The Indian subcontinent has a long-standing tradition of education and knowledge, dating back to the era of the Indus Valley Civilization. Prominent educational institutions of ancient India include Takshashila, Kashmir Samast, Nalanda, Vallabhi, Pushpagiri, Odantapuri, Vikramashila, Somapura, Bikrampur, and Jagaddala.
Takshashila or Taxila
First university
The ancient University of Taxila was a renowned institution of higher learning, situated in the city of Taxila within the Pathovar region of Pakistan's Punjab province. Located in the Taxila Tehsil of the Rawalpindi District, this institution lies approximately 25 kilometers (16 miles) northwest of the Islamabad-Rawalpindi metropolitan area and immediately south of the Haripur District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Based on scattered references—which could only be compiled a millennium later—it is believed to have been established at least as early as the 5th century BCE. Some scholars date the existence of Taxila back as far as the 6th century BCE. This educational complex comprised numerous monasteries; however, it lacked large dormitories or lecture halls, suggesting that education was likely imparted on an individual basis.
A detailed description of Taxila is found in later Jataka tales, which were written in Sri Lanka around the 5th century BCE.
It had already become a renowned center of learning by at least several centuries BCE, and the arrival of students continued there until the destruction of the city in the 5th century BCE.
Prominent Teachers
Notable teachers who taught at Takshashila University include the following:
Panini: The great Indian grammarian of the 5th century BCE.
Kumara Lata: According to the 3rd-century Chinese Buddhist monk and traveler Yuan Chiang, Kumara Lata was the founder of the Saturnalia school.
Vasanth Bandu: It is said that Vasanth Bandu—who is considered the founder of Tibetan Buddhism—also taught there. His renowned disciples included Dharma Kirti and Digna Ga.
Renowned Students
The renowned students of the ancient University of Taxila included:
King Prasenjit of Kosala, who was a close friend of the Buddha.
Janaka, who served as the Royal Physician of Raj girah and the personal physician to the Buddha.
Charka, who is regarded as the "Father of Indian Medicine" and was one of the pioneering scholars of Ayurveda; it is said that he, too, studied at Taxila and practiced medicine there.
Sompura Mahavira
Located at Pithampur in the Baalbaki Upasana of the Nagano District in Bangladesh, Sompura Mahavira is one of the most renowned "viharas" (monasteries) in the Indian subcontinent and is considered one of the country's most significant archaeological sites. It was one of the largest residential universities of ancient India. It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985. It represents one of the finest examples of pre-Islamic architecture in Bangladesh. Its chronology is contemporary with that of the nearby Hauled Vihara and Sialkot Vihara, which are situated in the Nawabganj Upasana of the Dinajpur District.
Nalanda
Nalanda was an ancient Buddhist Mahavira and a renowned university that served as a prestigious center of learning within India's ancient Magadha Empire (modern-day Bihar). In antiquity, Nalanda University attained immense fame, prestige, and significance; and, emerging around the 4th century, it achieved an exceptionally high status due to its contribution to India's rise as a major power. The site is situated approximately 95 kilometers (59 miles) southeast of Patna, and from the 5th century CE until around 1200 CE, it stood as one of the world's greatest centers of learning. Today, it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Vallabh University
Vallabh University was a significant center of Buddhist learning and played a pivotal role in the propagation and dissemination of Hinayana Buddhism between 600 CE and 1200 CE. From 480 to 775 CE, Vallabh served as the capital of the Maitra Empire. Situated in the Saurashtra region, it was a vital port for international trade; currently known as Vallabh purr, it is located in the Bhavnagar district of the state of Gujarat in western India—a region corresponding to the erstwhile princely state of 'Valla'. For a period, in the realm of education, this university was considered a rival to Nalanda University, located in Bihar. In September 2017, the Central Government of India began considering a proposal to revive this ancient university.
Sharda Peet
Sharda Peet is a ruined Hindu temple and ancient center of learning, situated in present-day Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir. Between the 6th and 12th centuries CE, it was one of the most prominent temple-universities of the Indian subcontinent. Particularly renowned for its library, legends recount that scholars undertook arduous journeys to study the texts housed there. It played a pivotal role in the development and popularization of the Sharda script in Northern India.
Library at Sharada Peet
Sharada Peet was also valued by scholars across the Indian subcontinent for its library, and stories detail long journeys they would take to consult it.
In the 11th century, the Vaishnava saint Swami Ramanuja traveled from Sri ran gam to Sharada Peet to refer to the Brahma Sutras, before commencing work on writing his commentary on the Brahma sutras, the Sri Basha.
The 13th century CE (1277 – 78) text Prabha vicarate contains a story of the Svetambara scholar Hema Chandra. As Sharada Peet was the only place with a library known to have all such works available in their complete form, Hema Chandra requested King Jayasimha Siddha raja to send a team to retrieve copies of the existing eight Sanskrit grammatical texts preserved there. These supported his own text of Sanskrit grammar, the Siddha-Hema-Sandaun Sassan.
Pushpa gyri Vihara
Pushpa gyri was an ancient Buddhist "Mahavira" (great monastery) or monastic complex situated atop the Languid Hill (or hills) in the Jaja purr district of the Indian state of Odisha. Pushpa gyri is mentioned in the writings of the Chinese traveler Xuan Zang (c. 602 – c. 664 CE), as well as in several other ancient sources. Until the 1990s, it was generally believed that Pushpa gyri was merely another name for one—or all—of the group of monastic sites located in the Jaja purr district: Lalit gyri, Ratnagiri, and Udaya gyri. Excavations at these sites have yielded the ruins of numerous buildings, stupas of various sizes, sculptures (many of which are now housed in museums), and other ancient artifacts.
However, archaeological excavations conducted on the Languid Hills between 1996 and 2006 revealed the existence of a distinct site. Inscriptions discovered at this location referred to the local monastery as 'Pushpa Sabha Girya,' which excavators subsequently identified as Pushpa gyri. This view has now become the consensus among scholars. Since then, the site has been opened to tourism.
Xuan Zang's travelogues indicate that Pushpa gyri was a significant Buddhist site in ancient India. Alongside Nalanda, Vikram Shyla, Odinga puri, Taxila, and Vallabh, it is regarded as a major ancient center of learning. It flourished between the 3rd and 11th centuries CE.
Vikram Shyla
During the reign of the Pala Empire, alongside Nalanda, Vikram Shyla was one of the two most important centers of education in India. This site is now identified with the village of Antica, located in the Bhagalpur district of Bihar.
Vikram Shyla was established by the Pala Emperor Dharmapala (783–820 CE) in response to the perceived decline in the quality of education at Nalanda. The renowned scholar Atish is also sometimes counted among its notable abbots. It was destroyed by the forces of Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji around 1193 CE.
Bik Rampur Vihara
Bik Rampur Vihara is an ancient Buddhist monastery located in Raghu Rampur village, within Bik Rampur—a village in the Munshi Ganj District of the Dhaka Division, Bangladesh.
Jagat dale Mahavira
Jagat dale Mahavira was a Buddhist monastery and a center of learning situated in a geographical region known as 'Virendra'. This region lies within Northern Bengal in present-day Bangladesh. It was established by the later kings of the Pala dynasty—most likely Ram apala. It is believed that this monastery was located in the northwestern part of present-day Bangladesh, near the village of Jagat dale in Dham or hat Up zila (close to Pahari purr), adjacent to the Indian border. In some texts, its name is also recorded as 'Jagat dale'.













