Wari-Bateshwar ruins, an ancient fort city dating back to 450 BC in Bangladesh
According to the recent excavations made at the archaeological site of Wari-Bateshwar, it can be said that the history of science and technology in Bangladesh starts in the Chalcolithic age, some evidences of pit-dwelling from that period were found in those excavations.
The current scientific study is being carried out by a team from the Archaeology Department of Jahangirnagar University led by Professor Sufi Mostafizur Rahman.
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The site is about 75km from Dhaka situated near the Wari and Bateshwar villages in the Belabo Upazila of Narsingdi District.
My Life in Ruins | Wari-Bateshwar ruins | Wari Empire | Wari | The Saint's homecoming: more than five centuries after Venerable Macarius' flight from the ruins of his monastery, his head gets red-carpet treatment in the towns it visits on its way back to Makaryevo | St. Philip's Church Ruins | Shiraho Saonetabaru Cave Ruins | Ruins of the medieval castle Kajt'a-tsikhe (Şeytan Kalesi) at the village Yıldırımtepe, Çıldır | Omi-Osun ruins | Love in the Ruins | ''Lehnin Abbey Ruins'': Eduard Gaertner | Jiaohe Ruins | Fragile Dreams: Farewell Ruins of the Moon | ''Classical Ruins'' by Hubert Robert | Bateshwar, Morena |
The Temple of Joy Kali is situated between Thathari Bazar and Wari, on a road itself named after this temple, which is called 24 Joy Kali Temple street.
The discovery in early 2013 of an undisturbed, imperial royal tomb, El Castillo de Huarmey, provides evidence of the material wealth and political power exercised by the Wari for centuries.
By this time, the body typically had begun to decompose in the heat and humidity of the Amazon, sometimes reaching the stage where the body became bloated and discolored.