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Indopedia:The Seal of Indopedia

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The Seal of Indopedia — original artwork, 2026, in the grammar of the ancient seal of Nalanda.

The seal of Indopedia is drawn from the oldest emblem of organised learning that India possesses: the official seal of Nalanda Mahavihara, the great monastery-university of Magadha that taught the world for some seven hundred years.

How the original was found

When the Archaeological Survey of India opened the mounds of Nalanda in the long campaign of excavations begun in 1915 — the epigraphic finds studied by Hiranand Sastri and published in his Nalanda and its Epigraphic Material — the diggers recovered, among monasteries and temples, hundreds of small clay sealings. These were the stamps with which the institution closed its letters and certified its documents: the signature of a university, pressed into clay twelve centuries before the printing press.[1]

What the ancient seal shows

The official seal of the mahavihara bears a dharmachakra — the wheel of the law — flanked by a deer on either side, resting upon a ground line, with the institution's name beneath. The composition remembers a precise moment: the deer park at Sarnath, where the Buddha set the wheel of dharma in motion in his first sermon. The wheel is the teaching; the deer are the listeners — the gentlest of creatures, first among all beings to hear.[1]

The legend and its meaning

Beneath the device the ancient sealings carry, in the late Gupta-era script (the ancestor of today's Devanagari), the Sanskrit legend:

श्री-नालन्दा-महाविहारीय-आर्य-भिक्षु-संघस्य
Śrī-Nālandā-Mahāvihārīya-Ārya-Bhikṣu-Saṁghasya
"[The seal] of the Community of Venerable Monks of the Great Monastery of Glorious Nalanda."

It is a genitive — a mark of belonging. Whatever document bore this seal spoke with the authority of the whole community of scholars. (We render the legend here in Devanagari, the living descendant of the script the monks used; the original characters belong to the Brahmi family of the Gupta age.)

What it symbolises — the shared lamp of two dharmas

Nalanda was a Buddhist mahavihara — and it was founded and endowed by Hindu kings: tradition and archaeology associate its foundation with Kumaragupta I of the Gupta dynasty, and its halls were sustained in turn by Harsha and the Palas. Within its walls the curriculum ran far beyond the Buddhist canon — the Vedas, grammar, logic (nyāya), medicine and astronomy were all taught, as the Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang, who studied there in the seventh century, recorded with wonder.[2]

The seal therefore stands for something larger than any single school: the wheel of enlightenment turned at the meeting place of Sanatana and Bauddha dharma — Hindu kings endowing Buddhist learning, Buddhist masters teaching Vedic sciences, one continuous Indian river of knowledge with two great currents. The wheel at the centre is the jyoti of understanding; the deer are every seeker who comes quietly to hear; the ground line is the earth of Bharata on which the whole enterprise rests.

The Indopedia rendering

Indopedia's seal is an original artwork (2026) composed in the ancient grammar: the sixteen-spoked wheel within a beaded ring, two antlered stags couchant and facing the wheel, and — where the monks placed their community's name — the name of this portal: INDOPEDIA · Encyclopedia of Indian History. The antlers follow the wider Sarnath tradition of the motif (the worn clay originals are too small to settle the question); the colours are the portal's own — the maroon of old manuscript bindings and the gold of temple lamplight. No element is copied from any modern institution's emblem; the design honours the source the way Indopedia honours all its sources — by going back to the original.

A university sealed its letters with this device for seven hundred years. An encyclopedia of Indian history can hope for no better signature.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hiranand Sastri, Nalanda and its Epigraphic Material, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India No. 66 (1942).
  2. Xuanzang's account of Nalanda in the Da Tang Xiyu Ji (Great Tang Records on the Western Regions), 7th century.