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Nalanda mahavihara

Nalanda (Nālandā, pronounced [naːlən̪d̪aː]) was a renowned mahavihara (Buddhist monastic university) in ancient Magadha (modern-day Bihar), eastern India.[4][5][6] Considered by historians to be the world's first residential university[7] and among the greatest centers of learning in the ancient world, it was located near the city of Rajagriha (now Rajgir) and about 90 kilometres (56 mi) southeast of Pataliputra (now Patna). Operating from 427 until 1197 CE,[8][9] Nalanda played a vital role in promoting the patronage of arts and academics during the 5th and 6th century CE, a period that has since been described as the "Golden Age of India" by scholars.[10]

Nalanda Mahavihara
The ruins of Nalanda Mahavihara
Shown within India
Nalanda mahavihara (Bihar)
Nalanda mahavihara (South Asia)
LocationNalanda district, Bihar, India
RegionMagadha
Coordinates25°08′12″N 85°26′38″E / 25.13667°N 85.44389°E / 25.13667; 85.44389
TypeCentre of learning, ancient university
Length240 m (800 ft)
Width490 m (1,600 ft)
Area12 ha (30 acres)
History
BuilderKing Kumaragupta I
Founded5th century
Abandoned13th century
EventsRansacked and destroyed by Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji in c. 1200 CE.
Site notes
Excavation dates1915–1937, 1974–1982[1]
ArchaeologistsDavid B. Spooner, Hiranand Sastri, Palak Shah, J. A. Page, M. Kuraishi, G. C. Chandra, N. Nazim, Amalananda Ghosh[2]
ConditionIn ruins
OwnershipGovernment of India
ManagementArchaeological Survey of India
Public accessYes
WebsiteASI
ASI No. N-BR-43[3]
 
Official nameArchaeological Site of Nalanda Mahavihara (Nalanda University) at Nalanda, Bihar
CriteriaCultural: iv, vi
Reference1502
Inscription2016 (40th Session)
Area23 ha
Buffer zone57.88 ha

Nalanda was established during the Gupta Empire era,[11] and was supported by numerous Indian and Javanese patrons – both Buddhists and non-Buddhists.[12][13] Over some 750 years, its faculty included some of the most revered scholars of Mahayana Buddhism. Nalanda mahavihara taught six major Buddhist schools and philosophies such as Yogachara and Sarvastivada as well as subjects such as Vedas, grammar, medicine, logic, mathematics,[14] astronomy[15] and alchemy.[16] The university was also a major source of the 657 Sanskrit texts carried by pilgrim Xuanzang and the 400 Sanskrit texts carried by Yijing to China in the 7th century, which influenced East Asian Buddhism.[17] Many of the texts composed at Nalanda played an important role in the development of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism including the Mahavairocana Tantra and the Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra of Shantideva.[18][19] Nalanda may have been attacked and damaged by Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji, but it managed to remain operational for decades (or possibly even centuries) following the raids.[20] It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[21]

In 2010, the Government of India passed a resolution to revive the famous university, and a contemporary institute, Nalanda University, was established at Rajgir.[22] It has been listed as an "Institute of National Importance" by the Government of India.[23]

Location edit

Nalanda is about 16 kilometres (10 mi) north of the city of Rajgir and about 90 kilometres (56 mi) southeast of Patna, connected via NH 31, 20 and 120 to India's highway network.[6] It is about 80 kilometres (50 mi) northeast of Bodh Gaya – another important Buddhist site in Bihar. The Nalanda archaeological site is spread over a large area to the northwest of Bargaon (Nalanda) village, and is between the historical manmade lakes Gidhi, Panashokar and Indrapuskarani. On the south bank of the Indrapushkarani lake is the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara – a university founded in its memory.[24][25]

Etymology edit

Mahavihara (Mahāvihāra) is the Sanskrit and Pali term for a great vihāra (centre of learning or Buddhist monastery) and is used to describe a monastic complex of viharas.

According to the early 7th-century Tang dynasty Chinese pilgrim, Xuanzang, the local tradition explains that the name Nālandā (Hindi/Magahi: नालन्दा) came from a nāga (serpent deity in Indian religions) whose name was Nalanda. He offers an alternate meaning "charity without intermission", from "na-alam-da"; however, this split does not mean this.[26] Hiranand Sastri, an archaeologist who headed the excavation of the ruins, attributes the name to the abundance of nālas (lotus-stalks) in the area and believes that Nalanda would then represent the giver of lotus-stalks.[27]

In some Tibetan sources, including the 17th-century work of Taranatha, Nalanda is referred to as Nalendra, and is likely synonymous with Nala, Nalaka, Nalakagrama found in Tibetan literature.[28][29][30]

History edit

Early history of the city of Nalanda (1200 BCE–300 CE) edit

 
A map of Nalanda and its environs from Alexander Cunningham's 1861–62 ASI report which shows a number of ponds (pokhar) around the Mahavihara.

The history of Nalanda in the 1st-millennium BCE is linked to the nearby city of Rajagriha (modern Rajgir) – the capital of Magadha and on the trade routes of ancient India.[31] Given the university's prestige, rulers in northeast India bequeathed villages to help fund Nalanda; the king of Sumatra contributed villages for the monastery's endowment. A special fund was also established to support scholars from China.[32]

Early Buddhist texts state that Buddha visited a town near Rajagriha called Nalanda on his peregrinations.[14] He delivered lectures in a nearby mango grove named Pavarika and one of his two chief disciples, Shariputra, was born in the area and later attained nirvana there.[33][34] These Buddhist texts were written down centuries after the death of the Buddha, are not consistent in either the name or the relative location. For example, texts such as the Mahasudassana Jataka states that Nalaka or Nalakagrama is about a yojana (10 miles) from Rajagriha, while texts such as Mahavastu call the place Nalanda-gramaka and place it half a yojana away.[28] A Buddhist text Nikayasamgraha does state that emperor Ashoka established a vihara (monastery) at Nalanda. However, archaeological excavations so far have not yielded any monuments from Ashoka period or from another 600 years after his death.[8][35]

Chapter 2.7 of the Jaina text Sutrakritanga states that Nalanda is a "suburb" of capital Rajagriha, has numerous buildings, and this is where Mahavira (6th/5th century BCE) spent fourteen varshas – a term that refers to a traditional retreat during monsoons for the monks in Indian religions. This is corroborated in the Kalpasutra, another cherished text in Jainism. However, other than the mention of Nalanda, Jaina texts do not provide further details, nor were they written down for nearly a millennium after Mahavira's death. Like the Buddhist texts, this has raised questions about reliability and whether the current Nalanda is same as the one in Jaina texts.[8] According to Scharfe, though the Buddhist and Jaina texts generate problems with place identification, it is "virtually certain" that the modern Nalanda is near or the site these texts are referring to.[36]

Archaeological excavations at sites near Nalanda, such as the Juafardih site about 3 kilometres away, have yielded black ware and other items. These have been carbon dated to about 1200 BCE. This suggests that the region around Nalanda in Magadha had a human settlement centuries before the birth of the Mahavira and the Buddha.[37]

Faxian visit (399–412 CE) edit

When Faxian, a Chinese Buddhist pilgrim monk, visited the city of Nalanda, there probably was no university yet. Faxian had come to India to acquire Buddhist texts, and spent 10 years in India in the early fifth century, visiting major Buddhist pilgrimage sites including the Nalanda area. He also wrote a travelogue, which inspired other Chinese and Korean Buddhists to visit India over the centuries; in it he mentions many Buddhist monasteries and monuments across India. However, he makes no mention of any monastery or university at Nalanda even though he was looking for Sanskrit texts and took a large number of them from other parts of India back to China. Combined with a lack of any archaeological discoveries of pre-400 CE monuments in Nalanda, the silence in Faxian's memoir suggests that Nalanda monastery-university did not exist around 400 CE.[36][38]

Foundation (5th century) edit

 
Nalanda was founded by the Gupta emperors in the early 5th century and then expanded over the next 7 centuries.

Nalanda's dateable history begins in the 5th century. A seal discovered at the site identifies a monarch named Shakraditya (Śakrāditya) as its founder and attributes the foundation of a sangharama (monastery) at the site to him.[39][40] This is corroborated by the Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang travelogue.[40] The tradition of formalised Vedic learning "helped to inspire the formation of large teachings centres," such as Nalanda, Taxila, and Vikramashila.[41]

 
Nalanda clay seal of Kumaragupta III. The inscription is in Sanskrit, late-Gupta script, the man shown has Vaishnava mark on his forehead, and seal has Garuda-vahana on upper face.[42]

In the Indian tradition and texts, kings were called by many epithets and names. Scholars such as Andrea Pinkney and Hartmut Scharfe conclude that Shakraditya is same as Kumaragupta I. He was one of the kings in the Hindu dynasty of the Guptas.[36][43] Further, numismatic evidence discovered at Nalanda corroborate that Kumaragupta I was the founder patron of the Nalanda monastery-university.[39][40]

His successors, Budhagupta, Tathagatagupta, Baladitya, and Vajra, later extended and expanded the institution by building additional monasteries and temples.[44] Nalanda, thus flourished through the 5th and 6th centuries under the Guptas.[45] These Gupta-era contributions to Nalanda are corroborated by the numerous Buddhist and Hindu seals, artwork, iconography and inscriptions discovered at Nalanda, which are in the Gupta-style and Gupta-era scripts.[46][47] During this period, the Gupta kings were not the only patrons of Nalanda. They reflect a broad and religiously diverse community of supporters. It is remarkable, states Scharfe, that "many donors were not Buddhists; the emblems on their seals show Lakshmi, Ganesha, Shivalinga and Durga".[48]

Post-Gupta dynasty (550–750 CE) edit

 
Seal of Harsha found in Nalanda[49]

After the decline of the Guptas, the most notable patron of the Nalanda Mahavihara was Harsha (known as Śīlāditya in some Buddhist records). He was a seventh-century emperor with a capital at Kannauj (Kanyakubja). According to Xuanzang, Harsha was a third generation Hindu king from the Vaishya caste, who built majestic Buddhist viharas, as well as three temples – Buddha, Surya and Shiva, all of the same size.[50] He states (c. 637 CE), "a long succession of kings" had built up Nalanda till "the whole is truly marvellous to behold".[51]

In accordance with the ancient Indian traditions of supporting temples and monasteries, inscriptions found at Nalanda suggest that it received gifts, including grants of villages by kings to support its work. Harsha himself granted 100 villages and directed 200 households from each of these villages to supply the institution's monks with requisite daily supplies such as of rice, butter, and milk. This supported over 1,500 faculty and 10,000 student monks at Nalanda.[52][44] These numbers, however, may be exaggerated. They are inconsistent with the much lower numbers (over 3000) given by Yijing, another Chinese pilgrim who visited Nalanda a few decades later. According to Asher, while the excavated Nalanda site is large and the number of viharas so far found are impressive, they simply cannot support 10,000 or more student monks. The total number of known rooms and their small size is such that either the number of monks must have been far less than Xuanzang's claims or the Nalanda site was many times larger than numerous excavations have so far discovered and what Xuanzang describes.[53][54][note 1]

Xuanzang's visit (630–643 CE) edit

Xuanzang travelled around India between 630 and 643 CE,[55] visiting Nalanda in 637 and 642, spending a total of around two years at the monastery.[56] He was warmly welcomed in Nalanda where he received the Indian name of Mokshadeva[57] and studied under the guidance of Shilabhadra, the venerable head of the institution at the time. He believed that the aim of his arduous overland journey to India had been achieved as in Shilabhadra he had at last found an incomparable teacher to instruct him in Yogachara, a school of thought that had then only partially been transmitted to China. Besides Buddhist studies, the monk also attended courses in grammar, logic, and Sanskrit, and later also lectured at the Mahavihara.[58]

 
A page from Xuanzang's Great Tang Records on the Western Regions or Dà Táng Xīyù Jì

In the detailed account of his stay at Nalanda, the pilgrim describes the view out of the window of his quarters thus,[59]

Moreover, the whole establishment is surrounded by a brick wall, which encloses the entire convent from without. One gate opens into the great college, from which are separated eight other halls standing in the middle (of the Sangharama). The richly adorned towers, and the fairy-like turrets, like pointed hill-tops are congregated together. The observatories seem to be lost in the vapours (of the morning), and the upper rooms tower above the clouds.

