Patna, Oct
18 :A three-member Italian archaeologist team, in a joint collaboration with the
Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), will explore the undiscovered parts of the
ancient Patliputra, near moder-day Patna. "Our
thrust will be to study, explore and identify new sites related to ancient Patliputra,"
Giovenni Veradi, an internationally acclaimed archaeologist, told IANS here Thursday.
"The team
will seek financial assistance from Italian government to go ahead with its joint
collaboration and to explore the sites," he said. Giovenni
Veradi's latest excavation work at Gotinava in Nepal was lauded for its discovery
of tracing the spread of Mauryan empire beyond India to Nepal and China. The
ASI is also upbeat to join hands with Italian archaeologists. "It is going
to be a big move to explore many more new facts about Patliputra," said P.K.
Mishra, superintendent archaeologist of the Patna circle. It
is widely believed by the experts that Patliputra was much bigger than what has
been discovered till date. "It
is a hard fact that Patliputra remains one of the least explored of the ancient
sites in India, " Mishra said. Mishra
said that the fresh explorations assume much significance in view of the satellite
images taken by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) last year. Italian
archaeologists are planning to study stone slabs and Arogya Vihar or hospital-cum-monastery
at Kumrahar, six km from Patna. Chinese
scholars Hieun Tsang and Fa Hien have accounted the size and grandeur of the ancient
Patiliputra. Megasthenese, the celebrated Greek ambassador in the court of Chandragupta
Maurya, gave vivid accounts of Patilputra in his book "Indica". (IANS)
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