নাটেশ্বর | |
Location | Tongibari, Munshiganj District |
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Region | Bangladesh |
Coordinates | 23°31′54″N 90°28′10″E / 23.531680°N 90.469358°E |
Type | Stupa, Buddhist Vihara |
Part of | Jia Bang Lao (as mentioned in the biography of Atiśa Dīpankara Śrījñāna)[1] |
Area | 10 acres[2] |
History | |
Material | Soil |
Founded | 780 CE[1][3] |
Abandoned | 1223 CE[3] |
Site notes | |
Archaeologists | Oitijjo Onneshon Gobeshona (Heritage Exploration Research, Jahangirnagar University), Cumilla University,[4] Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology of Hunan Province, China[3] |
Ownership | Ministry of Cultural Affairs[4] |
Management | Shah Sufi Mustafizur Rahman, Jahangirnagar University;[5] Agrashar Bikrampur Foundation[3] |
Architecture | |
Architectural styles | Buddhist architecture |
History of Bangladesh |
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Bangladesh portal |
Nateshwar Deul (Bengali: নাটেশ্বর দেউল, romanized: Nāṭēśśôr Dēul, lit. 'Temple complex of Nateshwar') is a Buddhist archaeological site located in the village of Nateshwar in Tongibari Upazila in the Munshiganj District, Bangladesh.[6] It is the ruin of a Buddhist city established from 780 to 950 CE and from 950 to 1223 CE in the Bikrampur region. Archaeological excavation began at Nateshwar in 2012–13.[1][3] From 2013 to 2018, an area of approximately 500 square metres (5,400 sq ft) was excavated.[7] Sixteen Buddhist stupas, including Bangladesh's only pyramid-shaped one, have been found in Nateshwar.[1][5]
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