对Gandhāran雕塑的追求:前开伯尔机构的业余发掘记录

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Zarawar Khan
{"title":"对Gandhāran雕塑的追求:前开伯尔机构的业余发掘记录","authors":"Zarawar Khan","doi":"10.1080/02666030.2023.2271250","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractThis article explores the history of clandestine activities concerning Buddhist antiquities in the former Khyber Agency of the British Indian Empire. To this end, the archives kept at the Directorate of Archives and Libraries at Peshawar prove that Gandhāran sculptures recovered during these clandestine excavations were transported to England in violation of the law in force. In addition, some sculptures belonging to senior officers have disappeared and are to this day unknown. This article envisions and considers some of these facts and therefore focuses particularly on the discovery, hasty excavation, and devastation of Buddhist ruins near the great stupa called Shpola which was part of the Khyber Agency under the British Kingdom.Keywords: Pursuance of antiquitiesBuddhist remainsKhyber AgencyBritish period AcknowledgementsThe author expresses gratitude to the Director of the Directorate of Archives and Library, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Peshawar for permission to study the archival record preserved therein the record section. I am also grateful to Mr Muhammad Ismail, Research Officer, and Mr Jibran Ullah, the custodian of the record section of DOAL, for their cooperation in tracing out the required material consulted in the present research.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Iqbal Javed, ‘An Overview of British Administrative Set-Up and Strategy in the Khyber 1849-1947’, IPRI Journal, XI/1, (2011), 77-95 (pp. 77-78); see also Baha Lal, ‘The Administration of the North-West Frontier Province 1901-1919’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the School of Oriental and African Studies, (University of London,1968), p. 16.2. Khan Zarawar & Fawad Khan, ‘The Shpola Stupa of Khyber Pass: The Twentieth-Century Record of a Proposed Conservation Project’, Pakistan Heritage, 13, (2021), 13-22 (pp. 13-16).3. Fergusson James, ‘History of Indian and Eastern Architecture’, (London: John Murry, 1910), 1, p.92.4. Hargreaves Harold, ‘Some monuments in the Punjab and North-Weste Frontier Province’, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1926-27, ed. by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1930); 120-127(pp.125-126).5. Schneider Britta, ‘The beginning and development of Gandhāran collections in German public museums’, in Buddhism and Gandhara an Archaeology of Museums Collection, ed. by Himanshu Prabha Ray, (New York: Routledge, 2018), 213-231; (P.219).6. See fig.047. Spooner Brainerd. D, ‘Section II. Exploration and research: Frontier Circle, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1922-23, ed. by D. Brainerd Spooner, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1923); 96-102, (pp.100-101).8. Natesa Aiyer. V, ‘Shpola Stupa, Khyber’, in Archaeological Survey of India. Annual Report 1915-16, ed.by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Government Printing, India, 1918); pp.115-16, Pl. LX a &b.9. Because the stupa was in the tribal area beyond the Jurisdiction of the ASIFC.10. Instead of his designation as PA Khyber Agency (see fig. 04).11. File No. 48-D/VII, S. No. 241, Bundle No. 36, (DoAL, Peshawar).12. Spooner, 1923, pp.100-101.13. Perhaps these were the same remains noticed by the Superintendent ASIFC during his first official visit to Sultan Khel in 1916 (see Natesa Aiyyar,1918, p.116).14. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.15. One of these antique dealers was Sayyad Rauf Shah of Sultan Khel village (See Hargreaves, 1930, p.125).16. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.17. Khan Zarawar et.al, ‘Gandhāran stucco sculptures from Sultan Khel (former Khyber Agency) in the collection of Peshawar Museum: A study in three parts’, in The Rediscovery and Reception of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 24th-26th March, 2021, (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2022), pp. 43-82 (p.52).18. The last sheet of the folder is written in 1939, and henceforth we do not know the later history of the site.19. File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.30.20. An ancient site at Landikotal, in the Khyber Agency.21. The notification was prohibiting the bringing or taking into or out of the N.W.F. Province, the Gandhāra sculptures and objects of archaeological and historical interest. It was republished in the Government Gazette N.W.F.P. on page 750 of the Gazette of July 25th, 1924. Under this notification anyone bringing such antiquities into the N.W.F.P. was not only liable to have them confiscated but to be fined Rs.500/ -in addition (see Khan Zarawar et. al 2022, Document No. 5 &6).22. Zwalf Wladimir, ‘A Catalogue of the Gandhāra Sculpture in the British Museum’, (London: Cambridge University Press, 1996), vols. I & II, Cat. No. 544, 553, 597,602, 604, 605, 619, 621, 627.23. Their names are not mentioned in the report.24. Letter No. 2494, dated 23 October 1929, File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).25. Olivieri Luca Maria, ‘Sir Aurel Stein and the ‘Lords of Marches’ New Archival Materials’, ACT-Field School Project Reports and Memoirs Archival Studies, 1 (Lahore: Sang-e-Meel Publications, 2015), Document No. 142.26. Jongeward David, ‘Buddhist Art of Pakistan and Afghanistan’, (Toronto: Coach House Printing, 2003), pp. 40-42.27. Schneider, 2018, p. 22128. Mahmud-Ul-Hassan, ‘Ramdas and other Miscellaneous Collections of the Buddhist Sculptures in Taxial Museum-Question of their Provenance’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the Taxila Institute of Asian Civilizations, (Islamabad: Quaid-Azam University, 2018), pp.3-4.29. Letter No. 3497, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar),30. File. No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.56.31. Letter No. 88/529, dated 5th August 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)32. Letter No. 2864/1-27, dated 18th September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)33. Mr. K.A. Gai and Mool Chand are recorded in the donor’s plaque of Leady Reading Hospital, Peshawar for the year 1927. Again in 1935, A.K. Gai donated a handsome amount to that hospital. He is said to belong from the Parsees family and run a business and antiquities dealing in Peshawar. See https://www.google.com/search?q=Mr.+Gai+antiquarian.34. Letter no. 5709, dated 23rd September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)35. Lyons Islay and Herald Ingholt, ‘Gandhān Art in Pakistan’, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1957), p. 7, figs. No. 10, 38, 123, 144, 169, 196, 100, 217, 245, 246, 259, 276, 317, 329, 337, 349, 377, 431, 445, 448, 465, 471, 496, 531,36. Letter No. 484, dated 8th May 1936, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)37. Letter No. 13471-82-DD/12/18-DD, dated 5th April 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).38. Letter No. 1091, dated 5th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).39. Letter No. 2586, dated 10th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).40. See Fergusson, 1910, p. 9241. Valeene Alexandra, ‘Differences and similarities in Gandhāran art production: the case of the modelling school of Ha֪ḍḍa (Afghanistan)’, in The Geography of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Second International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 22nd -23rd March, 2018 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2019), pp. 143-163. See also Tarzi Zemeryalai, ‘Tapa-e-Top-Kalān (TTK) of Ha֪ḍḍa’, in South Asian Archaeology 1987. Proceedings of the Ninth International conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe, held in the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, ed. by Maurizio Taddei, (Rome: 1990), pp.707-726.42. Taddei Maurizio, ‘Tapa Sardār. First Preliminary Report’, in East and West,18, 1/2, (1968), 109-124.43. Marshall John, A Guide to Taxila’, (Calcutta: Government Printing, 1918), p. 111.","PeriodicalId":52006,"journal":{"name":"South Asian Studies","volume":"15 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Pursuit of Gandhāran Sculptures: A Record of Amateur Excavations in the Former Khyber Agency\",\"authors\":\"Zarawar Khan\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/02666030.2023.2271250\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractThis article explores the history of clandestine activities concerning Buddhist antiquities in the former Khyber Agency of the British Indian Empire. To this end, the archives kept at the Directorate of Archives and Libraries at Peshawar prove that Gandhāran sculptures recovered during these clandestine excavations were transported to England in violation of the law in force. In addition, some sculptures belonging to senior officers have disappeared and are to this day unknown. This article envisions and considers some of these facts and therefore focuses particularly on the discovery, hasty excavation, and devastation of Buddhist ruins near the great stupa called Shpola which was part of the Khyber Agency under the British Kingdom.Keywords: Pursuance of antiquitiesBuddhist remainsKhyber AgencyBritish period AcknowledgementsThe author expresses gratitude to the Director of the Directorate of Archives and Library, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Peshawar for permission to study the archival record preserved therein the record section. I am also grateful to Mr Muhammad Ismail, Research Officer, and Mr Jibran Ullah, the custodian of the record section of DOAL, for their cooperation in tracing out the required material consulted in the present research.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Iqbal Javed, ‘An Overview of British Administrative Set-Up and Strategy in the Khyber 1849-1947’, IPRI Journal, XI/1, (2011), 77-95 (pp. 77-78); see also Baha Lal, ‘The Administration of the North-West Frontier Province 1901-1919’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the School of Oriental and African Studies, (University of London,1968), p. 16.2. Khan Zarawar & Fawad Khan, ‘The Shpola Stupa of Khyber Pass: The Twentieth-Century Record of a Proposed Conservation Project’, Pakistan Heritage, 13, (2021), 13-22 (pp. 13-16).3. Fergusson James, ‘History of Indian and Eastern Architecture’, (London: John Murry, 1910), 1, p.92.4. Hargreaves Harold, ‘Some monuments in the Punjab and North-Weste Frontier Province’, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1926-27, ed. by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1930); 120-127(pp.125-126).5. Schneider Britta, ‘The beginning and development of Gandhāran collections in German public museums’, in Buddhism and Gandhara an Archaeology of Museums Collection, ed. by Himanshu Prabha Ray, (New York: Routledge, 2018), 213-231; (P.219).6. See fig.047. Spooner Brainerd. D, ‘Section II. Exploration and research: Frontier Circle, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1922-23, ed. by D. Brainerd Spooner, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1923); 96-102, (pp.100-101).8. Natesa Aiyer. V, ‘Shpola Stupa, Khyber’, in Archaeological Survey of India. Annual Report 1915-16, ed.by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Government Printing, India, 1918); pp.115-16, Pl. LX a &b.9. Because the stupa was in the tribal area beyond the Jurisdiction of the ASIFC.10. Instead of his designation as PA Khyber Agency (see fig. 04).11. File No. 48-D/VII, S. No. 241, Bundle No. 36, (DoAL, Peshawar).12. Spooner, 1923, pp.100-101.13. Perhaps these were the same remains noticed by the Superintendent ASIFC during his first official visit to Sultan Khel in 1916 (see Natesa Aiyyar,1918, p.116).14. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.15. One of these antique dealers was Sayyad Rauf Shah of Sultan Khel village (See Hargreaves, 1930, p.125).16. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.17. Khan Zarawar et.al, ‘Gandhāran stucco sculptures from Sultan Khel (former Khyber Agency) in the collection of Peshawar Museum: A study in three parts’, in The Rediscovery and Reception of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 24th-26th March, 2021, (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2022), pp. 43-82 (p.52).18. The last sheet of the folder is written in 1939, and henceforth we do not know the later history of the site.19. File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.30.20. An ancient site at Landikotal, in the Khyber Agency.21. The notification was prohibiting the bringing or taking into or out of the N.W.F. Province, the Gandhāra sculptures and objects of archaeological and historical interest. It was republished in the Government Gazette N.W.F.P. on page 750 of the Gazette of July 25th, 1924. Under this notification anyone bringing such antiquities into the N.W.F.P. was not only liable to have them confiscated but to be fined Rs.500/ -in addition (see Khan Zarawar et. al 2022, Document No. 5 &6).22. Zwalf Wladimir, ‘A Catalogue of the Gandhāra Sculpture in the British Museum’, (London: Cambridge University Press, 1996), vols. I & II, Cat. No. 544, 553, 597,602, 604, 605, 619, 621, 627.23. Their names are not mentioned in the report.24. Letter No. 2494, dated 23 October 1929, File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).25. Olivieri Luca Maria, ‘Sir Aurel Stein and the ‘Lords of Marches’ New Archival Materials’, ACT-Field School Project Reports and Memoirs Archival Studies, 1 (Lahore: Sang-e-Meel Publications, 2015), Document No. 142.26. Jongeward David, ‘Buddhist Art of Pakistan and Afghanistan’, (Toronto: Coach House Printing, 2003), pp. 40-42.27. Schneider, 2018, p. 22128. Mahmud-Ul-Hassan, ‘Ramdas and other Miscellaneous Collections of the Buddhist Sculptures in Taxial Museum-Question of their Provenance’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the Taxila Institute of Asian Civilizations, (Islamabad: Quaid-Azam University, 2018), pp.3-4.29. Letter No. 3497, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar),30. File. No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.56.31. Letter No. 88/529, dated 5th August 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)32. Letter No. 2864/1-27, dated 18th September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)33. Mr. K.A. Gai and Mool Chand are recorded in the donor’s plaque of Leady Reading Hospital, Peshawar for the year 1927. Again in 1935, A.K. Gai donated a handsome amount to that hospital. He is said to belong from the Parsees family and run a business and antiquities dealing in Peshawar. See https://www.google.com/search?q=Mr.+Gai+antiquarian.34. Letter no. 5709, dated 23rd September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)35. Lyons Islay and Herald Ingholt, ‘Gandhān Art in Pakistan’, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1957), p. 7, figs. No. 10, 38, 123, 144, 169, 196, 100, 217, 245, 246, 259, 276, 317, 329, 337, 349, 377, 431, 445, 448, 465, 471, 496, 531,36. Letter No. 484, dated 8th May 1936, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)37. Letter No. 13471-82-DD/12/18-DD, dated 5th April 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).38. Letter No. 1091, dated 5th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).39. Letter No. 2586, dated 10th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).40. See Fergusson, 1910, p. 9241. Valeene Alexandra, ‘Differences and similarities in Gandhāran art production: the case of