Xuanzang returned to China with 657 Sanskrit texts and 150 relics carried by 20 horses in 520 cases. He translated 74 of the texts himself.[55][60]

Yijing's visit (673–700 CE) edit

In the thirty years following Xuanzang's return, no fewer than eleven travellers from China and Korea are known to have visited Nalanda,[61] including the monk Yijing. Unlike Faxian and Xuanzang, Yijing followed the sea route around Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka. He arrived in 673 CE, and stayed in India for fourteen years, ten of which he spent at the Nalanda Mahavihara.[62] When he returned to China in 695, he had with him 400 Sanskrit texts and 300 grains of Buddha relics which were subsequently translated in China.[63]

Unlike Xuanzang, who also described the geography and culture of seventh-century India, Yijing's account primarily concentrates on the practice of Buddhism in India and detailed descriptions of the customs, rules, and regulations of the monks at the monastery. In his chronicle, Yijing notes that revenues from 200 villages (as opposed to 100 in Xuanzang's time) had been assigned toward the maintenance of Nalanda.[52] He described there being eight vihara with as many as 300 cells.[64] According to him, Nalanda monastery has numerous daily Nikaya procedures and rules for the monks. He gives many examples. In one subsection he explains that the monastery has ten great pools. The morning begins with the ghanta (bell) being rung. Monks take their bathing sheets and go to one of these pools. They bathe with their underwear on, then get out slowly to avoid disturbing anyone else. They wipe their bodies, then wrap this 5-foot long and 1.5-foot wide sheet around the waist, change their clothes with this wrap in place. Then rinse, wring and dry the sheet. The entire procedure, says Yijing, is explained in the Buddhist Nikaya procedures. The day must begin with bathing, but bathing after meals is forbidden. The Nalanda Nikaya has many such daily procedures and rituals set out for the monks to follow.[65]

Korean and Tibetan pilgrims edit

 
Replica of the seal of Nalanda set in terracotta on display in the Archaeological Survey of India Museum in Nalanda

In addition to Chinese pilgrims, Buddhist pilgrims from Korea also visited India about the same time as Xuanzang and Yingji. The Chinese travelogues about India became known in the 19th century and have been well published. After mid-20th century, the Korean pilgrim journeys have come to light. For example, monks such as Kyom-ik began visiting Indian monasteries by the mid-6th century. They too carried Indian texts and translated them, producing 72 chuan of translated texts. In the mid-7th century, the Silla (Korean: 신라) monk Hyon-jo visited and stayed at several Indian monasteries, including three years at Nalanda, his visit corroborated by Yingji. He sent his students Hye-ryun and Hyon-gak to Nalanda for studies, the latter died at Nalanda. They adopted Indian names to interact with the fellow students; for example, Hye-ryun was known as Prajnavarman and it is this name that is found in the records. According to Korean records, monks visited India through the ninth century – despite arduous travel challenges – to study at various monasteries, and Nalanda was the most revered.[66][67]

In and after the 7th century, Tibetan monks such as Thonmi Sambhota came to Nalanda and other Indian monasteries to study, not only Buddhism, but Sanskrit language, grammar and other subjects. Sambhota is credited with applying the principles of Sanskrit and its grammar to remodel Tibetan language and its script. It was after Sambhota's first return from Nalanda that the Tibetan king adopted Buddhism and committed to making it the religion of his people.[68] Tibetan monks lived closer to Nepal, Sikkim and eastern India, with simpler travel itineraries than the Koreans and others. Tibetans continued to visit Magadha during the Pala era, and beyond through the 14th century, thereby participated in the crucible of ideas at Nalanda and other monasteries in Bihar and Bengal.[69] However, after the 8th century, it was the esoteric mandala and deities-driven Vajrayana Buddhism that increasingly dominated the exchange.[68]

Pala dynasty (750–1200 CE) edit

 
Avalokisteshvara in Khasarpana Lokesvara form from Nalanda, 9th-century.

The Palas established themselves in eastern regions of India in mid-8th century and reigned until the last quarter of the 12th century. They were a Buddhist dynasty. However, under the Palas, the traditional Mahayana Buddhism of Nalanda that inspired East Asian pilgrims such as Xuanzang was superseded by the then newly emerging Vajrayana tradition, a Tantra-imbibed, eros- and deity-inclusive esoteric version of Buddhism.[70] Nalanda continued to get support from the Palas, but they subscribed to Vajrayana Buddhism and they were prolific builders of new monasteries on Vajrayana mandala ideas such as those at Jagaddala, Odantapura, Somapura, and Vikramashila. Odantapura was founded by Gopala, the progenitor of the royal line, only 9.7 kilometres (6 mi) from Nalanda.[71] These competing monasteries, some just a few kilometres away from Nalanda likely drew away a number of learned monks from Nalanda.[72][73]

Inscriptions, literary evidence, seals, and ruined artwork excavated at the Nalanda site suggest that Nalanda remained active and continued to thrive under the Palas.[74] Kings Dharmapala and Devapala were active patrons. A number of 9th-century metallic statues containing references to Devapala have been found in its ruins as well as two notable inscriptions. The first, a copper plate inscription unearthed at Nalanda, details an endowment by the Shailendra King, Balaputradeva of Suvarnadvipa (Sumatra in modern-day Indonesia). This Srivijayan king, "attracted by the manifold excellences of Nalanda" had built a monastery there and had requested Devapala to grant the revenue of five villages for its upkeep, a request which was granted. The Ghosrawan inscription is the other inscription from Devapala's time and it mentions that he received and patronised a learned Vedic scholar named Viradeva who was later elected the head of Nalanda.[75][76]

Inscriptions issued between the 9th and 12th centuries attest gifts and support to Nalanda for the upkeep of the monastery, maintenance of the monks, copying of palm leaf manuscripts (necessary for preservation given the Indian tropical climate).[77] One inscription also mentions the destruction of a Nalanda library of manuscripts by fire, and support for its restoration.[77] Another 10th-century inscription quotes Bhadracari of the Sautrantikas tradition, attesting the activity of diverse schools of Buddhism at Nalanda.[78] Another Nalanda inscription from the 11th century mentions a gift of "revolving bookcase".[79]

While the Palas continued to patronise Nalanda liberally, the fame and influence of Nalanda helped the Palas. The Srivijaya kingdom of southeast Asia maintained a direct contact with Nalanda and the Palas, thus influencing the 9th to 12th century art in Sumatra, Java, southern Thailand and regions that actively traded with the Srivijaya kingdom. The influence extended to the Indonesian Shailendra dynasty. The Indonesian bronzes and votive tablets from this period show the creativity of its people, yet the iconographic themes overlap with those found at Nalanda and nearby region. Monks from Indonesia, Myanmar and other parts of southeast Asia came to Nalanda during the Pala rule.[80][81]

Narratives of Destruction under Khalji (c. 1200 CE) edit

Archeological excavations in the site during 1920-1921 discovered a thick layer of ashes on the uppermost strata, across many buildings separated by some distance; this suggests that Nalanda was subject to a catastrophic fire.[82] Traditionally, this is held to be an arson, blamed upon the troops of Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji who had plundered the region c. 1200 CE, and cited to be the leading cause of Nalanda's demise – a passage from Minhaj-i-Siraj's Tabaqat-i Nasiri which actually describes the destruction of Odantapura Vihar (var. Bihar Sharif[83]), a monastery few miles away from Nalanda, is offered in support.[82] While such a reading is misplaced, it is true that the Nalanda was raided by Khalji.[82]

The Tibetan records are the second source of the events at Nalanda in the late 12th century and much of the 13th century. These were the decades of widespread systematic destruction of monasteries in this region, and historical records in Tibet affirm that monks from Nalanda and nearby monasteries such as the Vikramashila monastery who "survived the slaughter, fled to Tibet", according to Scharfe.[84] Among the Tibetan records, the most useful is the biography of the Tibetan monk-pilgrim, Dharmasvamin discovered in 1936 and in bsdus-yig style, Tibetan script. It is useful because Dharmasvamin met the fleeing monks and famous scholars during his studies from about mid 1200s to 1226, he had learnt Indian languages and Sanskrit, he walked to and stayed in Nepal starting in 1226 and visited Bihar about 1234, including spending one monsoon season in Nalanda. He described the condition in the decades after the sack of Nalanda and other Buddhist monasteries in Magadha-region of India. His account states that the destruction of Nalanda was not an accident or misunderstanding but a part of the widespread destruction of Buddhist monasteries and monuments including a destruction of Bodhgaya. The vast manuscript libraries of Magadha had been mostly lost. Other Tibetan monks and he had shifted to Nepal, as the place to study, copy and move manuscripts to Tibet. According to his account, the Turushka-Qarluq (Turk) conquest extended from about 1193 to 1205, the destruction was systematic with "Turushka soldiers razing a monastery to the ground and throwing the stones into Ganges river", states Roerich. The fear of persecution was strong in the 1230s, and his colleagues dissuaded him from going to Magadha. According to George Roerich, "his [Chag lo-tsa-ba Chos-rje-dpal, Dharmasvamin] account conveys something of the anxiety of [the Buddhist community of] those days."[85]

Chapter 10 of Dharmasvamin's biography describes Nalanda in c. 1235 CE. Dharmasvamin found it "largely damaged and deserted". Despite the perils, some had re-gathered and resumed the scholastic activities in Nalanda, but at a vastly smaller scale and with donations from a wealthy Brahmin layperson named Jayadeva.[85][86] His account states:

There resided a venerable and learned monk who was more than ninety years old, the Guru and Mahapandita Rahulasribhadra. Raja Buddhasena of Magadha honored this Guru and four other Panditas, and about seventy venerable ones (monks).

— Dharmasvamin (Translator: George Roerich)[87]

While he stayed there for six months under the tutelage of Rahula Shribhadra, Dharmasvamin makes no mention of the legendary library of Nalanda which possibly did not survive the initial wave of Turkic attacks. He also states that some structures had survived, with "eighty small viharas, built of bricks and many left undamaged" but "there was absolutely no one to look after them".[85] He recites the arrest of their patron and lay-supporter Jayadeva by Muslim soldiers who threaten to kill him for honouring (supporting) the monks of Nalanda. Jayadeva sends them a message that the Turushka soldiers are sure to kill "Guru [Rahulasribhadra] and his disciples" and they should "flee!".[88]

Dharmasvamin also provides an eyewitness account of an attack on the derelict Mahavihara by the Muslim soldiers stationed at nearby Odantapura (now Bihar Sharif) which had been turned into a military headquarters. Only the Tibetan and his nonagenarian instructor stayed behind and hid themselves while the rest of the monks fled.[89][90] Another Tibetan source is that of Lama Taranatha, but this is from the late 16th century, and it is unclear what its sources were. The Taranatha account about Buddhism in India repeats the legendary accounts of Nalanda from the Buddha and Ashoka periods found in Xuanzang and other sources, then shifts to centuries of the 2nd-millennium. It describes Islamic raids in 12th-century India, states that whole of Magadha fell to the Turushka (Turks, a common term for Muslims in historic Indic and Tibetan texts).[52] Their armies, asserts Taranatha, destroyed Odantapuri as well as Vikramashila. Given the hundreds of years of gap between the events and Taranatha's account, and no clear chain of sources within the Tibetan tradition of record keeping, its reliability is questionable.[91]

Legendary accounts edit

Tibetan texts such as the 18th-century work named Pag sam jon zang and 16th/17th-century Taranatha's account include fictional Tibetan legends. These include stories such as a king Cingalaraja had brought "all Hindus and Turuskas [Muslims]" up to Delhi under his control, and converted from Brahmanism to Buddhism under the influence of his queen, and he restoring the monasteries.[92]

Others state that a southern king built thousands of monasteries and temples again, Muslim robbers murdered this king, thereafter Nalanda was repaired by Mudita Bhadra and a minister named Kukutasiddha erected a temple there.[citation needed]

One popular story describes the tale of two angry Tirthika (Brahmanical) monks, who gain magical powers by tantric siddha, spread ashes that erupt a fire that destroyed one of Nalanda's three libraries – Ratnodadhi, but magical water poured out of a manuscript that prevented damage and learned Buddhist monks rewrote the texts that were damaged.[citation needed]

However, there is no evidence for the existence of such a king (or sultan), minister, Muslim robbers, thousands of Buddhist monuments built in India between the 13th and 19th century, or of any significant Nalanda repairs in or after the 13th century.[93][94][note 2][note 3]

Continued influence edit

Johan Elverskog – a scholar of religious studies and history, states that it is incorrect to say Nalanda's end was sudden and complete by about 1202, because it continued to have some students well into the 13th century. Elverskog, relying on Arthur Waley's 1932 paper, states that this is confirmed by the fact a monk ordained in 13th-century Nalanda travelled to the court of Khubilai Khan. He adds that it is wrong to say that Buddhism ended in India around the 13th or 14th century or earlier, because "[Buddha] Dharma survived in India at least until the 17th-century".[97]

Impact of its destruction and influence on Tibetan Buddhist Tradition edit

After the Islamic conquest, the destruction and the demise of Nalanda, other monasteries and Buddhist culture from the plains of Bihar and Bengal, the brand memory of "Nalanda" remained the most revered in Tibet. The last throne-holder of Nalanda, Shakyashri Bhadra of Kashmir,[98] fled to Tibet in 1204 at the invitation of the Tibetan translator Tropu Lotsawa (Khro-phu Lo-tsa-ba Byams-pa dpal). Some of the surviving Nalanda books were taken by fleeing monks to Tibet.[99][100] He took with him several Indian masters: Sugataśrī, (an expert in Madhyamaka and Prajñāpāramitā); Jayadatta (Vinaya); Vibhūticandra (grammar and Abhidharma), Dānaśīla (logic), Saṅghaśrī (Candavyākaraṇa), Jīvagupta (books of Maitreya), Mahābodhi,(Bodhicaryāvatāra); and Kālacandra (Kālacakra).[101]

In 1351, Tibetans committed to recreating a monastery in the heart of Tibet, staffing it with monk-scholars from diverse Buddhist schools, and name it the "Nalanda monastery" in the honour of the ancient Nalanda, according to the Blue Annals (Tibetan: དེབ་ཐེར་སྔོན་པོ).[68] This institution emerged north of Lhasa in 1436 through the efforts of Rongtön Mawé Sengge, then expanded in the 15th century. It is now called the Tibetan Nalanda, to distinguish it from this site.[102]

Tibetan Buddhist tradition is regarded to be a continuation of the Nalanda tradition. The Dalai Lama states:[103]

Tibetan Buddhism is not an invention of the Tibetans. Rather, it is quite clear that it derives from the pure lineage of the tradition of the Nalanda Monastery. The master Nagarjuna hailed from this institution, as did many other important philosophers and logicians...

The Dalai Lama refers to himself as a follower of the lineage of the seventeen Nalanda masters.[104]

An Astasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra manuscript preserved at the Tsethang monastery has superbly painted and well preserved wooden covers and 139 leaves. According to its colophon it was donated by the mother of the great pandita Sri Asoka in the second year of the reign of King Surapala, at the very end of the 11th century.[105] Nalanda still continued to operate into the 14th century as the Indian monk, Dhyānabhadra was said to have been a monk at Nalanda prior to his travels in East Asia.[106]

Under the East India Company and British Empire (1800–1947) edit

 
A statue of Gautama Buddha at Nalanda in 1895.

