Dunhuang Caves In China
Dunhuang Caves In China

Dunhuang and the Cave of Manuscripts
Dunhuang has 492 caves, with 45,000 square meters of frescos, 2, 415 painted statues and five wooden-structured caves.
The Mogao Grottoes contain priceless paintings, sculptures, some 50,000 Buddhist scriptures, historical documents, textiles, and other relics that first stunned the world in the early 1900s.
Dunhuang is an oasis town in Chinese Central Asia west of Xian, a former capital of China.
To the west of Dunhuang lies the Taklamakan Desert.
The silk road coming from the west split to follow the northern and
southern borders of the desert where there were many small oases.
Dunhuang was the town where the two branches of the silk road
rejoined for the final leg into China's capital.
The cave-temples near the town of Dunhuang form what is arguably the
world's most extraordinary gallery of Buddhist art: a gallery whose
magnificent mural paintings and stucco sculptures were not collected from
distant sources but were created in situ over a period of nearly a thousand
years. Moreover, one particular cave contained a sealed library whose
contents, consisting of written documents, silk paintings and woodblock
prints, reflect contacts with every major Buddhist centre of both Central
Asia and the Chinese empire.
The town was founded by Emperor Wudi of the
Han dynasty in 111 BC as one of the four garrison commanderies
which assured Chinese control over the trade routes to the
western regions. For several hundred years after the collapse of
the Han empire (206 BC-220 AD), the area was subjected to
successive waves of invasions, which often caused great
upheaval. For example, in 439, conquest of the area by the
Northern Wei (386-535) led to a relocation of thirty thousand of
its inhabitants to the dynastic capital in Shanxi province.
In 781,
during the Tang dynasty (618-906), Dunhuang surrendered to the
Tibetans after ten years' resistance. When Chinese rule was
restored in 848, one local family assumed power, to be followed in
the tenth century by other powerful clans. Dunhuang was last
considered a place of importance when it was under the control of
the Western Xia kingdom (990-1227) and the Mongol Yuan
dynasty (1271-1368).
From the time of the Han to the end of the Yuan, a most important
trade route developed from China to the West, which later became
known by the marvelously evocative name, The Silk Road. The
ancient traveler leaving China along this road would pass through
Dunhuang before braving the many hazards of the journey
westwards through East Turkestan (present-day Xinjiang).
Dunhuang has a special place in history because of its location
close to the parting of the northern and southern routes that
skirted the impassable Taklamakan desert.
Silk was traded along
this seven thousand kilometre braid of caravan trails from China
right across Asia to the eastern Roman empire on the shores of
the Mediterranean, and also to south Asia. Persian and Sogdian
merchants travelled the whole length, and were such familiar sights
in the Chinese capitals Chang'an (present-day Xi'an) and Luoyang
that they can frequently be found, for example, portrayed on
Tang dynasty figurines.
This route was also used by Buddhist
monks from China and Korea traveling west in search of images
and scriptures, and by ambassadors and princes from the west
making the long journey to China. It was by means of the Silk Road
that all manner of exotic imports reached China, as diplomatic gifts
or through trade, and mainly in exchange for silks: vessels made of
gold and silver and the techniques for working these metals; fine
glass; fragrances and spices; exotic animals such as lions and
ostriches; new fruits such as grapes; dancers, musicians and their
instruments.
After the splendours of the Tang dynasty, however, trade along
the Silk Road was severely curtailed, and Dunhuang was left in
isolation. Later trade between China and Europe was entirely by
sea. By the late nineteenth century, with the decline of Chinese
imperial power, the whole of Central Asia, including Dunhuang, was
a political void which invited foreign interest from many sides,
including Britain, France, Germany, Russia and Japan. This provided
the opportunity for the "rediscovery" of ancient cultures and
treasures along the trade routes.
It was not just merchandise, technology and culture that passed
along the Silk Road. From the early centuries AD, learned monks
from the monastic centres of Central Asia imparted their
knowledge and interpretations of the scriptures to their Chinese
counterparts by way of these trade routes.
Representatives of
Zoroastrianism, the ancient Persian dualist religion, and of
Nestorianism, an Eastern Christian sect, also reached China and
established themselves there.
Founded in the sixth century BC, Buddhism soon began expanding
northwards from the foothills of the Himalayas. In the third century
BC, under its most influential convert, the Indian emperor Asoka, it
was dispersed by missionaries across Central Asia, where it
remained dominant for about a thousand years, until invaders in
the seventh century AD brought in Islam.
In China itself, Buddhism
was introduced probably as early as the first century BC, with
communities of Buddhist monks in existence by the first century
AD. Learned Buddhist monks became valued as palace advisors,
and it was through imperial and aristocratic patronage that
Buddhism made its first substantial progress in the empire.
