition under Tesshin Watanabe (渡辺哲信) and Kenyu Hori (堀賢雄), funded by Count Otani, but the expedition left hurriedly after four months of exploration in the area of Kucha, following a local earthquake.[25][26]

The Kizil caves were then explored by Albert Grünwedel, head of the Third German Turfan Expedition (December 1905 – July 6, 1907).[27] Albert von Le Coq was also part of the third German expedition and was under the direction of Albert Grünwedel, but only remained until June 1906, when he had to leave for British India due to a heavy illness.[28] The caves were photographed, drawings were made, and large portions of the murals were removed and sent to Germany.[29][28]

Grünwedel removed a great number of paintings, but was careful to make records before doing so in order to retain their archaeological value, and to photograph or draw them before cutting them out, out of fear that they could be destroyed upon removal or during transport.[30] He used a canvas to take quite precise records of the paintings. For example, Grünwedel recounts how he discovered a very interesting mural with warriors in the Cave of the Painters (207). Intending to remove it, he first made a precise drawing. But once the drawing was made, the mural disintegrated upon removal and was lost, except for a few fragments still in-situ.[31] Altogether, the Third German Expedition still removed many paintings, and shipped almost 120 crates of murals to Berlin.[32] Grünwedel published the result of his explorations in 1912 in Altbuddhistische Kultstätten in Chinesisch Turkistan, Bericht über archäologische Arbeiten von 1906 bis 1907 bei Kuča, Qarašahr und in der Oase Turfan.[28]

Grünwedel discovered that the Kizil Caves were essential in the understanding of the development of Buddhist art, and suggested some forms of Western artistic influences as well:

For years I have been endeavouring to find a credible thesis for the development of Buddhist art, and primarily to trace the ancient route by which the art of imperial Rome, etc..., reached the Far East. What I have seen here goes beyond my wildest dreams. If only I had hands enough to copy it all, [for] here in Kizil are about 300 caves, some of them containing frescoes, all of them very old and fine."

— Letter by Grünwedel, April 2, 1906.[33]

The French explorer Paul Pelliot and his photographer Charles Nouette, who were in Kucha from January 1907, visited Kizil soon after the German mission, from September 1, 1907, over a few days, and Charles Nouette took many beautiful and informative photographs.[34][35][36]

Albert von Le Coq came back to Kizil and surrounding areas in 1913–1914, heading the Fourth German Expedition, removing many paintings, including those Grünwedel had left in place, but generally taking much fewer records than his predecessor.[32][37]

Datation schemes

Albert Grünwedel and the German school

Datation scheme according to the German school[38][39]
Stage I
"Gandharan"
Stage II
"Sasanian"
 
 
 
 
500–600 CE:
Caves 207, 118, 76, 117, 77, 212, 83, 84
600–650 CE:
Caves 67, 198, 199, 110, 129, 114, 38, 205, 224, 7, 206, 13
Circa 650 CE:
Caves 8, 219, 3, 4, 63, 58, 178, 175, 181
After 650 CE:
Caves 123, 185, 184, 188

In 1912 Grünwedel proposed in 1912 a structural scheme which has remained influential throughout the 20th century. It is essentially based on the definition of two schools of art, "Style 1" and "Style 2".[38] Style I, qualified as "Indo-Iranian", derives from the Art of Gandhara, and murals tend to have dark cinnabar backgrounds with green and orange color schemes and natural shading, and the architecture tends to consist in squarish caves with cupola ceilings.[38][39] Style II derives from Sasanian art, and is characterized by a strong contrast between brilliant green-blue pigments.[38] Architecturally, the caves of Style II have a central stupa-pillar surrounded by a circular corridor for circumambulation. According to Grünwedel, Style II was before the 8th century CE. After Grünwedel, Albert von Le Coq and Ernst Waldschmidt proposed dates, based in the epigraphic inscriptions found in the caves. They proposed to date Style I from 500 to 600, and Style II from 600 to 650 CE. These chronological guidelines remained extremely influential throughout the 20th century, as late as the 1980s.[38]

Modern attempts at Carbon 14 dating

Various attempts at radio-carbon analysis were made over the years, with various degrees of success, but with the main effect of pushing back the dates of the first caves to circa 300 BCE, and challenging the German classification according to styles and colors schemes.[38]

In 1979, a Chinese institute (文物保护科学技术研究所, Wenwu baohu kexue jishu yanjiusuo) carbon-tested caves 63, 47, 13.[40]

Su Bai

Datation scheme according to Su Bai (1981)[39][38]
Stage I
"Initial stage"
310 CE +-80
350 CE +-60
Stage II
"Flourishing stage"
395 CE +-65
465 CE +-65
Stage III
"Decline stage"
545 CE +-75
685 CE +-65
Caves 38, 47, 6, 80, 13 Caves 77, 17, 171, 104, 139, 119, 35, 36, 92, 118, 39, 49, 14 Caves 201, 70, 148, 234, 187, 185, 182, 183, 181, 189, 190, 172, 8, 107B, 107A, 180, 197
Huo and Wang (1993)[38][39]
Stage I
200–350 CE
Stage II
350–500 CE
Stage III
500–700 CE
Caves 118, 92, 77, 47, 48, 117, 161, 196, 224, 17, 104 Caves 38, 76, 83, 84, 114, 13, 32, 171, 172 Caves 110, 57, 212, 81, 184, 188, 199, 207, 8, 205, 99, 4, 123, 206, 178

In 1979–1981, Su Bai (宿白) of Beijing University (北京大学历史系考古教研室, Beijing daxue lishi xi kaogu jiaoyanshi) made an influential carbon-testing campaign for caves 47, 3, 38, 6, 171, 17, 190, 8.[40] Based on these dates and on an analysis of the architecture of the caves (from the simpler to the more sophisticated), Su Bai proposed an influential dating scheme, pushing back the dates of the first caves to circa 300 CE.[39]

Huo and Wang

In 1989–1993, Huo and Wang (中国社会科学院考古研究所, Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan kaogu yanjiusuo) tested the following caves: 224, 76, 4, 8, 34, 68, 77, 98, 104, 114, 117, 118, 119, 125, 129, 135, 162, 171, 180, 189, 196, 198, 206, 212, 219, 227, 27, 39, 48, 60, 69, 84, 91, 92, 99, 123, 139, 161, 165, 178, 207.[40] They proposed a chronology which has some significant differences with the chronology previously proposed by Su Bai.[39]

Japanese teams of Nagoya University (日本名古屋大学) tested in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2011 the following caves: 8, 171, 224, 13, 67, 76, 77, 92, 205.[40]

Many of the results remain inconclusive, sometimes even contradictory, and the historical period in question is rather too short in relation to the uncertainty margin of Carbon 14 datation, to provide a meaningful segmentation of the caves.[41] Most narrow Carbon dates given for the Kizil Caves refer to a 68% probability level (1σ), which implies a significant level of uncertainty, and when dates are adjusted to the 95% probability level (2σ) as standard archaeological practice requires,[42] then the timespan between the earliest and lowest dates becomes so large (about 200 to 300 years),[43] as to make individual comparisons between the caves meaningless.[44] Most researchers now use an approach combining artistic and architectural analysis together with carbon-dating, as a way to approach a reliable nomenclature, as proposed by Marylin Martin Rhie from 2001.[39]

Caves, murals and architecture

 
Buddhist 2nd-century CE Sanskrit text in Middle Brahmi script, Ming-oi, Kizil Caves. First line: "... [pa]kasah tasmad asma(d)vipaksapratipaksas...". Carbon-dated to 130 CE (80–230 CE), corresponding to the rule of the Kushan king Kanishka.

In 1906, the German expedition team of Albert Grünwedel explored the Kizil Caves. Albert von Le Coq, who worked under the direction Grünwedel, had to leave in June 1906 due to health problems.[28] Grünwedel generally photographed and copied the murals, before removing those he considered essential.[28] Most of the fragments removed are now in Museum of Asian Art (formerly Museum für Indische Kunst) in Dahlem, Berlin.[45] Other explorers removed some fragments of murals, that may now be found in museums in Russia, Japan, Korea and United States. Although the site has been both damaged and looted, around 5000 square metres of wall paintings remain,[46] These murals mostly depict Jataka stories, avadanas, and legends of the Buddha, and are an artistic representation in the tradition of the Hinayana school of the Sarvastivadas.[1]

Carbon-testing and stylistical analysis helped determine three main periods in the paintings at Kizil, which cover a period from 300 CE to 650 CE.[47] The early art of Kizil correspond to the Western school of art in the Tarim Basin, and mainly displays influences from Gandhara and the Iranian world, particularly influence from the Hephtalites, and no influence from East Asia.[48][49][50][51]

The Kizil Caves were designated by the Germans by a series of names, and have been separately numbered by the Chinese. A correspondence chart has been produced by Rhie.[52]

Some very early caves, now numbered 90–17 to 90–24, have been discovered since the 1990s in the lower parts of the cliff at the entrance of the central valley. These caves were square or rectangular with barrel-vaulted ceilings, but without any decorations.[53]

General characteristics

 
Blue pigment used on mural. Greco-Buddhist Wind God Boreas or Vayu, central part of the ceiling of Cave 38

A notable feature of the murals in Kizil is the extensive use of blue pigments, including the precious ultramarine pigment derived from lapis lazuli from Afghanistan. In the classification of the art of the region by Ernst Waldschmidt, there are three distinct periods:[1] the murals from the first phase are characterized by the use of reddish pigments, while those from the second phase used bluish pigments in abundance.[15] The earlier paintings reflect more Greco-Indian or Gandharan influences, while the second ones show Iranian (Sassanian) influences.[14] Later caves seem to have fewer legends and/or jatakas, being replaced by the repetitive designs of numerous small Buddhas (the so-called thousand Buddha motif), or sitting Buddhas with nimbuses.[1] The paintings of the first two phases showed a lack of Chinese elements.[15] The last phase, the Turkic-Chinese period, is most in evidence in the Turfan area, but in Kizil only two caves showed Tang Chinese influence.

Another characteristic of the Kizil murals is the division into diamond-shaped blocks in the vault ceilings of the main room of many caves. Buddhist scenes are depicted inside these diamond-shapes in many layers on top of one another to show the narrative sequences of the scenes.[1]

Color pigments

The pigments in the painting of the Kizil Caves have been analysed by X-ray diffraction analysis. The reds are primarily vermilion and red lead, which today are greatly discolored, and red ocher. Blue pigments are from lapis lazuli. Green pigments are from copper hydroxy chloride minerals such as atacamite. Brownish-black pigments are PbO2, obtained from the oxidation of red lead. White pigments were mainly obtained from gypsum.[11]

Style periods

A broad classification of styles, formalized by Le Coq and Waldschmidt in 1933,[54] has been generally accepted.[55]

The first style is called "Indo-Iranian style I", and cover all the early caves with delicate tone-on-tone paintings, using browns, oranges and greens. The name "Indo-Iranian" broadly denotes the artistic influence from India, combined with elements of Iranian art, that presided over the creation of the first cave paintings at Kizil.[54] The main representative caves of this style are the Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118), the Cave of the Painters (Cave 207), the Peacock Cave (Cave 76), the Overpainted Cave (Cave 117), the Cave of the Statues (Cave 77), and the Cave of the Seafarers (Cave 112). The small group of the Treasure Cave (Cave 83, 84) is considered as contemporary, but in a slightly personal style, sometimes called "Special Style" (Sonderstil).[54] The first style is only found in Kizil, except for one cave in nearby Kumtura: the Cave with the cupola.[54]

The second style is called "Indo-Iranian style II", and cover most of the other caves of Kizil, which use strongly contrasted colors and strong line strokes, using browns, oranges and greens and especially a vivid lapis-lazuli blue. The name "Indo-Iranian" again broadly denotes the artistic influence from India, combined with important influences from Central Asian and the Iranian world.[54] This style is further divided in three broad periods.[54]

Finally, a third Uighur-Chinese style appears in only two caves at Kizil.

First Indo-Iranian Style: delicate "orange and green" paintings

 
Kizil standing Buddha of the 1st period (300–395 CE). Tocharian B inscription reading:
 
Se pañäkte saṅketavattse ṣarsa papaiykau
"This Buddha by Sanketava's hand was painted".[56][57][58][59]
Often attributed in the past to the 7th century CE,[56] but now carbon dated to 245–340 CE.[60]

The Kingdom of Kucha, the most populous oasis in the Tarim Basin, occupied a strategic position on the Northern Silk Road, which brought it prosperity, and made it a wealthy center of trade and culture.[61] Kucha was part of the Silk Road economy, and was in contact with the rest of Central Asia, including Sogdiana and Bactria, and thus also with the cultures of India, Iran, and coastal areas of China.[62] Early visitors are known, such Maes Titianus.[63] Since the 2nd century CE, under the auspices of the Han dynasty and the Kushan Empire, numerous great Buddhist missionaries passed through the Tarim Basin on their way to China, such as the Parthian An Shigao, the Yuezhis Lokaksema and Zhi Qian, or the Indian Chu Sho-fu (竺朔佛).[64] Culture flourished, and Indian Sanskrit scriptures were being translated by the Kuchean monk and translator Kumarajiva (344–413 CE), himself the son of a Buddhist man from Kashmir and a Kuchean princess, sister of the King.[64][61]

The 1st Style, sometimes called "First Indo-Iranian style" to denote influences from India and Central Asia, covers a period from 300 to 500 CE, and is characterized by Gandharan themes and orange and green hues, having a strong flavour of India: female dancers and musicians are often naked or half-naked with full breasts.[65][66] The art of these paintings is quite refined, and forms the "Classical" period of the art of Kizil: the shades are delicate, the lines are fine and elegant, the colors blend progressively to give a sense of texture and volume.[67] The paintings of Bamiyan in northern Afghanistan are generally considered as the precussors of the art of the Kizil Caves.[68] Towards the end of the period, the influence of the art of Gandhara is considered as a consequence of the political unification of the area between Bactria and Kucha under the Hephthalites, which lasted from 480 to 560 CE, or a few decades later.[69]

Period 1: "Classical" early style (circa 300–400 CE)

The earliest paintings at Kizil belong to a "Classical" stage. Their style is very elegant and "painterly", with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume. The lines are refined and subtle, the colors blend softly.[70] This style is also characteristically Indian, and may be related to Gandhara or Kashmir.[70] This early style is examplified by the Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118), and may form a distinctive school. This contrasts with the style of the following stage, as seen in the panels in the cella of the Cave of the Statues, such as the "Cowherd Nanda", which is much bolder, using intense colors (but still browns, greens and oranges only), thicker lines and simpler patterns.[70]

Early paintings

Early inscriptions in Tocharian, an Indo-European language using a derivation of the Indian Brahmi script is used in several early paintings on tablets, as found in the Cave above the cave of the coffered ceiling (Cave 171),[56] or the Cave of the Niche (Cave 27).[71]

Earliest painted caves

Cave of the Hippocampi
(cave 118, 300–350 CE)
 
Reconstitution of the structure and known decorative layout of the main cella. It is a rectangular room with a transversal vaulted ceiling. Small figures of Kuchean devotees (about 40cm tall) appear next to the four corners of the mural of the back wall.[75][73]
 
Cave of the Hippocampi, inside the central valley
 
Plan of vestibule and main cella
 
In situ
Noble or wealthy donors from Kucha, wearing short tunics and short boots, and one armed with a dagger. Bottom right and top right corners next to the mural of the back wall.[73][74]

According to the Chinese chronicles of the Jin dynasty (265-316 CE), there were already a thousand Buddhist stupas and temples in Kucha by the 3rd century CE.[76][77]

The earliest painted caves at Kizil are thought to be Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118) and Treasure Caves C and B (Caves 83 and 84 respectively).[73] Cave 118, possibly the earliest of the three, is located deep inside the central valley.[78] Cave 83 and 84 are located at the entrance of the same valley. These caves have simple architectural structures, together with paintings in a clear style, reflecting Indian influences.[73] Noble or wealthy Tocharian donors from Kucha, wearing tunics, sometimes appear kneeling at the side of devotional paintings.[75]

"Cave of the Hippocampi" (Cave 118, 300–350 CE)

The Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118) was visited and photographed by the Third German Expedition of 1906–1907, and by the French expedition of Paul Pelliot in 1907.[27] Large portions of the murals were removed and sent to Germany, especially by von Le Coq in 1914, who removed the lunettes and the sides of the vault.[29]

The cave consists of a rectangular room (3.6 x 4.8 meters), the entrance being on the long side, and the ceiling of which forms a transverse barrel vault.[73] In front of the cave, which is accessible through a door, there used to be an equally wide open space, perhaps adorned with paintings, with remains of a pyramid roof.[73] The two rooms are separated by a 1-meter-thick wall.[29] The model for this kind of vaulted cave can be found in Bactria at Kara Tepe, dating from the 2nd-3rd century CE.[73]

In the middle of the back wall of the main cella stands a large painting (3.42 m wide and 2.16 m high), with an unidentified scene of a King with attendants, possibly "The skill and music in the heavenly palace" (天宫伎乐).[73] The attitudes and postures of the figures remind the reliefs of 3rd–4th century CE Nagarjunakonda.[73] A king is seated at the center, with numerous attendants surrounding him, especially a near-naked woman seated to his left.[29] They wear heavy round earrings with a central rosette design.[29] The modeling of the faces reminds of the statuary of Hadda in Gandhara.[29] The picture is elaborately framed by five successive decorative borders with naturalistic vine rinceau, suggestive of Roman art.[73]

The colors of the murals are various shades of brown, with smatterings of light green, but no blue, defining the so-called "orange and green" style.[73] The center of the ceiling has motifs of the sun and moon, two monks, and a bird flying with a human figure in its claws.[73] The sides of the ceiling are composed of diamond-shaped mountains, around which are naturalistic motifs of humans, animals, lakes and trees, a possibly Near-Eastern design which was generally adopted in later caves at Kizil.[73] A band of fantastic animals separated the ceiling from the side walls.[73] The general style appears to be early, and possibly derived from Kashmir and Cave 24 at Bamiyan.[73]

The lunettes bordering the ceiling display ornate Buddhist scenes.[29] The right lunette is difficult to identify, but seems to represent a king or a Bodhisattava bending towards a warrior figure.[29] The bottom portion shows a palatial scene, with a figure on a couch surrounded by devatas.[29] The left lunette shows the Buddha of the future Maitreya in the Tusita Heaven.[29] Below this is a depiction of Mount Sumeru surrounding by various Nagas, figures of devotees, and animals.[29]

Small figures of kneeling devotees in tunics, about 40 centimeters tall, some armed with a dagger, appear next to the left and right corners of the back-wall mural: probably noble and wealthy Kuchean donors of the 4th century CE.[75] One of the donors holds three burning incense cones. He is dressed in a bordered and turned-up, collarless tunic with close-fitting sleeves.[75] The tunic, which reaches slightly above the knee, is belted. The pants are of the same color and have the same border.[75] He wears gray calf boots with cruciate ligaments that run under the sole.[75] The figure behind holds a wreath and a kind of censer, is dressed in a black belted lap jacket with tight-fitting sleeves, which is provided with a red border all around, and an ample green dress.[75] Their hair is cut straight to the nuque, a hair style also referenced for the people of Kucha in the contemporary Chinese chronicles Jin Shu.[75][79] A kneeling monk appeared next to the top left corner of the main mural, in a red robe and with ocher shorn hair, engaged in shaping a ceremonial jar with a hammer, while behind him appeared a painter wearing a tunic similar to those of the donors on the other side, but whose head only remained.[80]

"Treasure Cave C" (Cave 83, 300–350 CE)
"Treasure Caves" (Cave 83, Cave 84)
(300–350 CE)
 
Caves 82–85, at the entrance of the central valley.
 
Caves 82, 83, 84, 85. Murals are visible in-situ on the back wall of caves 83 and 84, before they were removed by Grünwedel.
 
