fbpx
Wikipedia

Pillars of Ashoka

The pillars of Ashoka are a series of monolithic columns dispersed throughout the Indian subcontinent, erected or at least inscribed with edicts by the 3rd Mauryan Emperor Ashoka The Great who reigned from c.  268 to 232 BCE.[2] Ashoka used the expression Dhaṃma thaṃbhā (Dharma stambha), i.e. "pillars of the Dharma" to describe his own pillars.[3][4] These pillars constitute important monuments of the architecture of India, most of them exhibiting the characteristic Mauryan polish. Of the pillars erected by Ashoka, twenty still survive including those with inscriptions of his edicts. Only a few with animal capitals survive of which seven complete specimens are known.[5] Two pillars were relocated by Firuz Shah Tughlaq to Delhi.[6] Several pillars were relocated later by Mughal Empire rulers, the animal capitals being removed.[7] Averaging between 12 and 15 m (40 and 50 ft) in height, and weighing up to 50 tons each, the pillars were dragged, sometimes hundreds of miles, to where they were erected.[8]

Pillars of Ashoka
One of the Pillars of Ashoka, in Vaishali
MaterialPolished sandstone
Period/culture3rd century BCE

The pillars of Ashoka are among the earliest known stone sculptural remains from India. Only another pillar fragment, the Pataliputra capital, is possibly from a slightly earlier date. It is thought that before the 3rd century BCE, wood rather than stone was used as the main material for Indian architectural constructions, and that stone may have been adopted following interaction with the Persians and the Greeks.[9] A graphic representation of the Lion Capital of Ashoka from the column there was adopted as the official State Emblem of India in 1950.[10]

All the pillars of Ashoka were built at Buddhist monasteries, many important sites from the life of the Buddha and places of pilgrimage. Some of the columns carry inscriptions addressed to the monks and nuns.[11] Some were erected to commemorate visits by Ashoka. Major pillars are present in the Indian States of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and some parts of Haryana.

Ashoka and Buddhism

 
Lion Capital of Ashoka from Sarnath, with Wheel of the Moral Law (reconstitution). 3rd century BCE.[12][13][14]

Ashoka ascended to the throne in 269 BC inheriting the Mauryan empire founded by his grandfather Chandragupta Maurya. Ashoka was reputedly a tyrant at the outset of his reign. Eight years after his accession he campaigned in Kalinga where in his own words, "a hundred and fifty thousand people were deported, a hundred thousand were killed and as many as that perished..." As he explains in his edicts, after this event Ashoka converted to Buddhism in remorse for the loss of life. Buddhism became a state religion and with Ashoka's support it spread rapidly. The inscriptions on the pillars set out edicts about morality based on Buddhist tenets.[15][16] They were added in 3rd century BCE.

Construction

Possible sources of inspiration
 
Highly polished Achaemenid load-bearing column with lotus capital and ashvins, Persepolis, c. 5th-4th BCE.

The traditional idea that all were originally quarried at Chunar, just south of Varanasi and taken to their sites, before or after carving, "can no longer be confidently asserted",[19] and instead it seems that the columns were carved in two types of stone. Some were of the spotted red and white sandstone from the region of Mathura, the others of buff-colored fine grained hard sandstone usually with small black spots quarried in the Chunar near Varanasi. The uniformity of style in the pillar capitals suggests that they were all sculpted by craftsmen from the same region. It would therefore seem that stone was transported from Mathura and Chunar to the various sites where the pillars have been found, and there was cut and carved by craftsmen.[20]

The pillars have four component parts in two pieces: the three sections of the capitals are made in a single piece, often of a different stone to that of the monolithic shaft to which they are attached by a large metal dowel. The shafts are always plain and smooth, circular in cross-section, slightly tapering upwards and always chiselled out of a single piece of stone. There is no distinct base at the bottom of the shaft. The lower parts of the capitals have the shape and appearance of a gently arched bell formed of lotus petals. The abaci are of two types: square and plain and circular and decorated and these are of different proportions. The crowning animals are masterpieces of Mauryan art, shown either seated or standing, always in the round and chiselled as a single piece with the abaci.[21][22] Presumably all or most of the other columns that now lack them once had capitals and animals. They are also used to commemorate the events of the Buddha's life.

Lion designs
 
 
Left image: Vaishali lion of Ashoka. Right image: Assyrian relief of a lion at Nineveh (circa 640 BCE). Many stylistic elements (design of the whiskers, the eyes, the fur etc...) point to similarities.[23]

Currently seven animal sculptures from Ashoka pillars survive.[5][24] These form "the first important group of Indian stone sculpture", though it is thought they derive from an existing tradition of wooden columns topped by animal sculptures in copper, none of which have survived. It is also possible that some of the stone pillars predate Ashoka's reign.[25]

Floral designs
 
 
Top image: Abacus of the Allahabad pillar, with lotuses alternating with "flame palmettes" over a bead and reel pattern.
Bottom image: A quite similar frieze from Delphi, 525 BCE.

Origin

Western origin

There has been much discussion of the extent of influence from Achaemenid Persia,[26] where the column capitals supporting the roofs at Persepolis have similarities, and the "rather cold, hieratic style" of the Sarnath Lion Capital of Ashoka especially shows "obvious Achaemenid and Sargonid influence".[27] India and the Achaemenid Empire had been in close contact since the Achaemenid conquest of the Indus Valley, from circa 500 BCE to 330 BCE.

Hellenistic influence has also been suggested.[28] In particular the abaci of some of the pillars (especially the Rampurva bull, the Sankissa elephant and the Allahabad pillar capital) use bands of motifs, like the bead and reel pattern, the ovolo, the flame palmettes, lotuses, which likely originated from Greek and Near-Eastern arts.[23] Such examples can also be seen in the remains of the Mauryan capital city of Pataliputra.

It has also been suggested that 6th century Greek columns such as the Sphinx of Naxos, a 12.5m Ionic column crowned by a sitted animal in the religious center of Delphi, may have been an inspiration for the pillars of Ashoka.[17] Many similar columns crowned by sphinxes were discovered in ancient Greece, as in Sparta, Athens or Spata, and some were used as funerary steles.[17] The Greek sphinx, a lion with the face of a human female, was considered as having ferocious strength, and was thought of as a guardian, often flanking the entrances to temples or royal tombs.[29]

Pillar as Dhvaja, military standard
 
Heliodorus pillar in Vidisha, India, 2nd Century BCE
 
Shunga horseman carrying portable garuda standard, Bharhut 2nd Century BCE

Indian origin

Some scholars such as John Irwin emphasized a reassessment from popular belief of Persian or Greek origin of Ashokan pillars. He makes the argument that Ashokan pillars represent Dhvaja or standard which Indian soldiers carried with them during battle and it was believed that the destruction of the enemy's dhvaja brought misfortune to their opponents. A relief of Bharhut stupa railing portrays a queenly personage on horseback carrying a Garudadhvaja.[30] Heliodorus pillar has been called Garudadhvaja, literally Garuda-standard, the pillar dated to 2nd century BC is perhaps the earliest recorded stone pillar which has been declared a dhvaja.[31]

Ashokan edicts themselves state that his words should be carved on any stone slab or pillars available indicating that the tradition of carving stone pillars was present before the period of Ashoka.

John Irwin also highlights the fact that carvings on pillars such as Allahabad pillar was done when it had already been erected indicating its pre Ashokan origins.[32]

 
Ashoka called his own pillars Silā Thabhe (𑀲𑀺𑀮𑀸𑀣𑀪𑁂, Stone Stambha, i.e. stone pillars). Lumbini inscription, Brahmi script.

Stylistic argument

Though influence from the west is generally accepted, especially the Persian columns of Achaemenid Persia, there are a number of differences between these and the pillars. Persian columns are built in segments whereas Ashokan pillars are monoliths, like some much later Roman columns. Most of the Persian pillars have a fluted shaft while the Mauryan pillars are smooth, and Persian pillars serve as supporting structures whereas Ashokan pillars are individual free-standing monuments. There are also other differences in the decoration.[33] Indian historian Upinder Singh comments on some of the differences and similarities, writing that "If the Ashokan pillars cannot in their entirety be attributed to Persian influence, they must have had an undocumented prehistory within the subcontinent, perhaps a tradition of wooden carving. But the transition from stone to wood was made in one magnificent leap, no doubt spurred by the imperial tastes and ambitions of the Maurya emperors."[34]

Whatever the cultural and artistic borrowings from the west, the pillars of Ashoka, together with much of Mauryan art and architectural prowesses such as the city of Pataliputra or the Barabar Caves, remain outstanding in their achievements, and often compare favourably with the rest of the world at that time. Commenting on Mauryan sculpture, John Marshall once wrote about the "extraordinary precision and accuracy which characterizes all Mauryan works, and which has never, we venture to say, been surpassed even by the finest workmanship on Athenian buildings".[35][36]

Complete list of the pillars

Five of the pillars of Ashoka, two at Rampurva, one each at Vaishali, Lauriya Araraj and Lauria Nandangarh possibly marked the course of the ancient Royal highway from Pataliputra to Nepal. Several pillars were relocated by later Mughal Empire rulers, the animal capitals being removed.[7]

The two Chinese medieval pilgrim accounts record sightings of several columns that have now vanished: Faxian records six and Xuanzang fifteen, of which only five at most can be identified with surviving pillars.[37] All surviving pillars, listed with any crowning animal sculptures and the edicts inscribed, are as follows:[21][38]

Complete standing pillars, or pillars with Ashokan inscriptions

 
Geographical spread of known pillar capitals.

