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          Patna, Nov 2 (IANS) After lying neglected for years, the ruins   of Vikramshila university, an ancient seat of Buddhist learning located in   Bihar's Bhagalpur district, are set to be conserved, like its older   contemporary, Nalanda university, so that current and future generations would   get to know about the rich tradition of scholarship in the state.
 
 |  The Archaeological Survey of India's Patna circle has decided to launch a mega   plan for conservation of the university ruins, located near Antichak village in   the Kahalgaon sub-division of Bhagalpur district, about 150 km from Patna,   officials said.
 The excavated ruins of Vikramshila university, set up in   the 8th century by the Pala dynasty king Dharmapala, are awaiting conservation.   "The ASI is serious about conservation of the entire excavated structure of   Vikramshila like of Nalanda university," ASI Patna's superintending   archaeologist Sanjay K. Manjul told IANS.
 
 He said conservation of the   ruins would help to protect it for future generations.
 
 "We have sent the   conservation plan to the director general of ASI for approval. After receiving   approval, we will launch the conservation plan," he said.
 
 According to   ASI officials here, conservation of 52 shells or reading room-like structures   adjoining the main stupa and a major portion of the excavated structure will be   taken up.
 
 The ASI's conservation plan comes in the wake of the Bihar   government's move to develop Vikramshila's ruins as a tourist destination like   Nalanda, situated around 90 km from the state capital.
 
 Vikramshila   university, set up by the Pala dynasty (750-1174 A.D) king Dharmapala in the   late 8th or early 9th century, was intended to complement the existing   world-class universities at Nalanda and Takshila. It lasted four centuries   before it was destroyed during an attack on local kingdoms by Bakhtiyar Khilji   of the Delhi Sultanate.
 
 As per the ASI, the remains at Antichak were   excavated by B.P. Sinha of Patna University during 1960-69.
 
 The   antiquities found at Vikramashila comprise terracotta objects, including a large   number of plaques representing Buddhist and Brahmanical deities, animal and bird   figurines and some symbolic representations, as also a large number of stone   images of gods and goddesses.
 
 A few small bronzes of Buddhist deities   like the Buddha, Maitreya, Vajrapani, Avalokitesvara and Manjusri have been   found. The bulk of antiquities comprise stone, iron, copper, silver and bronze   objects, including a few silver and copper coins.
 
 Locals are not happy   with the pace of ASI's work.
 
 Members of the Vikramshila Nagarik Samiti   said that after more than three and a half decades of excavation by the ASI, no   work has been done at the site on the pattern of Nalanda. The Samiti has been   demanding Vikramshila be included in the state's Buddhist tourist circuit for   its development.
 
 The ancient university at Nalanda was a seat of higher   learning in the fifth century. The university was home to over 10,000 students,   including from abroad, and nearly 2,000 teachers.
 
 
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