- Alexander Cunningham
Sir Alexander Cunningham (
23 January 1814 –28 November 1893 ) was a Britisharchaeologist andarmy engineer , known as the father of theArchaeological Survey of India . Both his brothers,Francis Cunningham andJoseph Cunningham became well-known for their work inBritish India .Early life and career
Born in
London to the Scottish poetAllan Cunningham , he had his early education at "Christ's Hospital",London . He later studied at the M.E.I Company's Seminary atAddiscombe , and at the R.E.Estate atChatham . He joined the Bengal Engineers at the age of 19 as a Second Lieutenant and spent the next 28 years in the service of British Government of India. Soon after arriving inIndia in June 1833, a meeting withJames Prinsep sparked his lifelong interest in Indian archaeology and antiquity. He was ADC toLord Auckland , the Governor-general of India from 1836 to 1840. One 30th March, 1840, he married Alicia Maria Whish, daughter of Martin Whish B.C.S.Cunningham, A. (1871)The Ancient Geography of India, Vol. 1, p.xiii. Trübner and co.India. pp. 589] He was appointed as Colenol R.E in 1860. Cunningham retired in 1861, having attained the rank ofMajor General .Military life
He saw action at the
Battle of Punniar and was with the "Army of Sutlej" in 1845-46. He later became the Chief of Commission ofLadakh -Tibet boundary withRichard Strachey , then a captain in the British Army and Dr. Thomson in 1847. The Commission was set up to delimt the northern boundaries of the Empire after theFirst Anglo-Sikh War concluded with theTreaty of Amritsar , which cededKashmir as warindemnity expenses to the British. He was also a member of a previous commission to chart the border of Ladakh underR.A. Vans Agnew . [NOORANI, A.G. (2003) Facts of history: A survey of the treaties and engagements that have dealt with the status of the western sector of the Sino-Indian boundary in Jammu and Kashmir, "Frontline" Vol. 20(18) [http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/fline/fl2018/stories/20030912002104800.htm Available online] ] His early works [Cunningham, A. (1848) Essay on the Aryan Order of Architecture, as exhibited in the Temples of Kashmir, Calcutta] [Cunningham, A. (1854) Ladak, Physical, Statistical and Historical. London] are from his visits to the temples inKashmir and his travels inLadakh during his tenure with the Commission. He was also present at the battles ofChilianwala and Gujrat in 1848. In 1851, he explored the Buddhist monuments of Central India along with Lt. Maisey, and wrote an account of these. [Cunningham, A. (1854) The Bhilsa Topes, or Buddhist Monuments of Central India. London] He was appointed as the Chief Engineer ofBurma in 1856 for two years, and later for three years from 1858 he served in the same post in the North-western Provinces.The
Archaeological Survey of India was set up following a correspondence between Cunningham and Charles John Canning, then theviceroy of India . Cunningham was appointed the first director of the project, which operated from 1861 to 1865. He published the first two volumes of the Archaeological Survey of India during his tenure here. In 1865 the Archaeological Survey was halted and he left India in February 1866 to join the "Delhi and London Bank" at London as its Director till 1870. In the year 1867, Cunningham was knighted. Upon the resumption of the Archaeological Survey in 1870, he returned to India to take up the position of Director-general of the ASI on 1st January, 1871 maintaining his post until 1885. He was the author of 11 volumes of the ASI, while the rest were written under his supervision. He retired on 30th September, 1885 and returned to London, and continued to write books on the Buddhist excavations and on ancient coins. He also published numerous papers in the Journal of theAsiatic Society and theNumismatic Chronicle .Awards
He was awarded the CSI on 20th May, 1870 and CIE in 1878. In 1887, he was awarded the title of "Knights Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire".
Work on Buddhist Stupas in Central India
General Cunningham had visited Bharhut stupa, located in present
Satna district inMadhya Pradesh in 1873 on his way toNagpur . He was fascinated to find such a heritage site likeBharhut but at the same time pained at its ignorance by the people and the government. He left some guards behind to look after the site and came back in February 1874. He collected the scattered pieces of sculptures and records and tried to understand its design and lay out. He came third time in November 1874 with some legal rights. He carried some of the sculptures toKolkata and started a Bharhut gallery in the National Museum at Kolkata. After a detailed study ofBuddhist literature and the sculptures from the site, he published in 1876 a book titled "The Stupa of Bharhut", which is still an authentic book about the Bharhut stupa. The famous 8Buddhist stupas have been built on the relics of Buddha in his honour. Bharhut is not in that list. It is still not clear about on whose relics this stupa is built. General Cunningham had found in 1874 excavations a small box carrying the "Rakh Phool (ashes)" , which could not be identified but he handed it over to the Raja ofNagod for safe custody. [Neeraj Jain, Bharhut Stoopa Gatha (Hindi), Ed. Ramnarayan Singh Rana, Satna, 2007, p. 51-52]Cunningham was associated with the excavation of many sites in India, including
Sarnath ,Sanchi , and theMahabodhi Temple . In the case ofMahabodhi , Cunningham's work of restoring the Temple was completed by the pioneer of Buddhist revival in India,Anagarika Dharmapala .Cunningham died in London on November 28th, 1893; today, his collection of rare Indian
coin s is displayed in theBritish Museum .Books written by him include
*"Bhilsa Topes" (1854), a history ofBuddhism
*"The Ancient Geography of India" (1871)
*"The Book of Indian Eras" (1883)
*"Coins of Ancient India" (1891)
*The Stupa ofBharhut : A Buddhist Monument Ornamented with Numerous Sculptures Illustrative of Buddhist Legend and History in the Third Century B.C. Reprint. First published in 1879, London. 1998External links
* [http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/C_0388.htm Sir Alexander Cunningham] at "Banglapedia"
*Ror community References
*1911
Notes
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