The Amaravati pillar fragment is rather problematic. It only consists in 6 lines in Brahmi which are hardly decipherable. Only the word vijaya (victory) can be made out, arguably a word also used by Ashoka.[39] Sircar, who provides a detailed study, considers it as probably belonging to an Ashokan pillar.[40]

Complete standing pillars, or pillars with Ashokan inscriptions

Pillars without Ashokan inscriptions

There are also several known fragments of Ashokan pillars, without recovered Ashokan inscriptions, such as the Ashoka pillar in Bodh Gaya, Kausambi, Gotihawa, Prahladpur (now in the Government Sanskrit College, Varanasi[42]), Fatehabad, Bhopal, Sadagarli, Udaigiri-Vidisha, Kushinagar, Arrah (Masarh) Basti, Bhikana Pahari, Bulandi Bagh (Pataliputra), Sandalpu and a few others, as well as a broken pillar in Bhairon ("Lat Bhairo" in Benares)[43] which was destroyed to a stump during riots in 1908.[44] The Chinese monks Fa-Hsien and Hsuantsang also reported pillars in Kushinagar, the Jetavana monastery in Sravasti, Rajagriha and Mahasala, which have not been recovered to this day.[44]

Fragments of Pillars of Ashoka, without Ashokan inscriptions

The capitals (Top Piece)

 
Abacus of the Allahabad pillar of Ashoka, the only remaining portion of the capital of the Allahabad pillar.

There are altogether seven remaining complete capitals, five with lions, one with an elephant and one with a zebu bull. One of them, the four lions of Sarnath, has become the State Emblem of India. The animal capitals are composed of a lotiform base, with an abacus decorated with floral, symbolic or animal designs, topped by the realistic depiction of an animal, thought to each represent a traditional directions in India.

 
The horse motif on the Sarnath Lion Capital of Ashoka, is often described as an example of Hellenistic realism.[46]

Various foreign influences have been described in the design of these capitals.[47] The animal on top of a lotiform capital reminds of Achaemenid column shapes. The abacus also often seems to display some influence of Greek art: in the case of the Rampurva bull or the Sankassa elephant, it is composed of honeysuckles alternated with stylized palmettes and small rosettes.[48] A similar kind of design can be seen in the frieze of the lost capital of the Allahabad pillar. These designs likely originated in Greek and Near-Eastern arts.[49] They would probably have come from the neighboring Seleucid Empire, and specifically from a Hellenistic city such as Ai-Khanoum, located at the doorstep of India.[25] Most of these designs and motifs can also be seen in the Pataliputra capital.

The Diamond throne of Bodh Gaya is another example of Ashokan architecture circa 260 BCE, and displays a band of carvings with palmettes and geese, similar to those found on several of the Pillars of Ashoka.[50]

Chronological order

Based on stylistic and technical analysis, it is possible to establish a tentative chronological orders for the pillars. The earliest one seems to be the Vaishali pillar, with its stout and short column, the rigid lion and the undecorated square abacus. Next would follow the Sankissa elephant and the Rampurva bull, also not yet benefiting from Mauryan polish, and using a Hellenistic abacus of lotus and palmettes for decoration. The abacus would then adopt the Hamsa goose as an animal decorative symbol, in Lauria Nandangarh and the Rampurva lion. Sanchi and Sarnath would mark the culmination with four animals back-to-back instead of just one, and a new and sophisticated animal and symbolic abacus (the elephant, the bull, the lion, the horse alternating with the Dharma wheel) for the Sarnath lion.[51]

Other chronological orders have also been proposed, for example based on the style of the Ashokan inscriptions on the pillars, since the stylistically most sophisticated pillars actually have the engravings of the Edicts of Ashoka of the worst quality (namely, very poorly engraved Schism Edicts on the Sanchi and Sarnath pillars, their only inscriptions). This approach offers an almost reverse chronological order to the preceding one.[52] According to Irwin, the Sankissa elephant and Rampurva bull pillars with their Hellenistic abacus are pre-Ashokan. Ashoka would then have commissioned the Sarnath pillar with its famous Lion Capital of Ashoka to be built under the tutelage of craftsmen from the former Achaemenid Empire, trained in Perso-Hellenistic statuary, whereas the Brahmi engraving on the very same pillar (and on pillars of the same period such as Sanchi and Kosambi-Allahabad) was made by inexperienced Indian engravers at a time when stone engraving was still new in India.[52] After Ashoka sent back the foreign artists, style degraded over a short period of time, down to the time when the Major Pillar Edicts were engraved at the end of Ashoka's reign, which now displayed very good inscriptional craftsmanship but a much more solemn and less elegant style for the associated lion capitals, as for the Lauria Nandangarh lion and the Rampurva lion.[52]

Known capitals of the pillars of Ashoka
Ordered chronologically based on stylistic and technical analysis.[51]

Of the Allahabad pillar, only the abacus remains, the bottom bulb and the crowning animal having been lost. The remains are now located in the Allahabad Museum.

 
The elephant-crowned pillar of Ashoka at the Mahabodhi Temple, Gaya. Bharhut relief, 100 BCE.

A few more possibly Ashokan capitals were also found without their pillars:

  • Kesariya (capital). Only the capital was found in the Kesaria stupa. It was discovered by Markham Kittoe in 1862, and said to be similar to the lion of the Lauriya Nandangarh pillar, except for the hind legs of the lion, which did not protrude beyond the abacus.[1] This capital is now lost.
  • Udaigiri-Vidisha (capital only at the Udayagiri Caves, visible here).[1] Attribution to Ashoka however is disputed (ranging from the 2nd century BCE Sunga period,[53] to the Gupta period.[54]).

It is also known from various ancient sculptures (reliefs from Bharhut, 100 BCE), and later narrative account by Chinese pilgrims (5-6th century CE), that there was a pillar of Ashoka at the Mahabodhi Temple founded by Ashoka, that it was crowned by an elephant.[55]

The same Chinese pilgrims have reported that the capital of the Lumbini pillar was a horse (now lost), which, by their time had already fallen to the ground.[55]

Inscriptions

 
Ashoka also called his pillars "Dhaṃma thaṃbhā" (𑀥𑀁𑀫𑀣𑀁𑀪𑀸, Dharma stambha), i.e. "pillars of the Dharma". 7th Major Pillar Edict. Brahmi script.[3]

The inscriptions on the columns include a fairly standard text. The inscriptions on the columns join other, more numerous, Ashokan inscriptions on natural rock faces to form the body of texts known as the Edicts of Ashoka. These inscriptions were dispersed throughout the areas of modern-day Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Afghanistan and Pakistan and represent the first tangible evidence of Buddhism. The edicts describe in detail Ashoka's policy of Dhamma, an earnest attempt to solve some of problems that a complex society faced.[56] In these inscriptions, Ashoka refers to himself as "Beloved servant of the Gods" (Devanampiyadasi). The inscriptions revolve around a few recurring themes: Ashoka's conversion to Buddhism, the description of his efforts to spread Buddhism, his moral and religious precepts, and his social and animal welfare program. The edicts were based on Ashoka's ideas on administration and behaviour of people towards one another and religion.

Alexander Cunningham, one of the first to study the inscriptions on the pillars, remarks that they are written in eastern, middle and western Prakrits which he calls "the Punjabi or north-western dialect, the Ujjeni or middle dialect, and the Magadhi or eastern dialect."[57] They are written in the Brahmi script.

Minor Pillar Edicts

These contain inscriptions recording their dedication, as well as the Schism Edicts and the Queen's Edict. They were inscribed around the 13th year of Ashoka's reign.

  • Sanchi pillar (Schism Edict)
  • Sarnath pillar (Schism Edict)
  • Allahabad pillar (Schism Edict, Queen Edict, and also Major Pillar Edicts)
  • Lumbini (Rummindei), Nepal (the upper part broke off when struck by lightning; the original horse capital mentioned by Xuanzang is missing) was erected by Ashoka where Buddha was born.
  • Nigali Sagar (or Nigliva), near Lumbini, Rupandehi district, Nepal (originally near the Buddha Konakarnana stupa)

Major Pillar Edicts

 
Fragment of the 6th Major Pillar Edict, from the Delhi-Meerut Pillar of Ashoka, British Museum.[58]

Asoka's 6 Major Pillar Edicts have been found at Kausambhi (Allahabad), Topra (now Delhi), Meerut (now Delhi), Lauriya-Araraj, Lauriya-Nandangarh, Rampurva (Champaran), and a 7th one on the Delhi-Topra pillar.

These pillar edicts include:[59]

  • I Asoka's principle of protection to people
  • II Defines dhamma as minimum of sins, many virtues, compassion, liberality, truthfulness and purity
  • III Abolishes sins of harshness, cruelty, anger, pride etc.
  • IV Deals with duties of government officials
  • V List of animals and birds which should not be killed on some days and another list of animals which cannot be killed on any occasion. Describes release of 25 prisoners by Asoka.
  • VI Works done by Asoka for Dhamma Policy. He says that all sects desire both self-control and purity of mind.
  • VII Testimental edict.

