The document discusses the Mogao Grottoes located near Dunhuang, China, which house centuries of Buddhist art along the ancient Silk Road. Over a thousand years, monks carved hundreds of shrines into the cliff face that now contain around 2,000 clay Buddha statues and 50,000 square meters of wall paintings depicting the cultural exchange along the Silk Road from the 4th to 14th centuries. The grottoes are now threatened by erosion and require preservation efforts.
The document discusses the Mogao Grottoes located near Dunhuang, China, which house centuries of Buddhist art along the ancient Silk Road. Over a thousand years, monks carved hundreds of shrines into the cliff face that now contain around 2,000 clay Buddha statues and 50,000 square meters of wall paintings depicting the cultural exchange along the Silk Road from the 4th to 14th centuries. The grottoes are now threatened by erosion and require preservation efforts.
The document discusses the Mogao Grottoes located near Dunhuang, China, which house centuries of Buddhist art along the ancient Silk Road. Over a thousand years, monks carved hundreds of shrines into the cliff face that now contain around 2,000 clay Buddha statues and 50,000 square meters of wall paintings depicting the cultural exchange along the Silk Road from the 4th to 14th centuries. The grottoes are now threatened by erosion and require preservation efforts.
The document discusses the Mogao Grottoes located near Dunhuang, China, which house centuries of Buddhist art along the ancient Silk Road. Over a thousand years, monks carved hundreds of shrines into the cliff face that now contain around 2,000 clay Buddha statues and 50,000 square meters of wall paintings depicting the cultural exchange along the Silk Road from the 4th to 14th centuries. The grottoes are now threatened by erosion and require preservation efforts.
Cave temples along the ancient Silk Road document the cultural and religious transformations of a millennium. Researchers are striving to preserve these endangered statues and paintings by Neville Agnew and Fan Jinshi MOGAO, near the city of Dunhuang, was a vibrant way station on the Silk Road, a place for travelers and merchants to rest and to worship. Depicted here during the middle of the Tang dynasty (618 to 907 C.E.), the oasis was a lively haven for caravans emerging from the surrounding deserts. As pivotal points along the great trade route, Mogao and Dunhuang were sites of immense cultural, religious and material exchange. Buddhist practitioners prayed in the caves that they carved into the cliff face and hung ceremonial banners to decorate them, while pilgrims prepared for the journey east to Beijing or west toward the Mediterranean. Treasures at Dunhuang Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. R O B E R T O
O S T I Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. Scientific American Month 1997 1 ROME ALEXANDRIA QUILON BUKHARA HAMADAN GUANGZHOU TYRE BAGHDAD REY MARY SAMARKAND KASHI SHACHE BARBARICUM HOTAN DUNHUANG XIAN ANXI BEIJING TURPAN ANTIOCH ENCROACHING SAND threatens the Mogao Grottoes (above) as it pours over the cliff face. The reinforced concrete facade (right), built in the 1960s, strengthens some of the grottoes that have been eroded by wind and weakened by earthquakes. As the map of the Silk Road (below) shows, Dunhuang sat on the very outskirts of China, at the point where the two arms of the trade network joined after circling the deadly Takla Makan Desert. 40C Scientific American July 1997 G E T T Y
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G R A C E Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. CELESTIAL DEITIES, called apsarasas, painted on this grotto ceiling date from the Western Wei dy- nasty (535 to 542 C.E.). N E V I L L E
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Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. Title goes here, please DESERT ENVIRONMENT stretches in all di- rections around the Daquan River, which provides the water for Mogao. The Ming- sha Dunes can be seen in the far distance; directly in front of them, next to the river, lie the trees and the cliff face, honey- combed with grottoes. WORSHIPING BODDHISATTVAS adorn Cave 328. These statues, from the high Tang, are covered with the ne dust that blows down from the Ming- sha Dunes, obscuring the sculptures and the wall paintings. Scientific American July 1997 41 O ne thousand nine hundred kilometers due west of Bei- jing, on the edge of both the Gobi and the Takla Makan deserts, sits one of the worlds most important cul- tural gateways. The city of Dunhuang