Plan of the Treasure Caves E, D (Cave 82), C (Cave 83), B (Cave 84) and A (Cave 85)

Cave 83 (Treasure Cave C) is part of the compact group of the four "Treasure Caves" (82, 83, 84, 85) located at the entrance of the central valley. It is a relatively small square cave (3.6x3.6m), with a podium in the middle, probably for a statue or a stupa.[73] Here the ceiling has collapsed, but probably formed a cupola.[73][81]

The back wall had a well-preserved scene of a Jataka story, the Rudrayana Legend from the Divyavadana, with king Rudrayana observing the dance of his Queen Chandraprabha, who appears nude except for thin veils and jewelry. During the dance, the king had a premonition that his wife would soon die, and she asked to become a Buddhist nun.[82][83][73] The style and attitudes of the figures are generally Indian, such as the Tribhanga posture of the dancer, of the way the King is seated. The flutering ribbons of the diadem worn by the king however, were adopted from Iranian royal symbolism.[81]

In this cave, the frames of the paintings, especially the vine rinceaux, are probably derived from Roman art of the 1st century CE.[73] This cave may be slightly earlier then Cave 84.[73] The mural was sent to Berlin by Grünwedel (Ref: MIK III 8443).[73]

These paintings are soft and delicate: volumes are defined by gradations of shades and colors, not by the sharp limit of a line. Overall, "the brush has the priority over drawing".[81]

"Treasure Cave B" (Cave 84, 300–350 CE)

Cave 84 (Treasure Cave B) was a square, probably domed cave (4x4m, here too the ceiling has collapsed), examplifying an earlier, simpler cave structure at Kizil, which is also known from Bamiyan (Cave 24).[73] The origin of the paintings in caves 84 seems Indian, probably from Kashmir.[73] They show groups of people standing around figures of the Buddha, who is either seated or standing.[73] The depth of placement is rather shallow, the figures are graceful with curved torsos. The faces are round and plump.[73] Rhies suggest a date of the first half of the 4th century for Cave 84.[73] All the paintings were sent to Berlin by Grünwedel.[73]

These two caves are adjoined to cave 82, an undecorated vihara also dated to 300–350 CE,[73] and cave 85, a small ruined cave.[73]

"Peacock Cave" (Cave 76, circa 400 CE)

Peacock Cave (Cave 76)
circa 400 CE
 
Internal layout of the main cella with central "peacock" dome and remaining paintings, as reported by Albert Grünwedel in 1912.[84][85] Most of the intact panels were dismantled and sent to the Museum für Indische Kunst, Berlin, Germany, where many were lost in the destructions of World War II.[84][86] This view faces the left wall ("2" on the plan).[87]
 
Peacock Cave location and plan (Cave 76). The main cella (top) has a large podium in the center (70cm high), and is crowned by a dome decorated with apsaras flying among peacock feathers.

The "Peacock Cave" (Pfauenhöhle in German)[88] is also an early cave, although dated slightly later to circa 400 CE, and next located "Cave of the statues" (Cave 77), in the second rocky outcrop just outside of the central valley.[89] It has been carbon dated to mid 4th-end 5th century CE.[90] It is said to be "the most recognizably Indian in the whole Kizil cycle".[91] The paintings echoe the Art of Gandhara and the murals of Ajanta Caves.[91]

A rectangular vestibule, the vaulted roof of which is now collapsed, preceded the main chamber.[84] The main chamber has a domed ceiling, an innovation first seen in early caves at Bamiyan, and in caves 83 and 84 at Kizil.[84][92] Numerous statuettes of the Buddha, as well as decorated wooden benches and low display tables were discovered in the antechamber of the cave.[93]

In the center of the main chamber, there is a large podium, on which probably stood some major statuary associated with the Buddha.[84] The architecture of the cave displays a marked advancement compared to earlier caves, but is anterior to the "central pillar" cave structure.[84][92] Several paintings illustrate the life of the Buddha. Only the left wall of the main cella had remained in great part intact by the time Grünwedel visited. The top part of the wall showed four important moments of the life of the Buddha, while celestial observers stand on a balcony above: 1) the Birth of Siddharta and the first Three Steps in which the Buddha appears naked and already tall, 2) the Four Encounters outside of the palace, 3) the Seduction of Mara's daughters, who are turned into old women, and 4) the Assault of Mara.[84][94][95] The middle row was almost entirely damaged, although scenes of the Preaching Buddha were identifiable.[96] The panels can be numbered 5 to 9, but 5 and 9 being half-panels going over the adjacent walls.[96] In one of the panels appear soldiers similar to those of the Cave of the Painters.[96] The bottom of the wall contained fragments of panels showing: 10) the Parinirvana, 11) devotees looking at the Buddha being put in a coffin, 11) The Buddha in his coffin, and 12) would have been the Cremation of the Buddha.[96][84][95] The upper part of the mural was removed by Grünwedel, and sent to Germany in panels, where some are still held in the Museum für Indische Kunst.[84]

This presentation of the various events of the life of the Buddha in successive panels reminds of examples from Gandhara, such as the Sikri stupa, although the panels in the Cave of the Peacock are remarkable by their rigorous chronological arrangement.[20] Similar types of narrative panels have also been found in Andhra.[20]

The dome over the cella is composed of eight pairs of segments filled with a flying apsara among peacock feather. Numerous devatas and Buddhas of the past are painted around the dome.[84]

According to Historian of Art Benjamin Rowland, commenting one of the remaining fragments, the "group of sword-bearing figures are recognizable Indian ethnic types".[91]

Pictures of monks and one Kuchean donor holding a basket of flowers, all labeled with Brahmi inscriptions, appeared on the door wall.[97][98] In the art of Kizil explanatory labels were often added to pictures of donors.[99] On the contrary, such labels were never used for narrative representations.[99]

The "Cave of the Seafarers" (cave 212, circa 400 CE)

"Cave of the Seafarers" (Cave 212)
Circa 400 CE
 
Plan of the cave, a rare longitudinal layout
 
Monk in meditation with a skull
 
A part of the frieze made by "the painter from Rome" Rumakama along the border of the mural.

The "Cave of the Seafarers" (Höhle der Seereise) is dated by Rhies to the early 5th century CE, based on stylistic analysis.[100] Carbon dates are significantly later, circa 561-637 CE.[101] The cave contained long narrative sequences about various paths to enlightenment.[100] Most of the panels are now in the Dahlem Museum.[100] The content of the paintings in the "Cave of the Seafarers" is clearly derived from Gandharan prototypes.[102]

A painter "Rumakama" ( , "the one from Rome"),[103] appears in a Sanskrit inscription in the cave.[101] The inscription, scribbled on the right side of the mural, reads:

"After this painting was done, the one who came from Rumakama (Syria), the painter Manibhadra, did these circles below".[104][105]

 
"Rumakama" inscription, in Sanskrit.

According to Grünwedel, "the circles (mandalâni) undoubtedly refer to the edges made of foliage and human skulls", that is the Classical border of acanthus leaves and Buddhist skulls painted along the inferior border of the mural.[106]

The word Rumakama, or Romakam appears in the Kizil paintings as well as in the later Tibetan document, and is thought to refer to a painter who came from the Roman Empire or the Byzantine Empire.[107]

 
Cave of the Seafarers. A Classical border of acanthus leaves and Buddhist skulls was painted along the bottom edge of the mural, in cave 212 where "Rumakama" worked.

Period 2: "New school" with bolder style (circa 400–500 CE)

 
Emergence of new painting techniques in the later half of the First Period. Left: "Classical" detail of Cave 212. Right: bolder style in Cave 77. Still, the color palette (brown, orange, green) remains the same.[70]

Following the earliest "Classical" style of the paintings at Kizil, which was especially elegant and "painterly", with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume,[70] a new school appears with the Cave of the Statues, with works such as the "Cowherd Nanda", which is much bolder, using intense colors (but still limited to browns, greens and oranges), thicker lines and simpler patterns, somewhat like "colored drawings".[70][108] This style is thought to be derived from the confluence of Hellenistic, Iranian and Indian influences under the Kushans, and its main center of creation was at Bamiyan, which became "a kind of parent monastery for the settlement of monks in Central Asia".[109]

This evolution in style is accompanied by a change in the main themes being portrayed. In the Classical period the story of the life of the Buddha and numerous Jataka tales took center stage. Now the main accent is on the sermons of the Buddha, which typically cover the walls of the main cella, together with the appearance of side and rear corridors in which are pictured the events of the death of the Buddha, the Parinirvana.[110][111]

Rhie attributes the sudden variations of styles at Kizil, without much signs of internal evolution (especially in the early stages), to the sudden arrival of new groups of artists from other regions, bringing their own artistic idioms and techniques.[112] This period is also marked by the appearance of the self-portraits of painters in long tunics and highboots armed with short daggers, such as the painter of the Cave of the Statues or the several painters of the "Cave of the Painters", with often their own identifying labels in Sanskrit.[113][114] The clothing style and type of these painters has often been described as Sasanian,[63] but has recently been proposed as being rather Hephthalite, due to the similarities with the Hephthalite figures in Dilberjin Tepe, Balalyk Tepe or Bamiyan, and because the Hepthalites did control the Tarim Basin for nearly a century around this time period.[51][115]

"Cave of the statues" (Cave 77, 375–400 CE)

"Cave of the statues" (Cave 77)
375–400 CE
 
General reconstitution of the main cella and corridors (the roof collapsed in ancient times).[117] In the higher portion of the main cella, three rows of beam holes, about 1.5 meters apart and above the paintings, were visible, suggesting supports for decorative balconies,[118] probably holdings stucco statues of standing figures and Devatas.[119] The rather well preserved corridors and back room remain to this day.
 
 
Self-portrait of the painter (104x35 cm) from the Cave of the Statues, in Central Asian caftan and high boots and armed with a dagger, who was standing behind the first statue of the left corridor.[116][113] Painting of a cowherd listening to a sermon of the Buddha, from the right wall of the main hall. Cave of the Statues. 14C date: 406-425 CE.[101]

The "Cave of the Statues"[70] (Statuenhöhle) was a magnificent cave, located next to the "Peacock Cave" (Cave 76). It is a "colossal image cave", with no niche in the main cella, but a podium on which a colossal standing statue of the Buddha probably stood.[70] In an atypical design, the back corridor is quite large and wider than the main cella, with a width of 8.70 meters, for a height of 5.10 meters.[70] Only seven other "Colossal image caves" are known in Kizil, including caves 47, 48, 70, 136, 139, 146.[4] They are characterized by a very tall main cella designed to accommodate a gigantic image of the Buddha, the height of the cella reaching around 5 meters and sometimes as high as 16.5 meters (such as in cave 47), and also a rather tall back room (often around 5–6 meters high).[4]

The numerous statues of the cave were made of clay and straw, fibers or hair for reinforcement, and often dated to the 6th century CE,[120] but now rather dated to 375–400 CE in conjunction with carbon dates.[101][121][7][90] Many of the statues were made from molds, which had Sanskrit names on them, which are probably the names of the crafsmen or the owners.[120]

The cave is a "central pillar" cave, but the roof of the main cella, which formed a vault culminating at around 6 meters, has entirely collapsed. A few paintings remained on the walls of the main cella: they were sermons of the Buddha organized in several rows, the size of each of these pictures being 1.34 m wide and 96 cm high. The sermon images were "of pure Gandhara style".[122] Their style was very close to those of the "Cave of the Painters (Cave 207)", and, according to Grünwedel, "they seem to have been executed by the same hand".[122][123] Albert Grünwedel attributed both caves to the same "Stage I" period (500–600 CE).[38][39]

Several fine fragments of very fine painting have reached us, which are attributed to the Cave of the Statues.[124] Grünwedel explained that only three paintings remained in the cella, all scenes of the sermon of the Buddha:

1) On the right wall of the cella, Grünwedel described the picture of a sermon, with "a youth in light undergarment praying in front of Buddha", corresponding to the picture now described as the "cowherd Nanda", known to have come from the Cave of the Statues.[122]
2) In the opposite location, on the left wall, Grünwedel described a sermon scene in which the Buddha "only had his feet remaining", corresponding to the panel photographed by Charles Nouette in-situ in 1907.[122]
3) Finally Grünwedel described a sermon scene with only a "kneeling adorant" remaining, corresponding to the kneeling Vajrapani, known to have come from the Cave of the Statues.[122]

The style of these panels from the main cella is markedly different from the refined, "classical" style of the side corridor vaults and the back corridor. They suggests different painters and different schools of art. In the cella, the paintings are much bolder, using intense colors, thicker lines and simpler patterns, as in the "Cowherd Nanda".[70] The colors of the paintings in the cella, although more intense, are still limited to browns, greens and oranges.[70] The big eyes and wide eyelids remind of late Kushana works.[70] These new types of paintings suggest the emergence of a bold new style in Kucha around that time.[70]

A painter, holding a cup of paint, and whose clothes "exactly match" the painters in the "Cave of the Painters" (caftan, boots...) is visible in one of the murals of the cave.[113][114] Originally at the front end of the left corridor, behind the first statue, the painting is now located in the Hermitage Museum.[125] Two more devotee figures with the same clothes were located in the back corridor as well.[122]

One of the statues is a man in a particular type of armour with sectioned areas, which used to stand as a protector (possibly a Vajrapani) to the left side of the colossal Buddha of the main cella.[70] This type of armour was in use for several centuries in art of the Northern segment of the Silk Road, and later became prevalent in China.[126] The head is a tentative addition.[127] Lü Guang, a Chinese general sent by Emperor Fu Jian (r. 357–385) of the Former Qin dynasty (351–394), who temporarily conquered Kucha in 383–385 CE, mentioned the powerful armour of Kuchaen soldiers, a type of chainmail and lamellar armour of Sasanian inspiration which can also be seen in the paintings of the Kizil Caves:[61]

They were skillful with arrows and horses, and good with short and long spears. They armour was like chain link; even if one shoots it, [the arrow] cannot go in.

— Biography of Chinese General Lü Guang[61]

The side corridors are structurally highly sophisticated and remain visible to this day. A low platform runs along the external wall of each corridor, on which rows of statues were displayed, with murals behind them including the figure of the painter in tunic and boots. Above them, the top of each corridor formed a high vault, equipped with a lunette on the southern side, and decorated over its length with rows of devatas behind a balustrade, standing around a Buddha Maitreya, and on top of them landscapes with rhombus losange designs with monks, animals, trees and ponds, of the type seen in vault of the Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118).[70][128][129]

 
Richly adorned asparas over the Parinirvana Buddha, back wall of the back corridor.

The back corridor, also visible today, is quite unusual, as its vault is trabeated, formed of three flat longitudinal surfaces, on which figures of devatas are aligned like a deck of cards.[70][129] On the bench along the back wall, stood a colossal reclining Buddha image in a scene of the Parinirvana, with elegant flying devatas hovering over the Buddha.[70][128] Remains of female statues seated on the back bench were visible, with, at their, feet the bust of a man-elephant.[128]

The style of the paintings in this cave, especially in the side and back corridors is very elegant and "painterly", with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume.[70] It is quite similar to the style of the Cave of the Hippocampi (Cave 118), and may belong to the same school.[70] This refined style contrasts with the style of panels in the cella, the "Cowherd Nanda", which is much bolder, using intense colors (browns, greens and oranges), thicker lines and simpler patterns.[70] This divergence suggests that the "Cave of the Statues" may be transitional between these two early styles.[70] Later caves such as the Cave of the Musicians point to an even more different style, using vivid colors and Ligne claire sharp lines to delineate body shapes together with the abundant use of intense blue pigments, with different roots inspired by the Western art of the 4th century CE.[70]

"Cave of the Painters" (Cave 207, dated 478–536 CE)

Cave of the Painters
(Cave 207, 478–536 CE)
 
Group around the Buddha and Classical Roman-style frieze over him in the main vaulted chamber of the Cave of the Painters (center top of the right wall).[132]
 
General decorative content and layout of the main chamber with prismatic dome, with location of the painters, as recorded by Albert Grünwedel in 1912.[101] The cave is today almost devoid of pictorial remains: several of the paintings of the right wall were sent to the Dahlem Museum in Germany;[5][133] the paintings of the left wall were essentially intact in 1912 and have remained on-site (except for the central top panel), but they are today fragmentary and have been vandalized.
 
Detail of the Monks attending the Buddha

The "Cave of the Painters" (Malerhöhle, 画家窟, Cave 207)[134] is one of the earliest caves of Kizil, and one of the most beautiful.[135] The cave contained a statue of the Buddha against the rear wall of the cella, and a barrel-vaulted ambulatory surrounded it.[135] The main cellar contained nine murals of the preaching Buddha on each side wall.[135]

The name of the cave comes from the numerous self-portraits of painters standing at the side of the murals, holding paint cupellas and brushes.[135] Several of the painters have a label, such as the written label in Sanskrit (Gupta script): "Painting of Tutuka" (  Citrakara Tutukasya) next to the painter in question.[136] "Citrakara" is not Tocharian, but Sanskrit (and later Hindi, चित्रकला) for "painter/ painting".[137][138][139][140] In the art of Kizil identifying labels were often added to pictures of donors, but never to narrative scenes.[99]

Paleography, stylistic analysis and carbon dating combine to give a date of circa 500 CE for these paintings.[135] Some stylistic elements have a strong Classical touch, such as Roman-style friezes at the top of the walls, over scenes of the Buddha.[132]

The Cave of the Painters, as some other caves at Kizil, depicts men in caftans with a triangular collar on the right side, and a unique hairstyle. Another marker is the two-point suspension system for swords, which seems to have been a Hephthalite innovation, and was introduced by them in the territories they controlled.[51] These paintings appear to have been made during Hephthalite rule in the region, circa 480–550 CE.[51][115] The influence of the art of Gandhara in some of the paintings at the Kizil Caves, dated to circa 500 CE, is considered as a consequence of the political unification of the area between Bactria and Kucha under the Hephthalites.[69]

The paintings of the Caves of the Painters have been carbon dated to 478–536 CE.[101] Albert Grünwedel in 1912 considered that the murals of the "Cave of the Statues" had been "made by the same artists as those of the Cave of the Painters", and that they were in "pure Gandhara style".[141] Also, a self-portraited painter in the Caves of the Statues, holding a cup of paint, has clothes which "exactly match" those of the painters in the "Cave of the Painters" (caftan, boots...).[113][114] The clothing style of the painters at Kizil has often been described as Sasanian,[142] but is now rather considered as Hephthalite due to the similarities with the figures in Bamiyan, Dilberjin Tepe or Balalyk Tepe.[51][115] Grünwedel attributed both caves to the same "Stage I" period (500–600 CE).[38][39]

The main cella contains 18 scenes of the Buddha preaching.[143] The niche must have contained a monumental statue of the Buddha, and paintings related to the Indrasala Cave narrative.[143] The ceiling is prismatic, reproducing a type of architecture known from Bamiyan.[143] The right corridor contained murals related to the War for the Relics and the Sharing of the relics of the Buddha, one of them showing armoured warriors on horses.[143] The murals of the back corridor were almost entirely gone by 1912. Only a few traces remained, suggesting scenes of the Parinirvana.[143] The left corridor had a beautiful mural showing a monk transmitting the teachings of the Buddha to a kneeling royal family, whether the mural in front of it on the external wall was entirely gone.[143]

Similarities have been noted between the paintings of the Cave of the Painters and those of Dilberjin Tepe and Penjikent of the 5th–6th centuries.[144]

Cave 60: "Largest Cave"

Cave 60, also called the "Largest Cave", is a cave which was expanded over several periods, and still contained a few paintings belonging to the refined style of the Classical First Period, while most of the paintings are from the later Second Period.[148] The cave is known for its portrait of royal donors, characteristically accompanied by a label in Brahmi script.[148] This is the only known possible instance of a portrait of royal donors in a painting of the First Style, whereas they occur very often during the second period.[148] The style of painting is very similar to that seen in the Cave of the Painters (Cave 207).[148] The hairstyle of the male donor is quite similar to that of the famous painter in the Cave of the Painters.[148]

The cave is also remarkable for the presence of Sasanian-style ducks in a bead roundel frames, a well-known motif which spread through Central Asia, and is known from the dress of a Central Asian ambassador from Afrasiab.[149] This motif was likely painted later than the portraits of the royal donors.[148]

Second Indo-Iranian Style: strongly contrasted "blue and green" paintings

 
Central Asian foreigner worshipping Maitreya, Cave 188

The "Second Indo-Iranian style" evolved with a few intermediate stages, expressing continuous influence from India, combined with influence from the Eastern Iran sphere, at that time occupied by the Sasanian Empire and the Hephthalites, with strong Sogdian cultural elements.[48] The Hephthalites lost political power circa 550 CE after being defeated by the Sasanids and the Western Turks, but they remained influential for a long time, having fragmented into semi-independent Principalities.[150][151] Sogdia, at the center of a new Silk Road between China to the Sasanian Empire and the Byzantine Empire became extremely prosperous around that time.[152]

Central-Asian stylistic elements

This style is characterized by strong Iranian-Sogdian elements probably brought with intense Sogdian-Tocharian trade during the period, the influence of which is especially apparent in the Central-Asian caftans with Sogdian textile designs, as well as Sogdian longswords of many of the figures.[66] Other characteristic Sogdian designs are animals, such as ducks, within pearl medallions.[66] Indo-Iranian influence also appears in mythological figures, such as the bird Garuda with snakes in its beak, the wind god Vayu, the sun god Aditya or the moon god Chandra.[66]

The use of strongly contrasted "blue and green" colours, made possible by the importation of lapis lazuli blue pigments from Central Asia, and the drawing of a line for contours, are characteristic of this style.[48][67] This style, examplified by the Cave of the Musicians, using vivid colors and Ligne claire sharp lines to delineate body shapes, seems to be inspired by the Western art of the 4th century CE, and is very different from the style of the Kizil caves of the earlier period, which on the contrary is very elegant and "painterly" with nuanced colors and sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume, and which probably points to different artistical roots.[70] Still no East-Asian influence is visible in these paintings.[48]

Period 1: Initial transitional style

The first period consist in a short interval of transitional style, in which paintings remain subtil and rather nuanced, but blue pigments have started to appear. The Cave of the Devil C (Cave 198) and Cave of the Devil A (Cave 199), as well as the Cave with the Steps (Cave 110) and sometimes the Red-domed Cave A (Cave 67) are considered as the first period of this new style.[48]

Period 2: main stylistic period

"Cave of the Musicians" (Cave 38)

Cave of the Musicians (38)
 
Cave of the Musicians (38) and neighbouring caves.
 
