The mystery surrounding the bones of the Buddha dates back more than
100 years ago, when colonial estate manager William (Willie) Peppe and
his workers began digging at a mysterious hill in Northern India. Peppe
had no idea what they'd find just a little more than 20 feet down. They
unearthed an astonishing discovery: a huge stone coffer, containing
five reliquary jars, more than 1,000 separate jewels carved
semi-precious stones and gold and silver objects and some ash and
bone. One of the jars bore a Sanskrit inscription which, when
translated, stated the jar contained the remains of the Buddha himself.
Doubt and rumors of forgery have overshadowed this remarkable find
dividing, Buddhist scholars for more than 100 years. Many believe the
whole thing is an elaborate hoax. Others insist the tomb on Peppe's
estate is no less than the final resting place of the leader of one of
the worlds great religions, a sage who died nearly 2,500 years ago. For
the doubters, suspicion focuses on a key figure from the time,
disgraced German archaeologist Dr. Anton Fuhrer.
Renowned historian Charles Allen sets out to solve this extraordinary
mystery, once and for all. Is the little-known monument in Northern
India really the Buddhas tomb? Is the find genuine? And if it is, who
created it and when? Allen begins his journey in England at the home of
Neil Peppe, the grandson of William Peppe. From there he travels 4,000
miles to Birdpore House in India, built by the Peppe family in the
1840s. The mysterious hill known as Piprahwa where the tomb was found
sits on the northern edge of the Birdpore estate. Allen traces Peppe's
steps to authenticate the find, uncovering how the discovery became
shrouded in scandal and where the Piprahwa ashes and bones reside today.
But is the inscription on the jar stating these are the relics of
the Buddha the Lord genuine? Allen meets with Harry Falk, a professor
at Germany's oldest institute of Indology and the worlds leading
authority on ancient Indian languages, to authenticate the ancient
Brahmi script. Though Falk's findings may finally clear William Peppe's
name and resolve the mystery surrounding his find, Allen must still
unravel who built the tomb and buried the remains of Buddha 2,500 year
ago.