the modelling school of Ha֪ḍḍa (Afghanistan)’, in The Geography of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Second International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 22nd -23rd March, 2018 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2019), pp. 143-163. See also Tarzi Zemeryalai, ‘Tapa-e-Top-Kalān (TTK) of Ha֪ḍḍa’, in South Asian Archaeology 1987. Proceedings of the Ninth International conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe, held in the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, ed. by Maurizio Taddei, (Rome: 1990), pp.707-726.42. Taddei Maurizio, ‘Tapa Sardār. First Preliminary Report’, in East and West,18, 1/2, (1968), 109-124.43. Marshall John, A Guide to Taxila’, (Calcutta: Government Printing, 1918), p. 111.\",\"PeriodicalId\":52006,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"South Asian Studies\",\"volume\":\"15 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.5000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-11-02\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"South Asian Studies\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/02666030.2023.2271250\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"ASIAN STUDIES\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"South Asian Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/02666030.2023.2271250","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ASIAN STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文探讨了前英属印度帝国开伯尔办事处有关佛教文物的秘密活动历史。为此目的,保存在白沙瓦档案和图书馆理事会的档案证明,在这些秘密挖掘期间发现的Gandhāran雕塑违反现行法律被运到英国。此外,一些属于高级军官的雕塑也消失了,至今无人知晓。这篇文章设想并考虑了其中的一些事实,因此特别关注在被称为Shpola的大佛塔附近的佛教遗址的发现、仓促挖掘和破坏,Shpola是英国开伯尔机构的一部分。关键词:古物追寻佛教遗存开伯尔机构英国时期致谢作者感谢白沙瓦开伯尔-普赫图赫瓦政府档案和图书馆理事会主任允许我对保存在记录部分的档案记录进行研究。我还要感谢研究官员Muhammad Ismail先生和DOAL记录部分的监管人Jibran Ullah先生,感谢他们的合作,为本研究提供了所需的资料。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。另见Baha Lal,“西北边境省的管理1901-1919”,未发表的博士论文,提交给东方和非洲研究学院,(伦敦大学,1968年),第16.2页。2 . Khan Zarawar & Fawad Khan,“开伯尔山口的Shpola佛塔:一个拟议保护项目的二十世纪记录”,《巴基斯坦遗产》,13 (2021),13-22 (pp. 13-16)。Fergusson James,“印度和东方建筑史”,(伦敦:John Murry出版社,1910),第1页,92.4页。哈格里夫斯·哈罗德,“旁遮普和西北边境省的一些纪念碑”,载于《1926-27年印度考古调查年度报告》,约翰·马歇尔爵士主编,(加尔各答:中央出版社,1930年);120 - 127(观念- 126)。5。Schneider Britta,“德国公共博物馆Gandhāran藏品的开始与发展”,载于Himanshu Prabha Ray主编的《佛教与犍陀罗博物馆藏品考古学》(纽约:Routledge出版社,2018),213-231页;(P.219)。6。看到fig.047。斯普纳布雷纳德。D .第二部分。《探索与研究:边界圈》,见D.布雷纳德·斯普纳主编的《1922-23年印度考古调查年报》(加尔各答:中央出版社,1923年);96 - 102年(pp.100 - 101)。8。Natesa Aiyer。V,“Shpola佛塔,开伯尔”,《印度考古调查》。《1915- 1916年年度报告》,约翰·马歇尔爵士编(加尔各答:印度政府印刷厂,1918年);第115-16页,Pl. LX a &b.9。因为佛塔在部落地区,不属于亚洲金融协会的管辖范围。而不是他的名称PA开伯尔机构(见图04)。第48-D/VII号文件,第241号文件,第36卷,(DoAL,白沙瓦)。史普纳,1923,pp.100-101.13。这些可能就是亚洲金融委员会主管1916年第一次正式访问苏丹凯尔勒时所注意到的遗迹(见Natesa Aiyyar,1918年,第116页)。哈格里夫斯,1930,第125.15页。这些古董商之一是苏丹科尔村的Sayyad Rauf Shah(见Hargreaves, 1930, p.125)。哈格里夫斯,1930,p.125.17。Khan Zarawar等人,“Gandhāran白沙瓦博物馆收藏的苏丹凯尔(前开伯尔办事处)的灰泥雕塑:三部分研究”,《Gandhāran艺术的重新发现和接受》。第四届Gandhāra连接项目国际研讨会论文集,由Wannaporn Reinjang和Peter Stewart编辑。牛津大学,2021年3月24日至26日,(Oxford: archaepress, 2022),第43-82页(第52页)。这个文件夹的最后一页写于1939年,从此我们就不知道这个地方后来的历史了。第49/D-VII号文件,第222号文件,第33卷,(DoAL,白沙瓦),第30.20页。位于开伯尔省兰迪科塔尔的古代遗址。该通知禁止将Gandhāra雕塑和具有考古和历史价值的物品带进或带出N.W.F.省。1924年7月25日《政府公报》第750页刊登了这篇文章。根据这一通知,任何将此类文物带入国家自然保护区的人不仅有可能被没收,而且还要被罚款500卢比/人(见Khan Zarawar et al 2022,第5和6号文件)。兹瓦尔夫·弗拉基米尔,“在大英博物馆Gandhāra雕塑目录”,(伦敦:剑桥大学出版社,1996年),卷。我和我,凯特。544、553、597,602、604、605、619、621、627.23号。报告中没有提到他们的名字。1929年10月23日第2494号信,第49/D-VII号档案,S。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Pursuit of Gandhāran Sculptures: A Record of Amateur Excavations in the Former Khyber Agency
