
Towards the Southeast
of Patna, the Capital City of Bihar State in India, is
a village called the 'Bada Gaon', in the vicinity of which,
are the world famous ruins of Nalanda University.
Founded in the 5th Century A.D., Nalanda is known as the ancient
seat of learning. 2,000 Teachers and 10,000 Students from
all over the Buddhist world lived and studied at Nalanda,
the first Residential International University of the World.
A walk in the ruins of the university, takes you to an era,
that saw India leading in imparting knowledge, to the world
- the era when India was a coveted place for studies. The
University flourished during the 5th and 12th century.
Although Nalanda is one of the places distinguished as having
been blessed by the presence of the Buddha, it later became
particularly renowned as the site of the great monastic university
of the same name , which was to become the crown jewel of
the development of Buddhism in India. The name may derive
from one of Shakyamuni's former births , when hewas a king
whose capital was here. Nalanda was one of his epithets
meaning "insatiable in giving."
This place saw the rise and fall of many empires and emperors
who contributed in the development of Nalanda University.
Many monasteries and temples were built by them. Kingarshwardhana
gifted a 25m high copper statue of Buddha and Kumargupta endowed
a college of fine arts ere. Nagarjuna- a Mahayana philosopher,
Dinnaga- founder of the school of Logic and Dharmpala- the
Brahmin scholar, taught here.
The famous Chinese traveller and scholar,Hieun-Tsang stayed
here and has given a detailed description of the situations
prevailing at that time. Careful excavation of the place has
revealed many stupas, monasteries,hostels,stair cases,meditation
halls, lecture halls and many other structures which speak
of the splendour and grandeur this place enjoyed,when the
place was a centre of serious study.
A large number of ancient Buddhist establishments, stupas,
chaityas, temples and monastery sites have been excavated
and they show that this was one of the most important Buddhist
centres of worship and culture.Regarding the historicity of
Nalanda, we read in Jaina texts that Mahavira Vardhamana spent
as many as fourteen rainy seasons in Nalanda.
Pali Buddhist Literature , too, has ample references to Nalanda,
which used to be visited by Lord Buddha. During the days of
Mahavira and Buddha,Nalanda was apparently a very prosperous
temple city, a great place of pilgrimage and the site of a
celebrated university. It is said that King Asoka gave offerings
to the Chaitya of Sariputra at Nalanda and erected a temple
there.Taranath mentions this and also that Nagarjuna, the
famous Mahayana philosopher of the second century A.D., studied
at Nalanda. Nagarjuna later became the high-priest there.
The Gupta kings patronised these monasteries, built in old
Kushan architectural style, in a row of cells around a courtyard. Ashoka
and Harshavardhana were some of its most celebrated patrons
who built temples and monasteries here. Recent excavations
have unearthed elaborate structures here. Hiuen Tsang had
left ecstatic accounts of both the ambiance and architectureof
this unique university of ancient times.
Modern historians have tentatively dated the founding of a
monastery at Nalanda as being in the fifth century.However,
this may not be accurate. For example,the standard biographiesof
the teacher Nagarjuna, believed by most historians to have
been born around 150 AD, are quite specific about his having
received ordination at Nalanda monastery when he was seven
years old. Further, his teacher Rahulabhadra is said to have
lived there for some time before that. We may infer that there
were a monastery or monasteries at Nalanda long before the
foundation of the later Great Mahavihara.
At the time Hsuan Chwang stayed at Nalanda and studied with
the abbot Shilabhadra, it was already a flourishing centre
of learning. In many ways it seems to have been like a modern
university. There was a rigorous oral entry examination conducted
by erudite gatekeepers, and many students were turned away.To
study or to have studied at Nalanda was a matter of great
prestige. However, no degree was granted nor was a specific
period of study required. The monks' time, measured by a water
clock, was divided between study and religious rites and practice.There
were schools of study in which students received explanations
by discourse, and there were also schools of debate, where
the mediocre were often humbled, and the conspicuously talented
distinguished. Accordingly, the elected abbot was generally
the most learned man of the time.
The libraries were vast and widely renowned, although there
is a legend of a malicious fire in which many of the texts
were destroyed and irrevocably lost.
During the Gupta age,the practice and study of the mahayana,
especially the madhyamaka, flourished. However, from 750 AD,
in the Pala age, there was an increase in the study and propagation
of the tantric teachings.This is evidenced by the famous pandit
Abhayakaragupta, a renowned tantric practitioner who was simultaneously
abbot of the Mahabodhi, Nalanda and Vikramashila monasteries.
Also Naropa, later so important to the tantric lineages of
the Tibetan traditions, was abbot of Nalanda in the years
1049-57.
Much of the tradition of Nalanda had been carried into Tibet
by the time of the Muslim invasions of the twelfth century.
While the monasteries of Odantapuri and Vikramashila were
then destroyed, the buildings at Nalanda do not seem to have
suffered extensive damage at that time, although most of the
monks fled before the desecrating armies. In 1235 the Tibetan
pilgrim Chag Lotsawa found a 90 year old teacher, Rahula Shribhadra,
with a class of seventy students. Rahula Shribhadra managed
to survive through the support of a local brahmin and did
not leave until he had completed educating his last Tibetan
student.
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