Plan
 
A typical "central pillar" cave layout, with painters at work
 
 
The eponymous musicians, and Jivajivaka the two-headed bird, over the murals of the main hall.

According to Rhie, the "Cave of the Musicians"[153] is probably the earliest of the "central pillar" caves at Kizil, dated to the mid-4th century CE, and its iconography is also among the earliest.[154] Carbon testing by Su Bai gave dates ranging from 310 +/-80 CE to 350 +/-60 CE (i.e. a maximum range of 230-410 CE).[17][47][65] Huo and Wang attributed the cave to the Second Period, giving it a date from mid-4th to late 5th century (circa 350–499 CE).[17] The traditional German datation estimated the cave to be from the 600–650 CE period, and presented it as an example of the later "Blue-green style", said to succeed chronologically the "Orange-green style" group.[17]

The so-called "central pillar" which appears on a plan is actually not a pillar at all but only the rock at the back of the cave, into which was bored a circular corridor allowing for circumambulation.[17] There is a niche in the "central pillar" designed to house a statue of the Buddha, and two other niches on each side of the main entrance, and niches in the back corridor.[17] The central niche probably depicted the Buddha meditating in the Indrasala Cave, with a background decoration of a mountain, a recurring central theme at Kizil.[17] Maitreya, the Buddha of the future, in the Tusita Heaven, appears in a beautiful mural over the exit door.[17] Structurally, the cave remains relatively simple, as it does not have an anteroom or vestibule.[17]

The style of the paintings is derived from the Art of Gandhara and Kashmir, the Art of Mathura and early Gupta art, with striking influences from Roman art and the art of Palmyra.[17][154] Kumārajīva is known to have travelled repeatedly between Kucha and Kashmir around this time, and he may have been instrumental, among many others, in the transmission of this art.[17] The structural prototype of the cave may be Kara Tepe in Bactria.[154] The flat, well-delineated surfaces of the paintings remind of the Roman Opus sectile technique, which prospered circa 331–359 CE.[17]

Cave 14: Central Asian traders

 
Group of caves 14–19. The small Cave 14 is located to the west, and Cave 17 is in the center of the group. The other caves are viharas, without decorations.

Cave 14, a small and nearly square room with a vaulted ceiling (2.17x2.17 meters), is considered as later than the "Cave of the Musicians", and dated to the late 4th century CE to early 5th century CE, circa 400 CE, by Rhie.[89][158] The cave has many designs showing Central Asian traders encountering various dangers on their way, such as being lost in the dark, and being saved by the Dragon-King Mabi.[159] Cave 14 is considered as an important historical marker for the dress styles or the armour types worn by some of the figures.[158]

Cave 17: Tocharian royalty (circa 500 CE)

 
Tocharian royal family (King, Queen and young blond-hair Prince in Tocharian clothing), Kizil, Cave 17 (entrance wall, lower left panel). Hermitage Museum.[160][161][162][163]

Cave 17 (Cave of the Bodhisattva Vault) is large "central pillar" cave located near Cave 14, and high up on the rock to the right of Cave 8.[164] It was probably the main cave of the group of caves from 14 to 19, which also includes several undecorated living quarters or viharas, and was dedicted to religious services. Su Bai dates Cave 17 to the Second Stage (395–465 CE -+65), together with Cave 14. Luo and Wang date it to 465 CE +-65.[7] Rhie attributes Cave 17 to circa 500, based on stylistic considerations.[165] It is a "central pillar" cave, with a small, very colorfull, square cella (3.80x3.90 meters) with a vaulted ceiling, a central pillar with two side corridors, and a back room.[164] These caves were possibly small chapels to nearby viharas.[89]

In Cave 17,[166] on the lower left panel of the entrance wall, appeared a Royal family, composed of the King, Queen and two young Princes. They are accompanied by monks, and men in caftan. The relief is now in the Hermitage Museum.[160] The King wears a crown and a triple halo, with Sasanian-type royal ribbons.[163] He wears a long white caftan decorated with small diamond designs, and has long boots. His right hand is in front of his chest, holding an incense lamp,[163] and he holds an akinakes sword and a red bag in the left hand.[163][167] The end of a long knight's sword is visible behind the first boot.[163] The king can be identified as a Tocharian king of Kucha.[162] His Queen wears a long robe, and his two sons, Princes, wear ornate caftan and are fair-haired.[163]

According to Historian of Art Benjamin Rowland, the portraits in Kizil show "that the Tocharians were European rather than Mongol in appearance, with light complexions, blue eyes, and blond or reddish hair, and the costumes of the knights and their ladies have haunting suggestions of the chivalric age of the West".[168] The Chinese named Kuchean kings by adding the prefix "白", meaning "white", probably pointing to the fair complexion of the Kucheans.[169] The Chinese Monk Xuanzang in 645 CE, noted that "they clothe themselves with ornamented garments of silk and embroidery".[170]

This cave also shows Central Asian traders encountering various dangers on their way, such as being lost in the dark, and being saved by the Dragon-King Mabi. Another is the story of the good merchant Sabu (萨缚), who, in order to show the way to a party of 500 merchants lost in the darkness, puts his own arms on fire to use them as torches, and successfully rescues them. The story appears in numerous paintings, in which the merchants are in Central Asian garb and accompanied by camels, and Sab has the attributes of a Bodhisattva.[159]

Cave 17 is contemporary with the earliest decorated Mogao Caves near Dunhuang (caves 268, 272 and 275), which were built and decorated by the Northern Liang between 419 and 439 CE, before the invasion of the Northern Wei. They have many stylistic characteristics in common.[171][172]

"Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers" (Cave no. 8, 432–538 CE)

Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers
(Cave 8, 432–538 CE)
 
Kizil Caves swordsmen in Hephthalite style, originally lining the interior of the side corridors (ordered from left to right).[51][174]
 
Structure and known decorative layout of the main hall of the cave. The side corridors, decorated with the Sixteen Sword-bearers, lead to a back room, which is transversally vaulted. The cave was Carbon dated to 432–538 CE.[173][60]

The "Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers" ("Höhle der Schwertträger", 十六带剑者窟) is a famous cave with a series of murals showing swordsmen wearing caftans and armed with long sword and daggers. These murals have been carbon dated to 432–538 CE.[173][60] The swordsmen have also been dubbed the "Tocharian donors".

The interpretations of the nationality or ethnicity of the donors have varied. Some authors claim that the donors are indeed Tocharians, an elusive people of the Tarim Basin who spoke the well-documented Tocharian language, the easternmost Indo-European language.[175] According to this thesis, the donors in the murals are of the Indo-European type, wearing Iranian-style clothes and reddish hair.[175]

A more recent interpretation is that the sword-bearers are actually Hephthalites, who are known to have occupied the Tarim Basin from 490 to 560 CE, precisely at the time the paintings were made.[51][174] Kucha was specifically part of their dominion between 502 and 556 CE.[176] The clothing style, the iconography and the physionomy of the donors are said to be extremely close to those depicted in the paintings of Tokharistan (Bactria), the center of Hephthalite power, at sites such as Balalyk tepe or Dilberjin Tepe.[51][174] In particular, the coat with single folded lapel is considered as a result of Hephthalite influence, whereas traditional Kuchean coats had two lapels.[177] At present, the most prevalent opinion among academics seems to be that the Hephthalites were initially of Turkic origin.[178]

Similar donors can be seen in the Kumtura Caves.

In the "Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers", the murals of the sixteen sword-bearers are located in the lateral left and right corridors around the central pillar, simulating a procession of devotees.[179] The sides of the main room are occupied by panels showing groups around seated Buddhas, while the vault is decorated with a myriad of small Buddhas with emanating flames.[179]

The rear corridor, forming a back-room behind the central pillar, is a barrel-vaulted rectangular room with the two corridors for side access. It was decorated by many spectacular murals, including a large mural showing the sharing of the relics, with soldiers in armour riding horses and elephants (β on the plan).[179][180] The vault was lavishly decorated with flying asparas holding musical instruments. The back wall had a depiction of the Parinirvana with a reclining image of the Buddha, and asparas flying over. The murals were photographed in black and white in-situ by Charles Nouette in September 1907, but all of them were later taken to Germany by Von Le Coq. A reconstruction of the rear corridor was recently built in the Museum für Asiatische Kunst.

Cave 181: Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley

Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley
(Cave 181)
 
Reconstitution of Cave 181, according to the description by Grünwedel.
 
Entrance
 
Plan

The Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley (Cave 181), also called the "Highest Cave",[181] is described extensively by Albert Grünwedel, as a particularly interesting cave of the small ravine.[182] He explains that the cave is located high up on the right side of the ravine, which accounts for the fact that its murals have been preserved from the usual iconoclastic vandalism: the faces in particular are well preserved.[182] Also, the murals did not use gold foils for decoration, which reduced the incentive for theft.[182] In his plates, Grünwedel illustrates the murals of the cave, where he names the cave by its official name: Hochliegende Höhle der 2. Schlucht ("Cave of the High Place in the 2nd Valley"),[183] which is the German name for cave 181.[184]

Grünwedel explains that the structure of the cave is extremely rare, as it is not a barrel-vaulted cave: instead, the ceiling has the shape of a tent.[185] The flatness of the sides of the tent-like ceiling is the reason why Grünwedel was able to remove easily most of the ceiling paintings in large panels, something which is impossible with the strongly curved surface of a barrel-vaulted ceiling.[182] The tent-like ceiling is bordered by a row of seven bejewelled princes on each side.[182]

The side wall depict rather tumultuous scenes of the sermon of the Buddha, no fewer than eight of them, with a multitude of attendants in various attitudes and clothing.[186] The entrance wall had paintings of Tocharian donors and monks on both side.[182] Above the entrance was the usual painting of Maitreya with surrounding Devaputras.[182] The side corridors had paintings of Jataka stories, while the back corridor behind the niche had a bench or pedestal along the back wall for the display of the Parinirvana of the Buddha, with deities flying over.[182] On the opposite wall was a scene of the Cremation of the Buddha.[182] Grünwedel sent most of the murals to Germany.[182]

A headless wooden statue of a Dhyanasana Buddha, about 164 cm tall, was found in the cave.[187]

The murals and the paintings of the ceiling are generally attributed to Cave 181,[188][189] but some authors attribute them to Cave 178 instead.[190] To add to the confusion, von Le Coq wrote in 1924 that the paintings of the ceiling actually came from barrel-vaulted Cave 184, and he claimed that Grünwedel, who accomplished the removal of the murals in 1906–1907, wrongly described the vault as being "tent-like".[191] Access to cave 181 has remained difficult, and it has also been claimed that it was never painted.[192][193]

Period 2 (later phase, 500–700 CE)

Maya Cave (3rd complex)
(Cave 224, 550–600 CE)
 
Maitreya in the lunette over the entrance of Maya Cave, 224. Dahlem Museum
 
Ceiling and lunette over the entrance of Maya Cave, 224
 
Plan of the cave

The 3rd phase covers a period from the mid-6th century CE to the early 7th century CE. Carbon testing from this period gave dates ranging from 545 +/-75 CE to 685 +/-65 CE (i.e. a maximum range of 470–750 CE).[65] Maya Cave (n.224) is one of the famous caves from this period. Historically, the paintings of this period seem to correspond to the Turk expansion, following their uprising against the Rouran Khaganate in 552 and their subsequent territorial expansion.[47] This can also be seen the style of armour of some of the soldiers in the murals, especially with their pear-shaped helmets.[47]

Vivid colors are used, with great contrast, sometimes quite unnaturally and in a garish manner. A lot of lapis lazuli blue is incorporated in the palette of this artist.[48] Skin color or hair color are often quite unnatural.[48] Backgrounds often have plenty of flowers, fruits or leaves. Ornaments are often extravagant.[48] Again, no East-Asian influence is visible in these paintings.[48]

Māyā Cave (Third complex, cave 224, c.550–600 CE)

Maya Cave (Cave 224) of "III Anlage" is one of the most famous caves of the Third Period. It is dated to circa 550–600 CE, and possibly follows the events of the Turk uprising against the Rouran Khaganate in 552 CE and the subsequent Turk expansion.[195] The helmets of the Knights depicted in some of the murals have been said to be characteristic pear-shaped segmented helmets of the Turkic type.[195][196]

A famous mural of the Mourning of the Buddha at his Cremation appears in Maya Cave (224), from the rear passage of the cave, with various figures in ethnic costumes.[197] Three of the men among the mourners cut their forehead skin or chest with their knives, a practice of self-mutilation practiced by the Scythians.[197] One of the mourners if is thought to be a Turk.[198][199]

Māyā Cave (Second complex, Cave 205, end 6th century CE)

Māyā Cave (2nd complex)
(Cave 205, 600 CE)
 
Prince Tottika of Kucha with his wife Svayamprabhā, accompanied by two monks, Maya Cave 205, Kizil.
 
Entrance
 
Plan

Maya Cave of "II Anlage" (Cave 205) has been carbon-dated to the 6th–7th century CE.[90] The cave has an inscriptions in Sanskrit mentioning the King of Kucha Anantavarma. He is shown accompanied by two armed attendants.[201]

"When Anantavarma, the great king (maharaja?) of Kucha, saw the letter of Ilmonis, the dedication and the little container of musk, he had honor done to the Buddha."

— Albert Grünwedel translation.[201]

A Prince appears with his wife in the adjacent frescoes, mentioned in a nearby inscription as the future king Tottika and his princess Swayamprabha.[202]

This cave has been rather precisely dated to the end of the 6th century CE, based on the names of the rulers found in the inscriptions, particularly King Tottika and his wife Svayamprabha (a Sanskrit name), who also appear together with Suvarnapushpa (known to have ruled 600–625 CE) and his son Suvarnadeva in the inscriptions on the walls of the Red-dome Cave.[203] The epigraphy also suggest dates later than the Cave of the Painters, with its more ancient inscription about the "painter Tutuka".[204]

Red-dome Cave 67: more royal dedications

Another nearby cave, the Red-domed Cave A (Cave 67) also has inscriptions mentioning a list of donors including a queen and six kings, among them Suvarnapuspa (ruled 600–625 CE) and his son Suvarnadeva (ruled 625–648 CE).[202][208][209] Also included in the inscriptions are the names of King Tottika and his wife Svayamprabha (a Sanskrit name), who also appear in the Maya Cave of the Second Group (Cave 205), suggesting proximity in time of these two caves.[203] The epigraphy also suggest dates later than the Cave of the Painters, with its more ancient inscription about the "painter Tutuka".[204]

The Red-dome cave contained a library in which were found very old manuscripts, including one of the oldest known manuscripts in Sanskrit.[33]

Cave 69: portrait and dedication of the king of Kucha (securely dated to 600–647 CE)

 
King Suvarnapushpa of Kucha (historically known, ruled 600–625 CE), Cave 69, Kizil.

This period has the only known secure dating in the Kizil Caves: Cave 69 has a painting of a royal Kuchean couple with an inscription in the halo of the King: "Temple Constructed for the Benefit of Suvarnapushpa by His Son", Suvarnapuspa having ruled between 600 and 625, and his three sons died before 647 CE according to Chinese sources.[210][211][212]

When he visited Kucha in 630 CE, the Chinese monk Xuanzang received the favours of Suvarnadeva, the son and successor of Suvarna-puspa, and Hinayana king of Kucha.[213]

Xuanzang described in many details the characteristics of Kucha (屈支国 qūzhīguó, in "大唐西域记" "Tang Dynasty Account of the Western Regions"), and probably visited Kizil:[214][215]
1) "The style of writing is Indian, with some differences"
2) "They clothe themselves with ornamental garments of silk and embroidery. They cut their hair and wear a flowing covering (over their heads)"
3) "The king is of Kuchean ("屈支" qūzhī) race"[216]
4) "There are about one hundred convents (saṅghārāmas) in this country, with five thousand and more disciples. These belong to the Little Vehicle of the school of the Sarvāstivādas (Shwo-yih-tsai-yu-po). Their doctrine (teaching of Sūtras) and their rules of discipline (principles of the Vinaya) are like those of India, and those who read them use the same (originals)."
5) "About 40 li to the north of this desert city there are two convents close together on the slope of a mountain".[101]

These events were soon before the Tang campaign against Kucha in 648 CE.[213]

Period 3: final narrative evolution

The final stage at Kizil is Period 3 of the Second Indo-Iranian Style.[54] Towards the end of its florescence, Kizil saw the emergence of the domed central pillar cave, a type of "central pillar" structure, with niche and circumambulating corridor, but with a very uncharacteristic near-cubic main cella crowned by a magnificent cupola decorated with divinities.[218] The style of painting is very refined, and can also be seen in some other caves in the region such as in Kumtura. The iconography too has evolved, with a cosmological Buddha becoming omnipresent and majestic, often surrounded by myriads of emanations of smaller Buddhas.[218] This exceptional and very refined type of cave is exemplified by Cave 123, the "Cave with the Ring-Bearing Doves".[219] It represents a final narrative evolution, in which the figures of the cosmological Buddha predominate, while secondary figures and stories take an ever-smaller role.[220]

"Cave with the Ring-Bearing Doves" (Cave 123)

Cave with the Ring-Bearing Doves
(Cave 123, 600–650 CE)
 
Cave of the Ring-Bearing Doves, as reconstructed in the Museum für Asiatische Kunst (reconstitution).
 
Entrance
 
Plan

The "Cave with the Ring-Bearing Doves" (Cave 123) had a type of "central pillar" structure, with niche and circumambulating corridor, but with a very uncharacteristic cubic main cella crowned by a magnificent dome decorated with divinities.[218][221] The main cella forms a square vestibule or main hall (3.42 x 3.42 meters) in front of the pillar forming the back wall, the vestibule being surmounted by a decorated dome. The prototype for the dome decorated with standing Buddhist deities is to be found in Group C of the caves at Bamiyan.[222] It can also be seen in some other caves in the region, such as in Kumtura.