Description of the pillars

 
Front view of the single lion capital in Vaishali.

Pillars retaining their animals

The most celebrated capital (the four-lion one at Sarnath (Uttar Pradesh)) erected by Emperor Ashoka circa 250 BC. also called the "Ashoka Column" . Four lions are seated back to back. At present the Column remains in the same place whereas the Lion Capital is at the Sarnath Museum. This Lion Capital of Ashoka from Sarnath has been adopted as the National Emblem of India and the wheel "Ashoka Chakra" from its base was placed onto the centre of the flag of India.

The lions probably originally supported a Dharma Chakra wheel with 24 spokes, such as is preserved in the 13th century replica erected at Wat Umong near Chiang Mai, Thailand by Thai king Mangrai.[60]

 
Depiction of the four lions capital surmounted by a Wheel of Law at Sanchi, Satavahana period, South gateway of stupa 3.

The pillar at Sanchi also has a similar but damaged four-lion capital. There are two pillars at Rampurva, one with a bull and the other with a lion as crowning animals. Sankissa has only a damaged elephant capital, which is mainly unpolished, though the abacus is at least partly so. No pillar shaft has been found, and perhaps this was never erected at the site.[61]

The Vaishali pillar has a single lion capital.[62] The location of this pillar is contiguous to the site where a Buddhist monastery and a sacred coronation tank stood. Excavations are still underway and several stupas suggesting a far flung campus for the monastery have been discovered. The lion faces north, the direction Buddha took on his last voyage.[63] Identification of the site for excavation in 1969 was aided by the fact that this pillar still jutted out of the soil. More such pillars exist in this greater area but they are all devoid of the capital.

Pillar at Prayagraj

In Prayagraj there is a pillar with inscriptions from Ashoka and later inscriptions attributed to Samudragupta and Jehangir. It is clear from the inscription that the pillar was first erected at Kaushambi, an ancient town some 30 kilometres west of Allahabad that was the capital of the Koshala kingdom, and moved to Allahabad, presumably under Muslim rule.[64]

The pillar is now located inside the Allahabad Fort, also the royal palace, built during the 16th century by Akbar at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers. As the fort is occupied by the Indian Army it is essentially closed to the public and special permission is required to see the pillar. The Ashokan inscription is in Brahmi and is dated around 232 BC. A later inscription attributed to the second king of the Gupta empire, Samudragupta, is in the more refined Gupta script, a later version of Brahmi, and is dated to around 375 AD. This inscription lists the extent of the empire that Samudragupta built during his long reign. He had already been king for forty years at that time and would rule for another five. A still later inscription in Persian is from the Mughal emperor Jahangir. The Akbar Fort also houses the Akshay Vat, an Indian fig tree of great antiquity. The Ramayana refers to this tree under which Lord Rama is supposed to have prayed while on exile.

Pillars at Lauriya-Areraj and Lauriya-Nandangarh

The column at Lauriya-Nandangarh, 23 km from Bettiah in West Champaran district, Bihar has single lion capital. The hump and the hind legs of the lion project beyond the abacus.[21] The pillar at Lauriya-Areraj in East Champaran district, Bihar is presently devoid of any capital.

Erecting the Pillars

The Pillars of Ashoka may have been erected using the same methods that were used to erect the ancient obelisks. Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehrner conducted several obelisk erecting experiments including a successful attempt to erect a 25ton obelisk in 1999. This followed two experiments to erect smaller obelisks and two failed attempts to erect a 25-ton obelisk.[65][66]

Rediscoveries

 
Rediscovery of the Ashoka pillar in Sarnath, 1905.

A number of the pillars were thrown down by either natural causes or iconoclasts, and gradually rediscovered. One was noticed in the 16th century by the English traveller Thomas Coryat in the ruins of Old Delhi. Initially he assumed that from the way it glowed that it was made of brass, but on closer examination he realized it was made of highly polished sandstone with upright script that resembled a form of Greek. In the 1830s James Prinsep began to decipher them with the help of Captain Edward Smith and George Turnour. They determined that the script referred to King Piyadasi which was also the epithet of an Indian ruler known as Ashoka who came to the throne 218 years after Buddha's enlightenment. Scholars have since found 150 of Ashoka's inscriptions, carved into the face of rocks or on stone pillars marking out a domain that stretched across northern India and south below the central plateau of the Deccan. These pillars were placed in strategic sites near border cities and trade routes.

The Sanchi pillar was found by F.O. Oertelin in 1851 in excavations led by Sir Alexander Cunningham, first head of the Archaeological Survey of India. There were no surviving traces above ground of the Sarnath pillar, mentioned in the accounts of medieval Chinese pilgrims, when the Indian Civil Service engineer F.O. Oertel, with no real experience in archaeology, was allowed to excavate there in the winter of 1904–05. He first uncovered the remains of a Gupta shrine west of the main stupa, overlying an Ashokan structure. To the west of that he found the lowest section of the pillar, upright but broken off near ground level. Most of the rest of the pillar was found in three sections nearby, and then, since the Sanchi capital had been excavated in 1851, the search for an equivalent was continued, and the Lion Capital of Ashoka, the most famous of the group, was found close by. It was both finer in execution and in much better condition than that at Sanchi. The pillar appeared to have been deliberately destroyed at some point. The finds were recognised as so important that the first onsite museum in India (and one of the few then in the world) was set up to house them.[67]

Other Ashokan structures

The Buddha's Diamond Throne and the Pillars of Ashoka
 
Discovery of Ashoka's Diamond throne in Bodh Gaya, near the spot of the Buddha's illumination and the Boddhi tree.
 
Side decorative bands of the Diamond Throne (top) and the Sanchi pillar capital (bottom), both featuring geese and flame palmettes.
 
Front decorative friezes of the Diamond Throne (top) and the Sankissa pillar capital (bottom), both alternating flame palmettes, rosettes and lotuses.
Stupas

Legend has it that Ashoka built 84,000 stupas commemorating the events and relics of Buddha's life. Some of these stupas contained networks of walls containing the hub, spokes and rim of a wheel, while others contained interior walls in a swastika (卐) shape. The wheel represents the sun, time, and Buddhist law (the wheel of law, or dharmachakra), while the swastika stands for the cosmic dance around a fixed center and guards against evil.[15][16]

"Diamond throne" in Bodh Gaya

Ashoka also built the Diamond Throne in Bodh Gaya, at the location where the Buddha had reached enlightenment some 200 years earlier.[68][69] This purely Buddhist monument to the Buddha is a thick slab of polished grey sandstone with Mauryan polish[70]

The sculpted decorations on the Diamond Throne clearly echoe the decorations found on the Pillars of Ashoka.[71] The Diamond Throne has a decorative band made of honeysuckles and geese, which can also be found on several of the Pillars of Ashoka,[50] such as the Rampurva capitals or the Sanchi capital.[70] The geese (hamsa) in particular are a very recurrent symbol on the pillars of Ashoka, and may refer to the devotees flocking to the faith.[69] The same throne is also illustrated in later reliefs from Bharhut, dated to circa 100 BCE.[72]