AbstractThis article explores the history of clandestine activities concerning Buddhist antiquities in the former Khyber Agency of the British Indian Empire. To this end, the archives kept at the Directorate of Archives and Libraries at Peshawar prove that Gandhāran sculptures recovered during these clandestine excavations were transported to England in violation of the law in force. In addition, some sculptures belonging to senior officers have disappeared and are to this day unknown. This article envisions and considers some of these facts and therefore focuses particularly on the discovery, hasty excavation, and devastation of Buddhist ruins near the great stupa called Shpola which was part of the Khyber Agency under the British Kingdom.Keywords: Pursuance of antiquitiesBuddhist remainsKhyber AgencyBritish period AcknowledgementsThe author expresses gratitude to the Director of the Directorate of Archives and Library, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Peshawar for permission to study the archival record preserved therein the record section. I am also grateful to Mr Muhammad Ismail, Research Officer, and Mr Jibran Ullah, the custodian of the record section of DOAL, for their cooperation in tracing out the required material consulted in the present research.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Iqbal Javed, ‘An Overview of British Administrative Set-Up and Strategy in the Khyber 1849-1947’, IPRI Journal, XI/1, (2011), 77-95 (pp. 77-78); see also Baha Lal, ‘The Administration of the North-West Frontier Province 1901-1919’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the School of Oriental and African Studies, (University of London,1968), p. 16.2. Khan Zarawar & Fawad Khan, ‘The Shpola Stupa of Khyber Pass: The Twentieth-Century Record of a Proposed Conservation Project’, Pakistan Heritage, 13, (2021), 13-22 (pp. 13-16).3. Fergusson James, ‘History of Indian and Eastern Architecture’, (London: John Murry, 1910), 1, p.92.4. Hargreaves Harold, ‘Some monuments in the Punjab and North-Weste Frontier Province’, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1926-27, ed. by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1930); 120-127(pp.125-126).5. Schneider Britta, ‘The beginning and development of Gandhāran collections in German public museums’, in Buddhism and Gandhara an Archaeology of Museums Collection, ed. by Himanshu Prabha Ray, (New York: Routledge, 2018), 213-231; (P.219).6. See fig.047. Spooner Brainerd. D, ‘Section II. Exploration and research: Frontier Circle, in Annual Report of the Archaeological Survey of India for the year 1922-23, ed. by D. Brainerd Spooner, (Calcutta: Central Publication Branch, 1923); 96-102, (pp.100-101).8. Natesa Aiyer. V, ‘Shpola Stupa, Khyber’, in Archaeological Survey of India. Annual Report 1915-16, ed.by Sir Jhon Marshall, (Calcutta: Government Printing, India, 1918); pp.115-16, Pl. LX a &b.9. Because the stupa was in the tribal area beyond the Jurisdiction of the ASIFC.10. Instead of his designation as PA Khyber Agency (see fig. 04).11. File No. 48-D/VII, S. No. 241, Bundle No. 36, (DoAL, Peshawar).12. Spooner, 1923, pp.100-101.13. Perhaps these were the same remains noticed by the Superintendent ASIFC during his first official visit to Sultan Khel in 1916 (see Natesa Aiyyar,1918, p.116).14. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.15. One of these antique dealers was Sayyad Rauf Shah of Sultan Khel village (See Hargreaves, 1930, p.125).16. Hargreaves, 1930, p.125.17. Khan Zarawar et.al, ‘Gandhāran stucco sculptures from Sultan Khel (former Khyber Agency) in the collection of Peshawar Museum: A study in three parts’, in The Rediscovery and Reception of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 24th-26th March, 2021, (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2022), pp. 43-82 (p.52).18. The last sheet of the folder is written in 1939, and henceforth we do not know the later history of the site.19. File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.30.20. An ancient site at Landikotal, in the Khyber Agency.21. The notification was prohibiting the bringing or taking into or out of the N.W.F. Province, the Gandhāra sculptures and objects of archaeological and