The cave is named after a pattern of "flying geese holding a wreath" (or ring). This pattern is also known from Cave 69, which is dated to 625–647 CE because of the depiction and inscription of a historically identified king. Because of this marker, Cave 123 may be dated to the same period.[223]

Two monumental Buddha images occupy the sides of the main cella. They have full-body "mandorla" halos filled with a multitude of sitting or standing Buddhas.[224] These monumental images represent the second Great Miracle of the Sakyamuni Buddha at Shravasti.[219] The myriads of Buddhas emanating from him, each standing on a lotus, are a result of his deep meditation at Shravasti, as recounted in the Divyavadana.[219] This understanding of the Great Miracle is most prominent among the Sarvastivadin and the Mulasarvastivadin.[219] The two monumental Buddhas are surrounded by attendants, some light-skinned and some dark-skinned, and a Vajrapani.[219]

The side corridors also have similar Buddha images, but this time with a supplementary decorated band around the Buddha, which is filled with a row of ring-bearing doves, hence the name given to the cave.[224] All Buddha images are surrounded with numerous attendants, Devatas and Vajrapanis.[224]

 
Ring-bearing doves, Cave 123

The paintings were in great part brought to Europe by the fourth Royal prussian expedition to Central Asia of 1913–1914 led by Albert von Le Coq.[225] The cave was reconstructed in Berlin around 1928, but suffered damage during the war.[226] It has been reconstructed again recently in the Museum für Asiatische Kunst. The painting of the left side wall remains in-situ, quite damaged.[227][228]

The cave is quite outstanding and refined, either in terms of architecture and decoration, and departs from the mainstream of other caves at Kizil. Marianne Yaldiz has called it "One of Xinjiang's Mysteries".[230] Untypically, the narrative scenes are placed over the entrance, taking second position to the monumental standing Buddhas of the side wall. This is a layout which became popular farther east in Gansu.[220] In a final narrative evolution, the cave magnifies the figure of the Buddha, and gives an ever smaller role to secondary figures and stories.[220]

Other caves of the third period

The Center Cave (Cave 186), the Third to Last Cave (Cave 184) and the Third Cave from the Front (Cave 187) are also considered as representatives of this third period.[54]

Uighur-Chinese Style (8th–9th century CE)

 
An apsara playing pipa. Tang dynasty.

A 4th period, also described as "The third style" receives strong influence from Chinese painting, a result of the artistic activity and expansion of the Tang dynasty.[231] The civilization of Kucha, with the whole Tarim Basin from Turfan to Khotan, fell to the Chinese punitive invasion of 648 CE, putting an end to the Indo-Iranian styles of Kucha.[232] Ashina She'er, the East Turkic general leading the Tang dynasty expeditionary corps, ordered the execution of eleven thousand Kuchean inhabitants by decapitation. It was recorded that "he destroyed five great towns and with them many myriads of men and women... the lands of the west were seized with terror."[233]

Two caves at Kizil have art of the Tang period: cave 43 and cave 229.[234] In nearby Kumtura and in Turfan, Chinese styles now prevailed.[232]

In 670 CE, the Tibetan Empire conquered most of the Tarim Basin, including Khotan, Kucha, Karashahr and Kashgar, which they kept until the Chinese took back the control of the area in 692.[235]

In 753 CE, the northern part of the Tarim Basin was taken over by the Turks of the Uyghur Khaganate, based in Turfan.[235][236] A new Tibetan conquest took place in 790 CE.[235] By 900 CE, the area was under Muslim domination.[235]

Texts and inscriptions

Love poem

Most of the texts known from the Tocharians are religious, except for one known love poem in Tocharian B, found in Kizil and dated circa 600 CE (manuscript B-496):[237]

Tocharian B manuscript B-496
Translation
(English)
Transliteration Inscription
(Tocharian script)

I.
... for a thousand years however, Thou wilt tell the story Thy (...) I announce,
Heretofore there was no human being dearer to me than thee; likewise hereafter there will be no one dearer to me than thee.
Love for thee, affection for thee—breath of all that is life—and they shall not come to an end so long as there lasts life.
III.
Thus did I always think: "I will live well, the whole of my life, with one lover: no force, no deceit."
The god Karma alone knew this thought of mine; so he provoked quarrel; he ripped out my heart from thee;
He led thee afar; tore me apart; made me partake in all sorrows and took away the consolation thou wast.

... mi life, spirit, and heart day-by-day...[238][239][240][241]

II.

(...) Yaltse pikwala (...) watäṃ weṃt no

Mā ñi cisa noṣ śomo ñem wnolme lāre tāka mā ra postaṃ cisa lāre mäsketär-ñ.

Ciṣṣe laraumñe ciṣṣe ārtañye pelke kalttarr śolämpa ṣṣe mā te stālle śol-wärñai.

III.

Taiysu pälskanoym sanai ṣaryompa śāyau karttse-śaulu-wärñai snai tserekwa snai nāte.

Yāmor-ñīkte ṣe cau ñi palskāne śarsa tusa ysaly ersate ciṣy araś ñi sälkāte,

Wāya ci lauke tsyāra ñiś wetke klyautka-ñ pāke po läklentas ciṣe tsārwo, sampāte.

(...) Śaul palsk araśñi, kom kom[238][239]

 
Tocharian B Love Poem, manuscript B496 (one of two fragments).

"Kyzil library"

The Kyzil library had some of "the oldest copies of the Indian theatre known today" written in Sanskrit or in Tokharian B: these Indian plays, called Nāṭaka in Sanskrit literature, alternate prose and verse, music and pantomime, and also provide scenic indications so that a single performer can enact a complete play by changing attitudes and voices. These plays are at the origin of the "chantefables" or Chinese "transformation texts" called Bianwen.[242]

13th century Tibetan document about Kizil

 
Tibetan map of the Kizil Caves (13th century CE)

Albert Grünwedel, one of the German discovers of the Kizil Caves, found in Saint-Peterburg a 13th-century Tibetan text related to Kucha and the Kizil Caves, including a map, which describes the caves from the perspective of Tantric Buddhism.[243] According to the Tibetan text, the paintings in some of the caves were commissioned by a Tokharian (Thogar) king called "Mendre" (probably Māndhātṛ) with the advice of Anandavarman, a high-ranking monk. The king ordered an Indian artist, Naravahanadatta, and a Syrian artist, Priyaratna, with their disciples to paint the caves.[1] The neighbouring Khotanese kings Vijayavardhana and Murlimin also assisted with the painting of another cave by sending artists to the site.

The king of Thogar, called Mendre, or "the Persian" (Po-lo-si), or Anandavarma, had images painted in these caves for the followers of Buddha, by the artist and painter Mitradatta, also by Naravahanadatta, who came from a place of worship (Kultort) of the Niganthas, finally by Priyaratna who came from Syria also with their apprentices (Werkschüler). Mendre, the king, received an image of Amitabha from the emperor of China, and went into the land of blessedness (Sukhavati). A son of the emperor of China came to the castle of Mir-li, killed, according to an oath that he had made, all Jaina-Niganthas and all followers of Kalachakra and restored all the caves for the worship of Buddha (Buddha-Kultus).

— Albert Grünwedel translation of the Tibetan text.[244]

The Japanese Buddhist scholar Teramoto Enga gave a rather different translation:

 
The Statue of Kumārajīva in front of the Kizil Caves in Kuqa County, Xinjiang, China.

King Mendre, or the King of Persia (Polosi) or Anandavarma the kings of Tukhara (覩货罗, Tokharistan)[245] had images painted in these caves for all the followers of the Buddha, by the artist and painter Mitradatta, also by Naravahanadatta, who came from a place of worship of the Niganthas, finally by Priyaratna who came from Syria (Rumakama, "Roman Empire") also with their apprentices. King Mendre and the King of Tukhara received the relics of Amitabha and went into the land of blessedness (Sukhavati). The son of the King of Tukhara called Dahuangfa (大黄发王) came to the city of Mir-li, preached the Kalachakra to all the Jaina-Niganthas and restored all the caves for the worship of Buddha.

— Teramoto Enga translation of the Tibetan text (fragment).[246]

According to a recent translation by Sam van Schaik, the text should be:

Among the Buddhists there was a Tocharian (Tho-gar) king called Men-dre, or Polosi, or Ānandavarmā. He had the caves painted by restorers and painters: Mitradatta; Naravāhanadatta from the lands of the "naked ones" (Niganthas); Priyaratna from Romakam (Byzantine Empire); and other experts in restoration. The king of the Rgya-ser and King Men-dre's bodies were taken by Amitābha and he went to the land of bliss. When the son of the great king of Rgya-ser came to the fort of Mir-li, thanks to the power of prayer, all the "naked ones" (Niganthas) were killed by the followers of Kālacakra, and all of the Buddhist caves were restored.

— Translation by Sam van Schaik.[103]

According to Sam van Schaik, "Mendre" could be the Indo-Greek king Menander, or the mythical king Manadhatṛ of Buddhist sources;[247] "Polosi" could be a Chinese abbreviation for king Prasenajit; "Romakam" may be the Byzantine Empire; the "naked ones" would be the Niganthas.[103]

In Tibetan, the country named "Tho-gar" "Thod-kar" corresponds to Tokharistan (ancient Bactria).[248][249][250]

Influences

 
 
Sculpture and murals from Mogao cave nb. 254, built during the Northern Wei period between 475 and 490 CE.[251] It is one of the earliest caves in Dunhuang, and shows parallels with the Kizil Caves (especially Cave 80), Western Indic features and Western influences.[252][251] The panel represents the Shibi Jataka.

The Kizil Caves are "the earliest representative grottoes in China".[11] The art of the Kizil Caves is thought to have influenced cave art at Dunhuang, in the Mogao Caves, as early as during the Northern Liang dynasty (421–439 CE), and pictorial arts in China thereafter.[253]

According to historian Daniel C. Waugh:

Given the importance of the Kucha region in the transmission of Buddhism into China and the evidence we have about the movement of translators such as Kumarajiva, it is reasonable to suggest that the art (and possibly the artists) of Kizil influenced the early art of the Mogao Cave complex near Dunhuang, further east along the Silk Road. The earliest of the extant Dunhuang caves (dating from the beginning of the fifth century) show distinctly "Central Asian" features in their painting, stylistically similar to what we find at Kizil. Among the subjects depicted at Kizil and Mogao in strikingly similar fashion is that of the "Cosmological Buddha", whose robe displays images connected with the phenomenal world.[101]

Decay, vandalism, dismantlement, and tourism

 
20th century vandalism: the murals of the left wall of the Cave of the Painters (Cave 207) were photographed and left in place by the German explorer Albert Grünwedel in 1912 (black and white photograph) except for the central top panel, but the rest have since been vandalized in-situ and are now almost completely destroyed as of 2019 (color photograph), with only disfigured portions remaining. This vandalism occurred during the last century.

Since their construction and decoration between the 4th and 8th centuries CE, the Kizil Caves have suffered numerous periods of religious vandalism and decay.[254]

Western archaeologists orchestrated the massive sampling on the best remaining works of art in the early 20th century.[254] Aside from their colonial outlook, one of their alleged motivations was to protect these works of arts from vandalism due to Islamic iconoclasm and the depredations of treasure hunters.[255] Most of the dismantled panels were sent to the Museum für Indische Kunst, Berlin, Germany, but ironically and tragically many were lost in the destructions of World War II, with only photographs or drawings remaining in the best cases.[84][86] A significant number of the murals were also captured by the Soviets in Berlin, and turned up recently in the Hermitage Museum.[256][161][162][163]

In more recent times, the Red Guards also contributed to the destruction of the site, and last but not least, the transformation of the site for touristic purposes since 2005 has led to the disfigurement of many caves and the irretrievable loss of archaeological knowledge.[254] Today, none of the caves can be said to have remained entirely intact, although many remain quite impressive.[257][255]

 
Caves 1–17 in 1912 and in 2015, with major modifications for protection and touristic accessibility.

Major Kizil caves

The caves were first named in German by Albert Grünwedel based on various individual characteristics. Many of these names have remained in English. More recently, a numbering system was adopted by the Chinese, generally based on the geographical position of the caves from West to East.

 
Kizil panorama, Caves 1 to 235, without 201–231, which are at the "back of the mountain" (后山, Houshan). Third German Expedition, 1906–1907.[10]
Chinese
number/name
German name[258] English name Comments/ stylistic period
(Rhie, 2019)[89]
C14 date
(Su Bai, 1983)
C14 date
(Huo and Wang, 1993)
Location Cave Paintings Plan
"Group West of the Valley" (谷西 Guxi, Caves 1–80)
1
 
2
"克孜尔石窟第2窟"
壁炉窟C, D, E
Höhlengruppe mit der Kamin C, D, E[259] Cave Group with the Chimney C, D, E
 
3
壁炉窟B
Höhlengruppe mit der Kamin B[259] Cave Group with the Chimney B
4
壁炉窟A
Höhlengruppe mit der Kamin A[259] Cave Group with the Chimney A 570 CE +-65[90]
 
 
7
绘画地坪窟
Höhle mit dem Freskoboden Cave with the Fresco floor
 
 
 
8
十六带剑者窟
Höhle der sechzehn Schwertträgger[260] Cave of the Sixteen Swordbearers 432–538 CE[173][60] 640 CE +38-50[90]
 
 
 
 
13 Cave 13
 
 
14 Cave 14[89] Mid to late 4th century.[158] 395 CE +-65 to 465 CE +-65.[7]
 
 
 
17
菩萨顶窟
Höhle mit dem Bodhisattvagewölbe[261]
Also: Höhle mit dem Bodhisattva-Plafond
Cave of the Bodhisattva Vault 395 CE +-65 to 465 CE +-65.[7] 465 CE +-65[90]
 
 
 
25, 25A, 25B, 25C 龛窟 Niche caves Small early caves, roughly cubic in shape, and about 1x1x1 meters in size
 
 
27
壁龛窟
Nischenhöhle[262] Cave of the Niche
 
 
 
 
30 Cave 30
 
33 Cave 33
 
34
思惟日神窟
Höhle mit dem meditierenden sonnengott Cave with meditating Sun God[158] Circa 400 CE.[165]
 
 
 
36, 37
禅房B, D
Das Sogenannte Kloster[263]
/Kloster mit der Treppe, B und A.[184]
The So-called Cloister Cave 395 CE +-65 to 465 CE +-65.[7]
 
 
 
38
伎乐窟
Höhle mit dem Musikerchor[264] Cave of the Musicians Mid 4th century CE. Possibly the earliest "central pillar" cave.[154] 310 CE +-80[47][65][74] mid 4th-end 5th century.[90]
 
 
 
39 Cave 39, a square cave 395 CE +-65 to 465 CE +-65.[7]
 
40 Cave 40, a vihara cave, without decoration
 
41, 42, 43
 
44, 45, 46, 46a Storage caves.[265]
 
47 Kultstatten Colossal Image Cave (Cave 47)[154] A colossal standing Buddha, about 10 meters tall, used to stand in front of the "central pillar".[266] Six storeys of decorations adorned the side walls (the first storey with stucco statues, and the other storeys with paintings).[266] The cave has a large backroom with a Parinirvana scene.[266] Probably the oldest "colossal image cave" at Kizil.[266] 310 CE +-80 to 350 CE +-60.[7] 350 CE +/-60.[90]
 
 
48 Cave 48[267] Another early "colossal image cave", but smaller than Cave 47. 350-400 CE.[268] 350 CE +/-60.[90]
 
 
 
? Bibliothek Library
 
 
58
戴盔者窟
Höhle der Behelmten Cave of the Helmetted Man
 

 
 