Similar pillars

The 6th century pillar at the tomb of Xiao Jing, or Emperor Jing of Western Liang, is similar to the Ashoka pillar.[73]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Buddhist Architecture, Huu Phuoc Le, Grafikol, 2010 p.36-40
  2. ^ Bisschop, Peter C.; Cecil, Elizabeth A. (May 2019). Copp, Paul; Wedemeyer, Christian K. (eds.). "Columns in Context: Venerable Monuments and Landscapes of Memory in Early India". History of Religions. University of Chicago Press for the University of Chicago Divinity School. 58 (4): 355–403. doi:10.1086/702256. ISSN 0018-2710. JSTOR 00182710. LCCN 64001081. OCLC 299661763.
  3. ^ a b Inscriptions of Asoka. New Edition by E. Hultzsch (in Sanskrit). 1925. p. 132, Edict No 7 line 23.
  4. ^ Skilling, Peter (1998). Mahasutras. Pali Text Society. p. 453. ISBN 9780860133209.
  5. ^ a b Himanshu Prabha Ray (7 August 2014). The Return of the Buddha: Ancient Symbols for a New Nation. Routledge. p. 123. ISBN 9781317560067.
  6. ^ India: The Ancient Past: A History of the Indian Subcontinent from c. 7000 BCE to CE 1200, Burjor Avari Routledge, 2016 p.139
  7. ^ a b Krishnaswamy, 697-698
  8. ^ "KING ASHOKA: His Edicts and His Times". www.cs.colostate.edu. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  9. ^ India: The Ancient Past: A History of the Indian Subcontinent from c. 7000 BCE to CE 1200, Burjor Avari, Routledge, 2016 p.149
  10. ^ State Emblem, Know India india.gov.in
  11. ^ Companion, 430
  12. ^ "Lion Capital of Ashoka At Sarnath Archaeological Museum Near Varanasi India". YouTube.
  13. ^ Agrawala, Vasudeva Sharana (1965). Studies In Indian Art. p. 67.
  14. ^ "Remains of the topmost wheel in the Sarnath Archaeological Museum". 17 February 2019.
  15. ^ a b Time Life Lost Civilizations series: Ancient India: Land Of Mystery (1994) p. 84-85,94-97
  16. ^ a b Oliphant, Margaret "The Atlas Of The Ancient World" 1992 p. 156-7
  17. ^ a b c Arora, Udai Prakash (1991). Graeco-Indica, India's Cultural Contacts with the Greek World: In Memory of Demetrius Galanos (1760-1833), a Greek Sanskritist of Benares. Delhi: Ramanand Vidya Bhawan. p. 5. ISBN 978-81-85205-53-3. It can also be suggested that Lāțs topped by animal figures also have an ancestor in the sphinx - topped pillars of Greece of the Middle Archaic period (c.580-40 B.C), Delphi Museum at Delphi, Greece, has an elegant winged sphinx figure sitting on an Ionic capital with side volutes. It was the Naxian sphinx pillar datable to about 575-560 BC. Many more sphinx-pillars have been found from different parts of Greece like Sparta, Athens and Spata (Attica). Rowland traces western Asiatic inspirations in the addorsed animal capitals of Aśokas Lāțs. But the inspiration for the single animal figure Lāțs, should be traced in the sphinx pillars of Greece. Asoka's direct link with his contemporaneous Greek states of Western Asia , Africa and Greece itself can result in the conception of single animal topped Lățs , from the Delphi type sphinx pillars. Such a possibility should not be ruled out in Mauryan Age.
  18. ^ Irwin, John (1974). "'Aśokan' Pillars: A Reassessment of the Evidence-II: Structure". The Burlington Magazine. 116 (861): 715. ISSN 0007-6287. JSTOR 877843.
  19. ^ Harle, 22
  20. ^ Thapar, Romila (2001). Aśoka and the Decline of the Mauryan, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-564445-X, pp.267-70
  21. ^ a b c Mahajan V.D. (1960, reprint 2007). Ancient India, S.Chand & Company, New Delhi, ISBN 81-219-0887-6, pp.350-3
  22. ^ Companion,
  23. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, by Huu Phuoc Le, Grafikol, 2010 p.44
  24. ^ Rebecca M. Brown, Deborah S. Hutton. A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 423–429.
  25. ^ a b Boardman (1998), 15
  26. ^ Boardman (1998), 13
  27. ^ Harle, 22, 24, quoted in turn
  28. ^ A Comprehensive History Of Ancient India, Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd, 2003, p.87
  29. ^ Stewart, Desmond. Pyramids and the Sphinx. [S.l.]: Newsweek, U.S., 72. Print.
  30. ^ Irwin, John (1974). "'Aśokan' Pillars: A Reassessment of the Evidence-II: Structure". The Burlington Magazine. 116 (861): 712–727. ISSN 0007-6287. JSTOR 877843.
  31. ^ Agrawala, Vasudeva S. (1977). Gupta Art Vol.ii.
  32. ^ Irwin, John (1983). "The Ancient Pillar-Cult at Prayāga (Allahabad): Its Pre-Aśokan Origins". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 115 (2): 253–280. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00137487. ISSN 0035-869X. JSTOR 25211537. S2CID 162953368.
  33. ^ Boardman (1998), 13-19
  34. ^ Singh, Upinder (2008). A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. Pearson Education India. p. 361. ISBN 9788131711200. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  35. ^ The Early History of India by Vincent A. Smith
  36. ^ Annual report 1906-07 p.89
  37. ^ Ashoka, 2
  38. ^ Singh, Upinder (2008). A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. New Delhi: Pearson Education. p. 358. ISBN 978-81-317-1677-9.
  39. ^ Buddshit Architecture, Le Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p.169
  40. ^ Sircar, D. C. (1979). Asokan studies. pp. 118–122.
  41. ^ Sircar, D. C. (1979). Asokan studies. p. 118.
  42. ^ Mapio
  43. ^ Asoka by Radhakumud Mookerji p.85
  44. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, Le Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, p.40
  45. ^ Geary, David (2017). The Rebirth of Bodh Gaya: Buddhism and the Making of a World Heritage Site. University of Washington Press. p. 209 Note 1. ISBN 9780295742380.
  46. ^ A Brief History of India, Alain Daniélou, Inner Traditions / Bear & Co, 2003, p.89-91 [1]
  47. ^ The pillars "owe something to the pervasive influence of Achaemenid architecture and sculpture, with no little Greek architectural ornament and sculptural style as well. Notice the florals on the bull capital from Rampurva, and the style of the horse of the Sarnath capital, now the emblem of the Republic of India." "The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity" by John Boardman, Princeton University Press, 1993, p.110
  48. ^ Le, Huu Phuoc (29 October 2017). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. ISBN 9780984404308. Retrieved 29 October 2017 – via Google Books.
  49. ^ Le, Huu Phuoc (29 October 2017). Buddhist Architecture. Grafikol. ISBN 9780984404308. Retrieved 29 October 2017 – via Google Books.
  50. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, Huu Phuoc Le, Grafikol, 2010 p.240
  51. ^ a b Le Huu Phuoc, Buddhist Architecture, p.42
  52. ^ a b c The True Chronology of Aśokan Pillars, John Irwin, Artibus Asiae, Vol. 44, No. 4 (1983), pp. 247-265 [2]
  53. ^ Story of the Delhi Iron Pillar, R. Balasubramaniam p.19
  54. ^ The Past Before Us, Romila Thapar p.361
  55. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, Le Huu Phuoc, Grafikol 2009, pp 238-248
  56. ^ "The Ashokan rock edicts are a marvel of history".
  57. ^ Inscriptions of Ashoka by Alexander Cunningham, Eugen Hultzsch. Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing. Calcutta: 1877
  58. ^ "British Museum Highlights". Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  59. ^ Full texts, An English rendering by Ven. S. Dhammika, 1993
  60. ^ . Thailand's World. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  61. ^ Companion, 428-429
  62. ^ "Destinations :: Vaishali".
  63. ^ "Destinations :: Vaishali ::Bihar State Tourism Development Corporation". bstdc.bih.nic.in. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  64. ^ Krishnaswamy, 697-700
  65. ^ "NOVA Online - Mysteries of the Nile - August 27, 1999: The Third Attempt". www.pbs.org. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  66. ^ Time Life Lost Civilizations series: Ramses II: Magnificence on the Nile (1993)p. 56-57
  67. ^ Allen, Chapter 15
  68. ^ A Global History of Architecture, Francis D. K. Ching, Mark M. Jarzombek, Vikramaditya Prakash, John Wiley & Sons, 2017 p.570ff
  69. ^ a b Buddhist Architecture, Huu Phuoc Le p.240
  70. ^ a b Alexander Cunningham, Mahâbodhi, or the great Buddhist temple under the Bodhi tree at Buddha-Gaya p.19 Public Domain text
  71. ^ Allen, Charles (2012). Ashoka: The Search for India's Lost Emperor. Little, Brown Book Group. p. 133. ISBN 9781408703885.
  72. ^ Mahâbodhi, Cunningham p.4ff Public Domain text
  73. ^ Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p.45

References

  • Ashoka, Emperor, Edicts of Ashoka, eds. N. A. Nikam, Richard P. McKeon, 1978, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0226586111, 9780226586113, google books
  • Boardman, John (1998), "Reflections on the Origins of Indian Stone Architecture", Bulletin of the Asia Institute, pp. 15–19, 1998, New Series, Vol. 12, (Alexander's Legacy in the East: Studies in Honor of Paul Bernard), p. 13-22, JSTOR
  • "Companion": Brown, Rebecca M., Hutton, Deborah S., eds., A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture, Volume 3 of Blackwell companions to art history, 2011, John Wiley & Sons, 2011, ISBN 1444396323, 9781444396324, google books
  • Harle, J.C., The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent, 2nd edn. 1994, Yale University Press Pelican History of Art, ISBN 0300062176
  • Krishnaswamy, C.S., Sahib, Rao, and Ghosh, Amalananda, "A Note on the Allahabad Pillar of Aśoka", The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, No. 4 (Oct., 1935), pp. 697–706, Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, JSTOR
  • Falk, H. Asokan Sites and Artefacts: a A Source-book with Bibliography, 2006, Volume 18 of Monographien zur indischen Archäologie, Kunst und Philologie, Von Zabern, ISSN 0170-8864

Further reading

  • Singh, Upinder (2008). "Chapter 7: Power and Piety: The Maurya Empire, c. 324-187 BCE". A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century. New Delhi: Pearson Education. ISBN 978-81-317-1677-9.

