PREVIOUSLY unknown ancient wall paintings have been discovered at the historic Mahabodhi Temple in Myanmar’s Bagan ancient cultural zone during ongoing restoration work carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).
The discovery
was made while the ASI team was conducting structural conservation and cleaning
decorative plasterwork at the 13th-century temple. As part of the restoration,
13 small test sections were opened beneath thin layers of plaster inside the
upper Gandhakuti chamber to determine whether original murals remained hidden.
The
inspection revealed three sections containing mural paintings: one
well-preserved painting on the eastern wall and two faded paintings on the
southern and northern walls.
Following the
report, a conservation team led by the Director of the Bagan Branch of the
Department of Archaeology and National Museum carried out an on-site
inspection and confirmed the presence of the ancient murals.
Bagan is home
to 3,837 historic monuments. Previously, 416 structures were officially
recorded as containing wall paintings. The discovery at the 13th-century
Mahabodhi Temple adds another monument to that list, highlighting the site’s
growing archaeological significance.
Authorities
plan to continue uncovering and conserving the newly discovered murals as part
of preparations to nominate the Mahabodhi Temple for inscription on the UNESCO
World Heritage List through a transnational nomination.
Dipa Linn/ST
#TheGlobalNewLightOfMyanmar


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