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Ancient Tibetan Dynasty Site to Be Set Forth as World Heritage Site

An ancient Tibetan castle encircled by a unique landscape of "earth forest" will compete for the title of World Heritage Site with state approval, according to local officials in Ari prefecture of the Tibet Autonomous Region.

Located in what is now Zhaburang village of Ari, the Guge Dynasty remains, which can be traced back over 1,000 years, boasts approximately 1,000 square meters of invaluable frescos, which historians and archaeologists said feature a typical mixture of Tibetan, Indian, central Asian and European artistic styles and thus are of great value.

The building structures in the site, including more than 300 houses and over 300 grottos remain intact, said Soiba Doje, head of Zanda county, home of the ancient dynasty.

The castle, with an area of some 180,000 square meters that varies from flat to hilly, was designed in three hierarchies, namely a magnificent imperial palace, a monastery and civilian housing dwellings.

The dynasty site is hemmed in by an "earth forest", a sort of woods of standing natural earth columns which extends some 210 sq km near the border of China and India.

The "earth forest" stands at an average altitude of over 4,000 meters.

With gullies, ravines and steep mountainsides, the unique landscape was shaped as a result of gradual geological movements of the Himalayan region ever since the Quaternary Period from 2.5 million years ago and the impact of perennial water erosion and air slaking.

As a historical site under top state protection form more than three decades since 1961, the site of the Guge Dynasty is currently undergoing a major renovation of its environment for the nomination, said Soiba Doje.

All those construction structures inharmonious in style with the ancient site are being pulled down, Soiba Doje said, and valuable frescos are stockaded.

A dozen families in the core area of the site have been displaced, the county head said.

The Guge Dynasty, a major power rising right after the Tubo Dynasty fell apart, was established in the ninth century and lasted more than 700 years.

The civilization was cited by historians as a vivid combination of diversified cultures of Tibet, Chinese Han, India, Nepal and Kashmir. The downfall of the dynasty, however, remains a mystery to archaeologists today.

Migmar Cering, director with the cultural bureau of Ari prefecture, said the special physiognomy of the "earth forest" and well-preserved Guge Dynasty site is of tremendous value for geological and historical research and thus are qualified to be nominated as World Heritage Site candidates.

The Chinese government has input more than 20 million yuan (about US$2.4 million) since 1997 into the maintenance of the Guge Dynasty site, Migmar Cering said.

Currently, the Potala Palace in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, is listed a World Heritage Site.
 
(Xinhua News Agency December 3, 2003)

 

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