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BAMIAN

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 305 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BAMIAN  , a once renowned

city of
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Afghanistan, situated about 8o m . N.W. of
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Kabul . Its remains lie in a valley of the
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Hazara country, on the chief road from Kabul towards Turkestan, and immediately at the
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northern
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foot of that prolongation of the
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Indian
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Caucasus now called Koh-i-Baba . The passes on the Kabul side are not less than 11,00o and 12,000 ft. in absolute height, and those immediately to the north but little inferior . The height of the valley was fixed at about 85oo ft., and the surrounding country carefully surveyed by Major Pelham J . Maitland and the Hon . M . G . Talbot, during the progress of the Russo-Afghan Boundary Commission in November 1885 . The
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river draining the valley is one of the chief
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sources of the Sarkhab (Surkhab) or Aksarai, an important tributary of the Upper
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Oxus . The prominences of the cliffs which
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line the valley are crowned by the remains of numerous massive towers, whilst their precipitous faces are for 6 or 7 M. pierced by an infinity of ancient cave-dwellings, some of which are still occupied . The actual site of the old city is marked by mounds and remains of walls, and on an isolated rock in the
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middle of the valley are consider-able ruins of what appears to have been the acropolis, now known to the
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people as Ghulgulah .

But the most famous remains at Bamian are two

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colossal
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standing idols, carved in the cliffs on the north side of the valley . They are 113 ft. and 120 ft. high respectively . These images, which have been much injured, apparently by cannon-shot, are cut in niches in the rock, and both images and niches have been coated with stucco . There is an inscription, not yet interpreted, over the greater idol, and on each side of its niche are staircases leading to a chamber near the head, which shows traces of elaborate ornamentation in azure and
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gilding . These chambers are used by the amir as store-houses for grain . The
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surface of the niches also has been painted with figures . In one of the branch valleys is a similar
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colossus, some-what inferior in
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size to the second of these two; and there are indications of other niches and idols . Chahilburj, 28 m. from Zari, on the road to
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Balkh by the Balkhab, at the east end of the Sokhtagi valley; Shahr-i-Babar, about 45 M. above Chahilburj; and Gawargin, 6 m. above Shahr-i-Babar, are all fortified sites of about the same age as the relics at Bamian . At
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Haibak there is a very perfect excavation called the Takht-i-Rustam (a general name for all incomprehensible constructions amongst the
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modern inhabitants of Afghan Turkestan), which consists of an annular ditch enclosing a platform, with a small house about 21 ft. square above it, all cut out of the solid rock . There are hundreds of caves in this neighbourhood, all pointing to a line of Buddhist occupation connecting Balkh with Kabul . As seen from the rock of Ghulgulah, Bamian, with its ruined towers, its colossi, its innumerable grottos, and with the singular red colour of its barren
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soil, presents an impressive aspect of desolation and mystery . That the idols of Bamian, about which so many conjectures have been uttered, were Buddhist figures, is ascertained from the narrative of the Chinese
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pilgrim, Hsuan-Tsang, who saw them in their splendour in A.D .

630, and was verified by the

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officers above named, who discovered other Buddhist caves and excavations in the valleys of the Balkhab and Sarikol . Still vaster than these was a recumbent figure, 2 M. east of Bamian, representing Sakya
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Buddha entering
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Nirvana, i.e. in act of
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death . This was " about T000 ft. in length." No traces of this are alluded to by modern travellers, but in all likelihood it was only formed of
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rubble plastered (as is the case still with such Nirvana figures in Indo-
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China) and of no durability . For a city so notable Bamian has a very obscure
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history . It does not seem possible to identify it with any city in classical geography: Alexandria ad Caucasum it certainly was not . The first known mention of it seems to be that by Hsuan-Tsang, at a time when apparently it had already passed its meridian, and was the head of one of the small states into which the
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empire of the White
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Huns had broken up . At a later period Bamian was for
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half a century, ending A.D . 1214, the seat of a branch of the Ghori dynasty, ruling over Tokharistan, or the basin of the Upper Oxus . The place was long besieged, and finally annihilated (1222) by Jenghiz Khan, whose wrath was exasperated at the death of a favourite grandson by an arrow from its walls . There appears to be no further record of Bamian as a city; but the character of ruins at Ghulgulah agrees with traditions on the spot in indicating that the city must have been rebuilt after the time of the
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Mongols and again perished . In 184o, during the
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British occupation of Kabul, Bamian was the scene of an acticn in which Colonel William H . Dennie with a small force routed Dost Mahommed Khan, accompanied by a number of Uzbeg chiefs .

See Hon . M . G . Talbot, " The Rock-cut Caves and Statues of Bamian,"

Journal R . Austral .
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Soc. vol. xviii.
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part 3; and J . A . Gray, At the Court of the Amir (1895) . (T . H .

End of Article: BAMIAN
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