词条 | Chaukhandi tombs |
释义 |
| name = Chaukhandi Tombs {{nq|چوکنڈی قبرستان}} | former_names = | alternate_names = | status = | image = Chaukhandi Tombs-ruins (cropped).jpg | image_alt = | image_size = | caption = Chaukhandi Necropolis | map_type = Pakistan | map_Lion = | altitude = | building_type = Mausoleum | architectural_style = | structural_system = | cost = | ren_cost = | client = | owner = | current_tenants = | landlord = | address = | location_town = | location_country = Sindh, Pakistan | coordinates = {{coord|24.863908|67.271367|region:TR-48|format=dms|display=inline,title}} | groundbreaking_date = | start_date = | completion_date = | opened_date = | inauguration_date = | renovation_date = | demolition_date = | destruction_date = | height = | architectural = | tip = | antenna_spire = | roof = | top_floor = | observatory = | other_dimensions = | floor_count = | floor_area = | seating_type = | seating_capacity = | elevator_count = | architect = | architecture_firm = | structural_engineer = | services_engineer = | civil_engineer = | other_designers = | quantity_surveyor = | main_contractor = | awards = | designations = | ren_architect = | ren_firm = | ren_str_engineer = | ren_serv_engineer = | ren_civ_engineer = | ren_oth_designers = | ren_qty_surveyor = | ren_awards = | parking = | website = | embedded = | references = | highest_region = | highest_reflabel = | highest_prev = | highest_start = | highest_end = | highest_next = }} The Chaukhandi ({{lang-ur|{{nq|چوکنڈی قبرستان}}}}; {{lang-sd|چوڪُنڊي}} ) tombs form an early Islamic cemetery situated {{convert|29|km|0|abbr=on}} east of Karachi, in the Sindh province of Pakistan. The tombs are notable for their elaborate sandstone carvings.[1] The tombs are similar in style to the elaborate tombs at the Makli Necropolis near Thatta, and are built in the funerary architectural style typical of lower Sindh. HistoryGenerally, the tombs are attributed to the Jokhio (also spelt Jokhiya) and known as the family graveyard of the Jokhio tribe, although other, mainly Baloch, tribes have also been buried here. They were mainly built during Mughal rule sometime in the 15th and 18th centuries when Islam became dominant. ArchitectureThis type of graveyard in Sindh and Baluchistan is remarkable because of its main north-south orientation. The more elaborate graves are constructed with a buff-colored sandstone, which has often kept remarkably well over time in the arid local climate. Tombs were constructed either as single graves or as groups of up to eight graves, raised on a common platform. A typical sarcophagus consists of six vertical slabs, with two long slabs on each side of the grave indicating the length of the body and the remaining two vertical slabs on the head and foot side. These six slabs are covered by a second sarcophagus consisting of six more similar vertical slabs but smaller in size, giving the grave a pyramid shape. The upper box is further covered with four or five horizontal slabs and the topmost construction is set vertically with its northern end often carved into a knob known as a crown or a turban. The tombs are embellished with geometrical designs and motifs, including figural representations such as mounted horsemen, hunting scenes, arms, and jewelry. Discovery and ResearchThe earliest -passing- reference of the Chaukhandi tombs (a.k.a. Jokundee) is in a letter of J. Macleod, addressed to H. B. E. Frere in 1851 {{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}. The tombs, however, were given more serious attention for the first time by H. D. Baskerville, the Assistant Collector of Thatta in Karachi district in 1917. The tombs near Landhi were included in the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act, 1904 in 1922{{Clarify|reason=what does "was brought with the pale" mean?|date=September 2009}}. Dr. Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath summarizes earlier research on these and similar tombs in Sindh as follows:[2]
After the Second World War the Chaukhandi tombs did not receive any attention from the Pakistan authorities until Dr. I. H. Qureshi, a renowned historian and the then education minister (later Chancellor of Karachi University), drew the attention of the Department of Archeology and Museums to them, having received a letter on the subject from Zahid Hussain, Governor of State Bank of Pakistan{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}. The then Director General of the Department of Archeology and Museums, Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, confessed that at first his department did not even realize that the tombs were protected under the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act, 1904. Soon the department realized its mistake and started taking some measures for the protection of the necropolis{{When|date=July 2013}}. In the post-independence era a first serious study was undertaken by Mumtaz Hassan; he described Chaukhandi tombs as Baloch tombs.