NOTE ON PLACES AND AREAS IN ANCIENT
INDIA
12. BARHUT in central Indian is famous for Buddhist
Stupa and stone railings which replaced the wooden ones in the Sunga period.
Barhut sculptures depict the visit of king Ajatasatru to the Buddha. Barhut
along with Sanchi and Bodh-Gaya represent the first organized art activity of
the Indian people as a whole. Furthermore, all these clearly indicate the
transition of sculpture from wood to stone.
13. BARYGAZA OR
BHARUKACHCHA (Broach) was the
oldest and largest northern most entrepot on the mouth of the Narmada river in
modern Maharashtra. It handled the bulk of the trade with western Asia (Jataka
stories and the Periplus mention it). It was also one of the district head
quarters of the Saka rulers. According to Jain traditions, it was the capital
of the Saka empire. It was international trade that mode Barygaza important in
ancient India.
14. BARBARICUM was an important port in the Indus
delta, receiving Chinese furs and silks through Bacteria for export to the
West. It added to the growing prosperity of India in the first century A.D.
15. BADAMI (MODERN NAME FOR VATAPI) in Bijapur
district was founded by pulkesin I as an early capital of the Western
Chalukyas. It as a hill-fort and an exquisite cave temple of lord Vishnu
excavated during the rule of Manglesh, the Chalukya ruler. Huen-tsang visited
it.
16. BODH-GAYA situated six miles south of Gaya in
Bihar on the western bank of the Nilajan river, was the place where the Buddha
attained enlightenement. It was part of the Magadha janapada.
17. BANAVASI (north kanara in Karnataka) also known
as Vaijayanti, was the capital of the Kadambas who were defeated by the
Chalukya king Kirtivarman during the last quarter of the 6th century A.D.
According to the Ceylonese chronicles Ashoka sent a mission to Deccan with the
Monk Rkshita who went as far as Banavasi.
18. BRAHMAGIRI in Chitaldurg district of Karnataka, is
remarkable for its continuity of cultural heritage extending from Neolithic
(stone-age culture) to megalithic (early historic culture-3rd century B.C. to
Ist century B.C. with possible links with Mediter anean and Caucasian
Megaliths) revealing ancestory worship and animism pointing to the practice of
cist and pit burials. It is the site of one of the two minor rock edicts of
Askoka. These edicts suggest the provability of Ashoka entering the Sangha as a
full monk after two and a half years of his conversion to Buddhism.
19. BURZAHOM in Kashmir Valley near Srinagar, is
associated with megalithic settlements (dating 2400 B.C.) where the people
lived on a plateau in pits using tools and weapons of stone (axe) and bones.
(The only other site which has yielded considerable bone implements is Chirand,
40 km. West of Patna on the northern bank of the Ganges and using coarse grey
pottery. The information that we gather from the two places, recently
discovered, throws light on the proto-histroy of India).
20. BAMIYAN an important Buddhist and Gandhara Art
center in Afghanistan in the early Christian centuries, has tall rock-cut
Buddha statues. The ancient trade route linking north western India with China
passed through it. It was the capital of the Hunas in the 5th and the 6th
centuries A.D.
21. BELUR with a group of Hoysala monuments
including the famous Chennakesava temple (built around 1117 A.D.) represents an
art which applies to stone the technique of the ivory worker or the goldsmith.
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