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The
historical place at which the Enlightenment took place
became a place of pilgrimage. Though it is not mentioned
in the scriptures, the Buddha must have visited Bodh
Gaya again in the course of his teaching career. About
250 years after the Enlightenment, the Buddhist Emperor,
Ashoka visited the site and is considered the founder
of the Mahabodhi Temple. According to the tradition,
Ashoka, as well as establishing a monastery, erected
a diamond throne shrine at this spot with a canopy
supported by four pillars over a stone representation
of the Vajrasana, the Seat of Enlightenment. The temple's
architecture is superb but its history is shrouded
in obscurity. It was constructed with the main intention
of making it a monument and not a receptacle for the
relics of the Buddha. Several shrines were constructed
with enshrined images for use as places of worship.
The basement of the present temple is 15m square,
15m in length as well as in breadth and its height
is 52m which rises in the form of a slender pyramid
tapering off from a square platform. On its four corners
four towers gracefully rise to some height. The whole
architectural plan gives pose and balance to the observers.
Inside the temple there is a colossal image of the
Buddha in the "touching the ground pose",
bhumisparsha mudra. This image is said to be 1700
years old and is facing east exactly at the place
where the Buddha in meditation with his back to the
Bodhi tree was enlightened.
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