At least 2,800
years ago, circa 800BCE, there existed a giant University at Takshashila (often
called Taxila), a town located in the north-western region of India (in today’s
Pakistan). According to references in the Ramayana, King Bharata founded the town
in the name of his son, Taksha.
The site initially
began to develop as a loosely connected group of buildings where learned
persons resided, worked and taught. Over the years, additional buildings were
added; rulers made donations and more scholars migrated there. Gradually a
large campus developed, which became a celebrated seat of learning in the
ancient world.
·
Not only Indians
but also students from as far as Babylonia, Greece, Syria, Arabia, Phoenicia
and China came to study.
Being near the
north-west frontier of India, Takshashila had to face the brunt of attacks and
invasions from the north and the west. Thus the Persians, Greeks, Parthians,
Shakas and Kushanas laid their destructive marks on this institution.
The final
blow, however, came from the Huns (also the destroyers of the Roman Empire)
who, A.D. c.450, razed the institution. When the Chinese traveller Huen T’sang
(A.D. 603-64) visited Takshashila, the town had lost all its former grandeur and
international character.
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