 
kizil, caves, also, romanized, qizil, qyzyl, uyghur, قىزىل, مىڭ, ئۆي, thousand, houses, chinese, 克孜尔千佛洞, thousand, buddhas, buddhist, rock, caves, located, near, kizil, township, 克孜尔乡, kèzī, xiāng, baicheng, county, aksu, prefecture, xinjiang, china, site, loc. The Kizil Caves also romanized as Qizil or Qyzyl Uyghur قىزىل مىڭ ئۆي lit The Thousand Red Houses Chinese 克孜尔千佛洞 lit Kizil Caves of the Thousand Buddhas are a set of Buddhist rock cut caves located near Kizil Township 克孜尔乡 Kezi er Xiang in Baicheng County Aksu Prefecture Xinjiang China The site is located on the northern bank of the Muzat River 65 kilometres 75 km by road west of Kucha 1 2 This area was a commercial hub of the Silk Road 3 The caves have an important role in Central Asian art and in the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism and are said to be the earliest major Buddhist cave complex in China with development occurring between the 3rd and 8th centuries CE 3 The caves of Kizil are the earlier of their type in China and their model was later adopted in the construction of Buddhist caves further east 4 Another name for the site has been Ming oi 明屋 The Thousand Houses although this term is now mainly used for the site of Shorchuk to the east 5 Kizil Cavesقىزىل مىڭ ئۆي Uyghur 克孜尔千佛洞 Chinese Kizil Caves on the edge of the Tarim Basin The Western Group of caves caves 1 80 is seen at the forefront in perspective while the Eastern Group caves 136 201 appears far right in the background The modern structures at the center approximately correspond to Caves 1 to 30 Shown within Continental AsiaShow map of Continental AsiaKizil Caves China Show map of ChinaKizil Caves Xinjiang Show map of XinjiangLocationXinjiang ChinaCoordinates41 47 04 N 82 30 17 E 41 78444 N 82 50472 E 41 78444 82 50472 Coordinates 41 47 04 N 82 30 17 E 41 78444 N 82 50472 E 41 78444 82 50472Kizil CavesUyghur nameUyghurقىزىل مىڭ ئۆي TranscriptionsLatin YeziqiQizil Ming OyYengi YeziⱪⱩizil Ming ƟySiril YeziqiҚizil Min ojChinese nameSimplified Chinese克孜尔千佛洞Traditional Chinese克孜爾千佛洞TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinKezi er Qianfu DongIPA kʰɤ tsɹ a ɚ tɕʰjɛ nfu tʊ ŋ The Kizil Caves were inscribed in 2014 on the UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the Silk Roads the Routes Network of Chang an Tianshan Corridor World Heritage Site 6 Contents 1 Caves 1 1 Overview 1 2 Central pillar cave structure 2 Exploration 3 Datation schemes 3 1 Albert Grunwedel and the German school 3 2 Modern attempts at Carbon 14 dating 3 2 1 Su Bai 3 2 2 Huo and Wang 4 Caves murals and architecture 4 1 General characteristics 4 1 1 Color pigments 4 1 2 Style periods 5 First Indo Iranian Style delicate orange and green paintings 5 1 Period 1 Classical early style circa 300 400 CE 5 1 1 Early paintings 5 1 2 Earliest painted caves 5 1 2 1 Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 300 350 CE 5 1 2 2 Treasure Cave C Cave 83 300 350 CE 5 1 2 3 Treasure Cave B Cave 84 300 350 CE 5 1 3 Peacock Cave Cave 76 circa 400 CE 5 1 4 The Cave of the Seafarers cave 212 circa 400 CE 5 2 Period 2 New school with bolder style circa 400 500 CE 5 2 1 Cave of the statues Cave 77 375 400 CE 5 2 2 Cave of the Painters Cave 207 dated 478 536 CE 5 2 3 Cave 60 Largest Cave 6 Second Indo Iranian Style strongly contrasted blue and green paintings 6 1 Central Asian stylistic elements 6 2 Period 1 Initial transitional style 6 3 Period 2 main stylistic period 6 3 1 Cave of the Musicians Cave 38 6 3 2 Cave 14 Central Asian traders 6 3 3 Cave 17 Tocharian royalty circa 500 CE 6 3 4 Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers Cave no 8 432 538 CE 6 3 5 Cave 181 Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley 6 4 Period 2 later phase 500 700 CE 6 4 1 Maya Cave Third complex cave 224 c 550 600 CE 6 4 2 Maya Cave Second complex Cave 205 end 6th century CE 6 4 3 Red dome Cave 67 more royal dedications 6 4 4 Cave 69 portrait and dedication of the king of Kucha securely dated to 600 647 CE 6 5 Period 3 final narrative evolution 6 5 1 Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves Cave 123 6 5 2 Other caves of the third period 7 Uighur Chinese Style 8th 9th century CE 8 Texts and inscriptions 8 1 Love poem 8 2 Kyzil library 8 3 13th century Tibetan document about Kizil 9 Influences 10 Decay vandalism dismantlement and tourism 11 Major Kizil caves 12 See also 13 Footnotes 14 Bibliography 15 External linksCaves Edit Western Group of Caves caves 1 80 as far as the entrance of the Central Valley 7 Map of Kizil Caves German names Global panorama of Kizil from caves 1 to 229 A typical Central Pillar cave with main vaulted hall central pillar with niche two side corridors and back room Cave 219 A side corridor looking towards the back room Cave 171 8 The Kizil Caves complex is the largest of the ancient Buddhist cave sites that are associated with the ancient Tocharian kingdom of Kucha as well as the largest in Xinjiang Other famous sites nearby are the Kizilgaha caves the Kumtura Caves Subashi Temple and the Simsim caves 9 10 The Kizil Caves are the earliest representative grottoes in China 11 At the time the caves were created the area of Kucha was following the orthodox Sarvastivadin school of Hinayana Buddhism although an early and minority Dharmagupta presence has also been noted 12 The simpler square caves may have been established by the Dharmagupta from the 4th century CE or earlier while the central pillar caves which flourished from the mid 6th century CE can rather be associated with the Sarvastivadin school 12 Overview Edit There are 236 cave temples in Kizil carved into the cliff stretching from east to west for a length of 2 km 1 Of these 135 are still relatively intact 13 The earliest caves are dated based in part on radioactive carbon dating to around the year 300 14 Most researchers believe that the caves were probably abandoned sometime around the beginning of the 8th century after Tang influence reached the area 15 Documents written in Tocharian languages were found in Kizil and a few of the caves contain Tocharian and Sanskrit inscriptions which give the names of a few rulers Many of the caves have a central pillar design whereby pilgrims may circumambulate around a central column incorporating a niche for a statue of the Buddha which is a representation of the stupa There are three other types of caves square caves caves with a colossal image and monastic cells kuti Around two thirds of the caves are kutis which are monks living quarters and store houses and these caves do not contain mural paintings 10 Chronology remains the subject of debate 16 10 Central pillar cave structure Edit In the typical central pillar design pilgrims can circumambulate around a central column incorporating a niche for a statue of the Buddha which is a representation of the stupa The so called central pillar which appears on a plan is actually not a pillar at all but only the rock at the back of the cave into which was bored a circular corridor allowing for circumambulation 17 A large vaulted chamber is located in front of the central pillar column and a smaller rear chamber behind with two tunnel like corridors on the sides linking these spaces In the front chamber a three dimensional image of Buddha would have been housed in a large niche serving as the focus of the interior however none of these sculptures have survived at Kizil 18 The rear chamber may feature the parinirvana scene in the form of a mural or large sculpture and in some cases a combination of both The central pillar layout is possibly related to the structural design of Kara Tepe in northern Bactria 19 The program of the paintings in the central pillar caves generally follows a fixed arrangement the walls of the main cella show sermons of the Buddha the ceiling has rhomboid vignettes alluding to Jatakas the central niche has the scene of the Indrasala Cave The back room or corridor has scenes related to the Parinirvana and finally the painting over the exit is related to the Tusita Heaven and the future Buddha Maitreya 20 Exploration Edit Japanese Expedition to Kizil in 1902 1904 Watanabe and Hori German Expedition at Kizil in front of Cave 4 in 1906 colorized Left to right assistant H Pohrt Theodor Bartus in uniform Albert Grunwedel seated and Albert von Le Coq standing 21 22 Grunwedel recording a painting Cave 4 1906 Cave 4 Vajrapani removed original and in situ drawing by GrunwedelGrunwedel recording a painting in the left corridor right wall of Cave 4 23 and original Vajrapani with his drawing from the same location The original was sent to Germany but seized by Russia at the end of World War II and is now in the Hermitage Museum 24 The Kizil Caves were first discovered and explored in 1902 1904 by the Ōtani expedition a Japanese expedition under Tesshin Watanabe 渡辺哲信 and Kenyu Hori 堀賢雄 funded by Count Otani but the expedition left hurriedly after four months of exploration in the area of Kucha following a local earthquake 25 26 The Kizil caves were then explored by Albert Grunwedel head of the Third German Turfan Expedition December 1905 July 6 1907 27 Albert von Le Coq was also part of the third German expedition and was under the direction of Albert Grunwedel but only remained until June 1906 when he had to leave for British India due to a heavy illness 28 The caves were photographed drawings were made and large portions of the murals were removed and sent to Germany 29 28 Grunwedel removed a great number of paintings but was careful to make records before doing so in order to retain their archaeological value and to photograph or draw them before cutting them out out of fear that they could be destroyed upon removal or during transport 30 He used a canvas to take quite precise records of the paintings For example Grunwedel recounts how he discovered a very interesting mural with warriors in the Cave of the Painters 207 Intending to remove it he first made a precise drawing But once the drawing was made the mural disintegrated upon removal and was lost except for a few fragments still in situ 31 Altogether the Third German Expedition still removed many paintings and shipped almost 120 crates of murals to Berlin 32 Grunwedel published the result of his explorations in 1912 in Altbuddhistische Kultstatten in Chinesisch Turkistan Bericht uber archaologische Arbeiten von 1906 bis 1907 bei Kuca Qarasahr und in der Oase Turfan 28 Grunwedel discovered that the Kizil Caves were essential in the understanding of the development of Buddhist art and suggested some forms of Western artistic influences as well For years I have been endeavouring to find a credible thesis for the development of Buddhist art and primarily to trace the ancient route by which the art of imperial Rome etc reached the Far East What I have seen here goes beyond my wildest dreams If only I had hands enough to copy it all for here in Kizil are about 300 caves some of them containing frescoes all of them very old and fine Letter by Grunwedel April 2 1906 33 The French explorer Paul Pelliot and his photographer Charles Nouette who were in Kucha from January 1907 visited Kizil soon after the German mission from September 1 1907 over a few days and Charles Nouette took many beautiful and informative photographs 34 35 36 Albert von Le Coq came back to Kizil and surrounding areas in 1913 1914 heading the Fourth German Expedition removing many paintings including those Grunwedel had left in place but generally taking much fewer records than his predecessor 32 37 Datation schemes EditAlbert Grunwedel and the German school Edit Datation scheme according to the German school 38 39 Stage I Gandharan Stage II Sasanian 500 600 CE Caves 207 118 76 117 77 212 83 84 600 650 CE Caves 67 198 199 110 129 114 38 205 224 7 206 13Circa 650 CE Caves 8 219 3 4 63 58 178 175 181After 650 CE Caves 123 185 184 188In 1912 Grunwedel proposed in 1912 a structural scheme which has remained influential throughout the 20th century It is essentially based on the definition of two schools of art Style 1 and Style 2 38 Style I qualified as Indo Iranian derives from the Art of Gandhara and murals tend to have dark cinnabar backgrounds with green and orange color schemes and natural shading and the architecture tends to consist in squarish caves with cupola ceilings 38 39 Style II derives from Sasanian art and is characterized by a strong contrast between brilliant green blue pigments 38 Architecturally the caves of Style II have a central stupa pillar surrounded by a circular corridor for circumambulation According to Grunwedel Style II was before the 8th century CE After Grunwedel Albert von Le Coq and Ernst Waldschmidt proposed dates based in the epigraphic inscriptions found in the caves They proposed to date Style I from 500 to 600 and Style II from 600 to 650 CE These chronological guidelines remained extremely influential throughout the 20th century as late as the 1980s 38 Modern attempts at Carbon 14 dating Edit Various attempts at radio carbon analysis were made over the years with various degrees of success but with the main effect of pushing back the dates of the first caves to circa 300 BCE and challenging the German classification according to styles and colors schemes 38 In 1979 a Chinese institute 文物保护科学技术研究所 Wenwu baohu kexue jishu yanjiusuo carbon tested caves 63 47 13 40 Su Bai Edit Datation scheme according to Su Bai 1981 39 38 Stage I Initial stage 310 CE 80350 CE 60 Stage II Flourishing stage 395 CE 65465 CE 65 Stage III Decline stage 545 CE 75685 CE 65Caves 38 47 6 80 13 Caves 77 17 171 104 139 119 35 36 92 118 39 49 14 Caves 201 70 148 234 187 185 182 183 181 189 190 172 8 107B 107A 180 197Huo and Wang 1993 38 39 Stage I200 350 CE Stage II350 500 CE Stage III500 700 CECaves 118 92 77 47 48 117 161 196 224 17 104 Caves 38 76 83 84 114 13 32 171 172 Caves 110 57 212 81 184 188 199 207 8 205 99 4 123 206 178In 1979 1981 Su Bai 宿白 of Beijing University 北京大学历史系考古教研室 Beijing daxue lishi xi kaogu jiaoyanshi made an influential carbon testing campaign for caves 47 3 38 6 171 17 190 8 40 Based on these dates and on an analysis of the architecture of the caves from the simpler to the more sophisticated Su Bai proposed an influential dating scheme pushing back the dates of the first caves to circa 300 CE 39 Huo and Wang Edit In 1989 1993 Huo and Wang 中国社会科学院考古研究所 Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan kaogu yanjiusuo tested the following caves 224 76 4 8 34 68 77 98 104 114 117 118 119 125 129 135 162 171 180 189 196 198 206 212 219 227 27 39 48 60 69 84 91 92 99 123 139 161 165 178 207 40 They proposed a chronology which has some significant differences with the chronology previously proposed by Su Bai 39 Japanese teams of Nagoya University 日本名古屋大学 tested in 1995 1997 1998 and 2011 the following caves 8 171 224 13 67 76 77 92 205 40 Many of the results remain inconclusive sometimes even contradictory and the historical period in question is rather too short in relation to the uncertainty margin of Carbon 14 datation to provide a meaningful segmentation of the caves 41 Most narrow Carbon dates given for the Kizil Caves refer to a 68 probability level 1s which implies a significant level of uncertainty and when dates are adjusted to the 95 probability level 2s as standard archaeological practice requires 42 then the timespan between the earliest and lowest dates becomes so large about 200 to 300 years 43 as to make individual comparisons between the caves meaningless 44 Most researchers now use an approach combining artistic and architectural analysis together with carbon dating as a way to approach a reliable nomenclature as proposed by Marylin Martin Rhie from 2001 39 Caves murals and architecture Edit Buddhist 2nd century CE Sanskrit text in Middle Brahmi script Ming oi Kizil Caves First line pa kasah tasmad asma d vipaksapratipaksas Carbon dated to 130 CE 80 230 CE corresponding to the rule of the Kushan king Kanishka In 1906 the German expedition team of Albert Grunwedel explored the Kizil Caves Albert von Le Coq who worked under the direction Grunwedel had to leave in June 1906 due to health problems 28 Grunwedel generally photographed and copied the murals before removing those he considered essential 28 Most of the fragments removed are now in Museum of Asian Art formerly Museum fur Indische Kunst in Dahlem Berlin 45 Other explorers removed some fragments of murals that may now be found in museums in Russia Japan Korea and United States Although the site has been both damaged and looted around 5000 square metres of wall paintings remain 46 These murals mostly depict Jataka stories avadanas and legends of the Buddha and are an artistic representation in the tradition of the Hinayana school of the Sarvastivadas 1 Carbon testing and stylistical analysis helped determine three main periods in the paintings at Kizil which cover a period from 300 CE to 650 CE 47 The early art of Kizil correspond to the Western school of art in the Tarim Basin and mainly displays influences from Gandhara and the Iranian world particularly influence from the Hephtalites and no influence from East Asia 48 49 50 51 The Kizil Caves were designated by the Germans by a series of names and have been separately numbered by the Chinese A correspondence chart has been produced by Rhie 52 Some very early caves now numbered 90 17 to 90 24 have been discovered since the 1990s in the lower parts of the cliff at the entrance of the central valley These caves were square or rectangular with barrel vaulted ceilings but without any decorations 53 General characteristics Edit Blue pigment used on mural Greco Buddhist Wind God Boreas or Vayu central part of the ceiling of Cave 38 A notable feature of the murals in Kizil is the extensive use of blue pigments including the precious ultramarine pigment derived from lapis lazuli from Afghanistan In the classification of the art of the region by Ernst Waldschmidt there are three distinct periods 1 the murals from the first phase are characterized by the use of reddish pigments while those from the second phase used bluish pigments in abundance 15 The earlier paintings reflect more Greco Indian or Gandharan influences while the second ones show Iranian Sassanian influences 14 Later caves seem to have fewer legends and or jatakas being replaced by the repetitive designs of numerous small Buddhas the so called thousand Buddha motif or sitting Buddhas with nimbuses 1 The paintings of the first two phases showed a lack of Chinese elements 15 The last phase the Turkic Chinese period is most in evidence in the Turfan area but in Kizil only two caves showed Tang Chinese influence Another characteristic of the Kizil murals is the division into diamond shaped blocks in the vault ceilings of the main room of many caves Buddhist scenes are depicted inside these diamond shapes in many layers on top of one another to show the narrative sequences of the scenes 1 Color pigments Edit The pigments in the painting of the Kizil Caves have been analysed by X ray diffraction analysis The reds are primarily vermilion and red lead which today are greatly discolored and red ocher Blue pigments are from lapis lazuli Green pigments are from copper hydroxy chloride minerals such as atacamite Brownish black pigments are PbO2 obtained from the oxidation of red lead White pigments were mainly obtained from gypsum 11 Style periods Edit A broad classification of styles formalized by Le Coq and Waldschmidt in 1933 54 has been generally accepted 55 The first style is called Indo Iranian style I and cover all the early caves with delicate tone on tone paintings using browns oranges and greens The name Indo Iranian broadly denotes the artistic influence from India combined with elements of Iranian art that presided over the creation of the first cave paintings at Kizil 54 The main representative caves of this style are the Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 the Cave of the Painters Cave 207 the Peacock Cave Cave 76 the Overpainted Cave Cave 117 the Cave of the Statues Cave 77 and the Cave of the Seafarers Cave 112 The small group of the Treasure Cave Cave 83 84 is considered as contemporary but in a slightly personal style sometimes called Special Style Sonderstil 54 The first style is only found in Kizil except for one cave in nearby Kumtura the Cave with the cupola 54 The second style is called Indo Iranian style II and cover most of the other caves of Kizil which use strongly contrasted colors and strong line strokes using browns oranges and greens and especially a vivid lapis lazuli blue The name Indo Iranian again broadly denotes the artistic influence from India combined with important influences from Central Asian and the Iranian world 54 This style is further divided in three broad periods 54 Finally a third Uighur Chinese style appears in only two caves at Kizil First Indo Iranian Style delicate orange and green paintings EditSee also Silk Road transmission of Buddhism Kizil standing Buddha of the 1st period 300 395 CE Tocharian B inscription reading Se panakte saṅketavattse ṣarsa papaiykau This Buddha by Sanketava s hand was painted 56 57 58 59 Often attributed in the past to the 7th century CE 56 but now carbon dated to 245 340 CE 60 The Kingdom of Kucha the most populous oasis in the Tarim Basin occupied a strategic position on the Northern Silk Road which brought it prosperity and made it a wealthy center of trade and culture 61 Kucha was part of the Silk Road economy and was in contact with the rest of Central Asia including Sogdiana and Bactria and thus also with the cultures of India Iran and coastal areas of China 62 Early visitors are known such Maes Titianus 63 Since the 2nd century CE under the auspices of the Han dynasty and the Kushan Empire numerous great Buddhist missionaries passed through the Tarim Basin on their way to China such as the Parthian An Shigao the Yuezhis Lokaksema and Zhi Qian or the Indian Chu Sho fu 竺朔佛 64 Culture flourished and Indian Sanskrit scriptures were being translated by the Kuchean monk and translator Kumarajiva 344 413 CE himself the son of a Buddhist man from Kashmir and a Kuchean princess sister of the King 64 61 The 1st Style sometimes called First Indo Iranian style to denote influences from India and Central Asia covers a period from 300 to 500 CE and is characterized by Gandharan themes and orange and green hues having a strong flavour of India female dancers and musicians are often naked or half naked with full breasts 65 66 The art of these paintings is quite refined and forms the Classical period of the art of Kizil the shades are delicate the lines are fine and elegant the colors blend progressively to give a sense of texture and volume 67 The paintings of Bamiyan in northern Afghanistan are generally considered as the precussors of the art of the Kizil Caves 68 Towards the end of the period the influence of the art of Gandhara is considered as a consequence of the political unification of the area between Bactria and Kucha under the Hephthalites which lasted from 480 to 560 CE or a few decades later 69 Period 1 Classical early style circa 300 400 CE Edit The earliest paintings at Kizil belong to a Classical stage Their style is very elegant and painterly with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume The lines are refined and subtle the colors blend softly 70 This style is also characteristically Indian and may be related to Gandhara or Kashmir 70 This early style is examplified by the Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 and may form a distinctive school This contrasts with the style of the following stage as seen in the panels in the cella of the Cave of the Statues such as the Cowherd Nanda which is much bolder using intense colors but still browns greens and oranges only thicker lines and simpler patterns 70 Early paintings Edit Early inscriptions in Tocharian an Indo European language using a derivation of the Indian Brahmi script is used in several early paintings on tablets as found in the Cave above the