[7] Subsequently, many articles appeared in the national newspapers but the mystery as to their origin could not be solved. Ms. E-J.W. Bunting, along with Dr. F. A. Khan, Justice Feroz Nana and S. A. Naqvi started preparing rubbings of stone carvings and provided further publicity by exhibitions abroad of these rubbings. The exhibition in the USA in particular aroused great interest amongst the scholars in the studies of various aspects of the Chaukhandi tombs.[8] In his first paper based on epigraphical-cum-historical studies, Shaikh Khurshid Hasan observed that the Chaukhandi graveyard near Landhi was predominantly a graveyard of the Jokhio tribe, although some tombs of the Burfat and Sheikh tribes could also been found.[9] In a 1984 article on the Chaukhandi tombs Shaikh Khurshid Hasan mainly dealt with the decorative elements of the stone carving.[10] In the following years he continued to publish on the gravestones[11] and inscriptions.[12] For further reading see also Shaikh Khurshid Hasan's comprehensive study.[13] Zajadacz-Hastenrath studyIn 1978 Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath published a book in which in which she mainly dealt with the stylistic evolution of Chaukhandi tombs. Comparing Chaukhandi tombs (tombs of particular types and forms thereof) among each other, a typological framework was established and consequently a relative chronology. By comparing this framework with dated structures, mainly of Makli Hill but also of other sites, the study arrived at dates for the various stages of evolution of the Chaukhandi tombs. Beside the Chaukhandi tombs strictly speaking, the study also dealt with specific aspects such as the 'Form of the tombstones', 'Riders, weapons, and other depictions on men's graves', 'Jewellery depictions on women's graves', articles which all show the richness of the Chaukhandi funerary art. The documentary part of the book included a list of dated stonemasonry patterns on Chaukhandi tombs.[14] Her study was mainly based on photographs taken of a total of 50 cemeteries and tombs; the book includes a representative selection of 112 photographs. A catalogue of the cemeteries visited provides details on their locations, and the number, types and conditions of individual tombs. It covered an area reaching from the Hub River in the west up to the region of Tando Muhammad Khan and of Shah Kapur in the east. Zajadacz-Hastenrath concluded that the Chaukhandi tombs had developed far beyond a kind of folkloristic specialty; they evolved from traditional forms of tombs widely spread in the Lower Sindh ( e.g. on Makli Hill, but there with richer forms, Kathiawar and Gujarat) to graves with a monumental quality, achieved by their unusual height, coupled with strong sculptural decorations. The apex of this development was reached during the first half of the 17th century of which fine examples were shown in figures 34, 35 and 36 of the study (the author called these 'Tombs with projecting surfaces'). Unique in the Islamic architectural tradition, the author considered the Chaukhandi tombs a most original and independent contribution to Islamic sepulchral architecture and ornamental sculpture. The notable character of her study was underlined in the Encyclopedia of Islam.[15] While dealing with the various types of sepulchral structures on the South Asia and referring to the study of Zajadacz-Hastenrath, the author of that article stressed that it was only in the case of the Chaukhandi tombs that such a systematic research had been done. In 2003 (i.e. after the author's decease in 1998), an English translation of the book was published in Pakistan.[2] Latest ResearchPakistani professor Mirza Mahad Baig visited Sindh at the end of the 20th century and examined some of the tombs. He pointed out to Rajput influences in the Chaukhandi necropolis.[16] He mentioned that it is well known that many Munda warrior groups have family ties with the so-called Rajput tribes of Rajasthan and Gujarat. Some Rajput tribes, namely the Jokhio, the satlari, emigrated from Kutch (Gujarat) and Rajputana towards the Sindh and Makran regions during the Samma Dynasty. These tribes had close relations among each other, including matrimonial ties, both within their own group as well as with the Baloch tribe of the Kalmatis. His hypothesis suggested a tribal Rajput origin in the utilization not only of the monolithic slabs and pedestals in the step-shaped graves, but also in the naive decoration of some tombs, resembling a house facade, or a human face as if drawn by a child. The decoration of the tombs (mostly with geometric motifs) seems derived from wood sculpture. With a few exceptions human figures are avoided, in accordance with Islamic beliefs. Further articles on the structural development of stone-carved graves were written by Kaleem Lashari[17][18][19] Later, Lashari highlighted the Bhawani Serai and the Tutai Chaukhandi graveyards{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}, and called for urgent conservation{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}. Meaning of ChaukhandiThere are various opinions as to the meaning of the word Chaukhandi. Shaikh Khurshid Hasan writes:[13]
Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath is of the opinion that the original age and history of Chaukhandi tombs are still entirely unclear.[2] She writes
Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath also comments on Mumtaz Hassan's theory and says {{Quote|(...) it does not seem possible to establish a convincing connection between the word 'Chaukhandi' and the tombs themselves. Admittedly, the word is also used to refer to other square structures – for example, the Chaukhandi Stupa in Sarnath. The Chaukhandi tombs themselves are also 'square' in contrast to the round or oval tombs that are also seen in Sindh and Balochistan; but, as a characteristic, this lacks the striking quality that might justify the use of this name for them.}} In her book she says the generic term Chaukhandi tombs is used in the sense of tombs resembling those found at the cemetery in Chaukhandi. See also{{Commons category|Chaukhandi tombs}}
References1. ^{{Cite web|url=http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/1287/|title=Chaukhandi Tombs, Karachi - UNESCO World Heritage Centre|last=Centre|first=UNESCO World Heritage|website=whc.unesco.org|language=en|access-date=2017-01-15}} 2. ^1 2 Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath, Chaukhandi Tombs, Funerary Art in Sind and Balochistan, Karachi 2003. 3. ^Jean Philippe Vogel, 'Tombs at Hinidan in Las Bela', Archaeological Survey of India, Annual Report 1902-1903. 4. ^Henry Cousens, The Antiquities of Sind, Archaeological Survey of India 46, Imperial Series (Calcutta, 1929, rptd. Karachi, 1975), 'Baloch tombs and Graveyards' 5. ^Marc Aurel Stein, Archeological Tours in Gedrosia, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India 43 (Calcutta, 1931), p. 180, fig. 20. 6. ^Nani Gopala Majumdar, Explorations in Sind: Being a Report of the Exploratory Survey carried out during the Years 1927-28, 1929-30, and 1930-31, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India 48 (Dehli, 1934) 7. ^1 2 Mumtaz Hassan, 'Chawkhandi Tombs', Artistic Pakistan 1: 2 (1968). 8. ^Bunting, Ethel-Jane W., Sindhi Tombs and Textiles - Persistence of Pattern, University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, U.S.A., 1967. 9. ^Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, Origin of Chaukhandi Tombs, Journal of Pakistan Historical Society, Vol. XXIV, Part II, April 1976. 10. ^Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, Stone Reliefs from Chaukhandi Tombs in Pakistan, East & West ISMEO, New Services, Vol. 34 Nos., 1-3 (September, 1984) Rome. 11. ^Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, Grave-stones from Chaukhandi, Journal of Central Asia, Vol. XV, NO. 1, July, 1992, Centre for the study of the Civilization of General Asia, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. 12. ^Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, Persian Inscriptions from Manghopir, Sindhological Studies, Summer, 1986, Institute of Sindhology, Jamshoro. 13. ^1 Shaikh Khurshid Hasan, Chaukhandi Tombs in Pakistan, Royal Book Co., Karachi/Pakistan 1996. 14. ^Salome Zajadacz-Hastenrath, Chaukandigräber, Studien zur Grabkunst in Sind und Balochistan, Wiesbaden/Germany 1978. 15. ^Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd Edition, vol. VI (1991), p. 127a, s.v. MAQBARA, India (J. Burton-Page). 16. ^G. G. Filippi, Rajput influences in the Chaukhandi Graveyards, Asiatica Venetiana, 4/1999. 17. ^1 Kaleem Lashari, Evolution of Stone Graves in Kohistan and Coastal Areas of Sindh, Balochistan, Journal of Pakistan Archaeologists Forum, Vol. I June, 1992, Karachi. 18. ^Kaleem Lashari, Study of Decorative Patterns and their evolution on stone carved graves, Journal of Pakistan Archaeologists Forum, Vol. 2, Issue I & II, Karachi 1993. 19. ^Kaleem Lashari, Structural Development of Stone Carved Graves in Kohistan, Archaeological Review Vol. 4, Issue I & II, 1995. 20. ^Progress Report of the Archaeological Survey of India, Western Circle for the year ending 31st March, 1920. 21. ^Ali Ahmad Brohi, History on tombstones - Sindh and Balochistan, Sindhi Adabi Board, Jamshoro 1986. 22. ^N. A. Baloch, Kalmati Tombs in Sindh and Balochistan, Pakistan Archaeology No. 26, Department of Archaeology, Govt. of Pakistan, Karachi 1991. External links
9 : Cemeteries in Karachi|Mausoleums in Karachi|Archaeological sites in Sindh|Ancient culture of Pakistan|Architecture in Sindh|History of Sindh|Monuments and memorials in Sindh|Sandstone buildings|Landhi Town |
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