which means blazing beaconrepre- sented the last oasis for Chinese travel- ers setting out for the West along the northern or southern arm of the Silk Road. The two routes skirted the dead- ly Takla Makan Desert, joining again on the far side at Kashi (1,600 kilome- ters to the west). For travelers coming to the East, the two forts of Dunhuang the Jade Gate, or Yumen Barrier, and the Yang Barriermeant successful passage around the Takla Makan, where the way was marked by the bleached bones of camels, horses and unfortunate voy- agers. This fortied outpost formed the furthermost extension of the Great Wall of China. From the fourth through the 14th century, the 7,500-kilometer Silk Road linked China to Rome and to every place in between, including Tibet, In- dia, Turkestan, Afghanistan and the Arabian Peninsula. The roadits name coined by the 19th-century explorer Baron Ferdinand von Richthofenwas more than a trade route. It was the rst information highway, spanning a quar- ter of the circumference of the globe and virtually the entire known world at that time. Out of the Middle Kingdom came the astonishing riches and techno- logical innovations of China: silk, ce- ramics, furs and, later, paper and gun- powder; from the West came cotton, spices, grapes, wine and glass. Art and ideas moved along with these goods, G E T T Y
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I N S T I T U T E Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. goods, back and forth along the bandit- rid-den trail, transforming vastly differ- ent cultures. It was along the Silk Road that Bud- dhism, which originated in India in the 6th century B.C.E., traveled to China. The full owering of this religion is powerfully evident in the rock temples near the town of Dunhuang. Around 360 C.E., Buddhist pilgrims journeying through Dunhuang began to carve caves in a 1,600-meter-long cliff, 25 kilome- ters southeast of the city. In these soft sandstone and conglomerate rock grot- toes, the worshipers built shrines, lodg- ings and places for sacred works and art; they also made offerings and prayed for safe passage. Over the next 10 cen- turies, monks carved hundreds of shrines in the rock, honeycombing the cliff face. Some 490 of these grottoes remain today, home to 2,000 or so clay statues of the Buddha and 50,000 square me- ters of wall paintings. These works of art reect the changes of 10 periods and dynasties, including the Tang (618 to 907 C.E.)which, in its middle period, marked the full unfolding of Chinese art and culture. The murals from the high Tang document the daily life of the many people from all social classes who passed through and lived in Dunhuang; those from earlier periods depict a some- what austere Buddhism. The paintings also record trade, manufacturing prac- tices, customs, legends and sutras (sa- cred prayers). And they show the trans- formation of Indian Buddhism into its Chinese form: Chinese myths and pat- terns are gradually incorporated into Indian iconography, until a purely Chi- nese Buddhist art emerges. These Mogao Grottoes, as they are called, represent the largest col- lection of Buddhist mural art in China and an unsurpassed repository of information about life in ancient China and along the Silk Road. The Silk Road closed dur- ing the 15th century as the Takla Makan oases dried up, no longer replenished by reced- ing glacial streams of the Qilian Mountains, and as invaders swept through the region, converting large parts to Islam. Much of Dunhuangs Buddhist legacy remained intact be- cause of its location. Indeed, the citys physical isolation often proved its salvation. During the two eras when Buddhists were persecuted by KNEELING FIGURE from the middle Tang resides in Cave 384. Statues such as this one provide detailed infor- mation about the costumes of medieval China. R U
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C h i n a S t o c k Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. Chinese emperorsin 446, by the Em- peror Wu, and in 845, by the Emperor WuzongDunhuang proved too re- mote from the center of power to be much affected. This also held true dur- ing the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s. (Although Tibetans conquered the city twice, in 781 and again in the early 16th century, the invaders revered the site and worshiped there. Their styl- istic inuence can be seen in some of the caves.) At the turn of this century, however, foreign devils in the form of archae- ologists began the systematic discovery and removal of the cultural heritage of the Silk Road. These men embarked on a frenzied race