HERITAGE: THE ART OF GANDHARA
A treasure trove of artefacts belonging to the ancient Gandhara civilisation that existed from the middle of the first millennium BCE to the beginning of the second millennium CE, in what is present-day northern Pakistan and Afghanistan, were unearthed from the 3,000-year-old epic city known as Takshashila, Taksasila or the modern Taxila and are housed in the National Museum in Karachi.
The history of Gandhara shows political rule of multiple dynasties over the centuries. Being a strategically located city and the centre of ancient trade routes, Taxila suffered repeated ownership conflict and was destroyed and rebuilt multiple times. However, the artefacts discovered from the excavated ancient site of Taxila show a remarkable uniformity of native cultural traditions that persisted through the Achaemenid, Greek, Mauryan, Indo-Greek, Scythian, Parthian, Kushan, Han and Hindu dynasties, up to the Muslim conquest in the beginning of the mediaeval period.
A rich collection of relics housed in the National Museum in Karachi depicts the Gandharan civilisation’s complex cultural history as well as its evolving artistic traditions
The Greek historian Arrian speaks of Taxila as one of the most flourishing among the cities that lay between the River Indus and Hydaspes (presently Jhelum) at the time of Alexander the Great. Strabo, the Greek geographer, philosopher and historian who lived in south-western Asia during the transitional period of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire, tells us that Taxila was thickly populated and extremely fertile, as the mountains gradually subsided into plains. Another Greek historian, biographer and essayist, Plutarch, remarked on the richness of the soil. Buddhist pilgrim and seventh-century traveller Hsiian Tsang also writes in a similar strain of the land’s fertility, its rich harvests, flowing streams and luxuriant vegetation.