The Great Stupa At Sanchi – Oldest Stone Structure In India
A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - Sanchi is famous in the world for stupas, monolithic Ashokan pillars, temples, monasteries, and sculptural wealth.
Located at Sanchi Town in Raisen District of the state of Madhya Pradesh, India we find the country’s oldest stone structure known as the “Great Stupa of Sanchi”.
A c. 1st century BCE/CE relief from Amaravati, Andhra Pradesh (India). The figure in the center may represent Ashoka.
Great Emperor Ashoka laid the foundations of a religious center at Sanchi
Commissioned by the emperor Ashoka the Great in the 3rd century BC, the stupa was originally a low structure of brick, half the diameter of the present edifice hemispherical in shape with raised terraces at the base.
It was enclosed by a wooden railing and a stone umbrella at the top. This Great Stupa served as a nucleus to the large Buddhist establishment during the later period.
Sanchi, variously known as Kakanaya, Kakanava, Kakanadabota, and Bota-Sriparvata in ancient times, has a singular distinction of having a remarkable specimen of Buddhist art and architecture right from the early Mauryan period (c. third century BC to twelfth century AD)
During Sunga times, several edifices were raised at Sanchi and its surrounding hills. The Asokan stupa was enlarged and faced with stones and decorated with balustrades, staircases, and a harmika on the top, which in Buddhist architecture, a square fence-like enclosure symbolizing heaven on top of the dome of a stupa.
Image credit: Nagarjun
In the first century BC the Andhra-Satavahanas, who had extended their sway over the eastern Malwa, caused the elaborately carved gateways to Stupa 1. The Great Stupa of Sanchi displays an austere grandeur and the exquisite carvings of the doorway depict in detail the significant episodes and miracles from Lord Buddha’s life and events depicted in the Buddhist Jataka stories.
Depictions of Buddha as a non-human figure
The Sanchi gateways are made of stone, but they were constructed in the manner of wood and covered with narrative sculptures.
Carved decoration of the Northern gateway to the Great Stupa of Sanchi. Torana Panels: Chhaddanta, Sujata's offering, Vessantara Jataka, East Columns: Shakra's visit, Royal procession, Bimbisara's visit, West Column: Foreigners, Monkeys, Kapilvastu. Image credit: Biswarup Ganguly
They show scenes from the life of the Buddha integrated with everyday events that should be familiar to the onlookers and make it easier for them to understand the Buddhist creed as relevant to their lives.
Some of the stone carvings at Sanchi show the Buddha as a non-human figure. Instead, the artists chose to represent him by certain attributes, such as the horse on which he left his father’s home, his footprints, or a canopy under the bodhi tree at the point of his enlightenment. The human body was thought to be too confining for the Buddha.
Sanchi Stupa inside
Since the fourteenth century, Sanchi remained deserted and uncared for till 1818 when General Taylor rediscovered the site. Sir John Marshall established an archaeological museum in 1919, which was later transformed into the present site museum at Sanchi.
Presently under a UNESCO project Sanchi and Satdhara, a Buddhist site, 10 km south-east of Sanchi, is being further excavated, conserved, and environmentally developed.
Written by - A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com Senior Staff Writer
Copyright © AncientPages.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of AncientPages.com
Expand for referencesReferences:
More From Ancient Pages
-
El Argar Civilization: Bronze Age Palace And Grave Goods Unearthed In Spain’s La Almoloya
Archaeology | Oct 15, 2014
-
What Are The Most Common Misconceptions About Pirates?
Ancient History Facts | Apr 16, 2024
-
Incest In The Elite Of Neolithic Ireland – Incredible Findings
Archaeology | Jun 24, 2020
-
Ancient Manuscripts Of Mythical City Of Timbuktu
Artifacts | Jun 12, 2014
-
Oldest Known Evidence Of Artificial Cranial Deformation Revealed In Croatia
Archaeology | Aug 26, 2019
-
New Moai Statue Found On Easter Island
Archaeology | Feb 28, 2023
-
Delphic Mysteries – Unusual Prophecy And Birth – Part 1
Featured Stories | Mar 27, 2023
-
Fossils, Fires And Focus On Early Human Activity In Southeast Asia Jungles
Archaeology | Oct 14, 2024
-
Monumental Structure Unearthed During Excavations Of Urartu-Era Karmir Blur
Archaeology | Nov 25, 2022
-
On This Day In History: Emperor Romulus Augustus Deposed – On September 4, 476
News | Sep 4, 2016
-
On This Day In History: Tsar Peter The Great Opens New Chapter in Russia’s History – On Mar 19, 1697
News | Mar 19, 2017
-
Glass Technology Was Known In Sahara Centuries Before The Arrival Of Europeans
Ancient Technology | Jan 20, 2018
-
On This Day In History: Battle Of Vinegar Hill Took Place – On June 21, 1798
News | Jun 21, 2017
-
Scientists Explore How Neanderthals Caught Birds In Caves For Food
Archaeology | Sep 16, 2021
-
Mystery Of The Vanished Settlers Of Greenland – What Happened To The Lost Viking Colonists?
Books | Jul 22, 2023
-
Ancient Roman Coffin Found In Leeds Revealed To The Public For The First Time
Archaeology | Apr 22, 2024
-
Sacred Hidden Buyan Island And The Mysterious Alatyr Stone With Healing Powers May Have Existed
Featured Stories | Mar 22, 2018
-
Artifacts From Shakhi Kora Reveal The Rejection Of Early Centralized Governance In Ancient Mesopotamia
Archaeology | Dec 9, 2024
-
Deciphered Dead Sea Scroll Reveals Secret Calendar And Two Events Not Mentioned In The Bible
Archaeology | Jan 23, 2018
-
Unique 3,000-Year-Old Logboat Found In River Tay – On Display In Perth, Scotland Again
Archaeology | Oct 30, 2023