The Silk Road, May 2008
And so on to Dunhuang and the Mogao caves. Dunhuang lies at the edge of the formidable Taklamakan desert, second largest sand desert in the world after the Sahara. Travelers – monks, merchants and warriors, about to cross it needed somewhere to pray for safe crossing, travelers who had crossed it successfully wanted somewhere to give thanks for having survived. And so along the sandstone cliffs of the Ji river over a period of a thousand years from the 4th to the 14th century AD, spanning the dynasties of the Sixteen Kingdoms to the Yuan, or Mongol, 735 caves were carved out at Mogao. (There are 5 sites in all but the other 4 have only 77 caves altogether.)
Caves cut out of the rock at Dunhuang
Artists were hired to paint their interiors with often wildly colorful scenes from the Jataka Tales (the life of the Buddha), Buddhist mythology and illustrations of the Buddhist sutras (scriptures), as well as scenes of court life with musicians, dancers, and courtiers. Statues of clay and wood were sculpted of Buddha, Boddhisattvas, kings and demons and installed, or sometimes carved out of the walls. Dunhuang supported a community of monks and over time it became a center for meditation, burial, worship and for the storage of documents and artifacts. Documents in Chinese, Tangut Uighur, Tibetan, Mongolian, Syriac, Sanskrit and Brahmi have been found, as well as metals, bone and stone vessels, bricks, coins, pottery, silk and textiles, figurines and stenciled stupas. (There are no photographs of the caves, cameras are forbidden.) The caves are also a UNESCO World Heritage Site http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/440