After its decline, Nalanda was largely forgotten until Francis Buchanan-Hamilton surveyed the site in 1811–1812 after locals in the vicinity drew his attention to some Buddhist and Brahmanical images and ruins in the area.[94] He, however, did not associate the mounds of earth and debris with famed Nalanda. That link was established by Major Markham Kittoe in 1847. Alexander Cunningham and the newly formed Archaeological Survey of India conducted an official survey in 1861–1862. Systematic excavation of the ruins by the ASI did not begin until 1915 and ended in 1937.[1] The first four excavations were led by Spooner between 1915 and 1919. The next two were led by Sastri in 1920 and 1921. The next seven seasons of archaeological excavations through 1928 were led by Page. These efforts were not merely digging, observation and cataloguing of discoveries, they included conservation, restoration and changes to the site such as drainage to prevent damage to unearthed floors.[107] After 1928, Kuraishi led two seasons of excavations, Chandra led the next four. The last season was led by Ghosh, but the excavations were abbreviated in 1937 for financial reasons and budget cuts. Chandra and final ASI team leaders noted that the "long row of monasteries extend further into the modern village of Bargaon" and the "extent of entire monastic establishment can only be determined by future excavations".[107]

Post–independence (Post-1947) edit

 
Rear view of the ruins of the Baladitya Temple in 1872.

Post independence, the second round of excavation and restoration took place between 1974 and 1982.[1] In 1951, the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara (New Nalanda Mahavihara), a modern centre for Pali and Buddhism in the spirit of the ancient institution, was founded by the Government of Bihar near Nalanda's ruins at the suggestion of Rajendra Prasad, India's first president.[108] It was deemed to be a university in 2006.[109]

1 September 2014 saw the commencement of the first academic year of a modern Nalanda University, with 15 students, in nearby Rajgir.[110] Nalanda University (also known as Nalanda International University) is an international and research-intensive university located in the historical city of Rajgir in Bihar, India. It was established by an Act of Parliament to emulate the famous ancient university of Nalanda, which functioned between the 5th and 13th centuries. The idea to resurrect Nalanda University was endorsed in 2007 at the East Asia Summit, represented mostly by Asian countries including China, Singapore, Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam, apart from Australia and New Zealand, and as such, the university is seen as one of the flagship projects of the Government of India. It has been designated as an "Institution of National Importance" by the Parliament, and began its first academic session on 1 September 2014. Initially set up with temporary facilities in Rajgir, a modern campus spanning over 160 hectares (400 acres) is expected to be finished by 2020. This campus, upon completion, will be the largest of its kind in India, and one of the largest in Asia.[111]

The Mahavihara edit

While its excavated ruins today only occupy an area of around 488 by 244 metres (1,600 by 800 ft) or roughly 12 hectares, Nalanda Mahavihara occupied a far greater area in medieval times. The subjects taught at Nalanda covered every field of learning, and it attracted pupils and scholars from Korea, Japan, China, Tibet, Indonesia, Persia and Turkey.[112][113]

The university edit

At its peak the school attracted scholars and students from near and far, with some travelling from Tibet, China, Korea, and Central Asia.[114] The highly formalised methods of Shramanic studies helped the establishment of large teaching institutions such as Taxila, Nalanda, and Vikramashila,[115] which are often characterised as India's early universities.[33][116][117][118] Archaeological evidence also notes contact with the Shailendra dynasty of Indonesia, one of whose kings built a monastery in the complex. Nalanda flourished under the patronage of the Gupta Empire in the 5th and 6th centuries, and later under Harsha, the emperor of Kannauj.[40] The liberal cultural traditions inherited from the Gupta age resulted in a period of growth and prosperity until the ninth century CE. The subsequent centuries were a time of gradual decline, a period during which the tantric developments of Buddhism became most pronounced in eastern India under the Pala Empire.[119]

Much of our knowledge of Nalanda comes from the writings of pilgrim monks from Asia, such as Xuanzang and Yijing, who travelled to the Mahavihara in the 7th century CE. Vincent Smith remarked that "a detailed history of Nalanda would be a history of Mahayanist Buddhism." Many of the names listed by Xuanzang in his travelogue as alumni of Nalanda are the names of those who developed the overall philosophy of Mahayana.[120] All students at Nalanda studied Mahayana, as well as the texts of the eighteen (Hinayana) sects of Buddhism. Their curriculum also included other subjects, such as the Vedas, logic, Sanskrit grammar, medicine, and Samkhya.[115][121][14][122]

Nalanda was destroyed three times but was rebuilt only twice.[citation needed] It was ransacked and destroyed by an army of the Mamluk dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate under Bakhtiyar Khalji in c. 1202 CE.[123] While some sources note that the Mahavihara continued to function in a makeshift fashion after this attack, it was eventually abandoned altogether and forgotten until the 19th century, when the site was surveyed and preliminary excavations were conducted by the Archaeological Survey of India. Systematic excavations commenced in 1915, which unearthed eleven monasteries and six brick temples neatly arranged on grounds 12 hectares (30 acres) in area. A trove of sculptures, coins, seals, and inscriptions have also been discovered in the ruins, many of which are on display in the Nalanda Archaeological Museum, situated nearby. Nalanda is now a notable tourist destination, and a part of the Buddhist tourism circuit.

On 25 November 2010, the Indian government, through an Act of Parliament, 'resurrected' the ancient university through the Nalanda University Bill, with which they chose to create a new and unrelated Nalanda University relatively nearby. It has been designated as an "International University of National Importance," and has accordingly been subject to intense government oversight, with both of its past chancellors explicitly citing Government actions for them leaving their post and courses being shut down due to members of the ruling party disapproving of them.

The library edit

 
Prajnaparamita and Scenes from the Buddha's Life (top), Maitreya and Scenes from the Buddha's Life (bottom), Folios from a Dharanisamgraha, manuscript from Nalanda, circa 1075
 
Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva. Ashtasahasrika Prajnyaparamita Sutra manuscript from Nalanda's Pala period.

It is evident from the large numbers of texts that Yijing carried back with him after his 10-year residence at Nalanda, that the Mahavihara must have featured a well-equipped library. Traditional Tibetan sources mention the existence of a great library at Nalanda named Dharmaganja (Piety Mart) which comprised three large multi-storeyed buildings, the Ratnasagara (Ocean of Jewels), the Ratnodadhi (Sea of Jewels), and the Ratnaranjaka (Jewel-adorned). Ratnodadhi was nine storeys high and housed the most sacred manuscripts including the Prajnyaparamita Sutra and the Guhyasamaja.[124][116]

The exact number of volumes in the Nalanda library is not known, but it is estimated to have been in the hundreds of thousands.[125] When a Buddhist scholar at Nalanda died, his manuscripts were added to the library collection.[126] The library not only collected religious manuscripts but also had texts on such subjects as grammar, logic, literature, astrology, astronomy, and medicine.[127][page needed] The Nalanda library must have had a classification scheme which was possibly based on a text classification scheme developed by the Sanskrit linguist, Panini.[128] Buddhist texts were most likely divided into three classes based on the Tripitaka's three main divisions: the Vinaya, Sutra, and the Abhidhamma.[129]

Curriculum edit

In his biography of Xuanzang, Hwui-Li states that all the students of Nalanda studied the Great Vehicle (Mahayana) as well as the works of the eighteen Nikaya traditions of Buddhism. In addition to these, they studied other subjects such as the Vedas, Hetuvidyā (Logic), Shabdavidya (Grammar and Philology), Chikitsavidya (Medicine), the works on magic (the Atharvaveda), and Samkhya.[121] According to Frazier, the Vedic studies included Vedic texts and ritual, but also the different theoretical disciplines associated with the limbs or the sciences of the Vedas, which included disciplines such as linguistics, law, astronomy and reasoning.[41]

Xuanzang himself studied a number of these subjects at Nalanda under Shilabhadra and others. Besides theology and philosophy, frequent debates and discussions necessitated competence in Logic. A student at the Mahavihara had to be well-versed in the systems of Logic associated with all the different schools of thought of the time as he was expected to defend Buddhist systems against the others. Other subjects believed to have been taught at Nalanda include law, astronomy, and city-planning.[115]

Tibetan tradition holds that there were "four doxographies" (Standard Tibetan: grub mtha') which were taught at Nalanda:[130]

  1. Sarvastivada Vaibhashika
  2. Sarvastivada Sautrantika
  3. Madhyamaka, the Mahayana philosophy of Nagarjuna
  4. Chittamatra, the Mahayana philosophy of Asanga and Vasubandhu

In the 7th century, Xuanzang recorded the number of teachers at Nalanda as being around 1510. Of these, approximately 1000 were able to explain 20 collections of sutras and shastras, 500 were able to explain 30 collections, and only 10 teachers were able to explain 50 collections. Xuanzang was among the few who were able to explain 50 collections or more. At this time, only the abbot Shilabhadra had studied all the major collections of sutras and shastras at Nalanda.[131]

Administration edit

The Chinese monk Yijing wrote that matters of discussion and administration at Nalanda would require assembly and consensus on decisions by all those at the assembly, as well as resident monks:[132]

If the monks had some business, they would assemble to discuss the matter. Then they ordered the officer, Vihārapāla, to circulate and report the matter to the resident monks one by one with folded hands. With the objection of a single monk, it would not pass. There was no use of beating or thumping to announce his case. In case a monk did something without consent of all the residents, he would be forced to leave the monastery. If there was a difference of opinion on a certain issue, they would give reason to convince (the other group). No force or coercion was used to convince.

Xuanzang also noted:[133]

The lives of all these virtuous men were naturally governed by habits of the most solemn and strictest kind. Thus in the seven hundred years of the monastery's existence no man has ever contravened the rules of the discipline. The king showers it with the signs of his respect and veneration and has assigned the revenue from a hundred cities to pay for the maintenance of the religious.

Influence on Buddhism edit

A vast amount of what came to comprise Tibetan Buddhism, both its Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions, stems from the teachers and traditions at Nalanda. Shantarakshita, who pioneered the propagation of Buddhism in Tibet in the 8th century was a scholar of Nalanda. He was invited by the Tibetan king, Khri-sron-deu-tsan, and established the monastery at Samye, serving as its first abbot. He and his disciple Kamalashila (who was also of Nalanda) essentially taught Tibetans how to do philosophy.[134] Padmasambhava, who was also invited from Nalanda Mahavihara by the king in 747 CE, is credited as a founder of Tibetan Buddhism.[135]

The scholar Dharmakirti (c. 7th century), one of the Buddhist founders of Indian philosophical logic, as well as one of the primary theorists of Buddhist atomism, taught at Nalanda.[136]

Other forms of Buddhism, such as the Mahayana Buddhism followed in Vietnam, China, Korea and Japan, flourished within the walls of the ancient school. A number of scholars have associated some Mahayana texts such as the Shurangama Sutra, an important sutra in East Asian Buddhism, with the Buddhist tradition at Nalanda.[137][138] Ron Epstein also notes that the general doctrinal position of the sutra does indeed correspond to what is known about the Buddhist teachings at Nalanda toward the end of the Gupta period when it was translated.[139]

Several Buddhist institutions overseas have chosen to call themselves Nalanda to acknowledge Nalanda's influence. These include Nalanda Buddhist Society in Malaysia[140] and Nalanda College, Colombo, Sri Lanka,[141] Nalanda Buddhist Education Foundation, Indonesia, Nalanda Buddhist Institute, Bhutan

World Heritage Sites Recognisation edit

The Nalanda Mahavihara is recognised as a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO in 2016.[142][143]

Historical figures associated with Nalanda edit

Traditional sources state that Nalanda was visited by both Mahavira and the Buddha in c. 6th and 5th century BCE.[1] It is also the place of birth and nirvana of Shariputra, one of the famous disciples of Buddha.[33]

Other historical figures associated with Nalanda include:

Excavated remains edit

 
A map of the excavated remains of Nalanda.
 
Excavated ruins of the monasteries of Nalanda.

After its decline, Nalanda was largely forgotten until Francis Buchanan-Hamilton surveyed the site in 1811–1812 after locals in the vicinity drew his attention to a vast complex of ruins in the area. He, however, did not associate the mounds of earth and debris with famed Nalanda. That link was established by Major Markham Kittoe in 1847. Alexander Cunningham and the newly formed Archaeological Survey of India conducted an official survey in 1861–1862.[2] Systematic excavation of the ruins by the ASI did not begin until 1915 and ended in 1937. The second round of excavation and restoration took place between 1974 and 1982.[1]

The remains of Nalanda today extend some 488 metres (1,600 ft) north to south and around 244 metres (800 ft) east to west. Excavations have revealed eleven monasteries (also known as vihara) and six major brick temples arranged in an ordered layout. A 30 m (100 ft) wide passage runs from north to south with the temples to its west and the monasteries to its east.[1] Most structures show evidence of multiple periods of construction with new buildings being raised atop the ruins of old ones. Many of the buildings also display signs of damage by fire on at least one occasion.[149]

The map gives the layout of the excavated structures. Temple 3 in the south was the most imposing structure. Temple 12, 13, 14 face the monasteries and face east. With the exception of those designated 1A and 1B, the monasteries all face west with drains emptying out in the east and staircases positioned in the south-west corner of the buildings.[150] Temple 2 was to the east.

