Mankiala

Mankiala (Urdu: مانكياله; also known as Manikyala and Manikiyala) is a village in the Potohar plateau, Punjab near Rawalpindi, Pakistan, known for the nearby Mankiala stupa - a Buddhist stupa located at the site where, according to legend, Buddha sacrificed some of his body parts to feed seven hungry tiger cubs.[1]

Mankiala
مانكياله
Village
Mankiala stupa is located in the nearby village of Tope Mankiala
Mankiala
مانكياله
Mankiala
مانكياله
Coordinates: 33.2652°N 73.1436°E / 33.2652; 73.1436
Country Pakistan
ProvincePunjab (Pakistan)
DistrictRawalpindi
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
Relic deposits from the Mankiala stupa in the British Museum

Location

Mankiala is located 36 km southeast of Islamabad, near the Rawat Fort.[1] It is situated along the Kallar Syedan Road.

Etymology

The town is said to be named after Raja Man or Manik, who is said to have built the village's stupa during the Buddhist era.[2]

The village is said to have been previously known as Manikpur or Maniknagar, and was capital of the ancient Hindu Rakshasas.[2] However, archaeological evidence does not support the conclusion that Manikpur was the capital of the Rakshasas,[2] and that the village's ruins were built during the Buddhist-era.[2]

Background

Mankiala Stupa is a Gandhara era stupa built in the nearby village of Tope Mankiala to memorialize the place where, according to legend, an earlier incarnation of Buddha sacrificed some of his body parts or his entire body to feed seven hungry tiger cubs.[1][3]

History

The stupa in 1897.

Mankiala dates from the Gandharan era, around 2000 years ago. The village had been previously described as the former grand capital of the mythological Rakshasas, though no archaeological evidence supports the theory of Mankiala serving as an ancient Hindu capital, and instead suggests that the area's ruins date from the Buddhist period.[2] The settlement during the Buddhist era may have consisted of approximately 2,000 homes, interspersed with monasteries and 15 stupas.[2] The archaeological site is believed to be on the same hillock where the modern village now stands.[2]

Mankiala's stupa was built in the reign of Kanishka (128-151 CE).[1] The ancient settlement is believed to have been destroyed by fire,[2] though there is no indication that it was purposely destroyed.[2]

Mountstuart Elphinstone, the first British emissary to Afghanistan chanced upon this stupa in 1808 AD and penned a detailed account in his memoir 'Kingdom of Caubul' (1815). According to an inscription on a stone the stupa was restored in 1891 by a regiment of the British Indian Army. Raja Usman was architect.

Relics from stupa

Mankiala stupa's relic deposits were all removed from the site during British colonial rule, and are all now housed in the British Museum, were found by Jean-Baptiste Ventura in 1830 between 10 and 20 metres below the top of the dome. They were at one stage owned by the celebrated antiquarian James Prinsep.[4]

The mouth of the stupa has a gaping hole as a result of excavations by relic hunters in the past. It now has a barrier around it for safety reasons.[1]

Transportation

Road

Mankiala is located along the Kallar Syedan Road, which connects the city to Kallar Syedan, and the N-5 National Highway that provides access to Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

Rail

Mankiala railway station is served by the Karachi–Peshawar Railway Line.

gollark: Maybe you meant per minute.
gollark: Half an hour is in fact 1800 seconds.
gollark: This worries me.
gollark: Also, the only APL in my distro's package repos is "GNU APL" which is apparently bad.
gollark: APL is incomprehensible squiggles of incomprehensibility.

See also

References

  1. Islamabad Tourist Treasures, Government of Pakistan, Islamabad Pg 1
  2. Punjab District Gazetteers: Rawalpindi District (v. 28-A). 1907. p. 34. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  3. Golden Light Sutra 18.
  4. The British Museum Collection


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.