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Archaeological Society of India Museum

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Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Archaeological Society of India Museum
Phone:
+91 631 220 0739

Hours:
Sunday9am - 5pm
Monday9am - 5pm
Tuesday9am - 5pm
Wednesday9am - 5pm
Thursday9am - 5pm
FridayClosed
Saturday9am - 5pm


The Buddhas of Bamiyan were 6th-century monumental statues of Gautam Buddha carved into the side of a cliff in the Bamyan valley in the Hazarajat region of central Afghanistan, 230 kilometres northwest of Kabul at an elevation of 2,500 metres . Built in 507 CE and 554 CE , the statues represented the classic blended style of Gandhara art. They were respectively 35 and 53 m tall.The main bodies were hewn directly from the sandstone cliffs, but details were modeled in mud mixed with straw, coated with stucco. This coating, practically all of which wore away long ago, was painted to enhance the expressions of the faces, hands, and folds of the robes; the larger one was painted carmine red and the smaller one was painted multiple colors.The lower parts of the statues' arms were constructed from the same mud-straw mix supported on wooden armatures. It is believed that the upper parts of their faces were made from great wooden masks or casts. The rows of holes that can be seen in photographs held wooden pegs that stabilized the outer stucco. They were dynamited and destroyed in March 2001 by the Taliban, on orders from leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, after the Taliban government declared that they were idols. An envoy visiting the United States in the following weeks said that they were destroyed to protest international aid exclusively reserved for statue maintenance while Afghanistan was experiencing famine, while the Afghan Foreign Minister claimed that the destruction was merely about carrying out Islamic religious iconoclasm. International opinion strongly condemned the destruction of the Buddhas, which in the following years was primarily viewed as an example of the extreme religious intolerance of the Taliban. Japan and Switzerland, among others, have pledged support for the rebuilding of the statues.
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