All the monasteries at Nalanda are very similar in layout and general appearance. Their plan involves a rectangular form with a central quadrangular court which is surrounded by a verandah which, in turn, is bounded by an outer row of cells for the monks – a typical design of vihara architecture. The central cell facing the entrance leading into the court is a shrine chamber. Its strategic position means that it would have been the first thing that drew the eye when entering the edifice. With the exception of those designated 1A and 1B, the monasteries all face west with drains emptying out in the east and staircases positioned in the south-west corner of the buildings.[150]

Monastery 1 is considered the oldest and the most important of the monastery group and shows as many as nine levels of construction. Its lower monastery is believed to be the one sponsored by Balaputradeva, the Srivijayan king, during the reign of Devapala in the 9th century (see Nalanda copper-plate of Devapala). The building was originally at least 2 storeys high and contained a colossal statue of a seated Buddha.[151]

 
Temple no. 3 (Sariputta Stupa)
 
Conjectural Reconstruction of Temple no. 3, Nalanda University

Temple no. 3 (also termed Sariputta Stupa) is the most iconic of Nalanda's structures with its multiple flights of stairs that lead all the way to the top. The temple was originally a small structure which was built upon and enlarged by later constructions. Archaeological evidence shows that the final structure was a result of at least seven successive such accumulations of construction. The fifth of these layered temples is the most interesting and the best preserved with four corner towers of which three have been exposed. The towers as well as the sides of the stairs are decorated with exquisite panels of Gupta-era art depicting a variety of stucco figures including Buddha and the Bodhisattvas, scenes from the Jataka tales. The temple is surrounded by numerous votive stupas some of which have been built with bricks inscribed with passages from sacred Buddhist texts. The apex of Temple no. 3 features a shrine chamber which now only contains the pedestal upon which an immense statue of Buddha must have once rested.[152] According to Win Maung, the stupa was influenced by Gupta architecture, which itself had Kushana era influences.[153] In a shrine near the bottom of the staircase, a large image of Avalotiteshvar was found which was eventually moved to the museum.[154]

 
Buddha Shakyamuni or the Bodhisattva Maitreya, gilt copper alloy, early 8th century, Nalanda

Temple no. 2 notably features 211 sculptured religious and secular panels. These include Shiva, Parvati, Kartikeya, and Gajalakshmi, Kinnaras playing musical instruments, various representations of Makaras, as well as human couples in amorous postures, as well as scenes of art and of everyday life. Susan Huntington and Bhaskara Misra – scholars of Indian architecture and arts, state Temple 2 as a Hindu temple.[155] However, Huu Phuoc Le – a scholar of Buddhist architecture, questions this purely "Hindu affiliation", stating that it could be a temple based on the mandala principles, and one reflecting "Hindu-Buddhist syncretism" of the 8th to 12th century when Shaiva and Shakti deities were integrated into Vajrayana Buddhism.[155] The site of Temple no. 13 features a brick-made smelting furnace with four chambers. The discovery of burnt metal and slag suggests that it was used to cast metallic objects.

To the north of Temple 13 lie the remains of Temple no. 14. An enormous image of the Buddha was discovered here. The image's pedestal features fragments of the only surviving exhibit of mural painting at Nalanda.[156]

To the east of Temple 2, lie the remains of Sarai Temple in the recently excavated Sarai Mound. This multi-storeyed Buddhist temple with many stupas and shrines was enclosed by a massive wall enclosure. The remains in the sanctum suggest that the Buddha statue was around 24 metres (80 ft) high.

Numerous sculptures, as well as many murals, copper plates, artworks, inscriptions, seals, coins, plaques, potteries and works in stone, bronze, stucco, and terracotta, have been unearthed within the ruins of Nalanda. The Buddhist sculptures discovered notably include those of the Buddha in different postures, Avalokiteshvara, Jambhala, Manjushri, Marichi, and Tara. Brahmanical idols of Vishnu, Shiva-Parvathi, Ganesha, Mahishasura Mardini, and Surya have also been found in the ruins.[1]

A Black Buddha temple (termed by locals as the Telia Bhairav, "tel" refers to use of oil) is near Temple 14 with has an ancient large black Buddha image in bhumisparha mudra. This the same temple termed Baithak Bhairab in Cunningham's 1861–62 ASI report.[157]

Surviving Nalanda manuscripts edit

Fleeing monks took some of the Nalanda manuscripts. A few of them have survived and are preserved in collections such as those at:

  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art[158] Folios from a Dharanisamgraha, circa 1075.
  • Asia Society[159] This Ashtasahasrika Prajnaparamita manuscript records, in Sanskrit and Tibetan, the history of the manuscript from its creation at the famous Nalanda monastery in India through its use in Tibet by the compiler of the first Tibetan canon of Buddhism, Buton.
  • Yarlung Museum, Tsetang (From the On ke ru Lha khang monastery)[160] Astasahahasrika Prajnaparamita Sanskrit palm-leaf manuscript, with 139 leaves and painted wooden covers. According to the colophon, this manuscript was donated by the mother of the great pandita Sri Asoka in the second year of the reign of King Surapala at end of the 11th century.

Nalanda inscriptions edit

A number of inscriptions were found during the excavation, which are now preserved in the Nalanda Museum. These include:

  • Son of a minister of Yashovarman donated to the temple built by king Baladitya. 8th cent CE, basalt slab found in monastery 1.[161]
  • Murnavarman constructed an 24-metre-high (80 ft) brass image of Buddha. 7th cent CE, basalt slab, found in Sarai mound.[162]
  • Monk Vipulshrimitra built a monastery. Basalt slab, later half of 12th cent, found in the uppermost level of Monastery 7.[163]
  • Donation of Balaputradeva, the king of Suvarnadvipa of Sailendra dynasty. 860 CE Copperplate found by Hirananda Shastri in 1921 in the antechamber of Monastery 1 at Nalanda.

Tourism edit

 
The Xuanzang Memorial Hall at Nalanda

Nalanda is a popular tourist destination in the state attracting a number of Indian and overseas visitors.[164] It is also an important stop on the Buddhist tourism circuit.[111]

Nalanda Archaeological Museum edit

 
Nalanda Archaeological Museum

The Archaeological Survey of India maintains a museum near the ruins for the benefit of visitors. The museum, opened in 1917, exhibits the antiquities that have been unearthed at Nalanda as well as from nearby Rajgir. Out of 13,463 items, only 349 are on display in four galleries.[165]

Xuanzang Memorial Hall edit

 
Xuan Zang Memorial Hall

The Xuanzang Memorial Hall is an Indo-Chinese undertaking to honour the famed Buddhist monk and traveller. A relic, comprising a skull bone of the Chinese monk, is on display in the memorial hall.[166]

Nalanda Multimedia Museum edit

Another museum adjoining the excavated site is the privately run Nalanda Multimedia Museum.[167] It showcases the history of Nalanda through 3-D animation and other multimedia presentations.[167]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Related Sites and Place

Ancient Indian learning centers:

Further reading edit

  • Ancient higher-learning institutions
  • List of Monuments of National Importance in Bihar
  • Kurkihar hoard
  • Mukherjee, Sugato (23 February 2023). "Nalanda: The university that changed the world". BBC.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Nalanda site is not fully excavated, and the modern village of Bargaon may be on top of some of the ruins. (ASI reports, 1935–1937)
  2. ^ Variants of similar fictional accounts about Nalanda before the 4th century are found in several Tibetan works and Chinese pilgrim accounts. There are fictional stories in Tibetan texts for post-12th-century era too, with names of ahistorical and unverifiable "kings", "sages", "arsonists", "thousands of new Buddhist monasteries and temples" and "Muslim robbers murdering a king". For example, the Taranatha account (c. 1600 CE) in Chapters 19 and 20, describes the tale of Muditabhabhadra, Malikabuddhi and Kakutsiddha. It states that, after a Persian king from Kashmir and his Muslim army destroyed Magadha and "heavily damaged Sri Nalendra [Nalanda]", one king named Krisnaraja built twenty one centers of Buddhist doctrine in madhya-desha (central India) with one thousand caityas containing images of (Buddhist) deities, but Muslim robbers murdered him and his "blood flowed in the form of milk and flowers filled the sky"; then Muditabhabhadra rebuilt those damaged caityas leading all "householders and brahmanas" to revere the Buddha; thereafter Kakutsiddha built a temple at Nalanda and consecrated it with a great feast. Then "young naughty" monks teased two beggars, who became very angry, one of whom dug a deep pit and pursued sadhana for twelve years and gained magical powers. He performed a yajna and produced magical ashes. He gathered these ashes, then spread them near the Dharmaganja library of Nalanda, which started a fire to destroy the library's collection. However, from the ninth floor miraculous water poured out and all the literature on which this water reached remained unburnt. The two tirthika-arsonists escaped to Ha-sa-ma (Assam), a Buddhapaksha repaired the monuments again and "vastly learned monks" assembled and from their memorised literature rewrote the works that were burnt down in the library.[95]
  3. ^ Nalanda's library with palm-leaf manuscripts did have incidences of fire damage in its history. A 10th-century stone inscription notes a destruction by fire and subsequent restoration at the Mahavihara during the reign of Mahipala (r. 988–1038).[96]

References edit

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  5. ^ Kumar (2018).
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Sources edit

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  • Humphreys, Christmas (1987). The Wisdom of Buddhism. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0700701971.
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  • Kulke, Hermann; Rothermund, Dietmar (2004). (Fourth ed.). Routledge. Archived from the original on 4 October 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  • Monroe, Paul (2000). Paul Monroe's encyclopaedia of history of education, Volume 1. Genesis Publishing. ISBN 978-8177550917.
  • Walser, Joseph (2005). Nāgārjuna in Context: Mahāyāna Buddhism and Early Indian Culture. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231131643.
  • Pinkney, Andrea M (2014). "Looking West to India: Asian education, intra-Asian renaissance, and the Nalanda revival". Modern Asian Studies. Cambridge University Press. 49 (1): 111–149. doi:10.1017/s0026749x13000310. S2CID 144865654.
  • Le, Huu Phuoc (2010). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. pp. 58–66. ISBN 978-0984404308.
  • Frazier, Jessica, ed. (2011). The Continuum companion to Hindu studies. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-9966-0.
  • Jarzombek, Mark M.; Prakash, Vikramaditya; Ching, Francis D.K. (2011). A Global History of Architecture. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0470902455.
  • Buswell, Robert E. Jr.; Lopez, Donald S. Jr. (2013). The Princeton dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400848058.
  • Kim, Jinah (2013). Receptacle of the Sacred: Illustrated Manuscripts and the Buddhist Book Cult in South Asia. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520273863.
  • Smith, F Harold (2013). The Buddhist Way of Life. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-02930-2.
  • Walton, Linda (2015). "Educational institutions" in The Cambridge World History Vol. 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19074-9.

External links edit

  • The life of Hiuen-Tsiang (1914) by Xuanzang's biographer, Hwui Li (translated by Samuel Beal), p. 105-113
  • A record of the Buddhist religion as practised in India and the Malay archipelago (1896) by Yijing (translated by J. Takakasu), searchable for Nalanda
  • Pag Sam Jon Zang (Dpag bsam ljon bzaṅ), Part I: History of the Rise, Progress, and Downfall of Buddhism in India (1908) by Sumpa Khan-po Yeçe Pal Jor (in Tibetan with an index in English, edited by Sarat Chandra Das)
  • Tabakat-i-Nasiri – A General History of the Muhammadan Dynasties of Asia Including Hindustan by Minhaj-i-Siraj (translated by Major H. G. Raverty), p. 552.
  • Rajgir | District Nalanda, Government of Bihar | India
Misc
  • Seals and figurines from Nalanda at the British Museum
  • Interactive walking tour from Google
  • Entry on Nalanda in the Buddhist Dictionary of Pali Proper Names


