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Dunhuang
It was Europeans who re-opened the road
in their search for the ancient Silk Road
cities. It happened in the latter part of
the last century. These tours can begin
very logically in Xian, proceeding via Lanzhou
and the Jiayuguan Pass to the Magao Caves
of Dunhuang, and then to Turpan, Urumqi
and Kashi.
Dunhuang
lies at the western end of the Gansu Corridor,
called Hexi Zoulang. The name Dunhuang originally
meant "prospering, flourishing"--
a hint that Dunhuang must once have been
an important city. Its position at the intersection
of two trade routes was what made Dunhuang
flourish. The coming and going of horse
and camel caravans carried new thoughts,
ideas, arts and sciences to the East and
West.
It
is said that in the fourth century a Buddhist
monk had a vision of 1000 Buddhas, and began
to carve grottoes into the sandstone cliff
and fill them with buddhist images. They
were abandoned and forgotten in around the
11th century until Stein and other archaeologists
arrived to carry away huge quantities of
manuscripts, textiles and other art objects.
However Magao remains a brilliant trove
of statues and wall paintings from the 4th
to 10th centuries.
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