External links

  • British Museum, collections online
  • Columbia University, New York - See "lioncapital" for pictures of the original "Lion Capital of Ashoka" preserved at the Sarnath Museum which has been adopted as the "National Emblem of India" and the Ashoka Chakra (Wheel) from which has been placed in the center of the "National Flag of India".

pillars, ashoka, ashoka, pillar, redirects, here, pillar, delhi, also, known, ashoka, pillar, iron, pillar, delhi, confused, with, lion, capital, ashoka, pillars, ashoka, series, monolithic, columns, dispersed, throughout, indian, subcontinent, erected, least,. Ashoka Pillar redirects here For the pillar in Delhi also known as Ashoka pillar see Iron pillar of Delhi Not to be confused with Lion Capital of Ashoka The pillars of Ashoka are a series of monolithic columns dispersed throughout the Indian subcontinent erected or at least inscribed with edicts by the 3rd Mauryan Emperor Ashoka The Great who reigned from c 268 to 232 BCE 2 Ashoka used the expression Dhaṃma thaṃbha Dharma stambha i e pillars of the Dharma to describe his own pillars 3 4 These pillars constitute important monuments of the architecture of India most of them exhibiting the characteristic Mauryan polish Of the pillars erected by Ashoka twenty still survive including those with inscriptions of his edicts Only a few with animal capitals survive of which seven complete specimens are known 5 Two pillars were relocated by Firuz Shah Tughlaq to Delhi 6 Several pillars were relocated later by Mughal Empire rulers the animal capitals being removed 7 Averaging between 12 and 15 m 40 and 50 ft in height and weighing up to 50 tons each the pillars were dragged sometimes hundreds of miles to where they were erected 8 Pillars of AshokaOne of the Pillars of Ashoka in VaishaliMaterialPolished sandstonePeriod culture3rd century BCESarnathSanchiRampurvaVaishaliSankissaNandangarhMeerutTopra KalanArarajAllahabadRummindeiNigaliclass notpageimage Known locations of the Pillars of Ashoka 1 The pillars of Ashoka are among the earliest known stone sculptural remains from India Only another pillar fragment the Pataliputra capital is possibly from a slightly earlier date It is thought that before the 3rd century BCE wood rather than stone was used as the main material for Indian architectural constructions and that stone may have been adopted following interaction with the Persians and the Greeks 9 A graphic representation of the Lion Capital of Ashoka from the column there was adopted as the official State Emblem of India in 1950 10 All the pillars of Ashoka were built at Buddhist monasteries many important sites from the life of the Buddha and places of pilgrimage Some of the columns carry inscriptions addressed to the monks and nuns 11 Some were erected to commemorate visits by Ashoka Major pillars are present in the Indian States of Bihar Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh and some parts of Haryana Contents 1 Ashoka and Buddhism 2 Construction 2 1 Origin 2 1 1 Western origin 2 1 2 Indian origin 2 1 3 Stylistic argument 3 Complete list of the pillars 3 1 Complete standing pillars or pillars with Ashokan inscriptions 3 2 Pillars without Ashokan inscriptions 4 The capitals Top Piece 5 Inscriptions 5 1 Minor Pillar Edicts 5 2 Major Pillar Edicts 6 Description of the pillars 6 1 Pillars retaining their animals 6 2 Pillar at Prayagraj 6 3 Pillars at Lauriya Areraj and Lauriya Nandangarh 6 4 Erecting the Pillars 7 Rediscoveries 8 Other Ashokan structures 9 Similar pillars 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksAshoka and Buddhism Edit Lion Capital of Ashoka from Sarnath with Wheel of the Moral Law reconstitution 3rd century BCE 12 13 14 Ashoka ascended to the throne in 269 BC inheriting the Mauryan empire founded by his grandfather Chandragupta Maurya Ashoka was reputedly a tyrant at the outset of his reign Eight years after his accession he campaigned in Kalinga where in his own words a hundred and fifty thousand people were deported a hundred thousand were killed and as many as that perished As he explains in his edicts after this event Ashoka converted to Buddhism in remorse for the loss of life Buddhism became a state religion and with Ashoka s support it spread rapidly The inscriptions on the pillars set out edicts about morality based on Buddhist tenets 15 16 They were added in 3rd century BCE Construction EditPossible sources of inspiration Sphinx of the Naxians Delphi c 6th BCE 17 18 Highly polished Achaemenid load bearing column with lotus capital and ashvins Persepolis c 5th 4th BCE See also Mauryan polish The traditional idea that all were originally quarried at Chunar just south of Varanasi and taken to their sites before or after carving can no longer be confidently asserted 19 and instead it seems that the columns were carved in two types of stone Some were of the spotted red and white sandstone from the region of Mathura the others of buff colored fine grained hard sandstone usually with small black spots quarried in the Chunar near Varanasi The uniformity of style in the pillar capitals suggests that they were all sculpted by craftsmen from the same region It would therefore seem that stone was transported from Mathura and Chunar to the various sites where the pillars have been found and there was cut and carved by craftsmen 20 The pillars have four component parts in two pieces the three sections of the capitals are made in a single piece often of a different stone to that of the monolithic shaft to which they are attached by a large metal dowel The shafts are always plain and smooth circular in cross section slightly tapering upwards and always chiselled out of a single piece of stone There is no distinct base at the bottom of the shaft The lower parts of the capitals have the shape and appearance of a gently arched bell formed of lotus petals The abaci are of two types square and plain and circular and decorated and these are of different proportions The crowning animals are masterpieces of Mauryan art shown either seated or standing always in the round and chiselled as a single piece with the abaci 21 22 Presumably all or most of the other columns that now lack them once had capitals and animals They are also used to commemorate the events of the Buddha s life Lion designs Left image Vaishali lion of Ashoka Right image Assyrian relief of a lion at Nineveh circa 640 BCE Many stylistic elements design of the whiskers the eyes the fur etc point to similarities 23 Currently seven animal sculptures from Ashoka pillars survive 5 24 These form the first important group of Indian stone sculpture though it is thought they derive from an existing tradition of wooden columns topped by animal sculptures in copper none of which have survived It is also possible that some of the stone pillars predate Ashoka s reign 25 Floral designs Top image Abacus of the Allahabad pillar with lotuses alternating with flame palmettes over a bead and reel pattern Bottom image A quite similar frieze from Delphi 525 BCE Origin Edit Western origin Edit There has been much discussion of the extent of influence from Achaemenid Persia 26 where the column capitals supporting the roofs at Persepolis have similarities and the rather cold hieratic style of the Sarnath Lion Capital of Ashoka especially shows obvious Achaemenid and Sargonid influence 27 India and the Achaemenid Empire had been in close contact since the Achaemenid conquest of the Indus Valley from circa 500 BCE to 330 BCE Hellenistic influence has also been suggested 28 In particular the abaci of some of the pillars especially the Rampurva bull the Sankissa elephant and the Allahabad pillar capital use bands of motifs like the bead and reel pattern the ovolo the flame palmettes lotuses which likely originated from Greek and Near Eastern arts 23 Such examples can also be seen in the remains of the Mauryan capital city of Pataliputra It has also been suggested that 6th century Greek columns such as the Sphinx of Naxos a 12 5m Ionic column crowned by a sitted animal in the religious center of Delphi may have been an inspiration for the pillars of Ashoka 17 Many similar columns crowned by sphinxes were discovered in ancient Greece as in Sparta Athens or Spata and some were used as funerary steles 17 The Greek sphinx a lion with the face of a human female was considered as having ferocious strength and was thought of as a guardian often flanking the entrances to temples or royal tombs 29 Pillar as Dhvaja military standard Heliodorus pillar in Vidisha India 2nd Century BCE Shunga horseman carrying portable garuda standard Bharhut 2nd Century BCE Indian origin Edit Some scholars such as John Irwin emphasized a reassessment from popular belief of Persian or Greek origin of Ashokan pillars He makes the argument that Ashokan pillars represent Dhvaja or standard which Indian soldiers carried with them during battle and it was believed that the destruction of the enemy s dhvaja brought misfortune to their opponents A relief of Bharhut stupa railing portrays a queenly personage on horseback carrying a Garudadhvaja 30 Heliodorus pillar has been called Garudadhvaja literally Garuda standard the pillar dated to 2nd century BC is perhaps the earliest recorded stone pillar which has been declared a dhvaja 31 Ashokan edicts themselves state that his words should be carved on any stone slab or pillars available indicating that the tradition of carving stone pillars was present before the period of Ashoka John Irwin also highlights the fact that carvings on pillars such as Allahabad pillar was done when it had already been erected indicating its pre Ashokan origins 32 Ashoka called his own pillars Sila Thabhe 𑀲 𑀮 𑀣𑀪 Stone Stambha i e stone pillars Lumbini inscription Brahmi script Stylistic argument Edit Though influence from the west is generally accepted especially the Persian columns of Achaemenid Persia there are a number of differences between these and the pillars Persian columns are built in segments whereas Ashokan pillars are monoliths like some much later Roman columns Most of the Persian pillars have a fluted shaft while the Mauryan pillars are smooth and Persian pillars serve as supporting structures whereas Ashokan pillars are individual free standing monuments There are also other differences in the