Tuesday 26 November 2013

Shrine find suggests Buddha may have been born two centuries earlier


Discovery of timber structure dating to 6th century BC suggests sage may have lived 200 years earlier than generally believed, say scientists

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Guanyu said...

Shrine find suggests Buddha may have been born two centuries earlier

Discovery of timber structure dating to 6th century BC suggests sage may have lived 200 years earlier than generally believed, say scientists

Agence France-Presse in Washington
26 November 2013

The discovery of a previously unknown wooden structure at the Buddha’s birthplace suggests the sage might have lived in the 6th century BC, two centuries earlier than thought, archeologists said.

Traces of what appears to have been an ancient timber shrine was found under a brick temple that is itself within Buddhism’s sacred Maya Devi Temple at Lumbini, in southern Nepal near the Indian border.

In design it resembles the Asokan temple erected on top of it. Significantly, however, it features an open area, unprotected from the elements, from which it seems a tree once grew - possibly the tree where the Buddha was reputedly born.

“This sheds light on a very, very long debate” over when the Buddha was born and, in turn, when the faith that grew out of his teachings took root, said archaeologist Robin Coningham.

It is widely accepted that the Buddha was born beneath a hardwood sal tree at Lumbini as his mother Queen Maya Devi, the wife of a clan chief, was travelling to her father’s kingdom to give birth. But much of what is known about his life and time has its origins in oral tradition, with little scientific evidence to sort out fact from myth.

Many scholars contend that the Buddha - who renounced material wealth to embrace and preach a life of enlightenment -lived and taught in the 4th century BC, dying at around the age of 80.

“What our work has demonstrated is that we have this shrine established in the 6th century BC” that supports the hypothesis that the Buddha might have lived and taught in that earlier era, Coningham said.

Radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence techniques were used to date fragments of charcoal and grains of sand found at the site.

Geoarchaeological research meanwhile confirmed the existence of tree roots within the temple’s central open area.

Coningham co-directed an international team of archaeologists at Lumbini, partly funded by the Washington-based National Geographic Society, which plans to telecast a documentary, Buried Secrets of the Buddha, worldwide in February.

The team’s findings appear in the December issue of the journal Antiquity, ahead of the 17th congress of the International Association of Buddhist Studies in Vienna in August next year.

Lumbini - overgrown by jungle before its rediscovery in 1896 - is today a Unesco world heritage site, visited by millions of pilgrims every year. Buddhism has 500 million followers worldwide.

Unesco director general Irina Bokova called for “more archaeological research, intensified conservation work and strengthened site management” at Lumbini.

The UN body and the Nepalese government had invited Coningham, Britain’s leading South Asian archeologist, to join Nepal’s former director general Kosh Prasad Acharya to steer the Lumbini effort. Since it is a working temple, the archaeologists found themselves digging in the midst of meditating monks, nuns and pilgrims.

It’s not unusual for adherents of one faith to have built a place of worship atop the ruins of a venue connected with another religion.

But what makes Lumbini special, Coningham said, is how the design of the wooden shrine resembles that of the multiple structures built over it over time.

Equally significant is what they did not find: signs of any dramatic change in which the site has been used over the ages.

“This is one of those rare occasions when belief, tradition, archaeology and science actually come together,” he said.