Because of its vitally important position on the Silk Road, virtually
every stage of this progress is chronicled in the caves at
Dunhuang.
Mogao Grottoes
Northern end of the Mogao cliff face, pitted with caves for shelter
The Mogao Grottoes of Dunhuang, popularly known as the Thousand Buddha Caves, were carved out of the rocks stretching for about 1,600 meters along the eastern side of the Mingsha Hill, 25 km southeast of Dunhuang.
A Tang Dynasty inscription records that the first cave in the Mogao Grottoes was made in 366 A.D. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) listed the Mogao Grottoes on the World Heritage List in 1987.
Despite erosion and man-made destruction, the 492 caves are well preserved, with frescoes covering an area of 45,000 square metres, more than 2,000 colored sculptured figures and five wooden eaves overhanging the caves.
Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara
According to archaeologists, it is the greatest and most consummate repository of Buddhist art in the world.
Heavenly Being
Many pavilions, towers, temples, pagodas, palaces, courtyards, towns and bridges in the murals provide valuable materials for the study of Chinese architecture. Other paintings depict Chinese and foreign musical performances, dancing and acrobatics.
The 'Cave for Preserving Scriptures', was discovered by a Taoist monk Wang Yuanlu in 1900. The cave contains more than 50,000 sutras, documents and paintings covering a period from the 4th to the 11th centuries. It was one of China's most significant archaeological finds. These precious relics are of great historical and scientific value.
Detail from the Procession of Zhang Yichao
In 1961 the Grottoes were listed by the State Council as one of China's key historical and cultural sites. Repairs were carried out from 1963 to 1965.
Between 1906 and 1919 the Dunhuang grottoes was looted. Much of the Hand-copied ancient books, manuscripts, literary works, Buddhist and secular decorative art works, and ancient manuscripts were removed by Aurel Stein, Paul Pelliot, Sergei Feodorovich Oldenburg and other archaeologists.
Chinese scholars such as Luo Zhenyu and Wang Guowei cultivated the study of Dunhuang culture by publishing a number of books in 1910. The Dunhuang Art Academy was established by Chang Shuhong later.
The site lay empty and ignored until a secret sealed-up cave was
discovered at the end of the 19th century. It was crammed with ancient
manuscripts and printed documents. Its discovery coincided with a period
of great international archaeological research in the area and
Sir Aurel Stein was the first to gain access in 1907. Thereafter
archaeologists from France, Russia and China were drawn to Dunhuang
and the great majority of manuscripts and documents from this one cave
are now in Beijing, Paris, London and St. Petersburg. Documents and
paintings from other Silk Road towns are to be found more widely in
museums and libraries throughout Europe and Asia.
Apart from 14,000 paper scrolls and fragments from this cave at Dunhuang,
the British Library Stein collection includes several thousand woodslips
and woodslip fragments with Chinese writing, thousands of Tibetan and
Tangut manuscripts, Prakrit wooden tablets in Brahmi and Kharosthi
scripts, along with documents in Khotanese, Uighur, Sogdian and Eastern
Turkic. All this material is included in The International Dunhuang Project
and will be entered onto the Project database.
Heavenly wonder of ancient China goes on show
Ananova - May 2004
A Chinese star chart possibly dating from the 7th century AD mapped the heavens with an accuracy unsurpassed until the Renaissance, according to research.
The Dunhuang chart is the oldest manuscript star map in the
world and one of the most valuable treasures in astronomy.
The fine paper scroll, measuring 210 by 25 centimetres,
(82 by 10 inches) displays no less than 1,345 stars
grouped in 257 non-constellation patterns.
Such detail was not matched until Galileo and other
European astronomers began searching the skies
hundreds of years later - and they had the advantage of
telescopes.
The chart includes very faint stars that are extremely
difficult to find with the naked eye. It also represents the
sky as a sphere projected on a cylinder, a modern
technique first adopted in Europe in the 15th century.
The first part of the document consists of a collection of
predictions based on shapes of clouds - evidence of the
important role divination played in ancient China.
Dr Francoise Praderie, from the Paris Observatory, who
studied the map with fellow French astronomer Dr
Jean-Marc Bonnet-Bidaud, said: "The origin of the star
chart's manufacture and real use remains unknown. One
can conjecture that it was used for military and travellers'
needs and probably also for uranomancy - divination by
consulting the heavens - as suggested by the cloud
divination texts preceding the charts.
"The long tradition in China of searching the sky for
celestial omens has therefore led to an early and
unsurpassed precision in star catalogues."
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