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ASI Patna seeks excavation at Kurkihar village in Bihar's Gaya to find archaeological treasures

PTI |
Feb 16, 2025 02:17 PM IST

ASI Patna seeks excavation at Kurkihar village in Bihar's Gaya to find archaeological treasures

Patna, The Patna Circle of the Archaeological Survey of India has sought permission from its headquarters to excavate Kurkihar village in Bihar’s Gaya district in search of archaeological treasures and to establish the region’s cultural sequence.

ASI Patna seeks excavation at Kurkihar village in Bihar's Gaya to find archaeological treasures
ASI Patna seeks excavation at Kurkihar village in Bihar's Gaya to find archaeological treasures

Kurkihar village, situated about 5 km northeast of Wazirganj and 27 km east of Gaya, is believed to have once been an ancient city and the site of a Buddhist monastery.

According to records from the ASI Patna Circle, accessed by PTI, "Alexander Cunningham, an officer of the British Army and an archaeologist, visited Kurkihar once in 1861-62 and again in 1879-80. He mentioned having seen not only numerous Buddhist sculptures, large and small, but a large number of votive stupas."

Alexander Cunningham, who excavated numerous sites in India, including Sarnath and Sanchi, was the first director of ASI.

Speaking to PTI, Sujeet Nayan, the Superintending Archaeologist of the ASI Patna Circle, said, "Yes, we have sought permission from the ASI headquarters to carry out an excavation at the site where Kurkihar village is situated now."

The antiquarian remains of Kurkihar were brought to notice also by Markham Kittoe, a well-known archaeologist, in 1847, Cunningham in 1861-62 and 1879-80, and other scholars, Nayan said.

"The site consists of a vast mound of bricks and remains of a large monastery. The main mound of the Buddhist ruins is around 25 feet high. A proposal in this regard has been recently sent to the ASI ," Nayan said.

According to Markham Kittoe, a well-known archaeologist, Kurkihar is an ancient city and Buddhist monastery or vihara, Nayan said, adding the main mound at the site contains Buddhist ruins, including inscriptions with other antiquities and cultural materials.

"Well-known historian K P Jayaswal had described how attention was dramatically drawn to the site in 1930 when a group of about 226 bronze sculptures were accidentally discovered in a mound located on the western side of the local temple in the area," Nayan said.

Most of the sculptures, cast in bronze, were then acquired for the Patna Museum and several other museums in different countries,” the Superintending Archaeologist said.

There is a huge architectural wealth that needs proper excavation of Kurkihar, he added.

Several statues made of stones have also been found from the Pala period, some of which are still in active worship at the local temple, he said.

Several inscriptions have also been found on the bronze sculptures, he said, adding the Kurkihar inscriptions refer to various periods of Pala dynasty rulers - from Devapala, Rajyapala, Mahipala and Vigrahapala III - ranging from the 9th Century to 1074 AD.

The monastery's name was Apanaka, which is mentioned in several inscriptions.

It was very popular among the visitors from Kanchi in South India and other international visitors, the superintending archaeologist added.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

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