Kumtura Caves


The Kumtura Thousand Buddha Caves is a Buddhist cave temple site in the Autonomous regions of the [People's Republic of China|Autonomous Region] of Xinjiang, China. The site is located some 25 km west of Kucha, Kuqa County, on the ancient Silk Road. Other famous sites nearby are the Kizilgaha Caves, the Kizil Caves, Subashi Temple and the Simsim Caves.
112 cave temples survive, dating from the fifth to the eleventh centuries. Damaged by occasional habitation after abandonment of the site, Kumtura was visited by a number of the early foreign expeditions to Chinese Central Asia, including the 1902 Ōtani expedition, Oldenburg, and Le Coq. The last detached several wall paintings and took them back to Berlin.
Construction of the Dongfang Hong Hydroelectric Plant in the 1970s caused the water level of the Muzat River to rise and has increased the rate of decay of the wall paintings. Long-term preservation measures under the auspices of UNESCO began in 1999 with extensive documentation and survey work and consolidation of the conglomerate rock from which the caves are excavated. The site was among the first to be designated for protection in 1961 as a Major [Site Protected for Its Historical and Cultural Value at the National Level|Major National Historical and Cultural Site]. In 2008 Kumtula Grottoes was submitted for future inscription on the UNESCO [World Heritage List] as part of the Chinese Section of the Silk Road.