nalanda, mahavihara, other, uses, nalanda, disambiguation, nalanda, nālandā, pronounced, naːlən, renowned, mahavihara, buddhist, monastic, university, ancient, magadha, modern, bihar, eastern, india, considered, historians, world, first, residential, universit. For other uses see Nalanda disambiguation Nalanda Nalanda pronounced naːlen d aː was a renowned mahavihara Buddhist monastic university in ancient Magadha modern day Bihar eastern India 4 5 6 Considered by historians to be the world s first residential university 7 and among the greatest centers of learning in the ancient world it was located near the city of Rajagriha now Rajgir and about 90 kilometres 56 mi southeast of Pataliputra now Patna Operating from 427 until 1197 CE 8 9 Nalanda played a vital role in promoting the patronage of arts and academics during the 5th and 6th century CE a period that has since been described as the Golden Age of India by scholars 10 Nalanda MahaviharaThe ruins of Nalanda MahaviharaShown within IndiaShow map of IndiaNalanda mahavihara Bihar Show map of BiharNalanda mahavihara South Asia Show map of South AsiaLocationNalanda district Bihar IndiaRegionMagadhaCoordinates25 08 12 N 85 26 38 E 25 13667 N 85 44389 E 25 13667 85 44389TypeCentre of learning ancient universityLength240 m 800 ft Width490 m 1 600 ft Area12 ha 30 acres HistoryBuilderKing Kumaragupta IFounded5th centuryAbandoned13th centuryEventsRansacked and destroyed by Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji in c 1200 CE Site notesExcavation dates1915 1937 1974 1982 1 ArchaeologistsDavid B Spooner Hiranand Sastri Palak Shah J A Page M Kuraishi G C Chandra N Nazim Amalananda Ghosh 2 ConditionIn ruinsOwnershipGovernment of IndiaManagementArchaeological Survey of IndiaPublic accessYesWebsiteASIASI No N BR 43 3 UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameArchaeological Site of Nalanda Mahavihara Nalanda University at Nalanda BiharCriteriaCultural iv viReference1502Inscription2016 40th Session Area23 haBuffer zone57 88 haNalanda was established during the Gupta Empire era 11 and was supported by numerous Indian and Javanese patrons both Buddhists and non Buddhists 12 13 Over some 750 years its faculty included some of the most revered scholars of Mahayana Buddhism Nalanda mahavihara taught six major Buddhist schools and philosophies such as Yogachara and Sarvastivada as well as subjects such as Vedas grammar medicine logic mathematics 14 astronomy 15 and alchemy 16 The university was also a major source of the 657 Sanskrit texts carried by pilgrim Xuanzang and the 400 Sanskrit texts carried by Yijing to China in the 7th century which influenced East Asian Buddhism 17 Many of the texts composed at Nalanda played an important role in the development of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism including the Mahavairocana Tantra and the Bodhisattvacaryavatara of Shantideva 18 19 Nalanda may have been attacked and damaged by Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji but it managed to remain operational for decades or possibly even centuries following the raids 20 It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site 21 In 2010 the Government of India passed a resolution to revive the famous university and a contemporary institute Nalanda University was established at Rajgir 22 It has been listed as an Institute of National Importance by the Government of India 23 Contents 1 Location 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Early history of the city of Nalanda 1200 BCE 300 CE 3 1 1 Faxian visit 399 412 CE 3 2 Foundation 5th century 3 3 Post Gupta dynasty 550 750 CE 3 3 1 Xuanzang s visit 630 643 CE 3 3 2 Yijing s visit 673 700 CE 3 3 3 Korean and Tibetan pilgrims 3 4 Pala dynasty 750 1200 CE 3 5 Narratives of Destruction under Khalji c 1200 CE 3 6 Legendary accounts 3 7 Continued influence 3 7 1 Impact of its destruction and influence on Tibetan Buddhist Tradition 3 8 Under the East India Company and British Empire 1800 1947 3 9 Post independence Post 1947 4 The Mahavihara 4 1 The university 4 2 The library 4 3 Curriculum 4 4 Administration 4 5 Influence on Buddhism 4 6 World Heritage Sites Recognisation 5 Historical figures associated with Nalanda 6 Excavated remains 7 Surviving Nalanda manuscripts 8 Nalanda inscriptions 9 Tourism 9 1 Nalanda Archaeological Museum 9 2 Xuanzang Memorial Hall 9 3 Nalanda Multimedia Museum 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 Further reading 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 External linksLocation editNalanda is about 16 kilometres 10 mi north of the city of Rajgir and about 90 kilometres 56 mi southeast of Patna connected via NH 31 20 and 120 to India s highway network 6 It is about 80 kilometres 50 mi northeast of Bodh Gaya another important Buddhist site in Bihar The Nalanda archaeological site is spread over a large area to the northwest of Bargaon Nalanda village and is between the historical manmade lakes Gidhi Panashokar and Indrapuskarani On the south bank of the Indrapushkarani lake is the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara a university founded in its memory 24 25 Etymology editMahavihara Mahavihara is the Sanskrit and Pali term for a great vihara centre of learning or Buddhist monastery and is used to describe a monastic complex of viharas According to the early 7th century Tang dynasty Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang the local tradition explains that the name Nalanda Hindi Magahi न लन द came from a naga serpent deity in Indian religions whose name was Nalanda He offers an alternate meaning charity without intermission from na alam da however this split does not mean this 26 Hiranand Sastri an archaeologist who headed the excavation of the ruins attributes the name to the abundance of nalas lotus stalks in the area and believes that Nalanda would then represent the giver of lotus stalks 27 In some Tibetan sources including the 17th century work of Taranatha Nalanda is referred to as Nalendra and is likely synonymous with Nala Nalaka Nalakagrama found in Tibetan literature 28 29 30 History editEarly history of the city of Nalanda 1200 BCE 300 CE edit nbsp A map of Nalanda and its environs from Alexander Cunningham s 1861 62 ASI report which shows a number of ponds pokhar around the Mahavihara The history of Nalanda in the 1st millennium BCE is linked to the nearby city of Rajagriha modern Rajgir the capital of Magadha and on the trade routes of ancient India 31 Given the university s prestige rulers in northeast India bequeathed villages to help fund Nalanda the king of Sumatra contributed villages for the monastery s endowment A special fund was also established to support scholars from China 32 Early Buddhist texts state that Buddha visited a town near Rajagriha called Nalanda on his peregrinations 14 He delivered lectures in a nearby mango grove named Pavarika and one of his two chief disciples Shariputra was born in the area and later attained nirvana there 33 34 These Buddhist texts were written down centuries after the death of the Buddha are not consistent in either the name or the relative location For example texts such as the Mahasudassana Jataka states that Nalaka or Nalakagrama is about a yojana 10 miles from Rajagriha while texts such as Mahavastu call the place Nalanda gramaka and place it half a yojana away 28 A Buddhist text Nikayasamgraha does state that emperor Ashoka established a vihara monastery at Nalanda However archaeological excavations so far have not yielded any monuments from Ashoka period or from another 600 years after his death 8 35 Chapter 2 7 of the Jaina text Sutrakritanga states that Nalanda is a suburb of capital Rajagriha has numerous buildings and this is where Mahavira 6th 5th century BCE spent fourteen varshas a term that refers to a traditional retreat during monsoons for the monks in Indian religions This is corroborated in the Kalpasutra another cherished text in Jainism However other than the mention of Nalanda Jaina texts do not provide further details nor were they written down for nearly a millennium after Mahavira s death Like the Buddhist texts this has raised questions about reliability and whether the current Nalanda is same as the one in Jaina texts 8 According to Scharfe though the Buddhist and Jaina texts generate problems with place identification it is virtually certain that the modern Nalanda is near or the site these texts are referring to 36 Archaeological excavations at sites near Nalanda such as the Juafardih site about 3 kilometres away have yielded black ware and other items These have been carbon dated to about 1200 BCE This suggests that the region around Nalanda in Magadha had a human settlement centuries before the birth of the Mahavira and the Buddha 37 Faxian visit 399 412 CE edit When Faxian a Chinese Buddhist pilgrim monk visited the city of Nalanda there probably was no university yet Faxian had come to India to acquire Buddhist texts and spent 10 years in India in the early fifth century visiting major Buddhist pilgrimage sites including the Nalanda area He also wrote a travelogue which inspired other Chinese and Korean Buddhists to visit India over the centuries in it he mentions many Buddhist monasteries and monuments across India However he makes no mention of any monastery or university at Nalanda even though he was looking for Sanskrit texts and took a large number of them from other parts of India back to China Combined with a lack of any archaeological discoveries of pre 400 CE monuments in Nalanda the silence in Faxian s memoir suggests that Nalanda monastery university did not exist around 400 CE 36 38 Foundation 5th century edit See also Gupta Empire nbsp Nalanda was founded by the Gupta emperors in the early 5th century and then expanded over the next 7 centuries Nalanda s dateable history begins in the 5th century A seal discovered at the site identifies a monarch named Shakraditya Sakraditya as its founder and attributes the foundation of a sangharama monastery at the site to him 39 40 This is corroborated by the Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang travelogue 40 The tradition of formalised Vedic learning helped to inspire the formation of large teachings centres such as Nalanda Taxila and Vikramashila 41 nbsp Nalanda clay seal of Kumaragupta III The inscription is in Sanskrit late Gupta script the man shown has Vaishnava mark on his forehead and seal has Garuda vahana on upper face 42 In the Indian tradition and texts kings were called by many epithets and names Scholars such as Andrea Pinkney and Hartmut Scharfe conclude that Shakraditya is same as Kumaragupta I He was one of the kings in the Hindu dynasty of the Guptas 36 43 Further numismatic evidence discovered at Nalanda corroborate that Kumaragupta I was the founder patron of the Nalanda monastery university 39 40 His successors Budhagupta Tathagatagupta Baladitya and Vajra later extended and expanded the institution by building additional monasteries and temples 44 Nalanda thus flourished through the 5th and 6th centuries under the Guptas 45 These Gupta era contributions to Nalanda are corroborated by the numerous Buddhist and Hindu seals artwork iconography and inscriptions discovered at Nalanda which are in the Gupta style and Gupta era scripts 46 47 During this period the Gupta kings were not the only patrons of Nalanda They reflect a broad and religiously diverse community of supporters It is remarkable states Scharfe that many donors were not Buddhists the emblems on their seals show Lakshmi Ganesha Shivalinga and Durga 48 Post Gupta dynasty 550 750 CE edit nbsp Seal of Harsha found in Nalanda 49 After the decline of the Guptas the most notable patron of the Nalanda Mahavihara was Harsha known as Siladitya in some Buddhist records He was a seventh century emperor with a capital at Kannauj Kanyakubja According to Xuanzang Harsha was a third generation Hindu king from the Vaishya caste who built majestic Buddhist viharas as well as three temples Buddha Surya and Shiva all of the same size 50 He states c 637 CE a long succession of kings had built up Nalanda till the whole is truly marvellous to behold 51 In accordance with the ancient Indian traditions of supporting temples and monasteries inscriptions found at Nalanda suggest that it received gifts including grants of villages by kings to support its work Harsha himself granted 100 villages and directed 200 households from each of these villages to supply the institution s monks with requisite daily supplies such as of rice butter and milk This supported over 1 500 faculty and 10 000 student monks at Nalanda 52 44 These numbers however may be exaggerated They are inconsistent with the much lower numbers over 3000 given by Yijing another Chinese pilgrim who visited Nalanda a few decades later According to Asher while the excavated Nalanda site is large and the number of viharas so far found are impressive they simply cannot support 10 000 or more student monks The total number of known rooms and their small size is such that either the number of monks must have been far less than Xuanzang s claims or the Nalanda site was many times larger than numerous excavations have so far discovered and what Xuanzang describes 53 54 note 1 Xuanzang s visit 630 643 CE edit Xuanzang travelled around India between 630 and 643 CE 55 visiting Nalanda in 637 and 642 spending a total of around two years at the monastery 56 He was warmly welcomed in Nalanda where he received the Indian name of Mokshadeva 57 and studied under the guidance of Shilabhadra the venerable head of the institution at the time He believed that the aim of his arduous overland journey to India had been achieved as in Shilabhadra he had at last found an incomparable teacher to instruct him in Yogachara a school of thought that had then only partially been transmitted to China Besides Buddhist studies the monk also attended courses in grammar logic and Sanskrit and later also lectured at the Mahavihara 58 nbsp A page from Xuanzang s Great Tang Records on the Western Regions or Da Tang Xiyu JiIn the detailed account of his stay at Nalanda the pilgrim describes the view out of the window of his quarters thus 59 Moreover the whole establishment is surrounded by a brick wall which encloses the entire convent from without One gate opens into the great college from which are separated eight other halls standing in the middle of the Sangharama The richly adorned towers and the fairy like turrets like pointed hill tops are congregated together The observatories seem to be lost in the vapours of the morning and the upper rooms tower above the clouds Xuanzang returned to China with 657 Sanskrit texts and 150 relics carried by 20 horses in 520 cases He translated 74 of the texts himself 55 60 Yijing s visit 673 700 CE edit In the thirty years following Xuanzang s return no fewer than eleven travellers from China and Korea are known to have visited Nalanda 61 including the monk Yijing Unlike Faxian and Xuanzang Yijing followed the sea route around Southeast Asia and Sri Lanka He arrived in 673 CE and stayed in India for fourteen years ten of which he spent at the Nalanda Mahavihara 62 When he returned to China in 695 he had with him 400 Sanskrit texts and 300 grains of Buddha relics which were subsequently translated in China 63 Unlike Xuanzang who also described the geography and culture of seventh century India Yijing s account primarily concentrates on the practice of Buddhism in India and detailed descriptions of the customs rules and regulations of the monks at the monastery In his chronicle Yijing notes that revenues from 200 villages as opposed to 100 in Xuanzang s time had been assigned toward the maintenance of Nalanda 52 He described there being eight vihara with as many as 300 cells 64 According to him Nalanda monastery has numerous daily Nikaya procedures and rules for the monks He gives many examples In one subsection he explains that the monastery has ten great pools The morning begins with the ghanta bell being rung Monks take their bathing sheets and go to one of these pools They bathe with their underwear on then get out slowly to avoid disturbing anyone else They wipe their bodies then wrap this 5 foot long and 1 5 foot wide sheet around the waist change their clothes with this wrap in place Then rinse wring and dry the sheet The entire procedure says Yijing is explained in the Buddhist Nikaya procedures The day must begin with bathing but bathing after meals is forbidden The Nalanda Nikaya has many such daily procedures and rituals set out for the monks to follow 65 Korean and Tibetan pilgrims edit nbsp Replica of the seal of Nalanda set in terracotta on