Pandita Vihara
পণ্ডিত বিহার | |
Pandita Vihara Location of Pondit Bihar in Bangladesh | |
Interactive map of Pondit Bihar | |
| Alternative name | Pondit Bihar University |
|---|---|
| Location | Deyang Hill, Anwara Upazila, Chattogram |
| Region | East Bengal (present-day Bangladesh) |
| Coordinates | 22°13′25″N 91°51′45″E / 22.2236°N 91.8625°E |
| Type | Bihār |
| History | |
| Founded | 8th century CE |
| Abandoned | Likely 17th century CE |
| Periods | 8th–13th century CE |
| Cultures | Tantric Buddhism |
| Associated with | Buddhist scholers, monks |
| Events | Decline due to regional conflicts |
| Site notes | |
| Discovered | Artifacts found in 1927 CE |
| Proposed for reestablishment | |
Pondit Bihar or Pandita Bihar University was an ancient university of the Indian subcontinent established in the 8th century CE in eastern Bengal (present-day Bangladesh), in Chattogram, and it is now completely extinct. This Bihar was essentially an educational institution similar to Nalanda University, which operated as a center for teaching and propagating Tantric Buddhism in eastern Bengal. During a conflict in the 13th century, Nalanda Vihara in Bihar was destroyed, and many eastern Buddhist scholar communities later took refuge in Pondit Bihar. Atiśa Dīpaṅkara Śrījñāna, a Buddhist monk and missionary of the [[Pala Empire ]], stayed and studied for some time at Pondit Bihar.
The professors at Pondit Bihar, along with their teaching, studies, and yogic practices, also composed songs and dohas during their leisure time, which later gained recognition as Charyapada, the earliest known work of Bengali language and poetry. Before and after Pondit Bihar, and until approximately the mid-18th century, the name of no other educational institution is found in history.