to gather as many arti- facts as they could transport. Among the most renowned of them were Swed- ish explorer Sven Hedin, Parisian Paul Pelliot, Harvard Universitys Langdon Warner, and Aurel Stein, a Hungarian- born British collector. Stein arrived on the scene in 1907. He had apparently heard of the site from the rst known Western visitorsfellow Hungarian count Bela Szechenyi and his two com- panions, who had made their way there in 1878. Stein is most reviled by contemporary Chinese scholars for carting off the 7,000 ancient Buddhist texts and paint- ings that are now housed in the British Museumincluding the earliest known book, a block-print version of the Dia- mond Sutra from 868 C.E. These manu- scripts were taken from Cave 17, a li- brary that had been sealed around 1000 C.E. and only rediscovered in the early 1900s by a resident Taoist priest, Wang Yuanlu. Wang fell victim to Steins per- suasion, and later Pelliots, secretly sell- ing off manuscripts for a pittance, which he used to restore the rock-cut temples. (Other less signicant texts that were removed include model apol- ogies for a drunken guest to send to his host of the previous evening, along with the appropriate response from the host.) By the time China was nally closed to foreign archaeologists in the mid-1920s, the European explorers had removed not only many thousands of texts but Chinas Buddhist Treasures at Dunhuang Scientific American July 1997 43 COLLAPSED CEILING of Cave 460 is indicative of the weakness of the soft sandstone and conglomerate rock of the grottoes, which have been thinned over time by erosion. THE GREAT MONASTERY at Mount Wutai in Shanxi Province is depicted in this wall painting from the Five Dynasties period (907960 C.E.), found in Cave 61. Mogao has 50,000 square meters of wall paintings. N E V I L L E
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G e t t y C o n s e r v a t i o n I n s t i t u t e Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. also statues and even some of the wall paintings themselves. These are now held by many major institutions in Eu- rope, India, Japan and the U.S. Today the threats to the Mogao Grot- toes are of a different nature, originating in the immediate surroundings. Over the years, constant winds have eroded the cliff, and sand has cascaded down the face, covering the entrances, partly lling the grottoes and obscuring both the sculpture and the wall paintings with a ne dust. Where moisture from rain and snow has seeped in through the cracks and holes, the paintings have deteriorated, and the clay plaster on which they were painted has separated from the rock face. The weak conglom- erate sandstone has been extensively fractured during earthquakes, most re- cently in 1933, and entire grottoes have collapsed. Visitors have taken their toll as well. In older times, passersby would light res in the caves, coating the paintings with soot. More recently, a steady stream of tourists has introduced hu- midity into the caves, threatening the fading pigments and eroding the oor tiles, some of them 1,000 years old. Mo- gao was opened to the public in 1980, and more ights to Dunhuangs enlarged airport have resulted in a rapid increase in tourism to the area. Dunhuang has been transformed from an ancient town into a modern city as new hotels have mushroomed. Since 1988 the Getty Conservation Institute in Los Angeles has worked with the Dunhuang Academy and the State Bureau of Cultural Relics of China to help conserve the famous site, which UNESCO designated a World Heritage Site in 1987. Together scientists and preservationists from the academy and the Getty, aided by members of other Chinese research organizations, have built ve-kilometer-long windbreak fences. These barriers, made with both synthetic fabrics and desert-adapted plants, stand above the grottoes to re- duce the amount of sand being blown over the cliff face. Previously, 2,000 cu- Chinas Buddhist Treasures at Dunhuang 44 Scientific American July 1997 EVER PRESENT SAND had to be constantly brushed and carted away (above), until researchers designed ve-kilometer-long fences (right) to contain the sand above Mogao. To stabilize the sand still more, they planted vegetation adapted to the desertincluding Tamarix chinensis, Haloxylon ammodendron, Calligonum arborescens and Hedysarum scoparium(inset). PRESERVATION includes monitoring paintings to see if the pigment is fading or has changed in hue, sometimes even from white to black (right). Scientists also track heat, humidity and other atmospheric parameters on the cliff (far right). Information on changes in the internal environment can be used to determine how many visitors can enter the caves and for how long a period. G E T T Y