decoration 33 Indian historian Upinder Singh comments on some of the differences and similarities writing that If the Ashokan pillars cannot in their entirety be attributed to Persian influence they must have had an undocumented prehistory within the subcontinent perhaps a tradition of wooden carving But the transition from stone to wood was made in one magnificent leap no doubt spurred by the imperial tastes and ambitions of the Maurya emperors 34 Whatever the cultural and artistic borrowings from the west the pillars of Ashoka together with much of Mauryan art and architectural prowesses such as the city of Pataliputra or the Barabar Caves remain outstanding in their achievements and often compare favourably with the rest of the world at that time Commenting on Mauryan sculpture John Marshall once wrote about the extraordinary precision and accuracy which characterizes all Mauryan works and which has never we venture to say been surpassed even by the finest workmanship on Athenian buildings 35 36 Complete list of the pillars EditFive of the pillars of Ashoka two at Rampurva one each at Vaishali Lauriya Araraj and Lauria Nandangarh possibly marked the course of the ancient Royal highway from Pataliputra to Nepal Several pillars were relocated by later Mughal Empire rulers the animal capitals being removed 7 The two Chinese medieval pilgrim accounts record sightings of several columns that have now vanished Faxian records six and Xuanzang fifteen of which only five at most can be identified with surviving pillars 37 All surviving pillars listed with any crowning animal sculptures and the edicts inscribed are as follows 21 38 Complete standing pillars or pillars with Ashokan inscriptions Edit Geographical spread of known pillar capitals Delhi Topra pillar in the fortress of Feroz Shah Kotla Delhi Pillar Edicts I II III IV V VI VII moved in 1356 CE from Topra Kalan in Yamunanagar district of Haryana to Delhi by Firuz Shah Tughluq 1 Delhi Meerut Delhi ridge Delhi Pillar Edicts I II III IV V VI moved from Meerut to Delhi by Firuz Shah Tughluq in 1356 1 Nigali Sagar or Nigliva Nigalihawa near Lumbini Nepal Pillar missing capital one Ashoka edict Erected in the 20th regnal year of Ashoka c 249 BCE 1 Rupandehi near Lumbini Nepal Also erected in the 20th regnal year of Ashoka c 249 BCE to commemorate Ashoka s pilgrimage to Lumbini Capital missing but was apparently a horse 1 Allahabad pillar Uttar Pradesh originally located at Kausambi and probable moved to Allahabad by Jahangir Pillar Edicts I VI Queen s Edict Schism Edict 1 Rampurva Champaran Bihar Two columns a lion with Pillar Edicts I II III IV V VI a bull without inscriptions The abacus of the bull capital features honeysuckle and palmette designs derived from Greek designs 1 Sanchi near Bhopal Madhya Pradesh four lions Schism Edict 1 Sarnath near Varanasi Uttar Pradesh four lions Pillar Inscription Schism Edict 1 This is the famous Lion Capital of Ashoka used in the national emblem of India Lauriya Nandangarth Champaran Bihar single lion Pillar Edicts I II III IV V VI 1 Lauriya Araraj Champaran Bihar Pillar Edicts I II III IV V VI 1 Vaishali Bihar single lion with no inscription 1 The Amaravati pillar fragment is rather problematic It only consists in 6 lines in Brahmi which are hardly decipherable Only the word vijaya victory can be made out arguably a word also used by Ashoka 39 Sircar who provides a detailed study considers it as probably belonging to an Ashokan pillar 40 Complete standing pillars or pillars with Ashokan inscriptions Vaishali Lauriya Nandangarh Lauriya Araraj Delhi Meerut originally from Meerut broken in pieces during transportation Delhi Topra originally from Topra Kalan Allahabad originally from Kosambi Lumbini broken in half Capped for protection in the 20th century Sarnath Sanchi Rampurva Nigali Sagar Fragment of pillar with inscription Amaravati 41 Pillars without Ashokan inscriptions Edit There are also several known fragments of Ashokan pillars without recovered Ashokan inscriptions such as the Ashoka pillar in Bodh Gaya Kausambi Gotihawa Prahladpur now in the Government Sanskrit College Varanasi 42 Fatehabad Bhopal Sadagarli Udaigiri Vidisha Kushinagar Arrah Masarh Basti Bhikana Pahari Bulandi Bagh Pataliputra Sandalpu and a few others as well as a broken pillar in Bhairon Lat Bhairo in Benares 43 which was destroyed to a stump during riots in 1908 44 The Chinese monks Fa Hsien and Hsuantsang also reported pillars in Kushinagar the Jetavana monastery in Sravasti Rajagriha and Mahasala which have not been recovered to this day 44 Fragments of Pillars of Ashoka without Ashokan inscriptions Kausambi Gotihawa possible base of the Nigali Sagar pillar Bodh Gaya originally near Sujata Stupa brought from Gaya in 1956 45 Portion of an Ashokan pillar found in Pataliputra Bhawanipur Rupandehi The capitals Top Piece Edit Abacus of the Allahabad pillar of Ashoka the only remaining portion of the capital of the Allahabad pillar There are altogether seven remaining complete capitals five with lions one with an elephant and one with a zebu bull One of them the four lions of Sarnath has become the State Emblem of India The animal capitals are composed of a lotiform base with an abacus decorated with floral symbolic or animal designs topped by the realistic depiction of an animal thought to each represent a traditional directions in India The horse motif on the Sarnath Lion Capital of Ashoka is often described as an example of Hellenistic realism 46 Various foreign influences have been described in the design of these capitals 47 The animal on top of a lotiform capital reminds of Achaemenid column shapes The abacus also often seems to display some influence of Greek art in the case of the Rampurva bull or the Sankassa elephant it is composed of honeysuckles alternated with stylized palmettes and small rosettes 48 A similar kind of design can be seen in the frieze of the lost capital of the Allahabad pillar These designs likely originated in Greek and Near Eastern arts 49 They would probably have come from the neighboring Seleucid Empire and specifically from a Hellenistic city such as Ai Khanoum located at the doorstep of India 25 Most of these designs and motifs can also be seen in the Pataliputra capital The Diamond throne of Bodh Gaya is another example of Ashokan architecture circa 260 BCE and displays a band of carvings with palmettes and geese similar to those found on several of the Pillars of Ashoka 50 Chronological orderBased on stylistic and technical analysis it is possible to establish a tentative chronological orders for the pillars The earliest one seems to be the Vaishali pillar with its stout and short column the rigid lion and the undecorated square abacus Next would follow the Sankissa elephant and the Rampurva bull also not yet benefiting from Mauryan polish and using a Hellenistic abacus of lotus and palmettes for decoration The abacus would then adopt the Hamsa goose as an animal decorative symbol in Lauria Nandangarh and the Rampurva lion Sanchi and Sarnath would mark the culmination with four animals back to back instead of just one and a new and sophisticated animal and symbolic abacus the elephant the bull the lion the horse alternating with the Dharma wheel for the Sarnath lion 51 Other chronological orders have also been proposed for example based on the style of the Ashokan inscriptions on the pillars since the stylistically most sophisticated pillars actually have the engravings of the Edicts of Ashoka of the worst quality namely very poorly engraved Schism Edicts on the Sanchi and Sarnath pillars their only inscriptions This approach offers an almost reverse chronological order to the preceding one 52 According to Irwin the Sankissa elephant and Rampurva bull pillars with their Hellenistic abacus are pre Ashokan Ashoka would then have commissioned the Sarnath pillar with its famous Lion Capital of Ashoka to be built under the tutelage of craftsmen from the former Achaemenid Empire trained in Perso Hellenistic statuary whereas the Brahmi engraving on the very same pillar and on pillars of the same period such as Sanchi and Kosambi Allahabad was made by inexperienced Indian engravers at a time when stone engraving was still new in India 52 After Ashoka sent back the foreign artists style degraded over a short period of time down to the time when the Major Pillar Edicts were engraved at the end of Ashoka s reign which now displayed very good inscriptional craftsmanship but a much more solemn and less elegant style for the associated lion capitals as for the Lauria Nandangarh lion and the Rampurva lion 52 Known capitals of the pillars of AshokaOrdered chronologically based on stylistic and technical analysis 51 Vaishali lion Sankissa elephant Rampurva zebu bull original now in Rashtrapati Bhavan New Delhi Lauria Nandangarh lion Rampurva lion Four lions once possibly crowned by a wheel from Sanchi The Lion Capital of Ashoka from Sarnath Of the Allahabad pillar only the abacus remains the bottom bulb and the crowning animal having been lost The remains are now located in the Allahabad Museum The elephant crowned pillar of Ashoka at the Mahabodhi Temple Gaya Bharhut relief 100 BCE A few more possibly Ashokan capitals were also found without their pillars Kesariya capital Only the capital was found in the Kesaria stupa It was discovered by Markham Kittoe in 1862 and said to be similar to the lion of the Lauriya Nandangarh pillar except for the hind legs of the lion which did not protrude beyond the abacus 1 This capital is now lost Udaigiri Vidisha capital only at the Udayagiri Caves visible here 1 Attribution to Ashoka however is disputed ranging from the 2nd century BCE Sunga period 53 to the Gupta period 54 It is also known from various ancient sculptures reliefs from Bharhut 100 BCE and later narrative account by Chinese pilgrims 5 6th century CE that there was a pillar of Ashoka at the Mahabodhi Temple founded by Ashoka that it was crowned by an elephant 55 The same Chinese pilgrims have reported that the capital of the Lumbini pillar was a horse now lost which by their time had already fallen to the ground 55 Inscriptions EditMain article Edicts of Ashoka Ashoka also called his pillars Dhaṃma thaṃbha 𑀥 𑀫𑀣 𑀪 Dharma stambha i e pillars of the Dharma 7th Major Pillar Edict Brahmi