Dhamek Stupa marks the location where
the Buddha gave
his first teaching to his first five disciples
Kaundinya,
Assaji, Bhaddiya, Vappa and Mahanama. All five eventually became fully liberated. In Sanskrit, the word
mriga is used in the sense of game animals, with deer being the most common. After the
parinirvana of the Buddha, his remains were cremated and the ashes were divided and buried under eight stupas, with two further stupas encasing the urn and the embers. The Dhamek Stupa was presumably among these eight stupas. The
Mauryan King
Ashoka may have commissioned the stupa's expansion. The contemporary profile of the Dhamek Stupa has been conclusively dated to the
Gupta Empire and the 5th-6th century CE. by employees of Babu Jagat Singh (the
Aumil of parganas Shivpur & Katehar and Nephew of
Raja Balwant Singh of Benares). Duncan published his observations in 1799 with the periodical of the Asiatic Society. The reliquary contained a few bones and some pearls, which were subsequently immersed in the
Ganges river. The reliquary itself, although sent over to the Asiatic Society, disappeared. The outer sandstone box once containing the reliquary was rediscovered by Cunningham in 1835. The bricks of the stupa were hauled off and used for the construction of the market in
Jagatganj, Varanasi. Jagat Singh and his crew also removed a large part of the facing of the Dhamek Stupa, and removed several Buddha statues which he retained at his house in Jagatganj. ==Gallery==