display in the Archaeological Survey of India Museum in NalandaIn addition to Chinese pilgrims Buddhist pilgrims from Korea also visited India about the same time as Xuanzang and Yingji The Chinese travelogues about India became known in the 19th century and have been well published After mid 20th century the Korean pilgrim journeys have come to light For example monks such as Kyom ik began visiting Indian monasteries by the mid 6th century They too carried Indian texts and translated them producing 72 chuan of translated texts In the mid 7th century the Silla Korean 신라 monk Hyon jo visited and stayed at several Indian monasteries including three years at Nalanda his visit corroborated by Yingji He sent his students Hye ryun and Hyon gak to Nalanda for studies the latter died at Nalanda They adopted Indian names to interact with the fellow students for example Hye ryun was known as Prajnavarman and it is this name that is found in the records According to Korean records monks visited India through the ninth century despite arduous travel challenges to study at various monasteries and Nalanda was the most revered 66 67 In and after the 7th century Tibetan monks such as Thonmi Sambhota came to Nalanda and other Indian monasteries to study not only Buddhism but Sanskrit language grammar and other subjects Sambhota is credited with applying the principles of Sanskrit and its grammar to remodel Tibetan language and its script It was after Sambhota s first return from Nalanda that the Tibetan king adopted Buddhism and committed to making it the religion of his people 68 Tibetan monks lived closer to Nepal Sikkim and eastern India with simpler travel itineraries than the Koreans and others Tibetans continued to visit Magadha during the Pala era and beyond through the 14th century thereby participated in the crucible of ideas at Nalanda and other monasteries in Bihar and Bengal 69 However after the 8th century it was the esoteric mandala and deities driven Vajrayana Buddhism that increasingly dominated the exchange 68 Pala dynasty 750 1200 CE edit nbsp Avalokisteshvara in Khasarpana Lokesvara form from Nalanda 9th century The Palas established themselves in eastern regions of India in mid 8th century and reigned until the last quarter of the 12th century They were a Buddhist dynasty However under the Palas the traditional Mahayana Buddhism of Nalanda that inspired East Asian pilgrims such as Xuanzang was superseded by the then newly emerging Vajrayana tradition a Tantra imbibed eros and deity inclusive esoteric version of Buddhism 70 Nalanda continued to get support from the Palas but they subscribed to Vajrayana Buddhism and they were prolific builders of new monasteries on Vajrayana mandala ideas such as those at Jagaddala Odantapura Somapura and Vikramashila Odantapura was founded by Gopala the progenitor of the royal line only 9 7 kilometres 6 mi from Nalanda 71 These competing monasteries some just a few kilometres away from Nalanda likely drew away a number of learned monks from Nalanda 72 73 Inscriptions literary evidence seals and ruined artwork excavated at the Nalanda site suggest that Nalanda remained active and continued to thrive under the Palas 74 Kings Dharmapala and Devapala were active patrons A number of 9th century metallic statues containing references to Devapala have been found in its ruins as well as two notable inscriptions The first a copper plate inscription unearthed at Nalanda details an endowment by the Shailendra King Balaputradeva of Suvarnadvipa Sumatra in modern day Indonesia This Srivijayan king attracted by the manifold excellences of Nalanda had built a monastery there and had requested Devapala to grant the revenue of five villages for its upkeep a request which was granted The Ghosrawan inscription is the other inscription from Devapala s time and it mentions that he received and patronised a learned Vedic scholar named Viradeva who was later elected the head of Nalanda 75 76 Inscriptions issued between the 9th and 12th centuries attest gifts and support to Nalanda for the upkeep of the monastery maintenance of the monks copying of palm leaf manuscripts necessary for preservation given the Indian tropical climate 77 One inscription also mentions the destruction of a Nalanda library of manuscripts by fire and support for its restoration 77 Another 10th century inscription quotes Bhadracari of the Sautrantikas tradition attesting the activity of diverse schools of Buddhism at Nalanda 78 Another Nalanda inscription from the 11th century mentions a gift of revolving bookcase 79 While the Palas continued to patronise Nalanda liberally the fame and influence of Nalanda helped the Palas The Srivijaya kingdom of southeast Asia maintained a direct contact with Nalanda and the Palas thus influencing the 9th to 12th century art in Sumatra Java southern Thailand and regions that actively traded with the Srivijaya kingdom The influence extended to the Indonesian Shailendra dynasty The Indonesian bronzes and votive tablets from this period show the creativity of its people yet the iconographic themes overlap with those found at Nalanda and nearby region Monks from Indonesia Myanmar and other parts of southeast Asia came to Nalanda during the Pala rule 80 81 Narratives of Destruction under Khalji c 1200 CE edit Archeological excavations in the site during 1920 1921 discovered a thick layer of ashes on the uppermost strata across many buildings separated by some distance this suggests that Nalanda was subject to a catastrophic fire 82 Traditionally this is held to be an arson blamed upon the troops of Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji who had plundered the region c 1200 CE and cited to be the leading cause of Nalanda s demise a passage from Minhaj i Siraj s Tabaqat i Nasiri which actually describes the destruction of Odantapura Vihar var Bihar Sharif 83 a monastery few miles away from Nalanda is offered in support 82 While such a reading is misplaced it is true that the Nalanda was raided by Khalji 82 The Tibetan records are the second source of the events at Nalanda in the late 12th century and much of the 13th century These were the decades of widespread systematic destruction of monasteries in this region and historical records in Tibet affirm that monks from Nalanda and nearby monasteries such as the Vikramashila monastery who survived the slaughter fled to Tibet according to Scharfe 84 Among the Tibetan records the most useful is the biography of the Tibetan monk pilgrim Dharmasvamin discovered in 1936 and in bsdus yig style Tibetan script It is useful because Dharmasvamin met the fleeing monks and famous scholars during his studies from about mid 1200s to 1226 he had learnt Indian languages and Sanskrit he walked to and stayed in Nepal starting in 1226 and visited Bihar about 1234 including spending one monsoon season in Nalanda He described the condition in the decades after the sack of Nalanda and other Buddhist monasteries in Magadha region of India His account states that the destruction of Nalanda was not an accident or misunderstanding but a part of the widespread destruction of Buddhist monasteries and monuments including a destruction of Bodhgaya The vast manuscript libraries of Magadha had been mostly lost Other Tibetan monks and he had shifted to Nepal as the place to study copy and move manuscripts to Tibet According to his account the Turushka Qarluq Turk conquest extended from about 1193 to 1205 the destruction was systematic with Turushka soldiers razing a monastery to the ground and throwing the stones into Ganges river states Roerich The fear of persecution was strong in the 1230s and his colleagues dissuaded him from going to Magadha According to George Roerich his Chag lo tsa ba Chos rje dpal Dharmasvamin account conveys something of the anxiety of the Buddhist community of those days 85 Chapter 10 of Dharmasvamin s biography describes Nalanda in c 1235 CE Dharmasvamin found it largely damaged and deserted Despite the perils some had re gathered and resumed the scholastic activities in Nalanda but at a vastly smaller scale and with donations from a wealthy Brahmin layperson named Jayadeva 85 86 His account states There resided a venerable and learned monk who was more than ninety years old the Guru and Mahapandita Rahulasribhadra Raja Buddhasena of Magadha honored this Guru and four other Panditas and about seventy venerable ones monks Dharmasvamin Translator George Roerich 87 While he stayed there for six months under the tutelage of Rahula Shribhadra Dharmasvamin makes no mention of the legendary library of Nalanda which possibly did not survive the initial wave of Turkic attacks He also states that some structures had survived with eighty small viharas built of bricks and many left undamaged but there was absolutely no one to look after them 85 He recites the arrest of their patron and lay supporter Jayadeva by Muslim soldiers who threaten to kill him for honouring supporting the monks of Nalanda Jayadeva sends them a message that the Turushka soldiers are sure to kill Guru Rahulasribhadra and his disciples and they should flee 88 Dharmasvamin also provides an eyewitness account of an attack on the derelict Mahavihara by the Muslim soldiers stationed at nearby Odantapura now Bihar Sharif which had been turned into a military headquarters Only the Tibetan and his nonagenarian instructor stayed behind and hid themselves while the rest of the monks fled 89 90 Another Tibetan source is that of Lama Taranatha but this is from the late 16th century and it is unclear what its sources were The Taranatha account about Buddhism in India repeats the legendary accounts of Nalanda from the Buddha and Ashoka periods found in Xuanzang and other sources then shifts to centuries of the 2nd millennium It describes Islamic raids in 12th century India states that whole of Magadha fell to the Turushka Turks a common term for Muslims in historic Indic and Tibetan texts 52 Their armies asserts Taranatha destroyed Odantapuri as well as Vikramashila Given the hundreds of years of gap between the events and Taranatha s account and no clear chain of sources within the Tibetan tradition of record keeping its reliability is questionable 91 Legendary accounts edit Tibetan texts such as the 18th century work named Pag sam jon zang and 16th 17th century Taranatha s account include fictional Tibetan legends These include stories such as a king Cingalaraja had brought all Hindus and Turuskas Muslims up to Delhi under his control and converted from Brahmanism to Buddhism under the influence of his queen and he restoring the monasteries 92 Others state that a southern king built thousands of monasteries and temples again Muslim robbers murdered this king thereafter Nalanda was repaired by Mudita Bhadra and a minister named Kukutasiddha erected a temple there citation needed One popular story describes the tale of two angry Tirthika Brahmanical monks who gain magical powers by tantric siddha spread ashes that erupt a fire that destroyed one of Nalanda s three libraries Ratnodadhi but magical water poured out of a manuscript that prevented damage and learned Buddhist monks rewrote the texts that were damaged citation needed However there is no evidence for the existence of such a king or sultan minister Muslim robbers thousands of Buddhist monuments built in India between the 13th and 19th century or of any significant Nalanda repairs in or after the 13th century 93 94 note 2 note 3 Continued influence edit Johan Elverskog a scholar of religious studies and history states that it is incorrect to say Nalanda s end was sudden and complete by about 1202 because it continued to have some students well into the 13th century Elverskog relying on Arthur Waley s 1932 paper states that this is confirmed by the fact a monk ordained in 13th century Nalanda travelled to the court of Khubilai Khan He adds that it is wrong to say that Buddhism ended in India around the 13th or 14th century or earlier because Buddha Dharma survived in India at least until the 17th century 97 Impact of its destruction and influence on Tibetan Buddhist Tradition edit After the Islamic conquest the destruction and the demise of Nalanda other monasteries and Buddhist culture from the plains of Bihar and Bengal the brand memory of Nalanda remained the most revered in Tibet The last throne holder of Nalanda Shakyashri Bhadra of Kashmir 98 fled to Tibet in 1204 at the invitation of the Tibetan translator Tropu Lotsawa Khro phu Lo tsa ba Byams pa dpal Some of the surviving Nalanda books were taken by fleeing monks to Tibet 99 100 He took with him several Indian masters Sugatasri an expert in Madhyamaka and Prajnaparamita Jayadatta Vinaya Vibhuticandra grammar and Abhidharma Danasila logic Saṅghasri Candavyakaraṇa Jivagupta books of Maitreya Mahabodhi Bodhicaryavatara and Kalacandra Kalacakra 101 In 1351 Tibetans committed to recreating a monastery in the heart of Tibet staffing it with monk scholars from diverse Buddhist schools and name it the Nalanda monastery in the honour of the ancient Nalanda according to the Blue Annals Tibetan ད བ ཐ ར ས ན པ 68 This institution emerged north of Lhasa in 1436 through the efforts of Rongton Mawe Sengge then expanded in the 15th century It is now called the Tibetan Nalanda to distinguish it from this site 102 Tibetan Buddhist tradition is regarded to be a continuation of the Nalanda tradition The Dalai Lama states 103 Tibetan Buddhism is not an invention of the Tibetans Rather it is quite clear that it derives from the pure lineage of the tradition of the Nalanda Monastery The master Nagarjuna hailed from this institution as did many other important philosophers and logicians The Dalai Lama refers to himself as a follower of the lineage of the seventeen Nalanda masters 104 An Astasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra manuscript preserved at the Tsethang monastery has superbly painted and well preserved wooden covers and 139 leaves According to its colophon it was donated by the mother of the great pandita Sri Asoka in the second year of the reign of King Surapala at the very end of the 11th century 105 Nalanda still continued to operate into the 14th century as the Indian monk Dhyanabhadra was said to have been a monk at Nalanda prior to his travels in East Asia 106 Under the East India Company and British Empire 1800 1947 edit nbsp A statue of Gautama Buddha at Nalanda in 1895 After its decline Nalanda was largely forgotten until Francis Buchanan Hamilton surveyed the site in 1811 1812 after locals in the vicinity drew his attention to some Buddhist and Brahmanical images and ruins in the area 94 He however did not associate the mounds of earth and debris with famed Nalanda That link was established by Major Markham Kittoe in 1847 Alexander Cunningham and the newly formed Archaeological Survey of India conducted an official survey in 1861 1862 Systematic excavation of the ruins by the ASI did not begin until 1915 and ended in 1937 1 The first four excavations were led by Spooner between 1915 and 1919 The next two were led by Sastri in 1920 and 1921 The next seven seasons of archaeological excavations through 1928 were led by Page These efforts were not merely digging observation and cataloguing of discoveries they included conservation restoration and changes to the site such as drainage to prevent damage to unearthed floors 107 After 1928 Kuraishi led two seasons of excavations Chandra led the next four The last season was led by Ghosh but the excavations were abbreviated in 1937 for financial reasons and budget cuts Chandra and final ASI team leaders noted that the long row of monasteries extend further into the modern village of Bargaon and the extent of entire monastic establishment can only be determined by future excavations 107 Post independence Post 1947 edit nbsp Rear view of the ruins of the Baladitya Temple in 1872 Post independence the second round of excavation and restoration took place between 1974 and 1982 1 In 1951 the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara New Nalanda Mahavihara a modern centre for Pali and Buddhism in the spirit of the ancient institution was founded by the Government of Bihar near Nalanda s ruins at the suggestion of Rajendra Prasad India s first president 108 It was deemed to be a university in 2006 109 1 September 2014 saw the commencement of the first academic year of a modern Nalanda University with 15 students in nearby Rajgir 110 Nalanda University also known as Nalanda International University is an international and research intensive university located in the historical city of Rajgir in Bihar India It was established by an Act of Parliament to emulate the