Bangladesh has many ancient secrets. Wari Bateshwar, this has slowly
revealed itself as an ancient, pre Common Era, flourishing centre of trade and
industry, Egarasindhur, which when exploratorily excavated in the 1930s gave up
artefacts not dissimilar to those being unearthed at Wari, and the ancient city
of Mahasthangarh, amongst them.
At the modern mouth of the Ganges/Padma, according to 16th
Century visitors, once stood the ‘flourishing Emporium of trade’ ,with a large
ship building industry, Sripur, apparently eroded away by the Ganges, and on
the opposite bank, the ancient city of Vikrampur. Once the capital of
flourishing Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms, this ancient city, too, is said to
have been eroded away, and the communities left, known as Munshiganj.
All is not, it seems, as believed. Travelling towards Munshiganj, which
local inhabitants still like to call Vikrampur, in the company of Professor
S.M. Rahman, who has ploughed the lonely furrow to uncover the wonders of Wari
Bateshwar over the past decade and a half, he told me,’ over a huge area, 13 or
17 Unions, wherever you put a spade in the ground, the first 12 or 18 inches
are farmland, then you reach the archaeology’.
It is hard to imagine, but taken to visit half a dozen widely dispersed
pits, you begin to understand. Bricks. Bricks everywhere, dated at 6th
or 7th Century CE, together with fragments of real rock, basalt,
granite and sandstone, probably from sculpture working, and pieces of
architectural stonework. That there is, beneath the soil of this verdant
farmland, the remains of a great community, there is no doubting. And this, we
know, is the city from which Atish Depanker, the, so called, ‘Second Buddha’,
left the university of which he was master, with over 8,000 students from
across the known world, to head to Tibet to restore Buddhism in that troubled country
in the middle of the eleventh century.
Not so hard to believe that, when you see the extent of the remains. And
the colourful Pagoda erected by the Chinese Government to commemorate him is at
least one contemporary piece of supporting evidence.
It would take years to fully appreciate all that is on the site, but
what can a small, dedicated, well led and motivated team of students do,
lacking support and resources, to reveal one of the ancient world’s great
cities?
The prize, in Bangladesh, of course, is not just the archaeology.
Rather, it is another part of the foundation of extraordinary archaeology for
developing a sustainable tourism industry which the country so badly needs to
support its social and economic development, and has so much to give to the
tourist, not just in its extraordinary and rich past, and its world leading
poverty alleviation and development programmes of the present, such as Grameen
and BRAC, but its extraordinary natural environment, and diversity of peoples
and cultures.
It has been the work of such as Professor Rahman that has confirmed what
some suspected, that it wasn’t desperation that brought to the lands of
Bangladesh such as Portuguese, Dutch, French, British and Danish trading
companies in the 16th and 17th Centuries, it was their
sure knowledge of a rich and flourishing centre of trade between the lands of
Central and East Asia, and the rest of the world, for over two thousand years.
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