Bodh gaya Travel Guide
Edit This The best resource for sights, hotels, restaurants, bars, what to do and seeThe site of a great monastic university, Bodh Gaya was the premier centre for the study of the early Buddhist schools in India for 700 years. Its most famous and enduring institution was the huge monastery built by the King of Sri Lanka in the 4th century which continued to function right up to the 13th century. Bodh Gaya became very early and remains even today the most important place of Buddhist pilgrimage. When it was abandoned in the 14th century its temples, shrines and monasteries fell into ruin and only began to be revived from the beginning of this century. Today most Buddhist countries have temples there and the place is visited by thousands of pilgrims and tourists every year.
The original Bodhi Tree, the tree at Bodh Gaya under which the Buddha sat on the night he attained enlightenment was destroyed by King Puspyamitra during his persecution of Buddhism in the 2nd century BC and the tree planted to replace it, probably an offspring, was destroyed by King Sassanka at the beginning of the 7th century AD. The tree that grows at Bodh Gaya today was planted in 1881 by a British archaeologist after the previous one had died of old age a few years before.
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