Khaleej Times

Temple built 1,300 years ago discovered in Swat

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peshawar — A Hindu temple, believed to have been constructe­d 1,300 years ago, has been discovered by Pakistani and Italian archaeolog­ical experts at a mountain in Swat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a. The discovery was made during an excavation at Barikot Ghundai.

Announcing the discovery on Thursday, Fazle Khaliq of the Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a Department of Archaeolog­y said that the temple discovered is of Hindu deity Vishnu.

It was built 1,300 years ago during the Hindu Shahi period, he said.

The Hindu Shahis or Kabul Shahis (850-1026 CE) was a Hindu dynasty that ruled the Kabul Valley (eastern Afghanista­n), Gandhara (modern-day Pakistan), and present-day northweste­rn India.

During their excavation, the archaeolog­ists also found traces of cantonment and watchtower­s near the temple site. The experts also found a water tank near the temple site which they believed used by the Hindus for bathing before worship.

Khaliq said that Swat district is home to thousand-year-old archaeolog­y sites and the traces of the Hindu Shahi period have been found for the first time in the area. Dr Luka, head of the Italian archaeolog­ical mission, said this was the first temple of the Gandhara civilisati­on discovered in Swat district.

Swat district is among the top 20 sites in Pakistan which is home to every kind of tourism like natural beauty, religious tourism, cultural tourism and archaeolog­ical sites. —

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