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G e t t y C o n s e r v a t i o n I n s t i t u t e Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc. bic meters of sand had to be removed from outside the caves annually. The fences have cut this volume by 60 per- cent; dust lters and seals have been tted on the doors to the caves to pro- tect against the sand that is still blown down. To strengthen the caves, scien- tists are measuring cracks, particularly the large ones that intersect the rock of several caves, and are planning to pin and stabilize them. To monitor environmental conditions and their impacts on the site, research- ers have installed a solar-powered mete- orological station on the cliff face. The equipment records baseline data such as wind speed and direction, solar radi- ation, humidity and precipitation. Vari- ous substations in selected caves record relative humidity, carbon dioxide, tem- perature as well as the number of visi- tors. Readings about the internal mi- croclimate are compared with data from caves that are closed to people and with data from the outside. Taken together, this information is being used to develop tourism strategies. Despite vigilant monitoring of the caves, it was clear that the parade of visitors had to be limited, especially in the popular caves that depict some of the well-known parables from the life of the Buddha. So the Dunhuang Academy built a large museum and ex- hibition gallery nearby, where about 10 caves are replicated. Because these full- size facsimiles are well lit, unlike the grottoes themselves, viewers can spend more time in them than they are al- lowed to in the original caves. As with many areas of science, ar- chaeology has undergone a form of re- vival in China in the past 10 to 20 years; in a few instances, joint efforts between foreign and Chinese archaeological teams have been part of this renaissance, though, for the most part, excavations have been undertaken strictly with the professional and scholarly resources of China alone. The most prominent re- cent discoveries include the tomb of the First Emperor Qinshihuanglled with thousands of terra-cotta soldiers and horsesin Xian in 1974; the 4,000- year-old Caucasian mummies from the southern part of the Takla Makan Des- ert; and the 13th-century B.C.E. tomb unearthed in the province of Jiangxi, which was lled with pottery as well as bronze vessels, bells and weapons adorned with an iconography never seen before. The importance of saving Mogao and other sites cannot be emphasized enough. Even the remoteness of a site such as the Mogao Grottoes does not guarantee its preservation. The collabo- ration between the Getty and the Dun- huang Academy represents a new stage in Chinese preservation of cultural her- itage. Scientists must continue to ex- plore ways to protect these cultural leg- acies so that todays pilgrims, traveling perhaps less harsh routes than those en- circling the ever deadly Takla Makan, can witness the worlds history. Chinas Buddhist Treasures at Dunhuang Scientific American July 1997 45 The Authors NEVILLE AGNEW and FAN JINSHI work to- gether on the preservation of the Mogao Grottoes at Dunhuang. Agnew is associate director for pro- grams at the Getty Conservation Institute in Los Angeles, where he has been since 1988, and holds a doctorate in chemistry. Fan is deputy director of the Dunhuang Academy, where she has worked since 1963. She has written extensively about many aspects of the history, art and archaeology of the Mogao Grottoes. Further Reading Foreign Devils on the Silk Road: The Search for the Lost Cities and Trea- sures of Chinese Central Asia. Peter Hopkirk. University of Massachusetts Press, 1980. Dunhuang, Caves of the Singing Sands: Buddhist Art from the Silk Road. Roderick Whiteld. Photography by Seigo Otsuka. Textile and Art Publications, London, 1995. Conservation of Ancient Sites on the Silk Road. Proceedings of an Interna- tional Conference on the Conservation of Grotto Sites: Mogao Grottoes, Dun- huang, the Peoples Republic of China. Edited by Neville Agnew. Getty Conserva- tion Institute, Los Angeles, 1997. D U S A N
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G e t t y C o n s e r v a t i o n I n s t i t u t e ( i n s e t ) SA Copyright 1997 Scientific American, Inc.
Shanker Thapa's Metadata of Endangered Archives Programme (EAP) 676: Record of Sanskrit Manuscripts From Personal Collections in Lalitpur Surveyed and Digitised by Dr. Shanker Thapa