cave of the coffered ceiling Cave 171 56 or the Cave of the Niche Cave 27 71 Kizil First Period 300 395 CE Kizil First Period 300 395 CE devotee detail Kizil First Period 300 395 CE Tocharian inscription The Buddha was painted by the hand of Ratna 72 Earliest painted caves Edit Cave of the Hippocampi cave 118 300 350 CE Reconstitution of the structure and known decorative layout of the main cella It is a rectangular room with a transversal vaulted ceiling Small figures of Kuchean devotees about 40cm tall appear next to the four corners of the mural of the back wall 75 73 Cave of the Hippocampi inside the central valley Plan of vestibule and main cella In situ Dahlem MuseumNoble or wealthy donors from Kucha wearing short tunics and short boots and one armed with a dagger Bottom right and top right corners next to the mural of the back wall 73 74 According to the Chinese chronicles of the Jin dynasty 265 316 CE there were already a thousand Buddhist stupas and temples in Kucha by the 3rd century CE 76 77 The earliest painted caves at Kizil are thought to be Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 and Treasure Caves C and B Caves 83 and 84 respectively 73 Cave 118 possibly the earliest of the three is located deep inside the central valley 78 Cave 83 and 84 are located at the entrance of the same valley These caves have simple architectural structures together with paintings in a clear style reflecting Indian influences 73 Noble or wealthy Tocharian donors from Kucha wearing tunics sometimes appear kneeling at the side of devotional paintings 75 Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 300 350 CE Edit The Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 was visited and photographed by the Third German Expedition of 1906 1907 and by the French expedition of Paul Pelliot in 1907 27 Large portions of the murals were removed and sent to Germany especially by von Le Coq in 1914 who removed the lunettes and the sides of the vault 29 The cave consists of a rectangular room 3 6 x 4 8 meters the entrance being on the long side and the ceiling of which forms a transverse barrel vault 73 In front of the cave which is accessible through a door there used to be an equally wide open space perhaps adorned with paintings with remains of a pyramid roof 73 The two rooms are separated by a 1 meter thick wall 29 The model for this kind of vaulted cave can be found in Bactria at Kara Tepe dating from the 2nd 3rd century CE 73 In the middle of the back wall of the main cella stands a large painting 3 42 m wide and 2 16 m high with an unidentified scene of a King with attendants possibly The skill and music in the heavenly palace 天宫伎乐 73 The attitudes and postures of the figures remind the reliefs of 3rd 4th century CE Nagarjunakonda 73 A king is seated at the center with numerous attendants surrounding him especially a near naked woman seated to his left 29 They wear heavy round earrings with a central rosette design 29 The modeling of the faces reminds of the statuary of Hadda in Gandhara 29 The picture is elaborately framed by five successive decorative borders with naturalistic vine rinceau suggestive of Roman art 73 The colors of the murals are various shades of brown with smatterings of light green but no blue defining the so called orange and green style 73 The center of the ceiling has motifs of the sun and moon two monks and a bird flying with a human figure in its claws 73 The sides of the ceiling are composed of diamond shaped mountains around which are naturalistic motifs of humans animals lakes and trees a possibly Near Eastern design which was generally adopted in later caves at Kizil 73 A band of fantastic animals separated the ceiling from the side walls 73 The general style appears to be early and possibly derived from Kashmir and Cave 24 at Bamiyan 73 The lunettes bordering the ceiling display ornate Buddhist scenes 29 The right lunette is difficult to identify but seems to represent a king or a Bodhisattava bending towards a warrior figure 29 The bottom portion shows a palatial scene with a figure on a couch surrounded by devatas 29 The left lunette shows the Buddha of the future Maitreya in the Tusita Heaven 29 Below this is a depiction of Mount Sumeru surrounding by various Nagas figures of devotees and animals 29 Small figures of kneeling devotees in tunics about 40 centimeters tall some armed with a dagger appear next to the left and right corners of the back wall mural probably noble and wealthy Kuchean donors of the 4th century CE 75 One of the donors holds three burning incense cones He is dressed in a bordered and turned up collarless tunic with close fitting sleeves 75 The tunic which reaches slightly above the knee is belted The pants are of the same color and have the same border 75 He wears gray calf boots with cruciate ligaments that run under the sole 75 The figure behind holds a wreath and a kind of censer is dressed in a black belted lap jacket with tight fitting sleeves which is provided with a red border all around and an ample green dress 75 Their hair is cut straight to the nuque a hair style also referenced for the people of Kucha in the contemporary Chinese chronicles Jin Shu 75 79 A kneeling monk appeared next to the top left corner of the main mural in a red robe and with ocher shorn hair engaged in shaping a ceremonial jar with a hammer while behind him appeared a painter wearing a tunic similar to those of the donors on the other side but whose head only remained 80 A reconstitution of the mural of the back wall Cave of the Hippocampi ceiling detail Monks with ocher shorn hair on the ceiling of the Cave of the Hippocampi 75 Right portion of the cave as photographed by Charles Nouette in 1907 Treasure Cave C Cave 83 300 350 CE Edit Treasure Caves Cave 83 Cave 84 300 350 CE Caves 82 85 at the entrance of the central valley Caves 82 83 84 85 Murals are visible in situ on the back wall of caves 83 and 84 before they were removed by Grunwedel Plan of the Treasure Caves E D Cave 82 C Cave 83 B Cave 84 and A Cave 85 Cave 83 Treasure Cave C is part of the compact group of the four Treasure Caves 82 83 84 85 located at the entrance of the central valley It is a relatively small square cave 3 6x3 6m with a podium in the middle probably for a statue or a stupa 73 Here the ceiling has collapsed but probably formed a cupola 73 81 The back wall had a well preserved scene of a Jataka story the Rudrayana Legend from the Divyavadana with king Rudrayana observing the dance of his Queen Chandraprabha who appears nude except for thin veils and jewelry During the dance the king had a premonition that his wife would soon die and she asked to become a Buddhist nun 82 83 73 The style and attitudes of the figures are generally Indian such as the Tribhanga posture of the dancer of the way the King is seated The flutering ribbons of the diadem worn by the king however were adopted from Iranian royal symbolism 81 In this cave the frames of the paintings especially the vine rinceaux are probably derived from Roman art of the 1st century CE 73 This cave may be slightly earlier then Cave 84 73 The mural was sent to Berlin by Grunwedel Ref MIK III 8443 73 These paintings are soft and delicate volumes are defined by gradations of shades and colors not by the sharp limit of a line Overall the brush has the priority over drawing 81 Treasure Cave C with mural visible on the back wall as of 1912 The mural Dance of princess Chandraprabha with frames probably derived from Roman art of the 1st century CE 73 Treasure Cave C Cave 83 MIK III 8443 Treasure Cave 83 attendants with ornate capital in the background detail Treasure Cave B Cave 84 300 350 CE Edit Cave 84 Treasure Cave B was a square probably domed cave 4x4m here too the ceiling has collapsed examplifying an earlier simpler cave structure at Kizil which is also known from Bamiyan Cave 24 73 The origin of the paintings in caves 84 seems Indian probably from Kashmir 73 They show groups of people standing around figures of the Buddha who is either seated or standing 73 The depth of placement is rather shallow the figures are graceful with curved torsos The faces are round and plump 73 Rhies suggest a date of the first half of the 4th century for Cave 84 73 All the paintings were sent to Berlin by Grunwedel 73 These two caves are adjoined to cave 82 an undecorated vihara also dated to 300 350 CE 73 and cave 85 a small ruined cave 73 Treasure Cave B Cave 84 with murals visible on the back wall as of 1912 Known structure and decorative layout of Treasure Cave B Cave 84 People around the Buddha Cave 84 Attendant Cave 84 Peacock Cave Cave 76 circa 400 CE Edit Peacock Cave Cave 76 circa 400 CE Internal layout of the main cella with central peacock dome and remaining paintings as reported by Albert Grunwedel in 1912 84 85 Most of the intact panels were dismantled and sent to the Museum fur Indische Kunst Berlin Germany where many were lost in the destructions of World War II 84 86 This view faces the left wall 2 on the plan 87 Peacock Cave location and plan Cave 76 The main cella top has a large podium in the center 70cm high and is crowned by a dome decorated with apsaras flying among peacock feathers The Peacock Cave Pfauenhohle in German 88 is also an early cave although dated slightly later to circa 400 CE and next located Cave of the statues Cave 77 in the second rocky outcrop just outside of the central valley 89 It has been carbon dated to mid 4th end 5th century CE 90 It is said to be the most recognizably Indian in the whole Kizil cycle 91 The paintings echoe the Art of Gandhara and the murals of Ajanta Caves 91 A rectangular vestibule the vaulted roof of which is now collapsed preceded the main chamber 84 The main chamber has a domed ceiling an innovation first seen in early caves at Bamiyan and in caves 83 and 84 at Kizil 84 92 Numerous statuettes of the Buddha as well as decorated wooden benches and low display tables were discovered in the antechamber of the cave 93 In the center of the main chamber there is a large podium on which probably stood some major statuary associated with the Buddha 84 The architecture of the cave displays a marked advancement compared to earlier caves but is anterior to the central pillar cave structure 84 92 Several paintings illustrate the life of the Buddha Only the left wall of the main cella had remained in great part intact by the time Grunwedel visited The top part of the wall showed four important moments of the life of the Buddha while celestial observers stand on a balcony above 1 the Birth of Siddharta and the first Three Steps in which the Buddha appears naked and already tall 2 the Four Encounters outside of the palace 3 the Seduction of Mara s daughters who are turned into old women and 4 the Assault of Mara 84 94 95 The middle row was almost entirely damaged although scenes of the Preaching Buddha were identifiable 96 The panels can be numbered 5 to 9 but 5 and 9 being half panels going over the adjacent walls 96 In one of the panels appear soldiers similar to those of the Cave of the Painters 96 The bottom of the wall contained fragments of panels showing 10 the Parinirvana 11 devotees looking at the Buddha being put in a coffin 11 The Buddha in his coffin and 12 would have been the Cremation of the Buddha 96 84 95 The upper part of the mural was removed by Grunwedel and sent to Germany in panels where some are still held in the Museum fur Indische Kunst 84 This presentation of the various events of the life of the Buddha in successive panels reminds of examples from Gandhara such as the Sikri stupa although the panels in the Cave of the Peacock are remarkable by their rigorous chronological arrangement 20 Similar types of narrative panels have also been found in Andhra 20 The dome over the cella is composed of eight pairs of segments filled with a flying apsara among peacock feather Numerous devatas and Buddhas of the past are painted around the dome 84 According to Historian of Art Benjamin Rowland commenting one of the remaining fragments the group of sword bearing figures are recognizable Indian ethnic types 91 Pictures of monks and one Kuchean donor holding a basket of flowers all labeled with Brahmi inscriptions appeared on the door wall 97 98 In the art of Kizil explanatory labels were often added to pictures of donors 99 On the contrary such labels were never used for narrative representations 99 The Seduction of Mara s daughters left who are turned into old women right The Assault of Mara Musician detail Cave 76 One of the eight pairs of segments from the dome with peacock feathers Top portion of two of the peacock segments Left wall of the main cella 2 on the plan showing the events of the early life of the Buddha and celestial devatas above 85 Lower row of panels in the left wall Central pedestal in the Peacock Cave total width of 2 18 meters The Cave of the Seafarers cave 212 circa 400 CE Edit Cave of the Seafarers Cave 212 Circa 400 CE Plan of the cave a rare longitudinal layout Monk in meditation with a skull A part of the frieze made by the painter from Rome Rumakama along the border of the mural The Cave of the Seafarers Hohle der Seereise is dated by Rhies to the early 5th century CE based on stylistic analysis 100 Carbon dates are significantly later circa 561 637 CE 101 The cave contained long narrative sequences about various paths to enlightenment 100 Most of the panels are now in the Dahlem Museum 100 The content of the paintings in the Cave of the Seafarers is clearly derived from Gandharan prototypes 102 A painter Rumakama the one from Rome 103 appears in a Sanskrit inscription in the cave 101 The inscription scribbled on the right side of the mural reads After this painting was done the one who came from Rumakama Syria the painter Manibhadra did these circles below 104 105 Rumakama inscription in Sanskrit According to Grunwedel the circles mandalani undoubtedly refer to the edges made of foliage and human skulls that is the Classical border of acanthus leaves and Buddhist skulls painted along the inferior border of the mural 106 The word Rumakama or Romakam appears in the Kizil paintings as well as in the later Tibetan document and is thought to refer to a painter who came from the Roman Empire or the Byzantine Empire 107 Cave of the Seafarers A Classical border of acanthus leaves and Buddhist skulls was painted along the bottom edge of the mural in cave 212 where Rumakama worked Period 2 New school with bolder style circa 400 500 CE Edit Emergence of new painting techniques in the later half of the First Period Left Classical detail of Cave 212 Right bolder style in Cave 77 Still the color palette brown orange green remains the same 70 Following the earliest Classical style of the paintings at Kizil which was especially elegant and painterly with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume 70 a new school appears with the Cave of the Statues with works such as the Cowherd Nanda which is much bolder using intense colors but still limited to browns greens and oranges thicker lines and simpler patterns somewhat like colored drawings 70 108 This style is thought to be derived from the confluence of Hellenistic Iranian and Indian influences under the Kushans and its main center of creation was at Bamiyan which became a kind of parent monastery for the settlement of monks in Central Asia 109 This evolution in style is accompanied by a change in the main themes being portrayed In the Classical period the story of the life of the Buddha and numerous Jataka tales took center stage Now the main accent is on the sermons of the Buddha which typically cover the walls of the main cella together with the appearance of side and rear corridors in which are pictured the events of the death of the Buddha the Parinirvana 110 111 Rhie attributes the sudden variations of styles at Kizil without much signs of internal evolution especially in the early stages to the sudden arrival of new groups of artists from other regions bringing their own artistic idioms and techniques 112 This period is also marked by the appearance of the self portraits of painters in long tunics and highboots armed with short daggers such as the painter of the Cave of the Statues or the several painters of the Cave of the Painters with often their own identifying labels in Sanskrit 113 114 The clothing style and type of these painters has often been described as Sasanian 63 but has recently been proposed as being rather Hephthalite due to the similarities with the Hephthalite figures in Dilberjin Tepe Balalyk Tepe or Bamiyan and because the Hepthalites did control the Tarim Basin for nearly a century around this time period 51 115 Cave of the statues Cave 77 375 400 CE Edit Cave of the statues Cave 77 375 400 CE General reconstitution of the main cella and corridors the roof collapsed in ancient times 117 In the higher portion of the main cella three rows of beam holes about 1 5 meters apart and above the paintings were visible suggesting supports for decorative balconies 118 probably holdings stucco statues of standing figures and Devatas 119 The rather well preserved corridors and back room remain to this day Self portrait of the painter 104x35 cm from the Cave of the Statues in Central Asian caftan and high boots and armed with a dagger who was standing behind the first statue of the left corridor 116 113 Painting of a cowherd listening to a sermon of the Buddha from the right wall of the main hall Cave of the Statues 14C date 406 425 CE 101 The Cave of the Statues 70 Statuenhohle was a magnificent cave located next to the Peacock Cave Cave 76 It is a colossal image cave with no niche in the main cella but a podium on which a colossal standing statue of the Buddha probably stood 70 In an atypical design the back corridor is quite large and wider than the main cella with a width of 8 70 meters for a height of 5 10 meters 70 Only seven other Colossal image caves are known in Kizil including caves 47 48 70 136 139 146 4 They are characterized by a very tall main cella designed to accommodate a gigantic image of the Buddha the height of the cella reaching around 5 meters and sometimes as high as 16 5 meters such as in cave 47 and also a rather tall back room often around 5 6 meters high 4 The numerous statues of the cave were made of clay and straw fibers or hair for reinforcement and often dated to the 6th century CE 120 but now rather dated to 375 400 CE in conjunction with carbon dates 101 121 7 90 Many of the statues were made from molds which had Sanskrit names on them which are probably the names of the crafsmen or the owners 120 The cave is a central pillar cave but the roof of the main cella which formed a vault culminating at around 6 meters has entirely collapsed A few paintings remained on the walls of the main cella they were sermons of the Buddha organized in several rows the size of each of these pictures being 1 34 m wide and 96 cm high The sermon images were of pure Gandhara style 122 Their style was very close to those of the Cave of the Painters Cave 207 and according to Grunwedel they seem to have been executed by the same hand 122 123 Albert Grunwedel attributed both caves to the same Stage I period 500 600 CE 38 39 Several fine fragments of very fine painting have reached us which are attributed to the Cave of the Statues 124 Grunwedel explained that only three paintings remained in the cella all scenes of the sermon of the Buddha 1 On the right wall of the cella Grunwedel described the picture of a sermon with a youth in light undergarment praying in front of Buddha corresponding to the picture now described as the cowherd Nanda known to have come from the Cave of the Statues 122 2 In the opposite location on the left wall Grunwedel described a sermon scene in which the Buddha only had his feet remaining corresponding to the panel photographed by Charles Nouette in situ in 1907 122 3 Finally Grunwedel described a sermon scene with only a kneeling adorant remaining corresponding to the kneeling Vajrapani known to have come from the Cave of the Statues 122 The style of these panels from the main cella is markedly different from the refined classical style of the side corridor vaults and the back corridor They suggests different painters and different schools of art In the cella the paintings are much bolder using intense colors thicker lines and simpler patterns as in the Cowherd Nanda 70 The colors of the paintings in the cella although more intense are still limited to browns greens and oranges 70 The big eyes and wide eyelids remind of late Kushana works 70 These new types of paintings suggest the emergence of a bold new style in Kucha around that time 70 A painter holding a cup of paint and whose clothes exactly match the painters in the Cave of the Painters caftan boots is visible in one of the murals of the cave 113 114 Originally at the front end of the left corridor behind the first statue the painting is now located in the Hermitage Museum 125 Two more devotee figures with the same clothes were located in the back corridor as well 122 One of the statues is a man in a particular type of armour with sectioned areas which used to stand as a protector possibly a Vajrapani to the left side of the colossal Buddha of the main cella 70 This type of armour was in use for several centuries in art of the Northern segment of the Silk Road and later became prevalent in China 126 The head is a tentative addition 127 Lu Guang a Chinese general sent by Emperor Fu Jian r 357 385 of the Former Qin dynasty 351 394 who temporarily conquered Kucha in 383 385 CE mentioned the powerful armour of Kuchaen soldiers a type of chainmail and lamellar armour of Sasanian inspiration which can also be seen in the paintings of the Kizil Caves 61 They were skillful with arrows and horses and good with short and long spears They armour was like chain link even if one shoots it the arrow cannot go in Biography of Chinese General Lu Guang 61 Front of the cave The main cella about 6 meters in height has collapsed and the entrances to the two side corridors are directly exposed Plan and side view of the Cave of the Statues The front room about 6 meters tall has a huge podium 3 8x1 4 meters for a colossal statue of the Buddha The large back room has a rare gabled ceiling The sermon scene just before the entrance to the left corridor photographed in situ by Charles Nouette in 1907 Seated Vajrapani Cave of the Statues Kizil Caves 14C date 406 425 CE 101 The side corridors are structurally highly sophisticated and remain visible to this day A low platform runs along the external wall of each corridor on which rows of statues were displayed with murals behind them including the figure of the painter in tunic and boots Above them the top of each corridor formed a high vault equipped with a lunette on the southern side and decorated over its length with rows of devatas behind a balustrade standing around a Buddha Maitreya and on top of them landscapes with rhombus losange designs with monks animals trees and ponds of the type seen in vault of the Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 70 128 129 Richly adorned asparas over the Parinirvana Buddha back wall of the back corridor The back corridor also visible today is quite unusual as its vault is trabeated formed of three flat longitudinal surfaces on which figures of devatas are aligned like a deck of cards 70 129 On the bench along the back wall stood a colossal reclining Buddha image in a scene of the Parinirvana with elegant flying devatas hovering over the Buddha 70 128 Remains of female statues seated on the back bench were visible with at their feet the bust of a man elephant 128 The style of the paintings in this cave especially in the side and back corridors is very elegant and painterly with sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume 70 It is quite similar to the style of the Cave of the Hippocampi Cave 118 and may belong to the same school 70 This refined style contrasts with the style of panels