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Ruins of Sirkap, the Hellenistic-era city of Taxila, with grid-plan streets visible

Taxila

ٹیکسلا518 BCE – 600 CE
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Interest

Iron AgeClassicalHellenisticRoman+1Achaemenid PersianGreekMauryan+1

First Persian mention

Behistun Inscription of Darius I, c. 518 BCE

Alexander's arrival

326 BCE — used as base before crossing the Indus

Three city layers

Bhir Mound (6th–2nd c. BCE), Sirkap (2nd c. BCE–2nd c. CE), Sirsukh (2nd c. CE+)

Artistic legacy

Origin of Gandharan style — first human depictions of the Buddha

UNESCO

World Heritage Site since 1980

Location

35 km northwest of Islamabad, eastern end of the Khyber Pass corridor

Taxila is where the Buddha got a face.”

Overview

Taxila lies in the Pothohar Plateau, 35 km northwest of Islamabad, at the eastern end of the Khyber Pass route from Central Asia into the subcontinent. The strategic position made it the meeting point of overland trade routes connecting Persia, Central Asia, China, and India — and the city reflects this intersection in its architecture, coinage, and art.

The site encompasses three major successive urban settlements, each occupying a distinct location on the plateau:

Bhir Mound (6th–2nd century BCE): The oldest city at Taxila, founded in the Achaemenid period when Taxila was a provincial capital of the Persian Empire (mentioned in the Behistun Inscription of Darius I, c. 518 BCE). The city became an important intellectual center — later tradition identifies it as the location of a university where the grammarian Panini (author of the Ashtadhyayi, the world's first formal linguistic grammar) was educated, and where Chanakya (Kautilya), author of the Arthashastra statecraft manual, taught. Alexander the Great received the submission of the city's king Ambhi in 326 BCE and used Taxila as his base before crossing the Indus.

Sirkap (2nd century BCE – 2nd century CE): Founded by the Bactrian Greek king Demetrius I after his invasion of the subcontinent c. 185 BCE, Sirkap was laid out on a Hellenistic grid plan with a main street (a typical Greek decumanus) and rectangular blocks. The city passed successively under Saka, Parthian, and Kushana rule. Its most remarkable monument is the Dharmarajika Stupa complex, built by Ashoka in the 3rd century BCE and expanded over the following centuries.

Sirsukh (2nd century CE onward): Founded by the Kushana emperor Kanishka (c. 127 CE), Sirsukh is a large rectangular walled city of the Kushana type. The Kushana period was the golden age of Gandharan Buddhist art: the sculpture workshops of Taxila produced the first realistic human depictions of the Buddha in stone and stucco, combining Hellenistic figural conventions with Buddhist iconography. The resulting Gandharan style spread Buddha imagery across Asia.

Dozens of Buddhist monasteries, stupas, and viharas surround the three city sites, the most celebrated being the Jaulian Monastery (2nd–5th century CE) with its decorated stupa and assembly hall.

Why It Matters

Taxila is where the Buddha got a face. Before Gandharan art developed in the workshops of Taxila and its region, the Buddha was depicted aniconically — by symbols, as at Sanchi. Gandharan sculptors, working in a tradition that merged Greek figural realism with Buddhist devotional needs, created the first human portraits of the Buddha, establishing the iconographic canon — ushnisha cranial protuberance, elongated earlobes, dhyana mudra hand gesture — that all subsequent Buddhist art from Japan to Java follows. Every Buddha image in the world is descended from the workshops of Taxila. Beyond art, Taxila is the physical site of the encounter of three great imperial traditions: Achaemenid administrative culture, Macedonian Hellenism, and Mauryan and Kushana Indian statecraft — each leaving material evidence in a single hilltop plateau.

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Evidence & Interpretation

Distinguishing what is well-established from what remains debated.

Well-Established Facts

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  • The Behistun Inscription of Darius I (c. 518 BCE) lists Gadara (Gandhara, centered on Taxila) as a tributary province of the Achaemenid Empire, providing the earliest textual attestation of the site's political status.
  • Coins found at Sirkap follow a clear numismatic sequence: Indo-Greek (with Greek legends and Athena iconography), Indo-Scythian (Saka rulers), Indo-Parthian, and Kushana — documenting the city's succession of rulers with physical evidence at each stratum.
  • Gandharan Buddha sculptures from the Taxila region display a consistent fusion of Hellenistic figural anatomy (contrapposto stance, naturalistic drapery) with Buddhist iconographic conventions (ushnisha, elongated earlobes, hand mudras), a hybrid style dated by coin associations to the 1st–3rd centuries CE.

Scholarly Inferences

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  • The oral tradition that Taxila hosted a famous university where Chanakya, Panini, and Jivaka (the Buddha's physician) were educated is supported by the city's intellectual products — the Arthashastra, the Ashtadhyayi — but no physical remains of a university building have been identified.

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Location

Sources

  • Taxila, 3 vols.John Marshall (1951)
  • Gandharan Art in ContextElizabeth Errington and Joe Cribb (eds.) (1992)
  • UNESCO — Archaeological Ruins at MoenjodaroLink

Research Papers

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