Home Sitemap Contact us
 
   
Home
General Informations
Statistical Profile
Geographical Data
Telephone Directory
Pride of Nalanda
Welcome Tourists
   
 
 
Statistical Profile
 

Buddhist monastic centre, often spoken of as a university, in northern Bihar state, India. Though it is traditionally dated to the time of the Buddha (6th–5th centuries BC), archaeological excavations date its foundations to the 5th century AD. It housed a population of several thousand teachers and students. Topics studied included logic, grammar, astronomy, and medicine. The Chinese pilgrims Xuanzang and Yijing provided vivid accounts of Nalanda in the late 7th century. Nalanda continued to flourish through the 12th century and became a centre of religious sculpture. It was probably sacked during Muslim raids c. 1200 and never recovered.

Nalanda (nəlän'də) , Buddhist monastic center in what is now Baragaon, Bihar state, E central India. Often referred to as a university, Nalanda was, from the 4th to the 12 cent. A.D., the most renowned center of Buddhist learning in India. There are extensive ruins of stupas, monasteries, and temples.

Nalanda
Remains at Nalanda
Remains at Nalanda

Nalanda is a historical place in central Bihar, India, 90 km south-east of the state capital of Patna. It is the place where one of the best known Universities of ancient India existed. It existed for around 700 years, reaching its zenith under the Gupta rule, which is often called the Golden period of ancient India. The Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang recorded that Nalanda was home to students from various countries at its zenith.

It is not inhabited now, and the nearest habitation is a village called Bargaon. Nalanda is important to the history of India, and that of Buddhism. Nalanda literally means the place that confers the lotus.

The Jain Tirthankara Mahavira attained Moksha at Pavapuri, which is located in Nalanda. However, the site is better known for its importance in Buddhist history. The famous Nalanda University had been established at the site by the 5th century BCE and the Buddha is believed to have visited it and given sermons near "the Mango Grove of Pavarika". Later, Nalanda University became an important Buddhist centre of learning, at its peak accommodating up to 10,000 students. Among the famous teachers there was Nagarjuna. The Tang Dynasty Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang left detailed accounts of the university in the 7th century.

In 1193, the Nalanda University complex was sacked by Turkish Muslim invaders under Bakhtiyar Khalji; this event is seen as a milestone in the decline of Buddhism in India. Many buddhist monks from Nalanda fled towards and into Tibet to escape the desecrating armies of Bakhtiyar Khalji. Fortified monastaries along the main route of the invasion were destroyed and being off the main route both Nalanda and Bodh Gaya survived. It is said that Khalji asked if there was a copy of the Koran at Nalanda before he sacked it. When the Tibetan translator Chag Lotsawa visited them in 1235, he found them damaged and looted, but still functioning with a small number of monks. The destruction of the universities at Nalanda as well as the destruction of many temples and monasteries throughout northern India which housed centers of learning, is considered by many historians to the responsible for the sudden demise of ancient Indian scientific thought in mathematics, astronomy, alchemy, and anatomy. However many instituions off the main route such as the Jagaddala Monastery in northern Bengal were untouched and flourishing.

A vast amount of what is considered to be Tibetan Buddhism (Vajrayana) actually stems from the late (9th-12th century) Nalanda teachers and traditions. Other forms of Buddhism, like the Mahayana followed in Vietnam, China, Korea and Japan, found their genesis within the walls of the ancient university. Theravada, the other main school of Buddhism, followed in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and elsewhere, and later the mystic Theravada schools also developed here.

A number of ruined structures survive. Nearby is the Surya Mandir, a Hindu temple. The known and excavated ruins extend over an area of about 150,000 square metres, although if Xuanzang's account of Nalanda's extent is correlated with present excavations, almost 90% of it remains unexcavated.

In 1951, a modern centre for Pali (Theravadin) Buddhist studies was founded nearby, the Nava Nalanda Mahavihara. Presently, this institute is pursuing an ambitious program of satellite imaging of the entire region.

The Nalanda Museum contains a number of manuscripts, and shows many examples of the items that have been excavated.
See also

    * Ancient Universities of India
    * Taxila
    * Vikramshila
    * Benares

Nalanda is also the name of the modern administrative district of Bihar in which the ancient university ruins are found.

Nalanda is also the name of two modern-day colleges, one in Sri Lanka and one in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and of a monastery in France.

 

 

Home | Tenders | Gallery | Tourists | Photogallery | Contact Us