in the cella the Cowherd Nanda which is much bolder using intense colors browns greens and oranges thicker lines and simpler patterns 70 This divergence suggests that the Cave of the Statues may be transitional between these two early styles 70 Later caves such as the Cave of the Musicians point to an even more different style using vivid colors and Ligne claire sharp lines to delineate body shapes together with the abundant use of intense blue pigments with different roots inspired by the Western art of the 4th century CE 70 Remains of statues in the left corridor 2 in the map The painter in caftan is in the corner behind the first statue from the left 130 The statues too were painted Cave of the Statues back room mural over a reclining statue of the Parinirvana Buddha 131 Left corridor devatas standing at a balcony detail Ceiling of the back corridor detail Cave of the Painters Cave 207 dated 478 536 CE Edit Cave of the Painters Cave 207 478 536 CE Group around the Buddha and Classical Roman style frieze over him in the main vaulted chamber of the Cave of the Painters center top of the right wall 132 General decorative content and layout of the main chamber with prismatic dome with location of the painters as recorded by Albert Grunwedel in 1912 101 The cave is today almost devoid of pictorial remains several of the paintings of the right wall were sent to the Dahlem Museum in Germany 5 133 the paintings of the left wall were essentially intact in 1912 and have remained on site except for the central top panel but they are today fragmentary and have been vandalized Detail of the Monks attending the Buddha The Cave of the Painters Malerhohle 画家窟 Cave 207 134 is one of the earliest caves of Kizil and one of the most beautiful 135 The cave contained a statue of the Buddha against the rear wall of the cella and a barrel vaulted ambulatory surrounded it 135 The main cellar contained nine murals of the preaching Buddha on each side wall 135 The name of the cave comes from the numerous self portraits of painters standing at the side of the murals holding paint cupellas and brushes 135 Several of the painters have a label such as the written label in Sanskrit Gupta script Painting of Tutuka Citrakara Tutukasya next to the painter in question 136 Citrakara is not Tocharian but Sanskrit and later Hindi च त रकल for painter painting 137 138 139 140 In the art of Kizil identifying labels were often added to pictures of donors but never to narrative scenes 99 Paleography stylistic analysis and carbon dating combine to give a date of circa 500 CE for these paintings 135 Some stylistic elements have a strong Classical touch such as Roman style friezes at the top of the walls over scenes of the Buddha 132 The Cave of the Painters as some other caves at Kizil depicts men in caftans with a triangular collar on the right side and a unique hairstyle Another marker is the two point suspension system for swords which seems to have been a Hephthalite innovation and was introduced by them in the territories they controlled 51 These paintings appear to have been made during Hephthalite rule in the region circa 480 550 CE 51 115 The influence of the art of Gandhara in some of the paintings at the Kizil Caves dated to circa 500 CE is considered as a consequence of the political unification of the area between Bactria and Kucha under the Hephthalites 69 The paintings of the Caves of the Painters have been carbon dated to 478 536 CE 101 Albert Grunwedel in 1912 considered that the murals of the Cave of the Statues had been made by the same artists as those of the Cave of the Painters and that they were in pure Gandhara style 141 Also a self portraited painter in the Caves of the Statues holding a cup of paint has clothes which exactly match those of the painters in the Cave of the Painters caftan boots 113 114 The clothing style of the painters at Kizil has often been described as Sasanian 142 but is now rather considered as Hephthalite due to the similarities with the figures in Bamiyan Dilberjin Tepe or Balalyk Tepe 51 115 Grunwedel attributed both caves to the same Stage I period 500 600 CE 38 39 The main cella contains 18 scenes of the Buddha preaching 143 The niche must have contained a monumental statue of the Buddha and paintings related to the Indrasala Cave narrative 143 The ceiling is prismatic reproducing a type of architecture known from Bamiyan 143 The right corridor contained murals related to the War for the Relics and the Sharing of the relics of the Buddha one of them showing armoured warriors on horses 143 The murals of the back corridor were almost entirely gone by 1912 Only a few traces remained suggesting scenes of the Parinirvana 143 The left corridor had a beautiful mural showing a monk transmitting the teachings of the Buddha to a kneeling royal family whether the mural in front of it on the external wall was entirely gone 143 Similarities have been noted between the paintings of the Cave of the Painters and those of Dilberjin Tepe and Penjikent of the 5th 6th centuries 144 Cave of the Painters plan Self portraits of the painters at Kizil Labels in Sanskrit Gupta script Painting of name Mural in the Cave of the Painters with painter in caftan in the lower right corner circa 500 CE 145 146 He has a label written in Sanskrit Gupta script The Painter Tutuka Citrakara Tutukasya 136 Citrakara च त रकल is Sanskrit and Hindi for painter painting 137 138 139 140 Photograph and drawing from 1912 and current state in situ 147 Mural with warriors in the right corridor outside wall the War for the relics of the Buddha 143 They wear lamellar helmets and their sword guards have typical Hunnish designs of rectangle or oval shapes with cloisonne ornamentation 47 Weaponry can be dated to the 5th century CE 47 The mural was very clear but disintegrated upon removal by Grunwedel only a few fragments remain in situ The sharing of the relics of the Buddha by the Brahmana Drona to eight kings four are visible Relief from the right corridor inside wall 143 Detail of a Devata right wall top tier left scene Cave 60 Largest Cave Edit Cave 60 also called the Largest Cave is a cave which was expanded over several periods and still contained a few paintings belonging to the refined style of the Classical First Period while most of the paintings are from the later Second Period 148 The cave is known for its portrait of royal donors characteristically accompanied by a label in Brahmi script 148 This is the only known possible instance of a portrait of royal donors in a painting of the First Style whereas they occur very often during the second period 148 The style of painting is very similar to that seen in the Cave of the Painters Cave 207 148 The hairstyle of the male donor is quite similar to that of the famous painter in the Cave of the Painters 148 The cave is also remarkable for the presence of Sasanian style ducks in a bead roundel frames a well known motif which spread through Central Asia and is known from the dress of a Central Asian ambassador from Afrasiab 149 This motif was likely painted later than the portraits of the royal donors 148 The Largest Cave Cave 60 The panel in First Style with royal donors and Brahmi label 148 Detail of the royal donor with a hairstyle similar to that of the main painter in the Cave of the Painters 148 Sasanian motif of birds in pearl roundels a likely later painting 148 Second Indo Iranian Style strongly contrasted blue and green paintings Edit Central Asian foreigner worshipping Maitreya Cave 188 The Second Indo Iranian style evolved with a few intermediate stages expressing continuous influence from India combined with influence from the Eastern Iran sphere at that time occupied by the Sasanian Empire and the Hephthalites with strong Sogdian cultural elements 48 The Hephthalites lost political power circa 550 CE after being defeated by the Sasanids and the Western Turks but they remained influential for a long time having fragmented into semi independent Principalities 150 151 Sogdia at the center of a new Silk Road between China to the Sasanian Empire and the Byzantine Empire became extremely prosperous around that time 152 Central Asian stylistic elements Edit This style is characterized by strong Iranian Sogdian elements probably brought with intense Sogdian Tocharian trade during the period the influence of which is especially apparent in the Central Asian caftans with Sogdian textile designs as well as Sogdian longswords of many of the figures 66 Other characteristic Sogdian designs are animals such as ducks within pearl medallions 66 Indo Iranian influence also appears in mythological figures such as the bird Garuda with snakes in its beak the wind god Vayu the sun god Aditya or the moon god Chandra 66 The use of strongly contrasted blue and green colours made possible by the importation of lapis lazuli blue pigments from Central Asia and the drawing of a line for contours are characteristic of this style 48 67 This style examplified by the Cave of the Musicians using vivid colors and Ligne claire sharp lines to delineate body shapes seems to be inspired by the Western art of the 4th century CE and is very different from the style of the Kizil caves of the earlier period which on the contrary is very elegant and painterly with nuanced colors and sophisticated shading of the bodies to express sculptural volume and which probably points to different artistical roots 70 Still no East Asian influence is visible in these paintings 48 Sasanian style medallions in Cave 60 Kizil Caves Jivajivaka two headed bird in blue and green style Kizil Cave 38 Sun God Aditya on his chariot Cave 171 Cave 38 moon symbol Period 1 Initial transitional style Edit The first period consist in a short interval of transitional style in which paintings remain subtil and rather nuanced but blue pigments have started to appear The Cave of the Devil C Cave 198 and Cave of the Devil A Cave 199 as well as the Cave with the Steps Cave 110 and sometimes the Red domed Cave A Cave 67 are considered as the first period of this new style 48 Lunette scene Cave 198 Mural Cave 198 Monks and devotees Cave 199 Murals with Princes Cave 199 Devotee right making an offering to the Buddha Cave 110 Period 2 main stylistic period Edit Cave of the Musicians Cave 38 Edit Cave of the Musicians 38 Cave of the Musicians 38 and neighbouring caves Plan A typical central pillar cave layout with painters at work The eponymous musicians and Jivajivaka the two headed bird over the murals of the main hall According to Rhie the Cave of the Musicians 153 is probably the earliest of the central pillar caves at Kizil dated to the mid 4th century CE and its iconography is also among the earliest 154 Carbon testing by Su Bai gave dates ranging from 310 80 CE to 350 60 CE i e a maximum range of 230 410 CE 17 47 65 Huo and Wang attributed the cave to the Second Period giving it a date from mid 4th to late 5th century circa 350 499 CE 17 The traditional German datation estimated the cave to be from the 600 650 CE period and presented it as an example of the later Blue green style said to succeed chronologically the Orange green style group 17 The so called central pillar which appears on a plan is actually not a pillar at all but only the rock at the back of the cave into which was bored a circular corridor allowing for circumambulation 17 There is a niche in the central pillar designed to house a statue of the Buddha and two other niches on each side of the main entrance and niches in the back corridor 17 The central niche probably depicted the Buddha meditating in the Indrasala Cave with a background decoration of a mountain a recurring central theme at Kizil 17 Maitreya the Buddha of the future in the Tusita Heaven appears in a beautiful mural over the exit door 17 Structurally the cave remains relatively simple as it does not have an anteroom or vestibule 17 The style of the paintings is derived from the Art of Gandhara and Kashmir the Art of Mathura and early Gupta art with striking influences from Roman art and the art of Palmyra 17 154 Kumarajiva is known to have travelled repeatedly between Kucha and Kashmir around this time and he may have been instrumental among many others in the transmission of this art 17 The structural prototype of the cave may be Kara Tepe in Bactria 154 The flat well delineated surfaces of the paintings remind of the Roman Opus sectile technique which prospered circa 331 359 CE 17 Entrance of Cave 38 Ceiling photographed in 1907 by Charles Nouette Maitreya the Buddha of the future in the Tusita Heaven over the exit door 17 Parinirvana scene on the back wall of the back corridor 17 155 Merciful Turtle King from Buddhist Jataka tales Hermitage Museum St Petersburg Warrior in armour ceiling of Cave 38 156 Trader making a dedication to the Buddha Cave 38 157 Jataka scene on the ceiling Sabu leading the way of the traders Kizil Cave 38 Cave of the Musicians Kizil Cave 38 ceiling Cave 14 Central Asian traders Edit Group of caves 14 19 The small Cave 14 is located to the west and Cave 17 is in the center of the group The other caves are viharas without decorations Cave 14 a small and nearly square room with a vaulted ceiling 2 17x2 17 meters is considered as later than the Cave of the Musicians and dated to the late 4th century CE to early 5th century CE circa 400 CE by Rhie 89 158 The cave has many designs showing Central Asian traders encountering various dangers on their way such as being lost in the dark and being saved by the Dragon King Mabi 159 Cave 14 is considered as an important historical marker for the dress styles or the armour types worn by some of the figures 158 Kizil man in armour cave 14 智马舍身救王命故事 The story of the smart horse who sacrifies himself for the king Dragon King Mabi saving traders Cave 14 Deity on elephant Cave 14 Ceiling of Cave 14 traders galloping in the dark bottom among vignettes alluding to Jataka tales Cave 17 Tocharian royalty circa 500 CE Edit Tocharian royal family King Queen and young blond hair Prince in Tocharian clothing Kizil Cave 17 entrance wall lower left panel Hermitage Museum 160 161 162 163 Cave 17 Cave of the Bodhisattva Vault is large central pillar cave located near Cave 14 and high up on the rock to the right of Cave 8 164 It was probably the main cave of the group of caves from 14 to 19 which also includes several undecorated living quarters or viharas and was dedicted to religious services Su Bai dates Cave 17 to the Second Stage 395 465 CE 65 together with Cave 14 Luo and Wang date it to 465 CE 65 7 Rhie attributes Cave 17 to circa 500 based on stylistic considerations 165 It is a central pillar cave with a small very colorfull square cella 3 80x3 90 meters with a vaulted ceiling a central pillar with two side corridors and a back room 164 These caves were possibly small chapels to nearby viharas 89 In Cave 17 166 on the lower left panel of the entrance wall appeared a Royal family composed of the King Queen and two young Princes They are accompanied by monks and men in caftan The relief is now in the Hermitage Museum 160 The King wears a crown and a triple halo with Sasanian type royal ribbons 163 He wears a long white caftan decorated with small diamond designs and has long boots His right hand is in front of his chest holding an incense lamp 163 and he holds an akinakes sword and a red bag in the left hand 163 167 The end of a long knight s sword is visible behind the first boot 163 The king can be identified as a Tocharian king of Kucha 162 His Queen wears a long robe and his two sons Princes wear ornate caftan and are fair haired 163 According to Historian of Art Benjamin Rowland the portraits in Kizil show that the Tocharians were European rather than Mongol in appearance with light complexions blue eyes and blond or reddish hair and the costumes of the knights and their ladies have haunting suggestions of the chivalric age of the West 168 The Chinese named Kuchean kings by adding the prefix 白 meaning white probably pointing to the fair complexion of the Kucheans 169 The Chinese Monk Xuanzang in 645 CE noted that they clothe themselves with ornamented garments of silk and embroidery 170 This cave also shows Central Asian traders encountering various dangers on their way such as being lost in the dark and being saved by the Dragon King Mabi Another is the story of the good merchant Sabu 萨缚 who in order to show the way to a party of 500 merchants lost in the darkness puts his own arms on fire to use them as torches and successfully rescues them The story appears in numerous paintings in which the merchants are in Central Asian garb and accompanied by camels and Sab has the attributes of a Bodhisattva 159 Cave 17 is contemporary with the earliest decorated Mogao Caves near Dunhuang caves 268 272 and 275 which were built and decorated by the Northern Liang between 419 and 439 CE before the invasion of the Northern Wei They have many stylistic characteristics in common 171 172 Plan of Cave 17 Two headed dragon capturing traders Cave 17 Sab leading the way for the 500 traders Kizil Cave 17 Attendants to the King Cave 17 Kizil Vairocana Buddha right corridor Cave 17 Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers Cave no 8 432 538 CE Edit Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers Cave 8 432 538 CE Kizil Caves swordsmen in Hephthalite style originally lining the interior of the side corridors ordered from left to right 51 174 Structure and known decorative layout of the main hall of the cave The side corridors decorated with the Sixteen Sword bearers lead to a back room which is transversally vaulted The cave was Carbon dated to 432 538 CE 173 60 The Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers Hohle der Schwerttrager 十六带剑者窟 is a famous cave with a series of murals showing swordsmen wearing caftans and armed with long sword and daggers These murals have been carbon dated to 432 538 CE 173 60 The swordsmen have also been dubbed the Tocharian donors The interpretations of the nationality or ethnicity of the donors have varied Some authors claim that the donors are indeed Tocharians an elusive people of the Tarim Basin who spoke the well documented Tocharian language the easternmost Indo European language 175 According to this thesis the donors in the murals are of the Indo European type wearing Iranian style clothes and reddish hair 175 A more recent interpretation is that the sword bearers are actually Hephthalites who are known to have occupied the Tarim Basin from 490 to 560 CE precisely at the time the paintings were made 51 174 Kucha was specifically part of their dominion between 502 and 556 CE 176 The clothing style the iconography and the physionomy of the donors are said to be extremely close to those depicted in the paintings of Tokharistan Bactria the center of Hephthalite power at sites such as Balalyk tepe or Dilberjin Tepe 51 174 In particular the coat with single folded lapel is considered as a result of Hephthalite influence whereas traditional Kuchean coats had two lapels 177 At present the most prevalent opinion among academics seems to be that the Hephthalites were initially of Turkic origin 178 Similar donors can be seen in the Kumtura Caves In the Cave of the Sixteen sword bearers the murals of the sixteen sword bearers are located in the lateral left and right corridors around the central pillar simulating a procession of devotees 179 The sides of the main room are occupied by panels showing groups around seated Buddhas while the vault is decorated with a myriad of small Buddhas with emanating flames 179 Cave of the 16 Sword bearers at the west end of the Kizil cave complex Cave of the 16 Sword Bearers plan One of the sword bearers in right lapelled caftan Cave 8 sword bearer detail Swordbearer and servant Man with a turban from the side wall of the main cella The rear corridor forming a back room behind the central pillar is a barrel vaulted rectangular room with the two corridors for side access It was decorated by many spectacular murals including a large mural showing the sharing of the relics with soldiers in armour riding horses and elephants b on the plan 179 180 The vault was lavishly decorated with flying asparas holding musical instruments The back wall had a depiction of the Parinirvana with a reclining image of the Buddha and asparas flying over The murals were photographed in black and white in situ by Charles Nouette in September 1907 but all of them were later taken to Germany by Von Le Coq A reconstruction of the rear corridor was recently built in the Museum fur Asiatische Kunst Back corridor room of the Cave of the Sixteen Swordbearers looking towards the main cella reconstitution Vault decoration over the mural of The War of the Relics on site photograph in 1907 by Charles Nouette and removed color panels at the Dalhem Museum Mural on the inside wall of the rear corridor b on the plan The kings around the Brahmana Drona and below soldiers on elephants and horses War of the relics Armoured men on horses and elephants in the rear corridor War of the Relics scene details Cave 181 Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley Edit Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley Cave 181 Reconstitution of Cave 181 according to the description by Grunwedel Entrance Plan The Cave of the High Place in the Small Valley Cave 181 also called the Highest Cave 181 is described extensively by Albert Grunwedel as a particularly interesting cave of the small ravine 182 He explains that the cave is located high up on the right side of the ravine which accounts for the fact that its murals have been preserved from the usual iconoclastic vandalism the faces in particular are well preserved 182 Also the murals did not use gold foils for decoration which reduced the incentive for theft 182 In his plates Grunwedel illustrates the murals of the cave where he names the cave by its official name Hochliegende Hohle der 2 Schlucht Cave of the High Place in the 2nd Valley 183 which is the German name for cave 181 184 Grunwedel explains that the structure of the cave is extremely rare as it is not a barrel vaulted cave instead the ceiling has the shape of a tent 185 The flatness of the sides of the tent like ceiling is the reason why Grunwedel was able to remove easily most of the ceiling paintings in large panels something which is impossible with the strongly curved surface of a barrel vaulted ceiling 182 The tent like ceiling is bordered by a row of seven bejewelled princes on each side 182 The side wall depict rather tumultuous scenes of the sermon of the Buddha no fewer than eight of them with a multitude of attendants in various attitudes and clothing 186 The entrance wall had paintings of Tocharian donors and monks on both side 182 Above the entrance was the usual painting of Maitreya with surrounding Devaputras 182 The side corridors had paintings of Jataka stories while the back corridor behind the niche had a bench or pedestal along the back wall for the display of the Parinirvana of the Buddha with deities flying over 182 On the opposite wall was a scene of the Cremation of the Buddha 182 Grunwedel sent most of the murals to Germany 182 A headless wooden statue of a Dhyanasana Buddha about 164 cm tall was found in the cave 187 The murals and the paintings of the ceiling are generally attributed to Cave 181 188 189 but some authors attribute them to Cave 178 instead 190 To add to the confusion von Le Coq wrote in 1924 that the paintings of the ceiling actually came from barrel vaulted Cave 184 and he claimed that Grunwedel who accomplished the removal of the murals in 1906 1907 wrongly described the vault as being tent like 191 Access to cave 181 has remained difficult and it has also been claimed that it was never painted 192 193 Flat mural of the right half of the ceiling It is about 4 cm thick and weight around 400 kg Dahlem Museum 194 Sab leading the way to a trader with a camel The Buddha and attendantsPeriod 2 later phase 500 700 CE Edit Maya Cave 3rd complex Cave 