famous ancient university of Nalanda which functioned between the 5th and 13th centuries The idea to resurrect Nalanda University was endorsed in 2007 at the East Asia Summit represented mostly by Asian countries including China Singapore Japan Malaysia and Vietnam apart from Australia and New Zealand and as such the university is seen as one of the flagship projects of the Government of India It has been designated as an Institution of National Importance by the Parliament and began its first academic session on 1 September 2014 Initially set up with temporary facilities in Rajgir a modern campus spanning over 160 hectares 400 acres is expected to be finished by 2020 This campus upon completion will be the largest of its kind in India and one of the largest in Asia 111 The Mahavihara editWhile its excavated ruins today only occupy an area of around 488 by 244 metres 1 600 by 800 ft or roughly 12 hectares Nalanda Mahavihara occupied a far greater area in medieval times The subjects taught at Nalanda covered every field of learning and it attracted pupils and scholars from Korea Japan China Tibet Indonesia Persia and Turkey 112 113 The university edit At its peak the school attracted scholars and students from near and far with some travelling from Tibet China Korea and Central Asia 114 The highly formalised methods of Shramanic studies helped the establishment of large teaching institutions such as Taxila Nalanda and Vikramashila 115 which are often characterised as India s early universities 33 116 117 118 Archaeological evidence also notes contact with the Shailendra dynasty of Indonesia one of whose kings built a monastery in the complex Nalanda flourished under the patronage of the Gupta Empire in the 5th and 6th centuries and later under Harsha the emperor of Kannauj 40 The liberal cultural traditions inherited from the Gupta age resulted in a period of growth and prosperity until the ninth century CE The subsequent centuries were a time of gradual decline a period during which the tantric developments of Buddhism became most pronounced in eastern India under the Pala Empire 119 Much of our knowledge of Nalanda comes from the writings of pilgrim monks from Asia such as Xuanzang and Yijing who travelled to the Mahavihara in the 7th century CE Vincent Smith remarked that a detailed history of Nalanda would be a history of Mahayanist Buddhism Many of the names listed by Xuanzang in his travelogue as alumni of Nalanda are the names of those who developed the overall philosophy of Mahayana 120 All students at Nalanda studied Mahayana as well as the texts of the eighteen Hinayana sects of Buddhism Their curriculum also included other subjects such as the Vedas logic Sanskrit grammar medicine and Samkhya 115 121 14 122 Nalanda was destroyed three times but was rebuilt only twice citation needed It was ransacked and destroyed by an army of the Mamluk dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate under Bakhtiyar Khalji in c 1202 CE 123 While some sources note that the Mahavihara continued to function in a makeshift fashion after this attack it was eventually abandoned altogether and forgotten until the 19th century when the site was surveyed and preliminary excavations were conducted by the Archaeological Survey of India Systematic excavations commenced in 1915 which unearthed eleven monasteries and six brick temples neatly arranged on grounds 12 hectares 30 acres in area A trove of sculptures coins seals and inscriptions have also been discovered in the ruins many of which are on display in the Nalanda Archaeological Museum situated nearby Nalanda is now a notable tourist destination and a part of the Buddhist tourism circuit On 25 November 2010 the Indian government through an Act of Parliament resurrected the ancient university through the Nalanda University Bill with which they chose to create a new and unrelated Nalanda University relatively nearby It has been designated as an International University of National Importance and has accordingly been subject to intense government oversight with both of its past chancellors explicitly citing Government actions for them leaving their post and courses being shut down due to members of the ruling party disapproving of them The library edit nbsp Prajnaparamita and Scenes from the Buddha s Life top Maitreya and Scenes from the Buddha s Life bottom Folios from a Dharanisamgraha manuscript from Nalanda circa 1075 nbsp Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva Ashtasahasrika Prajnyaparamita Sutra manuscript from Nalanda s Pala period It is evident from the large numbers of texts that Yijing carried back with him after his 10 year residence at Nalanda that the Mahavihara must have featured a well equipped library Traditional Tibetan sources mention the existence of a great library at Nalanda named Dharmaganja Piety Mart which comprised three large multi storeyed buildings the Ratnasagara Ocean of Jewels the Ratnodadhi Sea of Jewels and the Ratnaranjaka Jewel adorned Ratnodadhi was nine storeys high and housed the most sacred manuscripts including the Prajnyaparamita Sutra and the Guhyasamaja 124 116 The exact number of volumes in the Nalanda library is not known but it is estimated to have been in the hundreds of thousands 125 When a Buddhist scholar at Nalanda died his manuscripts were added to the library collection 126 The library not only collected religious manuscripts but also had texts on such subjects as grammar logic literature astrology astronomy and medicine 127 page needed The Nalanda library must have had a classification scheme which was possibly based on a text classification scheme developed by the Sanskrit linguist Panini 128 Buddhist texts were most likely divided into three classes based on the Tripitaka s three main divisions the Vinaya Sutra and the Abhidhamma 129 Curriculum edit In his biography of Xuanzang Hwui Li states that all the students of Nalanda studied the Great Vehicle Mahayana as well as the works of the eighteen Nikaya traditions of Buddhism In addition to these they studied other subjects such as the Vedas Hetuvidya Logic Shabdavidya Grammar and Philology Chikitsavidya Medicine the works on magic the Atharvaveda and Samkhya 121 According to Frazier the Vedic studies included Vedic texts and ritual but also the different theoretical disciplines associated with the limbs or the sciences of the Vedas which included disciplines such as linguistics law astronomy and reasoning 41 Xuanzang himself studied a number of these subjects at Nalanda under Shilabhadra and others Besides theology and philosophy frequent debates and discussions necessitated competence in Logic A student at the Mahavihara had to be well versed in the systems of Logic associated with all the different schools of thought of the time as he was expected to defend Buddhist systems against the others Other subjects believed to have been taught at Nalanda include law astronomy and city planning 115 Tibetan tradition holds that there were four doxographies Standard Tibetan grub mtha which were taught at Nalanda 130 Sarvastivada Vaibhashika Sarvastivada Sautrantika Madhyamaka the Mahayana philosophy of Nagarjuna Chittamatra the Mahayana philosophy of Asanga and VasubandhuIn the 7th century Xuanzang recorded the number of teachers at Nalanda as being around 1510 Of these approximately 1000 were able to explain 20 collections of sutras and shastras 500 were able to explain 30 collections and only 10 teachers were able to explain 50 collections Xuanzang was among the few who were able to explain 50 collections or more At this time only the abbot Shilabhadra had studied all the major collections of sutras and shastras at Nalanda 131 Administration edit The Chinese monk Yijing wrote that matters of discussion and administration at Nalanda would require assembly and consensus on decisions by all those at the assembly as well as resident monks 132 If the monks had some business they would assemble to discuss the matter Then they ordered the officer Viharapala to circulate and report the matter to the resident monks one by one with folded hands With the objection of a single monk it would not pass There was no use of beating or thumping to announce his case In case a monk did something without consent of all the residents he would be forced to leave the monastery If there was a difference of opinion on a certain issue they would give reason to convince the other group No force or coercion was used to convince Xuanzang also noted 133 The lives of all these virtuous men were naturally governed by habits of the most solemn and strictest kind Thus in the seven hundred years of the monastery s existence no man has ever contravened the rules of the discipline The king showers it with the signs of his respect and veneration and has assigned the revenue from a hundred cities to pay for the maintenance of the religious Influence on Buddhism edit A vast amount of what came to comprise Tibetan Buddhism both its Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions stems from the teachers and traditions at Nalanda Shantarakshita who pioneered the propagation of Buddhism in Tibet in the 8th century was a scholar of Nalanda He was invited by the Tibetan king Khri sron deu tsan and established the monastery at Samye serving as its first abbot He and his disciple Kamalashila who was also of Nalanda essentially taught Tibetans how to do philosophy 134 Padmasambhava who was also invited from Nalanda Mahavihara by the king in 747 CE is credited as a founder of Tibetan Buddhism 135 The scholar Dharmakirti c 7th century one of the Buddhist founders of Indian philosophical logic as well as one of the primary theorists of Buddhist atomism taught at Nalanda 136 Other forms of Buddhism such as the Mahayana Buddhism followed in Vietnam China Korea and Japan flourished within the walls of the ancient school A number of scholars have associated some Mahayana texts such as the Shurangama Sutra an important sutra in East Asian Buddhism with the Buddhist tradition at Nalanda 137 138 Ron Epstein also notes that the general doctrinal position of the sutra does indeed correspond to what is known about the Buddhist teachings at Nalanda toward the end of the Gupta period when it was translated 139 Several Buddhist institutions overseas have chosen to call themselves Nalanda to acknowledge Nalanda s influence These include Nalanda Buddhist Society in Malaysia 140 and Nalanda College Colombo Sri Lanka 141 Nalanda Buddhist Education Foundation Indonesia Nalanda Buddhist Institute Bhutan World Heritage Sites Recognisation edit The Nalanda Mahavihara is recognised as a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO in 2016 142 143 Historical figures associated with Nalanda editTraditional sources state that Nalanda was visited by both Mahavira and the Buddha in c 6th and 5th century BCE 1 It is also the place of birth and nirvana of Shariputra one of the famous disciples of Buddha 33 Other historical figures associated with Nalanda include Aryabhata 144 Aryadeva student of Nagarjuna 117 Asanga proponent of the Yogacarya school 145 Atisha Mahayana and Vajrayana scholar Buddhaguhya Vajrayana Buddhist monk and scholar 146 Chandrakirti student of Nagarjuna Chandragomin Dharmakirti logician 136 Dharmapala Dhyanabhadra 106 Dignaga founder of Buddhist Logic Kamalasila abbot of Nalanda Maitripada Indian Buddhist Mahasiddha Nagarjuna formaliser of the concept of Shunyata 117 Naropa student of Tilopa and teacher of Marpa Santarakṣita founder of Yogacara Madhyamika Shantideva composer of the Bodhisattvacarya Shilabhadra the teacher of Xuanzang 147 Vajrabodhi 7th 8th century Indian esoteric monk and one of the patriarchs of Chinese Esoteric Buddhism and Shingon Buddhism 148 Vasubandhu brother of Asanga 145 Xuanzang Chinese Buddhist traveller Yijing Chinese Buddhist travellerExcavated remains edit nbsp A map of the excavated remains of Nalanda nbsp Excavated ruins of the monasteries of Nalanda After its decline Nalanda was largely forgotten until Francis Buchanan Hamilton surveyed the site in 1811 1812 after locals in the vicinity drew his attention to a vast complex of ruins in the area He however did not associate the mounds of earth and debris with famed Nalanda That link was established by Major Markham Kittoe in 1847 Alexander Cunningham and the newly formed Archaeological Survey of India conducted an official survey in 1861 1862 2 Systematic excavation of the ruins by the ASI did not begin until 1915 and ended in 1937 The second round of excavation and restoration took place between 1974 and 1982 1 The remains of Nalanda today extend some 488 metres 1 600 ft north to south and around 244 metres 800 ft east to west Excavations have revealed eleven monasteries also known as vihara and six major brick temples arranged in an ordered layout A 30 m 100 ft wide passage runs from north to south with the temples to its west and the monasteries to its east 1 Most structures show evidence of multiple periods of construction with new buildings being raised atop the ruins of old ones Many of the buildings also display signs of damage by fire on at least one occasion 149 The map gives the layout of the excavated structures Temple 3 in the south was the most imposing structure Temple 12 13 14 face the monasteries and face east With the exception of those designated 1A and 1B the monasteries all face west with drains emptying out in the east and staircases positioned in the south west corner of the buildings 150 Temple 2 was to the east All the monasteries at Nalanda are very similar in layout and general appearance Their plan involves a rectangular form with a central quadrangular court which is surrounded by a verandah which in turn is bounded by an outer row of cells for the monks a typical design of vihara architecture The central cell facing the entrance leading into the court is a shrine chamber Its strategic position means that it would have been the first thing that drew the eye when entering the edifice With the exception of those designated 1A and 1B the monasteries all face west with drains emptying out in the east and staircases positioned in the south west corner of the buildings 150 Monastery 1 is considered the oldest and the most important of the monastery group and shows as many as nine levels of construction Its lower monastery is believed to be the one sponsored by Balaputradeva the Srivijayan king during the reign of Devapala in the 9th century see Nalanda copper plate of Devapala The building was originally at least 2 storeys high and contained a colossal statue of a seated Buddha 151 nbsp Temple no 3 Sariputta Stupa nbsp Conjectural Reconstruction of Temple no 3 Nalanda UniversityTemple no 3 also termed Sariputta Stupa is the most iconic of Nalanda s structures with its multiple flights of stairs that lead all the way to the top The temple was originally a small structure which was built upon and enlarged by later constructions Archaeological evidence shows that the final structure was a result of at least seven successive such accumulations of construction The fifth of these layered temples is the most interesting and the best preserved with four corner towers of which three have been exposed The towers as well as the sides of the stairs are decorated with exquisite panels of Gupta era art depicting a variety of stucco figures including Buddha and the Bodhisattvas scenes from the Jataka tales The temple is surrounded by numerous votive stupas some of which have been built with bricks inscribed with passages from sacred Buddhist texts The apex of Temple no 3 features a shrine chamber which now only contains the pedestal upon which an immense statue of Buddha must have once rested 152 According to Win Maung the stupa was influenced by Gupta architecture which itself had Kushana era influences 153 In a shrine near the bottom of the staircase a large image of Avalotiteshvar was found which was eventually moved to the museum 154 nbsp Buddha Shakyamuni or the Bodhisattva Maitreya gilt copper alloy early 8th century NalandaTemple no 2 notably features 211 sculptured religious and secular panels These include Shiva Parvati Kartikeya and Gajalakshmi Kinnaras playing musical instruments various representations of Makaras as well as human couples in amorous postures as well as scenes of art and of everyday life Susan Huntington and Bhaskara Misra scholars of Indian architecture and arts state Temple 2 as a Hindu temple 155 However Huu Phuoc Le a scholar of Buddhist architecture questions this purely Hindu affiliation stating that it could be a temple based on the mandala principles and one reflecting Hindu Buddhist syncretism of the 8th to 12th century