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Zehanpora Stupa

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: IT

Subject: Art and Culture

Context: The 2,000-year-old Buddhist stupas and monastic complex at Zehanpora in Baramulla, Kashmir, dating to the Kushan period, have been scientifically excavated.

About Zehanpora Stupa:

What it is?

• The Zehanpora site is a large Kushan-era Buddhist complex comprising multiple stupas, apsidal chaityas (prayer halls), viharas (monk residences), urban-type settlements, and artefacts, spread over nearly 10 acres in Baramulla district, Jammu & Kashmir.

Discovered at:

Zehanpora village, Baramulla district, North Kashmir

• Located along the ancient Silk Route corridor linking Kashmir with Gandhara (Afghanistan–Pakistan region)

History:

• The site dates to the Kushan period (1st–3rd century CE)

• Kashmir was a major centre of Buddhist learning during this time under rulers like Kanishka and Huvishka

• Buddhism in Kashmir began earlier under Ashoka (3rd century BCE) and flourished through Mahayana Buddhism, which later spread to Central Asia and China

• Zehanpora was likely part of the Gandhara Buddhist network, a trans-regional system of monasteries, trade routes and learning centres

Key characteristics of the discovered stupas/structures:

Stupa-like plateau/mounds: The mounds appear as man-made raised platforms, resembling stupa bases that have been reduced by time but remain prominent.

Multiple mounds (clustered layout): The landscape suggests more than one stupa, indicating a complex, not an isolated shrine.

Evidence of superstructure: Indications of a wooden super-structure above the mound(s), implying layered construction.

Scientific mapping & survey: Documentation used drones, remote sensing, aerial photography and ground mapping, indicating the site is structurally dense beyond what is visible on the surface.

Signature-link potential: The excavation narrative highlights comparing construction patterns/circuits/modus features across regional sites.

Significance:

• Experts note no other regional site matches Zehanpora’s scale, making it a key addition to Kashmir’s material history.

• The complex strengthens Kashmir’s position as a hub of Buddhist learning and monastic activity, linked to movement of monks, ideas and pilgrims.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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