224 550 600 CE Maitreya in the lunette over the entrance of Maya Cave 224 Dahlem Museum Ceiling and lunette over the entrance of Maya Cave 224 Plan of the cave The 3rd phase covers a period from the mid 6th century CE to the early 7th century CE Carbon testing from this period gave dates ranging from 545 75 CE to 685 65 CE i e a maximum range of 470 750 CE 65 Maya Cave n 224 is one of the famous caves from this period Historically the paintings of this period seem to correspond to the Turk expansion following their uprising against the Rouran Khaganate in 552 and their subsequent territorial expansion 47 This can also be seen the style of armour of some of the soldiers in the murals especially with their pear shaped helmets 47 Vivid colors are used with great contrast sometimes quite unnaturally and in a garish manner A lot of lapis lazuli blue is incorporated in the palette of this artist 48 Skin color or hair color are often quite unnatural 48 Backgrounds often have plenty of flowers fruits or leaves Ornaments are often extravagant 48 Again no East Asian influence is visible in these paintings 48 Maya Cave Third complex cave 224 c 550 600 CE Edit Maya Cave Cave 224 of III Anlage is one of the most famous caves of the Third Period It is dated to circa 550 600 CE and possibly follows the events of the Turk uprising against the Rouran Khaganate in 552 CE and the subsequent Turk expansion 195 The helmets of the Knights depicted in some of the murals have been said to be characteristic pear shaped segmented helmets of the Turkic type 195 196 A famous mural of the Mourning of the Buddha at his Cremation appears in Maya Cave 224 from the rear passage of the cave with various figures in ethnic costumes 197 Three of the men among the mourners cut their forehead skin or chest with their knives a practice of self mutilation practiced by the Scythians 197 One of the mourners if is thought to be a Turk 198 199 Mural of the Mourning of the Buddha with various figures in ethnic costumes Maya Cave 224 The second figure from the right is thought to be a Turk 198 199 200 Coin of the Turkic dynasties of Chach Circa 605 630 CE lt ref gt King Ajatasaru His Queen and His Minister Varshakara Kizil Maya Cave Cave 224 Drona the Brahmin with Relics of the Buddha Cave 224 Kizil The War of the Relics back corridor of Maya Cave 224 195 Knights in Kucha following the events of 552 CE Turk uprising and the subsequent Turk expansion 2nd half of the 6th century CE The helmet is a characteristic pear shaped segmented helmet of the Turkic type 195 196 Tocharian Prince mourning the Buddha A monk from The First Sermon right corridor painting Maya Cave Second complex Cave 205 end 6th century CE Edit Maya Cave 2nd complex Cave 205 600 CE Prince Tottika of Kucha with his wife Svayamprabha accompanied by two monks Maya Cave 205 Kizil Entrance Plan Maya Cave of II Anlage Cave 205 has been carbon dated to the 6th 7th century CE 90 The cave has an inscriptions in Sanskrit mentioning the King of Kucha Anantavarma He is shown accompanied by two armed attendants 201 When Anantavarma the great king maharaja of Kucha saw the letter of Ilmonis the dedication and the little container of musk he had honor done to the Buddha Albert Grunwedel translation 201 A Prince appears with his wife in the adjacent frescoes mentioned in a nearby inscription as the future king Tottika and his princess Swayamprabha 202 This cave has been rather precisely dated to the end of the 6th century CE based on the names of the rulers found in the inscriptions particularly King Tottika and his wife Svayamprabha a Sanskrit name who also appear together with Suvarnapushpa known to have ruled 600 625 CE and his son Suvarnadeva in the inscriptions on the walls of the Red dome Cave 203 The epigraphy also suggest dates later than the Cave of the Painters with its more ancient inscription about the painter Tutuka 204 Presentation of the Parinirvana Cave 205 The Monk Ajnatakaundinya Maya Cave Site 2 Cave 205 Cremation of the Buddha King Anandavarman and attendants 205 206 Medidating Mahakasyapa in his patched robe ceiling detail Cave 205 207 The inscription in Sanskrit mentioning AnandavarmanRed dome Cave 67 more royal dedications Edit Another nearby cave the Red domed Cave A Cave 67 also has inscriptions mentioning a list of donors including a queen and six kings among them Suvarnapuspa ruled 600 625 CE and his son Suvarnadeva ruled 625 648 CE 202 208 209 Also included in the inscriptions are the names of King Tottika and his wife Svayamprabha a Sanskrit name who also appear in the Maya Cave of the Second Group Cave 205 suggesting proximity in time of these two caves 203 The epigraphy also suggest dates later than the Cave of the Painters with its more ancient inscription about the painter Tutuka 204 The Red dome cave contained a library in which were found very old manuscripts including one of the oldest known manuscripts in Sanskrit 33 Plan of the Red domed Cave A cave 67 View of the dome and paintings Princes and Princesses in the Red domed caveCave 69 portrait and dedication of the king of Kucha securely dated to 600 647 CE Edit King Suvarnapushpa of Kucha historically known ruled 600 625 CE Cave 69 Kizil This period has the only known secure dating in the Kizil Caves Cave 69 has a painting of a royal Kuchean couple with an inscription in the halo of the King Temple Constructed for the Benefit of Suvarnapushpa by His Son Suvarnapuspa having ruled between 600 and 625 and his three sons died before 647 CE according to Chinese sources 210 211 212 When he visited Kucha in 630 CE the Chinese monk Xuanzang received the favours of Suvarnadeva the son and successor of Suvarna puspa and Hinayana king of Kucha 213 Xuanzang described in many details the characteristics of Kucha 屈支国 quzhiguo in 大唐西域记 Tang Dynasty Account of the Western Regions and probably visited Kizil 214 215 1 The style of writing is Indian with some differences 2 They clothe themselves with ornamental garments of silk and embroidery They cut their hair and wear a flowing covering over their heads 3 The king is of Kuchean 屈支 quzhi race 216 4 There are about one hundred convents saṅgharamas in this country with five thousand and more disciples These belong to the Little Vehicle of the school of the Sarvastivadas Shwo yih tsai yu po Their doctrine teaching of Sutras and their rules of discipline principles of the Vinaya are like those of India and those who read them use the same originals 5 About 40 li to the north of this desert city there are two convents close together on the slope of a mountain 101 These events were soon before the Tang campaign against Kucha in 648 CE 213 A painting in the left corridor Cave 69 Kuchean devotees Cave 69 Kizil King Suvarnapuspa and his Queen 龟兹国王与王后供养像 in Cave 69 dated 600 647 CE per Chinese sources 217 Wreath bearing dove Cave 69Period 3 final narrative evolution Edit The final stage at Kizil is Period 3 of the Second Indo Iranian Style 54 Towards the end of its florescence Kizil saw the emergence of the domed central pillar cave a type of central pillar structure with niche and circumambulating corridor but with a very uncharacteristic near cubic main cella crowned by a magnificent cupola decorated with divinities 218 The style of painting is very refined and can also be seen in some other caves in the region such as in Kumtura The iconography too has evolved with a cosmological Buddha becoming omnipresent and majestic often surrounded by myriads of emanations of smaller Buddhas 218 This exceptional and very refined type of cave is exemplified by Cave 123 the Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves 219 It represents a final narrative evolution in which the figures of the cosmological Buddha predominate while secondary figures and stories take an ever smaller role 220 Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves Cave 123 Edit Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves Cave 123 600 650 CE Cave of the Ring Bearing Doves as reconstructed in the Museum fur Asiatische Kunst reconstitution Entrance Plan The Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves Cave 123 had a type of central pillar structure with niche and circumambulating corridor but with a very uncharacteristic cubic main cella crowned by a magnificent dome decorated with divinities 218 221 The main cella forms a square vestibule or main hall 3 42 x 3 42 meters in front of the pillar forming the back wall the vestibule being surmounted by a decorated dome The prototype for the dome decorated with standing Buddhist deities is to be found in Group C of the caves at Bamiyan 222 It can also be seen in some other caves in the region such as in Kumtura The cave is named after a pattern of flying geese holding a wreath or ring This pattern is also known from Cave 69 which is dated to 625 647 CE because of the depiction and inscription of a historically identified king Because of this marker Cave 123 may be dated to the same period 223 Two monumental Buddha images occupy the sides of the main cella They have full body mandorla halos filled with a multitude of sitting or standing Buddhas 224 These monumental images represent the second Great Miracle of the Sakyamuni Buddha at Shravasti 219 The myriads of Buddhas emanating from him each standing on a lotus are a result of his deep meditation at Shravasti as recounted in the Divyavadana 219 This understanding of the Great Miracle is most prominent among the Sarvastivadin and the Mulasarvastivadin 219 The two monumental Buddhas are surrounded by attendants some light skinned and some dark skinned and a Vajrapani 219 The side corridors also have similar Buddha images but this time with a supplementary decorated band around the Buddha which is filled with a row of ring bearing doves hence the name given to the cave 224 All Buddha images are surrounded with numerous attendants Devatas and Vajrapanis 224 Ring bearing doves Cave 123 The paintings were in great part brought to Europe by the fourth Royal prussian expedition to Central Asia of 1913 1914 led by Albert von Le Coq 225 The cave was reconstructed in Berlin around 1928 but suffered damage during the war 226 It has been reconstructed again recently in the Museum fur Asiatische Kunst The painting of the left side wall remains in situ quite damaged 227 228 Cave 123 with collapsed front antechamber 229 Cave 123 as recorded by Charles Nouette in September 1907 composite Decorative dome over the niche Cave with the Ring Bearing Doves Ethnological Museum of BerlinThe cave is quite outstanding and refined either in terms of architecture and decoration and departs from the mainstream of other caves at Kizil Marianne Yaldiz has called it One of Xinjiang s Mysteries 230 Untypically the narrative scenes are placed over the entrance taking second position to the monumental standing Buddhas of the side wall This is a layout which became popular farther east in Gansu 220 In a final narrative evolution the cave magnifies the figure of the Buddha and gives an ever smaller role to secondary figures and stories 220 The Buddha with his thousand emanations Entrance wall Sermon of the Buddha Bodhisattava over the niche Cave 123 Dome detail Cave 123 Dome detail Other caves of the third period Edit The Center Cave Cave 186 the Third to Last Cave Cave 184 and the Third Cave from the Front Cave 187 are also considered as representatives of this third period 54 Monks and donors Cave 186 Cave 186 group Cave 186 Monks and devotees Cave 184 Devotees Cave 184Uighur Chinese Style 8th 9th century CE Edit An apsara playing pipa Tang dynasty A 4th period also described as The third style receives strong influence from Chinese painting a result of the artistic activity and expansion of the Tang dynasty 231 The civilization of Kucha with the whole Tarim Basin from Turfan to Khotan fell to the Chinese punitive invasion of 648 CE putting an end to the Indo Iranian styles of Kucha 232 Ashina She er the East Turkic general leading the Tang dynasty expeditionary corps ordered the execution of eleven thousand Kuchean inhabitants by decapitation It was recorded that he destroyed five great towns and with them many myriads of men and women the lands of the west were seized with terror 233 Two caves at Kizil have art of the Tang period cave 43 and cave 229 234 In nearby Kumtura and in Turfan Chinese styles now prevailed 232 In 670 CE the Tibetan Empire conquered most of the Tarim Basin including Khotan Kucha Karashahr and Kashgar which they kept until the Chinese took back the control of the area in 692 235 In 753 CE the northern part of the Tarim Basin was taken over by the Turks of the Uyghur Khaganate based in Turfan 235 236 A new Tibetan conquest took place in 790 CE 235 By 900 CE the area was under Muslim domination 235 Texts and inscriptions EditLove poem Edit Most of the texts known from the Tocharians are religious except for one known love poem in Tocharian B found in Kizil and dated circa 600 CE manuscript B 496 237 Tocharian B manuscript B 496 Translation English Transliteration Inscription Tocharian script I for a thousand years however Thou wilt tell the story Thy I announce Heretofore there was no human being dearer to me than thee likewise hereafter there will be no one dearer to me than thee Love for thee affection for thee breath of all that is life and they shall not come to an end so long as there lasts life III Thus did I always think I will live well the whole of my life with one lover no force no deceit The god Karma alone knew this thought of mine so he provoked quarrel he ripped out my heart from thee He led thee afar tore me apart made me partake in all sorrows and took away the consolation thou wast mi life spirit and heart day by day 238 239 240 241 II Yaltse pikwala wataṃ weṃt noMa ni cisa noṣ somo nem wnolme lare taka ma ra postaṃ cisa lare masketar n Ciṣṣe laraumne ciṣṣe artanye pelke kalttarr solampa ṣṣe ma te stalle sol warnai III Taiysu palskanoym sanai ṣaryompa sayau karttse saulu warnai snai tserekwa snai nate Yamor nikte ṣe cau ni palskane sarsa tusa ysaly ersate ciṣy aras ni salkate Waya ci lauke tsyara nis wetke klyautka n pake po laklentas ciṣe tsarwo sampate Saul palsk arasni kom kom 238 239 Tocharian B Love Poem manuscript B496 one of two fragments Kyzil library Edit The Kyzil library had some of the oldest copies of the Indian theatre known today written in Sanskrit or in Tokharian B these Indian plays called Naṭaka in Sanskrit literature alternate prose and verse music and pantomime and also provide scenic indications so that a single performer can enact a complete play by changing attitudes and voices These plays are at the origin of the chantefables or Chinese transformation texts called Bianwen 242 13th century Tibetan document about Kizil Edit Tibetan map of the Kizil Caves 13th century CE Albert Grunwedel one of the German discovers of the Kizil Caves found in Saint Peterburg a 13th century Tibetan text related to Kucha and the Kizil Caves including a map which describes the caves from the perspective of Tantric Buddhism 243 According to the Tibetan text the paintings in some of the caves were commissioned by a Tokharian Thogar king called Mendre probably Mandhatṛ with the advice of Anandavarman a high ranking monk The king ordered an Indian artist Naravahanadatta and a Syrian artist Priyaratna with their disciples to paint the caves 1 The neighbouring Khotanese kings Vijayavardhana and Murlimin also assisted with the painting of another cave by sending artists to the site The king of Thogar called Mendre or the Persian Po lo si or Anandavarma had images painted in these caves for the followers of Buddha by the artist and painter Mitradatta also by Naravahanadatta who came from a place of worship Kultort of the Niganthas finally by Priyaratna who came from Syria also with their apprentices Werkschuler Mendre the king received an image of Amitabha from the emperor of China and went into the land of blessedness Sukhavati A son of the emperor of China came to the castle of Mir li killed according to an oath that he had made all Jaina Niganthas and all followers of Kalachakra and restored all the caves for the worship of Buddha Buddha Kultus Albert Grunwedel translation of the Tibetan text 244 The Japanese Buddhist scholar Teramoto Enga gave a rather different translation The Statue of Kumarajiva in front of the Kizil Caves in Kuqa County Xinjiang China King Mendre or the King of Persia Polosi or Anandavarma the kings of Tukhara 覩货罗 Tokharistan 245 had images painted in these caves for all the followers of the Buddha by the artist and painter Mitradatta also by Naravahanadatta who came from a place of worship of the Niganthas finally by Priyaratna who came from Syria Rumakama Roman Empire also with their apprentices King Mendre and the King of Tukhara received the relics of Amitabha and went into the land of blessedness Sukhavati The son of the King of Tukhara called Dahuangfa 大黄发王 came to the city of Mir li preached the Kalachakra to all the Jaina Niganthas and restored all the caves for the worship of Buddha Teramoto Enga translation of the Tibetan text fragment 246 According to a recent translation by Sam van Schaik the text should be Among the Buddhists there was a Tocharian Tho gar king called Men dre or Polosi or Anandavarma He had the caves painted by restorers and painters Mitradatta Naravahanadatta from the lands of the naked ones Niganthas Priyaratna from Romakam Byzantine Empire and other experts in restoration The king of the Rgya ser and King Men dre s bodies were taken by Amitabha and he went to the land of bliss When the son of the great king of Rgya ser came to the fort of Mir li thanks to the power of prayer all the naked ones Niganthas were killed by the followers of Kalacakra and all of the Buddhist caves were restored Translation by Sam van Schaik 103 According to Sam van Schaik Mendre could be the Indo Greek king Menander or the mythical king Manadhatṛ of Buddhist sources 247 Polosi could be a Chinese abbreviation for king Prasenajit Romakam may be the Byzantine Empire the naked ones would be the Niganthas 103 In Tibetan the country named Tho gar Thod kar corresponds to Tokharistan ancient Bactria 248 249 250 Influences Edit Sculpture and murals from Mogao cave nb 254 built during the Northern Wei period between 475 and 490 CE 251 It is one of the earliest caves in Dunhuang and shows parallels with the Kizil Caves especially Cave 80 Western Indic features and Western influences 252 251 The panel represents the Shibi Jataka The Kizil Caves are the earliest representative grottoes in China 11 The art of the Kizil Caves is thought to have influenced cave art at Dunhuang in the Mogao Caves as early as during the Northern Liang dynasty 421 439 CE and pictorial arts in China thereafter 253 According to historian Daniel C Waugh Given the importance of the Kucha region in the transmission of Buddhism into China and the evidence we have about the movement of translators such as Kumarajiva it is reasonable to suggest that the art and possibly the artists of Kizil influenced the early art of the Mogao Cave complex near Dunhuang further east along the Silk Road The earliest of the extant Dunhuang caves dating from the beginning of the fifth century show distinctly Central Asian features in their painting stylistically similar to what we find at Kizil Among the subjects depicted at Kizil and Mogao in strikingly similar fashion is that of the Cosmological Buddha whose robe displays images connected with the phenomenal world 101 Decay vandalism dismantlement and tourism Edit 20th century vandalism the murals of the left wall of the Cave of the Painters Cave 207 were photographed and left in place by the German explorer Albert Grunwedel in 1912 black and white photograph except for the central top panel but the rest have since been vandalized in situ and are now almost completely destroyed as of 2019 color photograph with only disfigured portions remaining This vandalism occurred during the last century Since their construction and decoration between the 4th and 8th centuries CE the Kizil Caves have suffered numerous periods of religious vandalism and decay 254 Western archaeologists orchestrated the massive sampling on the best remaining works of art in the early 20th century 254 Aside from their colonial outlook one of their alleged motivations was to protect these works of arts from vandalism due to Islamic iconoclasm and the depredations of treasure hunters 255 Most of the dismantled panels were sent to the Museum fur Indische Kunst Berlin Germany but ironically and tragically many were lost in the destructions of World War II with only photographs or drawings remaining in the best cases 84 86 A significant number of the murals were also captured by the Soviets in Berlin and turned up recently in the Hermitage Museum 256 161 162 163 In more recent times the Red Guards also contributed to the destruction of the site and last but not least the transformation of the site for touristic purposes since 2005 has led to the disfigurement of many caves and the irretrievable loss of archaeological knowledge 254 Today none of the caves can be said to have remained entirely intact although many remain quite impressive 257 255 Caves 1 17 in 1912 and in 2015 with major modifications for protection and touristic accessibility Major Kizil caves EditThe caves were first named in German by Albert Grunwedel based on various individual characteristics Many of these names have remained in English More recently a numbering system was adopted by the Chinese generally based on the geographical position of the caves from West to East Kizil panorama Caves 1 to 235 without 201 231 which are at the back of the mountain 后山 Houshan Third German Expedition 1906 1907 10 Chinesenumber name German name 258 English name Comments stylistic period Rhie 2019 89 C14 date Su Bai 1983 C14 date Huo and Wang 1993 Location Cave Paintings Plan Group West of the Valley 谷西 Guxi Caves 1 80 1 2 克孜尔石窟第2窟 壁炉窟C D E Hohlengruppe mit der Kamin C D E 259 Cave Group with the Chimney C D E 3壁炉窟B Hohlengruppe mit der Kamin B 259 Cave Group with the Chimney B4壁炉窟A Hohlengruppe mit der Kamin A 259 Cave Group with the Chimney A 570 CE 65 90 7绘画地坪窟 Hohle mit dem Freskoboden Cave with the Fresco floor 8十六带剑者窟 Hohle der sechzehn Schwerttragger 260 Cave of the Sixteen Swordbearers 432 538 CE 173 60 640 CE 38 50 90 13 Cave 13 14 Cave 14 89 Mid to late 4th century 158 395 CE 65 to 465 CE 65 7 17菩萨顶窟 Hohle mit dem Bodhisattvagewolbe 261 Also Hohle mit dem Bodhisattva Plafond Cave of the Bodhisattva Vault 395 CE 65 to 465 CE 65 7 465 CE 65 90 25 25A 25B 25C 龛窟 Niche caves Small early caves roughly cubic in shape and about 1x1x1 meters in size 27壁龛窟 Nischenhohle 262 Cave of the Niche 30 Cave 30 33 Cave 33 34思惟日神窟 Hohle mit dem meditierenden sonnengott Cave with meditating Sun God 158 Circa 400 CE 165 36 37禅房B D Das Sogenannte Kloster 263 Kloster mit der Treppe B und A 184 The So called Cloister Cave 395 CE 65 to 465 CE 65 7 38伎乐窟 Hohle mit dem Musikerchor 264 Cave of the Musicians Mid 4th century CE Possibly the earliest central pillar cave 154 310 CE 80 47 65 74 mid 4th end 5th century 90 39 Cave 39 a square cave 395 CE 65 to 465 CE 65 7 40 Cave 40 a vihara cave without decoration 41 42 43 44 45 46 46a Storage caves 265 47 Kultstatten Colossal Image Cave Cave 47 154 A colossal standing Buddha about 10 meters tall used to stand in front of the central pillar 266 Six storeys of decorations adorned the side walls the first storey with stucco statues and the other storeys with paintings 266 The cave has a large backroom with a Parinirvana scene 266 Probably the oldest colossal image cave at Kizil 266 310 CE 80 to 350 CE 60 7 350 CE 60 90 48 Cave 48 267 Another early colossal image cave but smaller than Cave 47 350 400 CE 268 350 CE 60 90 Bibliothek Library 58戴盔者窟 Hohle der Behelmten Cave of the Helmetted Man span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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