http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20020514a6.htm
OSAKA -- A Japanese scholar
said Monday he believes the discovery of 19 Buddha statues at an
ancient site in Iran challenges current theories on the spread of
Buddhism. According to one established theory, Buddhist statues
were
first created in Gandhara, northwestern Pakistan, in the early second
century using Greek techniques from the west that later spread eastward
and southward, said Takayasu Higuchi, professor emeritus at Kyoto
University.
But the latest discovery, made
in the Iranian state of Fars, which is about 1,700 km west of Gandhara,
is quite unusual, Higuchi said.
"It may be possible to
formulate a new theory on the background of how Buddhism spread,"
he said, suggesting the religion may have been present in Iran.
Statues with characteristics
similar to the Fars statues have also been unearthed farther north,
in eastern
Afghanistan, and Higuchi said that this could mean Buddhism also
spread west at an early stage.
The 19 statues, between 5 cm
to 20 cm tall, are made of clay and plaster and look similar to
the statues in Gandhara,
according to Higuchi.
Some are partially burned and
colored, but the faces are almost intact, he said. They also bear
some of the
characteristics of items found between the first and third centuries
in the state of Kusana in northern India, he said.
Higuchi examined the statues
in late April, when he was invited by Iranian authorities to go
through various items stored at Iran's national museum of archaeology.
The Japan Times: May 14, 2002
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