script 3 The inscriptions on the columns include a fairly standard text The inscriptions on the columns join other more numerous Ashokan inscriptions on natural rock faces to form the body of texts known as the Edicts of Ashoka These inscriptions were dispersed throughout the areas of modern day Bangladesh India Nepal Afghanistan and Pakistan and represent the first tangible evidence of Buddhism The edicts describe in detail Ashoka s policy of Dhamma an earnest attempt to solve some of problems that a complex society faced 56 In these inscriptions Ashoka refers to himself as Beloved servant of the Gods Devanampiyadasi The inscriptions revolve around a few recurring themes Ashoka s conversion to Buddhism the description of his efforts to spread Buddhism his moral and religious precepts and his social and animal welfare program The edicts were based on Ashoka s ideas on administration and behaviour of people towards one another and religion Alexander Cunningham one of the first to study the inscriptions on the pillars remarks that they are written in eastern middle and western Prakrits which he calls the Punjabi or north western dialect the Ujjeni or middle dialect and the Magadhi or eastern dialect 57 They are written in the Brahmi script Minor Pillar Edicts Edit Main article Minor Pillar Edicts These contain inscriptions recording their dedication as well as the Schism Edicts and the Queen s Edict They were inscribed around the 13th year of Ashoka s reign Sanchi pillar Schism Edict Sarnath pillar Schism Edict Allahabad pillar Schism Edict Queen Edict and also Major Pillar Edicts Lumbini Rummindei Nepal the upper part broke off when struck by lightning the original horse capital mentioned by Xuanzang is missing was erected by Ashoka where Buddha was born Nigali Sagar or Nigliva near Lumbini Rupandehi district Nepal originally near the Buddha Konakarnana stupa Kosambi Allahabad Schism Edict Sanchi Schism Edict Sarnath Schism Edit Rummindei in Lumbini Nigali Sagar Major Pillar Edicts Edit Fragment of the 6th Major Pillar Edict from the Delhi Meerut Pillar of Ashoka British Museum 58 Main article Major Pillar Edicts Asoka s 6 Major Pillar Edicts have been found at Kausambhi Allahabad Topra now Delhi Meerut now Delhi Lauriya Araraj Lauriya Nandangarh Rampurva Champaran and a 7th one on the Delhi Topra pillar These pillar edicts include 59 I Asoka s principle of protection to people II Defines dhamma as minimum of sins many virtues compassion liberality truthfulness and purity III Abolishes sins of harshness cruelty anger pride etc IV Deals with duties of government officials V List of animals and birds which should not be killed on some days and another list of animals which cannot be killed on any occasion Describes release of 25 prisoners by Asoka VI Works done by Asoka for Dhamma Policy He says that all sects desire both self control and purity of mind VII Testimental edict Major Pillar Edicts I II III Delhi Topra Major Pillar Edicts IV Delhi Topra Major Pillar Edicts V VII Delhi Topra Major Pillar Edicts VII second part Delhi Topra Description of the pillars Edit Front view of the single lion capital in Vaishali Pillars retaining their animals Edit Main article Lion Capital of Ashoka The most celebrated capital the four lion one at Sarnath Uttar Pradesh erected by Emperor Ashoka circa 250 BC also called the Ashoka Column Four lions are seated back to back At present the Column remains in the same place whereas the Lion Capital is at the Sarnath Museum This Lion Capital of Ashoka from Sarnath has been adopted as the National Emblem of India and the wheel Ashoka Chakra from its base was placed onto the centre of the flag of India The lions probably originally supported a Dharma Chakra wheel with 24 spokes such as is preserved in the 13th century replica erected at Wat Umong near Chiang Mai Thailand by Thai king Mangrai 60 Depiction of the four lions capital surmounted by a Wheel of Law at Sanchi Satavahana period South gateway of stupa 3 The pillar at Sanchi also has a similar but damaged four lion capital There are two pillars at Rampurva one with a bull and the other with a lion as crowning animals Sankissa has only a damaged elephant capital which is mainly unpolished though the abacus is at least partly so No pillar shaft has been found and perhaps this was never erected at the site 61 The Vaishali pillar has a single lion capital 62 The location of this pillar is contiguous to the site where a Buddhist monastery and a sacred coronation tank stood Excavations are still underway and several stupas suggesting a far flung campus for the monastery have been discovered The lion faces north the direction Buddha took on his last voyage 63 Identification of the site for excavation in 1969 was aided by the fact that this pillar still jutted out of the soil More such pillars exist in this greater area but they are all devoid of the capital Pillar at Prayagraj Edit Main articles Allahabad pillar and Allahabad Stone Pillar Inscription of Samudra Gupta In Prayagraj there is a pillar with inscriptions from Ashoka and later inscriptions attributed to Samudragupta and Jehangir It is clear from the inscription that the pillar was first erected at Kaushambi an ancient town some 30 kilometres west of Allahabad that was the capital of the Koshala kingdom and moved to Allahabad presumably under Muslim rule 64 The pillar is now located inside the Allahabad Fort also the royal palace built during the 16th century by Akbar at the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers As the fort is occupied by the Indian Army it is essentially closed to the public and special permission is required to see the pillar The Ashokan inscription is in Brahmi and is dated around 232 BC A later inscription attributed to the second king of the Gupta empire Samudragupta is in the more refined Gupta script a later version of Brahmi and is dated to around 375 AD This inscription lists the extent of the empire that Samudragupta built during his long reign He had already been king for forty years at that time and would rule for another five A still later inscription in Persian is from the Mughal emperor Jahangir The Akbar Fort also houses the Akshay Vat an Indian fig tree of great antiquity The Ramayana refers to this tree under which Lord Rama is supposed to have prayed while on exile Pillars at Lauriya Areraj and Lauriya Nandangarh Edit The column at Lauriya Nandangarh 23 km from Bettiah in West Champaran district Bihar has single lion capital The hump and the hind legs of the lion project beyond the abacus 21 The pillar at Lauriya Areraj in East Champaran district Bihar is presently devoid of any capital Erecting the Pillars Edit The Pillars of Ashoka may have been erected using the same methods that were used to erect the ancient obelisks Roger Hopkins and Mark Lehrner conducted several obelisk erecting experiments including a successful attempt to erect a 25ton obelisk in 1999 This followed two experiments to erect smaller obelisks and two failed attempts to erect a 25 ton obelisk 65 66 Rediscoveries Edit Rediscovery of the Ashoka pillar in Sarnath 1905 A number of the pillars were thrown down by either natural causes or iconoclasts and gradually rediscovered One was noticed in the 16th century by the English traveller Thomas Coryat in the ruins of Old Delhi Initially he assumed that from the way it glowed that it was made of brass but on closer examination he realized it was made of highly polished sandstone with upright script that resembled a form of Greek In the 1830s James Prinsep began to decipher them with the help of Captain Edward Smith and George Turnour They determined that the script referred to King Piyadasi which was also the epithet of an Indian ruler known as Ashoka who came to the throne 218 years after Buddha s enlightenment Scholars have since found 150 of Ashoka s inscriptions carved into the face of rocks or on stone pillars marking out a domain that stretched across northern India and south below the central plateau of the Deccan These pillars were placed in strategic sites near border cities and trade routes The Sanchi pillar was found by F O Oertelin in 1851 in excavations led by Sir Alexander Cunningham first head of the Archaeological Survey of India There were no surviving traces above ground of the Sarnath pillar mentioned in the accounts of medieval Chinese pilgrims when the Indian Civil Service engineer F O Oertel with no real experience in archaeology was allowed to excavate there in the winter of 1904 05 He first uncovered the remains of a Gupta shrine west of the main stupa overlying an Ashokan structure To the west of that he found the lowest section of the pillar upright but broken off near ground level Most of the rest of the pillar was found in three sections nearby and then since the Sanchi capital had been excavated in 1851 the search for an equivalent was continued and the Lion Capital of Ashoka the most famous of the group was found close by It was both finer in execution and in much better condition than that at Sanchi The pillar appeared to have been deliberately destroyed at some point The finds were recognised as so important that the first onsite museum in India and one of the few then in the world was set up to house them 67 Other Ashokan structures EditThe Buddha s Diamond Throne and the Pillars of Ashoka Discovery of Ashoka s Diamond throne in Bodh Gaya near the spot of the Buddha s illumination and the Boddhi tree Side decorative bands of the Diamond Throne top and the Sanchi pillar capital bottom both featuring geese and flame palmettes Front decorative friezes of the Diamond Throne top and the Sankissa pillar capital bottom both alternating flame palmettes rosettes and lotuses StupasLegend has it that Ashoka built 84 000 stupas commemorating the events and relics of Buddha s life Some of these stupas contained networks of walls containing the hub spokes and rim of a wheel while others contained interior walls in a swastika 卐 shape The wheel represents the sun time and Buddhist law the wheel of law or dharmachakra while the swastika stands for the cosmic dance around a fixed center and guards against evil 15 16 Diamond throne in Bodh GayaMain article Vajrasana Bodh Gaya Ashoka also built the Diamond Throne in Bodh Gaya at the location where