
Reportedly the bihar government is preparing the process for exploration of Buddhist sites visited by Chinese traveler Hiuen Tsang in present-day Vaishali district, and excavation of the remains of 2,600-year-old structures in Banka, officials said on Monday. The Archaeological survey of india (ASI) recently granted permission to the bihar Heritage Development Society (BHDS), a wing of the state’s Art, culture and youth department, to work in these two places.The excavations will be made in Bhadaria village with links to Hindu mythology and Buddhism, in Banka district near the Chandan river.
“It has been established that Bhadaria is a historical place. As per initial studies, the remains found there are 2,600 years old,” said Harjot Kaur Bamhrah, Additional Chief Secretary of the state’s Art, culture and youth department. The ground-penetrating radar (GPR) survey, a geophysical method that uses radar pulses to image the subsurface, has already been conducted in Banka and surrounding areas to trace ancient structures that are buried below the earth, she told PTI. “A team of experts from IIT kanpur conducted the survey at Bhadaria village, where ancient-age brick structures were found under the ground, both in the bed and on the bank of Chandan river,” Bamhrah said.
The Mandar hill in Banka has many references in Hindu mythology. In ancient Buddhist literature, Bhadaria is mentioned as a place where buddha himself visited and one of his chief disciples, Visakha (a nun), stayed in that village. “This hill was used for churning the ocean to extract the nectar from its bosom, as per mythology,” said BDHS Executive director Bijoy Kumar Choudhary. chief minister Nitish Kumar had visited the site in december 2020. In the case of Vaishali visited by Hiuen Tsang over 1,000 years ago, the BDHS will start exploration work there. “Buddhist pilgrim sites visited by Xuanzang in South bihar have already been discovered in Patna-Jehanabad-Gaya-Nawada-Nalanda sector by the BHDS. In this process, all major hills falling in the region have been explored, and its sculptures, antiquities and archaeological features scientifically documented and studied,” she said. Now, the BDHS will start exploration work in the Vaishali area. “Exploration of these sites would help us discover and piece together our great heritage,” said Bamhrah.