Kapilvastu Museum

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Established1962 (Taulihawa, Moved to Tilaurakot in 1985)
LocationTilaurakot, Nepal
DirectorSubash Krishna Dangol
Kapilvastu Museum of Nepal
Tilaurakot, Ancient capital of the Shakyas
Established1962 (Taulihawa, Moved to Tilaurakot in 1985)
LocationTilaurakot, Nepal
TypeArchaeological museum
DirectorSubash Krishna Dangol
CuratorSubash Krishna Dangol

Kapilavastu Museum is a cultural and religious museum in Tilaurakot, Nepal. Kapilavastu is the ancient city of the Sakyas, Sakyamuni Buddha son of Suddhodhan. There are more than 136 archaeological sites in the territory of ancient Kapilavastu. Tilaurākoṭ, Niglihawa, Gotihawa, Arorakot, Sisahaniyakot, Chhetradehi, Sagrahawa, and Pipari, etc. are enriched with ancient art remains and monuments that are discovered. Archaeological findings of Tilaurākoṭ and of other sites are kept in the Kapilavastu Museum.

The museum is operated under the Department of Archaeology of the Nepāl Government. This museum was established in 1962 located on the right bank of the Banaganga River and the western site of Tilaurākoṭ mound. The catalog of displayed objects includes terracotta human figurines, animal figurines, birds, seal and sealing, beads, bangles, dabber, flesh rubber, coins, musical instruments, and Chalcolithic objects of Mustang Chhokhopani cave. Copper rings, weapons, painted grey ware pieces, conch and bone balls, teeth of hair, shoulder bone, finger bone, and leg bone are also displayed here.

Pottery from the excavated and explored–sites help researchers understand the basic cultural components of the various periods of human occupation. In the course of excavation at Tilaurākoṭ, Bañjarāhī, Lumbinī, Rāmagrāma, and Paisiā, excavators discovered clear-cut sequences of cultures beginning from painted grey ware phase to the period of Imperial Guptas. Some of the ancient mounds yielded fragments of P.G. ware, N.B.P. ware, and Red ware from the surface. Vedmau is specially enriched with fragments of painted grey ware, which is called a Vedic site by the local people. The ceramic tradition of this region is similar to the one at Hastināpur from period II to IV. Thus, the archaeologists rightly compared the chronology and ceramic tradition of the area with that of Hastināpur. The most characteristic shape in greyware is a dish with convex sides and beaked edges. The pottery is thick in section having horizontal and vertical bands. The clay used was well-levigated. A metallic sound is produced by the fragments of greyware when struck. Northern black polished ware is thin and perfect in treatment. The clay used is not so well levigated and well-baked as in the case of greyware. It carries black and silver shades. These two phases are comparable to the periods II and III of Hastināpur, dated there in c.11-8th and c.6th-5th centuries BC respectively.

The red–slipped ware is abundant in quantity in the trenches as well as on the surface of the ancient mounds. Dishes, bowls, and basins are representative types of this ceramic tradition as well. Redware pottery and terracotta seals with Brāhmi scripts were found in the same layers. The quality of clay is very fine and is also well-fired.

Painted Grey Ware

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