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Taxila: Sirkap (1)
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Map of Taxila
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Taxila (Old Indian Takshaçila):
the ancient capital of the eastern Punjab, the country between the
rivers Indus
and Hydaspes.
The site consists of several parts, which belong to three periods:
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The second city at Taxila
is called Sirkap, which means "severed head" and is the name of a mythological
demon that is said to have lived on this site. It devoured human flesh
and was killed by the hero Rasalu. Sirkap was founded by the Bactrian
king Demetrius, who conquered this region in the 180's BCE. The city was rebuilt
by king Menander. A satellite photo can be seen here.
Demetrius thought of himself as a Greek and built the city on the Hippodamaean
plan, that is: like a gridiron. Taxila's
sanctuaries
reflect the multicultural nature of the Indo-Greek kingdom, which consisted not only
of the Punjab, but also of Gandara,
(i.e., the valley of the Kabul
and Swat),
Arachosia,
and a part of the Ganges valley. Greek religious practices, Zoroastrian
cults, Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism are all known from second-century
Taxila. (For example, there was a Zoroastrian sanctuary at Jandial,
which looks just like a Greek temple.) |
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Archaeologists have identified seven strata:
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A suburb of Bhir
mound; sixth-third century BCE;
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The first, Demetrian phase of the Greek city, early second century BCE;
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The second, Menandrian phase of the Greek city, late second century BCE;
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The first phase of the Saca period, beginning ca. 90 BCE;
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The second phase of the Saca period (picture, bottom),
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The last phase of the Saca period, until an earthquake in ca. 30 CE (picture,
center);
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The Parthian
period (picture, thin layer at the top).
Strata 4-6 are sometimes labeled "Indo-Scythian".
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The modern visitor sees the sixth phase and its reconstruction
by the Parthian king Gondophares, which is sometimes called "Indo-Parthian". The excavated area is large: about 1200
meters long and 400 wide. The wall that surrounded the city, built in phase
5, appears to have had a height of 6-10 meters, was 5-7 meters wide, and almost 4,800 meters
long. This picture shows the northern gate.
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The walls are made from coursed rubble masonry, which is characteristic
for the Greek and Saca periods. Immediately behind the gate was, as one
could have expected, a guard room. |
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The
main road of Sirkap: a straight line, dividing the 1200 m long town
into two halves. The private houses were constructed of rubble
masonry covered with lime or mud plaster. Usually, they had a small
court,
a second floor and a flat roof. After the earthquake that marks the
break between the Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian periods,
many houses were rebuilt with stronger walls and deeper foundations.
Currently
hardly visible, the palace is to the left.
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A Greek visitor, whose description of Taxila was included in the Life
of Apollonius by Philostratus,
says that the houses gave the impression of having one storey, but had in
fact basement rooms. This visitor may indeed have been the neo-pythagorean
philosopher Apollonius
of Tyana; at least Philostratus believed that the subject of his vie
romancée had visited the Punjab, and much information appears
to be correct. That the palace of Taxila was small, that there was a Sun
temple, that there was a temple in front of the walls (Jandial),
that the streets were as small as those of Athens - it has all shown to
be correct.
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©
Jona Lendering for
Livius.Org,
2004
Revision: 28 May 2008 |
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