Along the Karakoram Highway in northern Pakistan lies one of the world’s most overlooked archaeological wonders. Thousands of ancient rock carvings etched into the mountains over millennia.
Discovered in stages starting in 1884, these petroglyphs were fully revealed during the construction of the highway in 1978, prompting a German-Pakistani research effort led by scholars like Karl Jettmar and Ahmed Hassan Dani.
Since then, researchers have uncovered carvings and inscriptions in multiple ancient languages, including Brahmi, Sogdian, Tibetan, and even Hebrew.
Some inscriptions carry haunting messages, like “Always remember, you must die,” offering a glimpse into the philosophical depth of these forgotten cultures.
The carvings span over 10,000 years of history, starting from the late Stone Age and evolving through the Bronze Age, Persian imperial expansions, and finally the golden age of Buddhism between the 5th and 8th centuries.
Among the carvings are faceless giants, mythical beasts, warriors in Persian dress, and massive depictions of the Buddha and stupas that resemble machines more than temples, evoking imagery from Hinduism.
These rock faces provide us a time capsule of belief systems, cultural shifts, and ancient human imagination carved into the bones of the Earth.
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