Bamiyan Valley




DATE OF INCRIPTION :- 2003



LOCATION :-

Bamiyan Province, Bamiyan District, afghanistan



DESCRIPTION :-




The kingdom of Bamiyan was a Buddhist state positioned at a strategic location along
the trade routes that for centuries linked China
and Central Asia with India and the west.

Many statues of Buddha were carved into the sides of cliffs facing Bamiyan city.
The two most prominent of these statues were standing Buddhas,
measuring 55 and 37 meters high respectively,
that were the largest examples of standing Buddha carvings in the world.
They were probably erected in the 4th or 5th century.

In March 2001, the Afghan Taliban government ordered them to be demolished.

The cultural landscape and archaeological remains of the Bamiyan Valley represent
the artistic and religious developments
which from the 1st to the 13th centuries
characterized ancient Bakhtria,

integrating various cultural influences into the Gandhara school of Buddhist art.
The area contains numerous Buddhist monastic ensembles and sanctuaries,
as well as fortified edifices from the Islamic period.

The site is also testimony to the tragic destruction
by the Taliban of the two standing Buddha statues, which shook the world in March 2001.

Justification for Inscription

Criterion (i): The Buddha statues
and the cave art in Bamiyan Valley are an outstanding representation of
the Gandharan school in Buddhist art in the Central Asian region.

Criterion (ii): The artistic and architectural remains of Bamiyan Valley,
and an important Buddhist centre on the Silk Road,
are an exceptional testimony to the interchange of Indian,
Hellenistic, Roman, Sasanian influences as the basis for the development of
a particular artistic expression in the Gandharan school.
To this can be added the Islamic influence in a later period.

Criterion (iii): The Bamiyan Valley bears an exceptional testimony
to a cultural tradition in the Central Asian region,
which has disappeared.

Criterion (iv): The Bamiyan Valley is an outstanding example of
a cultural landscape which illustrates a significant period in Buddhism.

Criterion (vi): The Bamiyan Valley is the most monumental expression of the western Buddhism.
It was an important centre of pilgrimage over many centuries.
Due to their symbolic values,
the monuments have suffered at different times of their existence,
including the deliberate destruction in 2001, which shook the whole world.


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