A view of the Gandhara Research and Resource Centre near Taxila — Photos by the writer
TAXILA: Modern day Taxila was once the cradle of the Gandhara civilisation, famous as a centre of learning for sculpture and art, architecture, education, medicine and religion, and home to one of the oldest recognised universities in the world.
According to experts on Gandhara’s history, there were at one stage more than 10,000 students from Babylon, Greece, Syria and China learning languages, Vedas, philosophy, medicine, politics, warfare, accounts, commerce, documentation, music, dance and other performing arts, futurology, the occult, science and mathematics from monks, until the city was destroyed in the 5th century.
Students enrolled at Taxila university, now known Julian monastery, at the age of 16 and were taught in different faculties according to their intellectual ability, interests and capability. They were even taught archery, hunting and elephant lore, along with law, medicine and military science.
Panini, the great Sanskirt grammarian and author of a famous book on Sanskrit grammar used to teach here, while Ashtadhyayi lived and taught at Taxila university.
Charaka, the physician considered the father of Indian medicine because of his contribution to the development of Ayurveda, was also an alumnus.