| Dir,
situated in the Khyber Paktunkhwa of Pakistan, is one
of the most important regions, both historically and
culturally. Its territories stretches between 34°
22' and 35° 50' North and 71 ° 02' and 72°
30' East and mainly comprises the terrain drained by
the Panjkora river and its affluents. Dir takes its
name from the name of a village, Dir, which served as
capital of the state during the Nawabs era. It has District
Swat in the East, Bajaur on the West, Chitral on the
North and Malakand Agency on the south. Pushto is the
main spoken language of the population, followed by
Kohistani and Gujri. The people of Dir, who are courageous
and hospitable, have deep reverence for their religion.
The
history of Dir goes back to at least the 2"d millennium
BC, which is testified by the excavations of numerous
burials of Aryans at Timargarha and other places, dating
from 18th to 6th century BC. The Aryans were followed
by the Achaemenians, who were ousted by the invasion
of Alexander in 327 BC, though he faced great difficulties
in subjugating the local population. Greek historians
have paid great tributes to the population, the army
and the queen of Massaga, an ancient site near the modern
Ziarat village, located between Chakdara and Timargarha.
After the Greeks, the area witnessed the Gandharan Civilization,
which achieved great fame. This period is signified
by the presence of the monumental remains of the Buddhist
stupas and monasteries, a few of which has already filled
the museum at Chakdara.
The Yousafzai Pathans, who established themselves here
in the 5th century AD, are responsible for the tribal,
social, political and economic life of the region. Akhund
lIyas Painda Khel of the Malaizi tribe (1640) enjoyed
popular support among locals and was recognized as a
spiritual leader. His descendants built upon this support
and ultimately increased their power over the people
and laid the foundation of a distinct political state,
then called the state of Nawabs. The British annexed
Dir in 1897 and demarcated its boundaries. After independence
of Pakistan, it still enjoyed the status of a separate
state, but was amalgamated with Pakistan in 1960 as
a tribal agency. It was finally merged as a district
with the NWFP in 1969. Recently, due to administrative
constraints, Dir District was divided into two districts-Lower
and Upper Dir- with Timargarha and Dir as their respective
headquarters.
Dir occupied an important position as a centre of Gandhara
Art. Pilgrims and historians have defined Gandhara,
(the land of fragrance and beauty), as "the area
to the west of Indus and north of Kabul rivers which
included the valleys of Peshawar, Swat, Dir and Bajaur,
extending westwards to Hadda and Bamiyan in Afghanistan
and Taxila Valley in Punjab in the east". The region
of Dir is therefore littered with the remains of the
Gandharan Civilization and Dir Museum, Chakdara, offers
a fine and unique collection of Gandharan Art.
The
Department of Archaeology, University of Peshawar undertook
a few important archaeological projects in Dir during
1966-1969 and excavated various archaeological sites.
To house the collection from the area, the then State
Government of Dir, constructed a museum in Chakdara.
Capt. Rahatulah Khan Jaral, the then Political Agent
of Dir Agency, proposed the construction of the Dir
Museum and allocated a sum of Rs. 2,50,000/- for its
construction. The Provincial Government afterwards allocated
an additional fund of Rs. 4,90,000/- for the construction
of residential quarters, boundary wall, guest house,
storage and other facilities in the museum.
The museum building was designed by Mr. Saidal Khan,
Consultant Architect of Khyber Paktunkhwa . Public Works
Department. The designer, while designing the museum,
kept the local style of arc hitecture in mind and constructed
it of bare stone, called Malakandi stone, an architectural
element common in the area and reflecting the strength
and dynamism of the locals. The museum has a fort like
appearance with a grand facade, consisting of an arched
entrance, two square corner picket-towers and battlements
on the parapet.
The
museum remained a state museum till 1969 and when the
state was merged with NWFP, the museum was handed over
to the provincial government. The provincial government
constituted a Board of Governors under the NWFP Educational
and Training Ordinance 1970 to run the affairs of the
museum. Lt. General Azhar Khan, the then Governor of
NWFP laid the foundation of the museum on 20.9.1970.
Lt. General (Rtd.) Fazl-e-Haq, the then Governor NWFP
inaugurated the museum on 30.5.1979. The purpose of
the museum is to exhibit the archaeological, Islamic
and ethnological collection of the area, including sculptures,
coins, jewelry and weapons etc.
Dir
museum has a total collection of 2161 objects, with
more than 1444 Gandharan pieces. The collection of this
section includes the themes of Buddha's pre-birth and
life stories, miracles, worship of symbols, relic caskets
and individual standing Buddha sculptures. The most
represented pre-birth stories or Jatakas are Dipankara,
Maitryakanyaka, Amara, Syama and Visvantara Jatakas.
The most important scenes from the Buddha Life Story
includes Queen Maya's dream, interpretation of the dream,
birth of Siddhartha, bath scene, seven steps, going
to school, writing lessons, wrestling matches, palace
life, marriage scene, renunciation, great departure,
ascetic life, first meditation, demons attacks, attaining
enlightment, first sermon at Sarnath, conversion of
Kasyapa, monks, death scene, cremation of Buddha, distribution
and guarding of relics and the construction of stupas
on the relics. The miracle of Sravasti and taming of
a wild elephant are the two commonly represented miracles
in the museum collection. Different types of the relic
caskets, stupa models and life-size Buddha statues also
make part of the collection.
The Hall of Tribes or the Ethnological Gallery of the
museum was established in 1977 with 498 objects and
includes manuscripts, weapons, jewelry, dresses, ceramics,
musical instruments, household objects, furniture and
wooden architectural elements.
The Gandharan art pieces in the Dir Museum mainly come
from the sites of Andan Dheri, Chat Pat, Baghrajai,
Bumbolai, Jabagai, Shalizar, Ramora, Tri Banda, Macho,
Amluk Darra, Nasafa, Damkot, Bajaur and Talash, Dir,
Malakand, Balambat, Timargarha, Shamlai Graves, Inayat
Qila, Shah Dheri Damkot, Gumbatuna, Jandol, Matkani
and Shalkandi.
The important Garidharan sites in the vicinity of Dir
Museum include & Andan Dheri, Chat Pat and Gumbatuna.
The museum collection is growing and after necessary
up-gradation, the museum will provide better facilities
to all concerned.
|