South India Holiday Tours ![]() ![]() Amravati Museum | Amaravati Museum in AmaravatiLocated on the right banks of the River Krishna, Amaravati is a historical town that was once the capital of the Satavahana kingdom. The Satavahana dynasty ruled the region for four centuries.Amaravati Museum, Amaravati Museum in Andhra Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh Amaravati Museum, Museum Amaravati, Museum Amaravati in Amaravati During this period Amaravati emerged as a major center of Buddhist art and culture. The Amaravati Museum in Amaravati is an amazing repository of relics that have been gathered from the ruins of this 2000 year old Buddhist settlement as well as from nearby places which were also under the influence of this religion. A visit to the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati gives you an excellent opportunity to witness the superb collection of antiquities that have been collected from various Buddhist sites in Andhra Pradesh. The three galleries of the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati exhibit these rare artifacts. They mostly belong to the period 3rd century B.C. to 12th century A.D. Amaravati Museum, Amaravati Museum in Andhra Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh Amaravati Museum, Museum Amaravati, Museum Amaravati in Amaravati Some of the precious objects housed in the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati include a gold necklace from Gummadiduru, several caskets, Bone relics and gold flowers. Gallery I of the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati provides valuable insight into the art tradition of Amaravati. The collection includes an inscribed relief of Buddha from Gummadidurru, coins, beads, terracotta pottery, exquisite ssculptures and pillars. Amaravati Museum, Amaravati Museum in Andhra Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh Amaravati Museum, Museum Amaravati, Museum Amaravati in Amaravati What will surely catch your attention at the second gallery of the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati are the two Buddha images from Alluru, inscribed pillars and a stone wheel from Liongarajapalli. Beautifully sculpted Limestone panels from Dharanikota are a part of this impressive depository. There was once a great Stupa at Amaravati even larger than the one at Sanchi. Even though this stupa is presently kept in the Government Museum in Chennai, a few remains of this 2000 year old stupa is to be found in the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati. The greatest attraction of the Amaravati Museum in Amaravati is the tall and elegant bronze statue of Lord Buddha. It probably belongs to the 8th century A.D and was excavated from the south eastern part of the Deccan. The sculptural dexterity revealed in the statue is commendable. The robes of the Buddha are not very distinctly visible. His right shoulder is bare. From the right hand of the Buddha it appears as though he wants to do some charitable act. This kind of gesture of charity is referred to as Varadamudra. The statue is admirable. The quaint little town of Amaravati is well known not only as an eminent pilgrimage site at Amareswaram, but also for its archeological museum that stores some of history’s most treasured relics. Amravati Museum, Amravati is an exponent of the Amravati School of Art that dates back to antiquity. Amravati Museum is sited in Andhra Pradesh’s Guntur District and encompasses the latitudinal parallel of 16?34’ North and the longitudinal meridian of 80 17’ East. The museum rests on the banks of the Krishna River and is easily accessible from Guntur Railway Station, a mere 35 km away from the museum’s site. Archeologists, research scholars, students as well as curators from all across the world visit Amravati Museum. The museum remains open all through the week from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Entry fees are priced a Rs. 2 per visitor above the threshold of 15 years and hence the museum records a very high footfall. The primordial Amravati School of Art finds adequate mention in the chronicles of the Satavahana era. The sculpting and the art forms that once upon a time adorned the ancient Buddhist Mahachaityas are displayed in the principal gallery. The lotus and the purnakumbha motifs, an auspicious symbol of abundant prosperity unravels the erstwhile affluence of the patrons of this art form. Drum slabs, swastikas, and relics of the jatakas find pride of place in the museum’s first floor gallery while the second floor gallery is dedicated to a life size image of the holy Gautam Buddha. The museum also houses several valued pieces that narrate the courage and valor of India’s ancient Satavahana rulers. A trip to Amravati Museum, Amravati takes visitors down memory lane to the pages of history and personifies the triumphs and losses of a bygone era.
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