historical interest. It was republished in the Government Gazette N.W.F.P. on page 750 of the Gazette of July 25th, 1924. Under this notification anyone bringing such antiquities into the N.W.F.P. was not only liable to have them confiscated but to be fined Rs.500/ -in addition (see Khan Zarawar et. al 2022, Document No. 5 &6).22. Zwalf Wladimir, ‘A Catalogue of the Gandhāra Sculpture in the British Museum’, (London: Cambridge University Press, 1996), vols. I & II, Cat. No. 544, 553, 597,602, 604, 605, 619, 621, 627.23. Their names are not mentioned in the report.24. Letter No. 2494, dated 23 October 1929, File No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).25. Olivieri Luca Maria, ‘Sir Aurel Stein and the ‘Lords of Marches’ New Archival Materials’, ACT-Field School Project Reports and Memoirs Archival Studies, 1 (Lahore: Sang-e-Meel Publications, 2015), Document No. 142.26. Jongeward David, ‘Buddhist Art of Pakistan and Afghanistan’, (Toronto: Coach House Printing, 2003), pp. 40-42.27. Schneider, 2018, p. 22128. Mahmud-Ul-Hassan, ‘Ramdas and other Miscellaneous Collections of the Buddhist Sculptures in Taxial Museum-Question of their Provenance’, Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertations, submitted to the Taxila Institute of Asian Civilizations, (Islamabad: Quaid-Azam University, 2018), pp.3-4.29. Letter No. 3497, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar),30. File. No. 49/D-VII, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar), p.56.31. Letter No. 88/529, dated 5th August 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)32. Letter No. 2864/1-27, dated 18th September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)33. Mr. K.A. Gai and Mool Chand are recorded in the donor’s plaque of Leady Reading Hospital, Peshawar for the year 1927. Again in 1935, A.K. Gai donated a handsome amount to that hospital. He is said to belong from the Parsees family and run a business and antiquities dealing in Peshawar. See https://www.google.com/search?q=Mr.+Gai+antiquarian.34. Letter no. 5709, dated 23rd September 1931, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)35. Lyons Islay and Herald Ingholt, ‘Gandhān Art in Pakistan’, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1957), p. 7, figs. No. 10, 38, 123, 144, 169, 196, 100, 217, 245, 246, 259, 276, 317, 329, 337, 349, 377, 431, 445, 448, 465, 471, 496, 531,36. Letter No. 484, dated 8th May 1936, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar)37. Letter No. 13471-82-DD/12/18-DD, dated 5th April 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).38. Letter No. 1091, dated 5th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).39. Letter No. 2586, dated 10th May 1939, File. No. D-VII/49, S. No. 222, Bundle No. 33, (DoAL, Peshawar).40. See Fergusson, 1910, p. 9241. Valeene Alexandra, ‘Differences and similarities in Gandhāran art production: the case of the modelling school of Ha֪ḍḍa (Afghanistan)’, in The Geography of Gandhāran Art. Proceedings of the Second International Workshop of the Gandhāra Connections Project, ed. by Wannaporn Reinjang and Peter Stewart. University of Oxford, 22nd -23rd March, 2018 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2019), pp. 143-163. See also Tarzi Zemeryalai, ‘Tapa-e-Top-Kalān (TTK) of Ha֪ḍḍa’, in South Asian Archaeology 1987. Proceedings of the Ninth International conference of the Association of South Asian Archaeologists in Western Europe, held in the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, ed. by Maurizio Taddei, (Rome: 1990), pp.707-726.42. Taddei Maurizio, ‘Tapa Sardār. First Preliminary Report’, in East and West,18, 1/2, (1968), 109-124.43. Marshall John, A Guide to Taxila’, (Calcutta: Government Printing, 1918), p. 111.
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South Asian Studies
South Asian Studies ASIAN STUDIES-
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