the Buddha had reached enlightenment some 200 years earlier 68 69 This purely Buddhist monument to the Buddha is a thick slab of polished grey sandstone with Mauryan polish 70 The sculpted decorations on the Diamond Throne clearly echoe the decorations found on the Pillars of Ashoka 71 The Diamond Throne has a decorative band made of honeysuckles and geese which can also be found on several of the Pillars of Ashoka 50 such as the Rampurva capitals or the Sanchi capital 70 The geese hamsa in particular are a very recurrent symbol on the pillars of Ashoka and may refer to the devotees flocking to the faith 69 The same throne is also illustrated in later reliefs from Bharhut dated to circa 100 BCE 72 Similar pillars EditThe 6th century pillar at the tomb of Xiao Jing or Emperor Jing of Western Liang is similar to the Ashoka pillar 73 See also EditRelated topics Ashoka s Major Rock Edicts Dhar iron pillar Iron pillar of Delhi List of Edicts of Ashoka Stambha Other similar topics Early Indian epigraphy Hindu temple architecture History of India Indian copper plate inscriptions Indian rock cut architecture Lak Mueang List of rock cut temples in India Outline of ancient India South Indian Inscriptions TagundaingNotes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Buddhist Architecture Huu Phuoc Le Grafikol 2010 p 36 40 Bisschop Peter C Cecil Elizabeth A May 2019 Copp Paul Wedemeyer Christian K eds Columns in Context Venerable Monuments and Landscapes of Memory in Early India History of Religions University of Chicago Press for the University of Chicago Divinity School 58 4 355 403 doi 10 1086 702256 ISSN 0018 2710 JSTOR 00182710 LCCN 64001081 OCLC 299661763 a b Inscriptions of Asoka New Edition by E Hultzsch in Sanskrit 1925 p 132 Edict No 7 line 23 Skilling Peter 1998 Mahasutras Pali Text Society p 453 ISBN 9780860133209 a b Himanshu Prabha Ray 7 August 2014 The Return of the Buddha Ancient Symbols for a New Nation Routledge p 123 ISBN 9781317560067 India The Ancient Past A History of the Indian Subcontinent from c 7000 BCE to CE 1200 Burjor Avari Routledge 2016 p 139 a b Krishnaswamy 697 698 KING ASHOKA His Edicts and His Times www cs colostate edu Retrieved 29 October 2017 India The Ancient Past A History of the Indian Subcontinent from c 7000 BCE to CE 1200 Burjor Avari Routledge 2016 p 149 State Emblem Know India india gov in Companion 430 Lion Capital of Ashoka At Sarnath Archaeological Museum Near Varanasi India YouTube Agrawala Vasudeva Sharana 1965 Studies In Indian Art p 67 Remains of the topmost wheel in the Sarnath Archaeological Museum 17 February 2019 a b Time Life Lost Civilizations series Ancient India Land Of Mystery 1994 p 84 85 94 97 a b Oliphant Margaret The Atlas Of The Ancient World 1992 p 156 7 a b c Arora Udai Prakash 1991 Graeco Indica India s Cultural Contacts with the Greek World In Memory of Demetrius Galanos 1760 1833 a Greek Sanskritist of Benares Delhi Ramanand Vidya Bhawan p 5 ISBN 978 81 85205 53 3 It can also be suggested that Lațs topped by animal figures also have an ancestor in the sphinx topped pillars of Greece of the Middle Archaic period c 580 40 B C Delphi Museum at Delphi Greece has an elegant winged sphinx figure sitting on an Ionic capital with side volutes It was the Naxian sphinx pillar datable to about 575 560 BC Many more sphinx pillars have been found from different parts of Greece like Sparta Athens and Spata Attica Rowland traces western Asiatic inspirations in the addorsed animal capitals of Asokas Lațs But the inspiration for the single animal figure Lațs should be traced in the sphinx pillars of Greece Asoka s direct link with his contemporaneous Greek states of Western Asia Africa and Greece itself can result in the conception of single animal topped Lățs from the Delphi type sphinx pillars Such a possibility should not be ruled out in Mauryan Age Irwin John 1974 Asokan Pillars A Reassessment of the Evidence II Structure The Burlington Magazine 116 861 715 ISSN 0007 6287 JSTOR 877843 Harle 22 Thapar Romila 2001 Asoka and the Decline of the Mauryan New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 564445 X pp 267 70 a b c Mahajan V D 1960 reprint 2007 Ancient India S Chand amp Company New Delhi ISBN 81 219 0887 6 pp 350 3 Companion a b Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le Grafikol 2010 p 44 Rebecca M Brown Deborah S Hutton A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture John Wiley amp Sons pp 423 429 a b Boardman 1998 15 Boardman 1998 13 Harle 22 24 quoted in turn A Comprehensive History Of Ancient India Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd 2003 p 87 Stewart Desmond Pyramids and the Sphinx S l Newsweek U S 72 Print Irwin John 1974 Asokan Pillars A Reassessment of the Evidence II Structure The Burlington Magazine 116 861 712 727 ISSN 0007 6287 JSTOR 877843 Agrawala Vasudeva S 1977 Gupta Art Vol ii Irwin John 1983 The Ancient Pillar Cult at Prayaga Allahabad Its Pre Asokan Origins Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 115 2 253 280 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00137487 ISSN 0035 869X JSTOR 25211537 S2CID 162953368 Boardman 1998 13 19 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century Pearson Education India p 361 ISBN 9788131711200 Retrieved 10 April 2018 The Early History of India by Vincent A Smith Annual report 1906 07 p 89 Ashoka 2 Singh Upinder 2008 A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century New Delhi Pearson Education p 358 ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 Buddshit Architecture Le Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 169 Sircar D C 1979 Asokan studies pp 118 122 Sircar D C 1979 Asokan studies p 118 Mapio Asoka by Radhakumud Mookerji p 85 a b Buddhist Architecture Le Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 p 40 Geary David 2017 The Rebirth of Bodh Gaya Buddhism and the Making of a World Heritage Site University of Washington Press p 209 Note 1 ISBN 9780295742380 A Brief History of India Alain Danielou Inner Traditions Bear amp Co 2003 p 89 91 1 The pillars owe something to the pervasive influence of Achaemenid architecture and sculpture with no little Greek architectural ornament and sculptural style as well Notice the florals on the bull capital from Rampurva and the style of the horse of the Sarnath capital now the emblem of the Republic of India The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity by John Boardman Princeton University Press 1993 p 110 Le Huu Phuoc 29 October 2017 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol ISBN 9780984404308 Retrieved 29 October 2017 via Google Books Le Huu Phuoc 29 October 2017 Buddhist Architecture Grafikol ISBN 9780984404308 Retrieved 29 October 2017 via Google Books a b Buddhist Architecture Huu Phuoc Le Grafikol 2010 p 240 a b Le Huu Phuoc Buddhist Architecture p 42 a b c The True Chronology of Asokan Pillars John Irwin Artibus Asiae Vol 44 No 4 1983 pp 247 265 2 Story of the Delhi Iron Pillar R Balasubramaniam p 19 The Past Before Us Romila Thapar p 361 a b Buddhist Architecture Le Huu Phuoc Grafikol 2009 pp 238 248 The Ashokan rock edicts are a marvel of history Inscriptions of Ashoka by Alexander Cunningham Eugen Hultzsch Calcutta Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing Calcutta 1877 British Museum Highlights Retrieved 29 October 2017 Full texts An English rendering by Ven S Dhammika 1993 Wat Umong Chiang Mai Thailand s World Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2013 Companion 428 429 Destinations Vaishali Destinations Vaishali Bihar State Tourism Development Corporation bstdc bih nic in Retrieved 29 October 2017 Krishnaswamy 697 700 NOVA Online Mysteries of the Nile August 27 1999 The Third Attempt www pbs org Retrieved 29 October 2017 Time Life Lost Civilizations series Ramses II Magnificence on the Nile 1993 p 56 57 Allen Chapter 15 A Global History of Architecture Francis D K Ching Mark M Jarzombek Vikramaditya Prakash John Wiley amp Sons 2017 p 570ff a b Buddhist Architecture Huu Phuoc Le p 240 a b Alexander Cunningham Mahabodhi or the great Buddhist temple under the Bodhi tree at Buddha Gaya p 19 Public Domain text Allen Charles 2012 Ashoka The Search for India s Lost Emperor Little Brown Book Group p 133 ISBN 9781408703885 Mahabodhi Cunningham p 4ff Public Domain text Buddhist Architecture by Huu Phuoc Le p 45References EditAshoka Emperor Edicts of Ashoka eds N A Nikam Richard P McKeon 1978 University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226586111 9780226586113 google books Boardman John 1998 Reflections on the Origins of Indian Stone Architecture Bulletin of the Asia Institute pp 15 19 1998 New Series Vol 12 Alexander s Legacy in the East Studies in Honor of Paul Bernard p 13 22 JSTOR Companion Brown Rebecca M Hutton Deborah S eds A Companion to Asian Art and Architecture Volume 3 of Blackwell companions to art history 2011 John Wiley amp Sons 2011 ISBN 1444396323 9781444396324 google books Harle J C The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent 2nd edn 1994 Yale University Press Pelican History of Art ISBN 0300062176 Krishnaswamy C S Sahib Rao and Ghosh Amalananda A Note on the Allahabad Pillar of Asoka The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland No 4 Oct 1935 pp 697 706 Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland JSTOR Falk H Asokan Sites and Artefacts a A Source book with Bibliography 2006 Volume 18 of Monographien zur indischen Archaologie Kunst und Philologie Von Zabern ISSN 0170 8864Further reading EditSingh Upinder 2008 Chapter 7 Power and Piety The Maurya Empire c 324 187 BCE A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India From the Stone Age to the 12th Century New Delhi Pearson Education ISBN 978 81 317 1677 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ashoka pillars Archaeological Survey of India British Museum collections online Columbia University New York See lioncapital for pictures of the original Lion Capital of Ashoka preserved at the Sarnath Museum which has been adopted as the National Emblem of India and the Ashoka Chakra Wheel from which has been placed in the center of the National Flag of India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pillars of Ashoka amp oldid 1139955420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.