when Shaiva and Shakti deities were integrated into Vajrayana Buddhism 155 The site of Temple no 13 features a brick made smelting furnace with four chambers The discovery of burnt metal and slag suggests that it was used to cast metallic objects To the north of Temple 13 lie the remains of Temple no 14 An enormous image of the Buddha was discovered here The image s pedestal features fragments of the only surviving exhibit of mural painting at Nalanda 156 To the east of Temple 2 lie the remains of Sarai Temple in the recently excavated Sarai Mound This multi storeyed Buddhist temple with many stupas and shrines was enclosed by a massive wall enclosure The remains in the sanctum suggest that the Buddha statue was around 24 metres 80 ft high Numerous sculptures as well as many murals copper plates artworks inscriptions seals coins plaques potteries and works in stone bronze stucco and terracotta have been unearthed within the ruins of Nalanda The Buddhist sculptures discovered notably include those of the Buddha in different postures Avalokiteshvara Jambhala Manjushri Marichi and Tara Brahmanical idols of Vishnu Shiva Parvathi Ganesha Mahishasura Mardini and Surya have also been found in the ruins 1 A Black Buddha temple termed by locals as the Telia Bhairav tel refers to use of oil is near Temple 14 with has an ancient large black Buddha image in bhumisparha mudra This the same temple termed Baithak Bhairab in Cunningham s 1861 62 ASI report 157 Surviving Nalanda manuscripts editFleeing monks took some of the Nalanda manuscripts A few of them have survived and are preserved in collections such as those at Los Angeles County Museum of Art 158 Folios from a Dharanisamgraha circa 1075 Asia Society 159 This Ashtasahasrika Prajnaparamita manuscript records in Sanskrit and Tibetan the history of the manuscript from its creation at the famous Nalanda monastery in India through its use in Tibet by the compiler of the first Tibetan canon of Buddhism Buton Yarlung Museum Tsetang From the On ke ru Lha khang monastery 160 Astasahahasrika Prajnaparamita Sanskrit palm leaf manuscript with 139 leaves and painted wooden covers According to the colophon this manuscript was donated by the mother of the great pandita Sri Asoka in the second year of the reign of King Surapala at end of the 11th century Nalanda inscriptions editA number of inscriptions were found during the excavation which are now preserved in the Nalanda Museum These include Son of a minister of Yashovarman donated to the temple built by king Baladitya 8th cent CE basalt slab found in monastery 1 161 Murnavarman constructed an 24 metre high 80 ft brass image of Buddha 7th cent CE basalt slab found in Sarai mound 162 Monk Vipulshrimitra built a monastery Basalt slab later half of 12th cent found in the uppermost level of Monastery 7 163 Donation of Balaputradeva the king of Suvarnadvipa of Sailendra dynasty 860 CE Copperplate found by Hirananda Shastri in 1921 in the antechamber of Monastery 1 at Nalanda Tourism edit nbsp The Xuanzang Memorial Hall at NalandaNalanda is a popular tourist destination in the state attracting a number of Indian and overseas visitors 164 It is also an important stop on the Buddhist tourism circuit 111 Nalanda Archaeological Museum edit nbsp Nalanda Archaeological MuseumThe Archaeological Survey of India maintains a museum near the ruins for the benefit of visitors The museum opened in 1917 exhibits the antiquities that have been unearthed at Nalanda as well as from nearby Rajgir Out of 13 463 items only 349 are on display in four galleries 165 Xuanzang Memorial Hall edit nbsp Xuan Zang Memorial HallThe Xuanzang Memorial Hall is an Indo Chinese undertaking to honour the famed Buddhist monk and traveller A relic comprising a skull bone of the Chinese monk is on display in the memorial hall 166 Nalanda Multimedia Museum edit Another museum adjoining the excavated site is the privately run Nalanda Multimedia Museum 167 It showcases the history of Nalanda through 3 D animation and other multimedia presentations 167 Gallery edit nbsp Entrance to the excavated remains nbsp A seal Gupta period c 5th 6th century nbsp Stupa of Sariputta Temple 3 nbsp Stupa of Sariputta secondary shrines nbsp Sculpted stucco panels on a tower Stupa of Sariputta nbsp Stucco Buddha image at Nalanda Stupa of Sariputta nbsp People on second story of an excavated monastery nbsp Monastery 4 with well and stepped platform nbsp A post 8th century bronze statue of Buddha from Nalanda nbsp Details on one of numerous votive stupas at the site nbsp Vajrapani Basalt circa 8th century CE nbsp Skanda Temple 2 nbsp Kubera nbsp Jain Tirthankara Bronze from Nalanda 10th century nbsp Ganesha Bronze from Nalanda 10th centurySee also edit nbsp India portalRelated Sites and PlaceTelhara Telhara was the site of a Buddhist monastery in ancient India Bakhtiarpur named after Bakhtiar Khilji who destroyed Nalanda MahaviraAncient Indian learning centers Jagaddala Bengal Odantapuri adjacent to Nalanda Pushpagiri Vihara Odissa Sharada Peeth Kashmir Somapura Bengal Taxila Punjab Teladhaka near Nalanda Vallabhi Gujarat Vikramashila BiharFurther reading editAncient higher learning institutions List of Monuments of National Importance in Bihar Kurkihar hoard Mukherjee Sugato 23 February 2023 Nalanda The university that changed the world BBC Notes edit The Nalanda site is not fully excavated and the modern village of Bargaon may be on top of some of the ruins ASI reports 1935 1937 Variants of similar fictional accounts about Nalanda before the 4th century are found in several Tibetan works and Chinese pilgrim accounts There are fictional stories in Tibetan texts for post 12th century era too with names of ahistorical and unverifiable kings sages arsonists thousands of new Buddhist monasteries and temples and Muslim robbers murdering a king For example the Taranatha account c 1600 CE in Chapters 19 and 20 describes the tale of Muditabhabhadra Malikabuddhi and Kakutsiddha It states that after a Persian king from Kashmir and his Muslim army destroyed Magadha and heavily damaged Sri Nalendra Nalanda one king named Krisnaraja built twenty one centers of Buddhist doctrine in madhya desha central India with one thousand caityas containing images of Buddhist deities but Muslim robbers murdered him and his blood flowed in the form of milk and flowers filled the sky then Muditabhabhadra rebuilt those damaged caityas leading all householders and brahmanas to revere the Buddha thereafter Kakutsiddha built a temple at Nalanda and consecrated it with a great feast Then young naughty monks teased two beggars who became very angry one of whom dug a deep pit and pursued sadhana for twelve years and gained magical powers He performed a yajna and produced magical ashes He gathered these ashes then spread them near the Dharmaganja library of Nalanda which started a fire to destroy the library s collection However from the ninth floor miraculous water poured out and all the literature on which this water reached remained unburnt The two tirthika arsonists escaped to Ha sa ma Assam a Buddhapaksha repaired the monuments again and vastly learned monks assembled and from their memorised literature rewrote the works that were burnt down in the library 95 Nalanda s library with palm leaf manuscripts did have incidences of fire damage in its history A 10th century stone inscription notes a destruction by fire and subsequent restoration at the Mahavihara during the reign of Mahipala r 988 1038 96 References edit a b c d e f g Nalanda Archaeological Survey of India Archived from the original on 18 September 2014 Retrieved 18 September 2014 a b Le 2010 p 59 Alphabetical List of Monuments Bihar Archaeological Survey of India Archived from the original on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 17 September 2014 Asher 2015 pp 1 5 Kumar 2018 a b History District Nalanda Government of Bihar India nalanda nic in 15 June 2023 Retrieved 2 June 2023 UNESCO Nominations PDF UNESCO Retrieved 2 June 2023 a b c Pinkney 2014 pp 116 117 with footnotes Kumar Manoj Ancient Nalanda University PDF Archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2022 Retrieved 6 November 2021 Ingalls Daniel H H 1976 Kalidasa and the Attitudes of the Golden Age Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 1 15 26 doi 10 2307 599886 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 599886 Smith 2013 pp 111 112 Krishnan 2016 p 17 Scharfe 2002 pp 148 150 with footnotes a b c Buswell amp Lopez 2013 Entry for Nalanda Kumar Pintu 2011 The Ancient Nalanda Mahavihara The Beginning of Institutional Education The Journal of the World Universities Forum 4 1 65 80 doi 10 18848 1835 2030 CGP v04i01 56731 ISSN 1835 2030 Sumersingh DhirajsinghRajput Gokarn Rohit Jagtap ChandrashekharY Galib R Patgiri Bj Prajapati Pk 2016 Critical Review of Rasaratna Samuccaya A Comprehensive Treatise of Indian Alchemy Ancient Science of Life 36 1 12 18 doi 10 4103 0257 7941 195412 ISSN 0257 7941 PMC 5255965 PMID 28182027 Buswell amp Lopez 2013 Entry for Nalanda Xuanzang and Yijing Santideva 1998 Translator s Note The Bodhicaryavatara Oxford University Press p xxviii ISBN 978 0 19 283720 2 Hodge Stephen 9 December 2005 The Maha Vairocana Abhisambodhi Tantra With Buddhaguhya s Commentary Routledge p 17 ISBN 978 1 135 79654 9 Truschke Audrey May 2018 The Power of the Islamic Sword in Narrating the Death of Indian Buddhism History of Religions 57 4 406 435 doi 10 1086 696567 ISSN 0018 2710 S2CID 165825418 Four sites inscribed on UNESCO s World Heritage List whc unesco org UNESCO World Heritage Centre 15 July 2016 Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2016 History and Revival Nalandauniv edu in Vision Nalandauniv edu in Retrieved 8 March 2022 Ghosh 1965 pp 1 2 Prasad 1988 p 184 with footnotes Ghosh 1965 pp 3 with footnote 2 Hiranand Sastri 1986 pp 3 4 a b Ghosh 1965 pp 2 3 Hartmut Scharfe 12 November 2018 Education in Ancient India BRILL pp 148 150 ISBN 978 90 474 0147 6 Jose Ignacio Cabezon Jose Ignacio Cabezon 31 January 2013 The Buddha s Doctrine and the Nine Vehicles Rog Bande Sherab s Lamp of the Teachings OUP USA p 87 ISBN 978 0 19 995862 7 KA Nilakanta Sastri 1988 p 268 Elverskog Johan 2010 Buddhism and Islam on the Silk Road Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 1 a b c Scharfe 2002 p 148 Dutt 1962 p 328 Ghosh 1965 pp 4 5 a b c Scharfe 2002 pp 148 149 with footnotes Tewari Rakesh 2016 EXCAVATION AT JUAFARDIH DISTRICT NALANDA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA pp 6 8 Layers 13 the uppermost deposit of Period I has provided a C14 date of 1354BCE it may thus be seen that the C14 dates of Period I and II are consistent and justifiably indicate that the conventional date bracket for NBPW requires a fresh review at least for the sites in Magadh region Deeg Max 2019 Chinese Buddhist Travelers Faxian Xuanzang and Yijing Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190277727 013 217 ISBN 978 0 19 027772 7 a b Monroe 2000 p 166 a b c d Dutt 1962 p 329 a b Frazier Jessica Flood Gavin 30 June 2011 The Continuum Companion to Hindu Studies A amp C Black p 34 ISBN 978 0 8264 9966 0 John F Fleet Nalanda clay seals of Kumaragupta III Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum Vol 3 Pinkney 2014 pp 116 with footnotes Quote Some of Nalanda s most important patrons include the Hindu Guptas epecially fifth century Kumaragupta also known as Sakraditya who reigned from 415 455 CE and emperor Harsha a b Ghosh 1965 p 5 Krishnan 2016 pp 162 163 Dutt 1962 p 330 Pal 2019 pp 95 99 Scharfe 2002 pp 149 150 with footnotes Sastri Hirananda 1931 Epigraphia Indica Vol 21 pp 74 80 Li Rongxi 1996 The Great Tang Dynasty Record of the Western Regions Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai and Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research Berkeley pp 123 132 Quote Harṣavardhana known as Xizeng Increment of Happiness is a descendant of the Vaisya caste His family had three kings that ruled over the country for Ghosh 1965 p 6 a b c Scharfe 2002 p 151 Asher 2015 pp 5 21 Scharfe 2002 pp 151 152 a b Kulke amp Rothermund 2004 p 110 Wriggins 1996 p 237 Ghosh 1965 p 8 Wriggins 1996 p 124 Beal 2000 p 111 Wriggins 1996 pp 177 Ghosh 1965 p 9 Scharfe 2002 p 144 Buswell amp Lopez 2013 Entry for Nalanda and Yijing Monroe 2000 p 167 J Takakusu A Record 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8133 2801 0 Wink Andre 2002 Al Hind the making of the Indo Islamic world Vol 1 3rd ed Boston MA Brill ISBN 978 0 391 04173 8 Khurshid Anis January 1972 Growth of libraries in India International Library Review 4 1 21 65 doi 10 1016 0020 7837 72 90048 9 Sastri Hiranand 1986 First published in 1942 Nalanda and its Epigraphic Material New Delhi Sri Satguru Publications ISBN 978 8170300137 Sastri Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta 1988 1967 Age of the Nandas and Mauryas 2nd ed Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 978 8120804661 Taher Mohamed Davis Donald Gordon 1994 Librarianship and library science in India an outline of historical perspectives New Delhi Concept Pub Co ISBN 978 8170225249 Bhatt Rakesh Kumar 1995 History and Development of Libraries in India Mittal Publications ISBN 978 8170995821 Mookerji Radha Kumud 1998 First published in 1951 Ancient Indian Education Brahmanical and Buddhist 2 ed Motilal Banarsidass Publications ISBN 978 8120804234 Prasad Chandra Shekhar 1988 Nalanda vis a vis the Birthplace of Sariputra East and West 38 1 4 175 188 JSTOR 29756860 Patel Jashu Kumar Krishan 2001 Libraries and Librarianship in India Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313294235 Collins Randall 2000 The sociology of philosophies a global theory of intellectual change Volume 30 Issue 2 of Philosophy of the social sciences Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00187 9 Beal Samuel 2000 First published in 1911 The life of Hiuen Tsiang Trubner s Oriental Series Vol 1 New ed London Routledge ISBN 9781136376290 Humphreys Christmas 1987 The Wisdom of Buddhism Psychology Press ISBN 978 0700701971 Wayman Alex 1984 Buddhist Insight Essays Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120806757 Kulke Hermann Rothermund Dietmar 2004 A History of India Fourth ed Routledge Archived from the original on 4 October 2014 Retrieved 1 October 2014 Monroe Paul 2000 Paul Monroe s encyclopaedia of history of education Volume 1 Genesis Publishing ISBN 978 8177550917 Walser Joseph 2005 Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231131643 Pinkney Andrea M 2014 Looking West to India Asian education intra Asian renaissance and the Nalanda revival Modern Asian Studies Cambridge University Press 49 1 111 149 doi 10 1017 s0026749x13000310 S2CID 144865654 Le Huu Phuoc 2010 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol pp 58 66 ISBN 978 0984404308 Frazier Jessica ed 2011 The Continuum companion to Hindu studies London Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 9966 0 Jarzombek Mark M Prakash Vikramaditya Ching Francis D K 2011 A Global History of Architecture John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0470902455 Buswell Robert E Jr Lopez Donald S Jr 2013 The Princeton dictionary of Buddhism Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400848058 Kim Jinah 2013 Receptacle of the Sacred Illustrated Manuscripts and the Buddhist Book Cult in South Asia University of California Press ISBN 978 0520273863 Smith F Harold 2013 The Buddhist Way of Life Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 02930 2 Walton Linda 2015 Educational institutions in The Cambridge World History Vol 5 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19074 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nalanda The life of Hiuen Tsiang 1914 by Xuanzang s biographer Hwui Li translated by Samuel Beal p 105 113 A record of the Buddhist religion as practised in India and the Malay archipelago 1896 by Yijing translated by J Takakasu searchable for Nalanda Pag Sam Jon Zang Dpag bsam ljon bzaṅ Part I History of the Rise Progress and Downfall of Buddhism in India 1908 by Sumpa Khan po Yece Pal Jor in Tibetan with an index in English edited by Sarat Chandra Das Tabakat i Nasiri A General History of the Muhammadan Dynasties of Asia Including Hindustan by Minhaj i Siraj translated by Major H G Raverty p 552 Rajgir District Nalanda Government of Bihar IndiaMiscSeals and figurines from Nalanda at the British Museum Interactive walking tour from Google Entry on Nalanda in the Buddhist Dictionary of Pali Proper Names Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nalanda mahavihara amp oldid 1182044682, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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