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Ashoka Rock Edicts (Mansehra)

Type: Archaeological Site - Rock Art
Province: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
District: Mansehra
Period: Historic
Relative Chronology: 4th - 2nd Century BCE
Description: The Mansehra rock edicts are cut into the surface of three large boulders on the side of a rocky outcrop close to the city of Mansehra. They record fourteen edicts of the Mauryan emperor, Asoka (r. c. 272-235 BCE) and represent the earliest irrefutable evidence of writing in South Asia. Dating to middle of 3rd Century BCE, they are written from right to left in the Kharosthi script. The presence of Kharosthi suggests that the influence of Achaemenid rule in this region, the province of Gandhara, outlived the short Alexandrian interlude of 4th century BCE. The fourteen major edicts recorded at the site present aspects of Asoka dharma or righteous law. These edicts are located besides one of the ancient routes connecting the Vale of Peshawar to the regions of Kashmir, Gilgit and Central Asia in the north and to the great city of Taxila in the south.
Latitude: 34.340500000
Longitude: 73.200200000
Ownership: Federal Government
Legal Status: Protected by The Antiquity Act 1975 (As amended in 1992)
Title of Publication: Mapping of the Cultural Assets in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Punjab
Published In: UNESCO, Islamabad
Year of Publication: 2011
Bibliography/Reference: Anonymous
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