Gondrani

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Gondrani
Gondrani is located in Pakistan
Gondrani
Shown within Pakistan
Alternate name Shehr-e-Roghan, Cave City of Lasbella, Cave Dwellings of Gondrani, House of the Spirits, Mai Goudrani
Location Bela, Balochistan, Pakistan
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Gondrani, also known as Shehr-e-Roghan,[1] is an archaeological site near the town of Bela in Balochistan, Pakistan.

Alternate names

The town is also known as the Cave City of Lasbella, the Cave Dwellings of Gondrani, the House of the Spirits,[2] and the town of Mai Goudrani.[3]

Location

The site is 20 kilometres (12 mi) to the north of the ancient town of Bela and 175 kilometres (109 mi) from Karachi, in Lasbella District of Balochistan.[3]

History

The exact history of the town is not known, nor who built the caves. Historians believe that the town was once a large Buddhist monastery dating back to the eighth century, when the region was part of a Buddhist kingdom.[4] André Wink in his book Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam: 7th-11th Centuries states that:

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In effect, at eighteen km north-west of Las Bela, at Gandakahar, near the ruins of an ancient town, are the caves of Gondrani, and as their construction shows these caves were undoubtedly Buddhist.[5]

According to another source, Journal of the Society for South Asian Studies, the site cannot be conclusively linked to Buddhist heritage, though it does show Buddhist characteristics:

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Although not irrefutably Buddhist, the cave complex of Gondrani, some fifteen kilometres north-west of Las Bela in Makran, does show definite Buddhist characteristics.[6]

The Geographical Journal agrees that the caves are of Buddhist origin:

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...not far from them are the Caves of Gondrani, about which there is no room for conjecture, for they are clearly Buddhist, as can be told from their construction.[4]

Gondrani caves

The caves of Gondrani, locally known as Puraney Ghar (Urdu: پرانے گھر‎),[2] are carved into solid conglomerate rocks[3] at several levels, and are connected by pathways. All the caves have small rooms with hearths and wall niches for lamps, along with verandahs or front porches.[2]

During British rule, around 1500 caves were reported, but now only 500 remain. The caves are in poor condition and are slowly eroding. No conservation efforts have been made to protect the site because of poor accessibility and lack of knowledge of the archaeological site.[2]

Legends

Many local legends are associated with the town. One relates the story of a king and his daughter, named Badiul Jamal, during the reign of king Solomon, who was haunted by demons. Many heroes came to free her and failed, but eventually Prince Saif-ul-Muluk killed the demons and freed her. According to another legend, the demons and evil spirits inhabiting the mountain would torment and feed on the flesh of the people of Gondrani. An old holy woman named Mai Balochani or Mai Balochani sacrificed herself to kill the demons and free the town people.[2] In another version, the pious lady exorcised the town and lived there until her death.[1] The woman is buried nearby; her burial place is a well-known local shrine.[7]

See also

References

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