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About Bihar: Bihar's
antiquity is evident from its name, which is derived from
the ancient word "VIHARA" (monastery). It is indeed
a land of monasteries. Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Muslim and Sikh
shrines abound in this ancient land where India's first major
empires rose and fell. Where the ruins of the worlds' earliest
university slumbers in the void of time. The passage of Ganga,
flowing wide and deep enrich the plains of Bihar before distributing
in Bengal's deltoid zone.
Among all Indian states, Bihar
is the one most intimately linked to the Buddha’s life,
resulting in a trail of pilgrimages which have come to be
known as the Buddhist circuit. The Buddhist trail begins at
the capital city, Patna, where a noteworthy museum contains
a collection of Hindu and Buddhist sculptures as well as a
terracotta urn said to contain the ashes of Lord Buddha.
The Khuda Baksh Oriental Library
has rare Muslim manuscripts including some from the University
of Cordoba in Spain. 40 km away, Vaishali, was the site for
the second Buddhist Council is the presence of ruins testify.
90 km south of Patna is Nalanda which translates as the place
that confers the lotus’ (of spiritual knowledge). A
monastic university flourished here from the 5th to the 11th
century. It is said to have contained nine million books,
with 2,000 teachers to impart knowledge to 10,000 students
who came from all over the Buddhist world. Lord Buddha himself
taught here and Hieun Tsang, the 7th century Chinese traveler,
was a student. Ongoing excavations have uncovered temples,
monasteries and lecture halls. Rajgir, ‘the royal palace’,
12 km south, was the venue for the first Buddhist Council.
The Buddha spent five years
at Rajgir after having attained enlightenment, and many of
the remains at Rajgir commemorate various incidents related
to life of Buddha, the hill of Gridhrakuta being perhaps the
most important, as this is where the Buddha delivered most
of his sermons. Bodhgaya is the spot where Lord Buddha attained
enlightenment, with the Mahabodhi Temple marking the precise
location.
This landlocked state of Bihar
is surrounded by Nepal, Bengal, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar
Pradesh and comprises four cultural regions-Bhojpur, Mithila
and Magadha and Chotanagpur. Rivers Kosi and Gandak from the
north and Sone from the south join the Ganga. In the fertile
plains, rice, sugarcane, oilseeds, gram, maize, jute, barley
and wheat are cultivated.
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