The Archaeological Survey of India Report
The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) excavated the mosque site at the direction of the
Allahabad Bench of the Uttar Pradesh high court in 2003. The archaeologists reported evidence
of a large 10th century structure similar to a Hindu temple having pre-existed the Babri Masjid.
A team of 131 labourers including 29 Muslims - who were later on included on the objections of
the Muslim side- was engaged in the excavations. In June 11, 2003 the ASI issued an interim
report that only listed the findings of the period between May 22 and June 6, 2003. In August
2003 the ASI handed a 574-page report to the Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court.
The ASI, who examined the site, issued a report of the findings of the period between May 22
and June 6, 2003. This report stated:
“Among the structures listed in the report are several brick walls ‘in east-west
orientation’, several ‘in north-south orientation’, ‘decorated coloured floor’, several
‘pillar bases’, and a ‘1.64-metre high decorated black stone pillar (broken) with vaksha
figurines on four corners’ as well as "Arabic inscription of holy verses on stone" Earlier
reports by the ASI, based on earlier findings, also mention among other things a staircase
and two black basalt columns ‘bearing fine decorative carvings with two crosslegged
figures in bas-relief on a bloomed lotus with a peacock whose feathers are raised
upwards’.
The excavations give ample traces that there was a mammoth pre-existing structure beneath the
three-domed Babri structure. Ancient perimeters from East to West and North to South have
been found beneath the Babri fabrication. The bricks used in these perimeters predate the time of
Babur. Beautiful stone pieces bearing carved Hindu ornamentations like lotus, Kaustubh jewel,
alligator facade, etc., have been used in these walls. These decorated architectural pieces have
been anchored with precision at varied places in the walls. A tiny portion of a stone slab is
sticking out at a place below 20 feet in one of the pits. The rest of the slab lies covered in the
wall. The projecting portion bears a five-letter Dev Nagari inscription that turns out to be a
Hindu name. The items found below 20 feet should be at least 1,500 years old. According to
archaeologists about a foot of loam layer gathers on topsoil every hundred years. Primary clay
was not found even up to a depth of 30 feet. It provides the clue to the existence of some
structure or the other at that place during the last 2,500 years.
More than 30 pillar bases have been found at equal spans. The pillar-bases are in two rows and
the rows are parallel. The pillar-base rows are in North-South direction. A wall is superimposed
upon another wall. At least three layers of the floor are visible. An octagonal holy fireplace
(Yagna Kund) has been found. These facts prove the enormity of the pre-existing structure.
Surkhii has been used as a construction material in our country since over 2000 years and in the
constructions at the Janma Bhumi Surkhii has been extensively used. Molded bricks of round
and other shapes and sizes were neither in vogue during the middle ages nor are in use today. It
was in vogue only 2,000 years ago. Many ornate pieces of touchstone (Kasauti stone) pillars
have been found in the excavation. Terracotta idols of divine fugurines, serpent, elephant, horse-
rider, saints, etc., have been found. Even to this day terracotta idols are used in worship during
Diwali celebrations and then put by temple sanctums for invoking divine blessings. The Gupta
and the Kushan period bricks have been found. Brick walls of the Gahadwal period (12th
Century CE) have been found in excavations.
Nothing has been found to prove the existence of residential habitation there. The excavation
gives out the picture of a vast compound housing a sole distinguished and greatly celebrated
structure used for divine purposes and not that of a colony or Mohalla consisting of small houses.
That was an uncommon and highly celebrated place and not a place of habitation for the
common people. Hindu pilgrims have always been visiting that place for thousands of years.
Even today there are temples around that place and the items found in the excavations point to
the existence of a holy structure of North Indian architectural style at that place.
In the January 2003, Canadian geophysicist Claude Robillard performed a search with a ground-
penetrating radar. The survey concluded the following:
"There is some structure under the mosque. The structures were ranging from 0.5 to 5.5 meters
in depth that could be associated with ancient and contemporaneous structures such as pillars,
foundation walls, slab flooring, extending over a large portion of the site".
Claude Robillard, the chief geophysicist stated the following:
"There are some anomalies found underneath the site relating to some archaeological features.
You might associate them (the anomalies) with pillars, or floors, or concrete floors, wall
foundation or something. These anomalies could be associated with archaeological features but
until we dig, I can't say for sure what the construction is under the mosque."
The final ASI report of August 25, 2003 stated that there was evidence of a large Hindu temple having
pre‐existed
of the ASI excavations for not following the excavation norms.
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