Nalanda

Author:

Rajani M. B.1,Kumar Viraj2

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India

2. Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India

Abstract

Nalanda, in eastern India's Bihar state, was once the most important Buddhist monastery in the world. The six excavated temples there are oriented approximately to the cardinal directions, but their east–west axes are tilted more than 4° south of east. Other key Buddhist temples within the same cultural milieu (Bodhgaya, Vikramasila, Somapura, and Samye) are similarly oriented a few degrees south of east. As M. B. Rajani and Viraj Kumar argue in Nalanda: A Tale in the Twist, this demands an explanation, because a method to orient structures to within 0.5° of the cardinal directions was known in the region for several centuries prior to the construction of these temples. Rajani and Kumar identify a temporal pattern in the orientation of Nalanda's temples; hypothesize that each temple was aligned with the rise of a specific star (Spica or Beta Librae), with the temporal pattern being a consequence of axial precession; propose a simple, unified explanation for the few exceptions to the pattern; and use this hypothesis to propose an approximate construction date for each temple based on its orientation.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

History,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Architecture

Reference75 articles.

1. We thank the following scholars: Dr. John R. Marr, Professor Frederick Asher, Professor Jayant Murthy, Dr. R. R. Navalgund, Dr. B. S. Shylaja, Professor James Evans, and Ms. Sonia Das. We thank the Science and Engineering Research Board, Government of India, for funding (through an ongoing project) travel to Nalanda, Vikramasila, and Bodhgaya. Finally, we thank the reviewers at JSAH for their constructive comments.

2. Fredrick Asher, Nalanda: Situating the Great Monastery (Mumbai: Marg Foundation, 2015), 21–29.

3. A chaitya is a Buddhist shrine or assembly/prayer hall that houses a stupa.

4. This skew has been noticed and reported by Asher, Nalanda, 15–49.

5. The Nalanda complex protected by the Archaeological Survey of India also includes ten monasteries. While the sacred temples may have been carefully oriented, we believe that the orientations of monasteries (dwelling spaces) were dictated by practicality (the majority of these are abutting structures with little variation in their alignments) and do not warrant further explanation in this context. We leave it to future research to determine whether the monasteries reflected the orientations of other structures.

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Opportunities Beyond Landscapes;Patterns in Past Settlements: Geospatial Analysis of Imprints of Cultural Heritage on Landscapes;2020-09-30

2. Relative Orientation of Prasat Hin Phanom Rung Temple to Spica on New Year’s Day: The Chief Indicator for the Intercalary Year of the Luni-Solar Calendar;Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union;2019-12

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