The Ancient City
Anuradhapura
This sacred city was established around a cutting
from the 'tree of enlightenment', the Buddha's fig tree, brought there in the
3rd century B.C. by Sanghamitta, the founder of an order of Buddhist nuns. Anuradhapura, a Ceylonese
political and religious capital that flourished for 1,300 years, was abandoned
after an invasion in 993. Hidden away in dense jungle for many years, the
splendid site, with its palaces, monasteries and monuments, is now accessible
once again.
Anuradhapura attests in a unique and
specific way to the Sinhalese civilization. On numerous occasions the city was
submitted to the assaults of invaders from southern India - Tamils, Pandyas, Cholas,
etc. It stands as a permanent manifesto of the culture of Sri Lanka,
impervious to outside influences. The sacred city exerted a considerable
influence on the development of architecture during several centuries. It
includes remarkable monuments, particularly the Dagabas of colossal size,
placed on circular foundations and surrounded by a ring of monolithic columns,
characteristic of the Sinhalese stupas.
The city
is one of the principal shrines of Buddhism. The cutting from the fig tree of
Buddha, brought there in the 3rd century BC, has flourished and, today, the Bodhi
tree spreads out over the centre of the site from a sanctuary near the Brazen Palace.
The relics of Siddharta have, moreover, shaped the religious topography of Anuradhapura, where the
Dagaba Thuparama was built by King Tissa in the 3rd century BC to house the
clavicle of Buddha, an important religious relic presented by Ashoka.
Founded
during the 4th century BC, Anuradhapura quickly
became both the capital of Ceylon
and the sacred city of Buddhism
on the island. The Chronicles of Mahanam, a narrative written 1,000 years
later, affirms that it was founded in 380 BC by Prince Pandukabhaya.
Towards
250 BC, King Ashoka sent his son Mahinda to convert Tissa, the grandson of
Pandukabhaya, and the latter became the first Buddhist sovereign (devanampiya)
of Ceylon.
A second mission, led by Sanghamitta, Buddhist nun and daughter of Ashoka,
brought Tissa a cutting from the Ashvattha, the sacred fig tree of Bodhgaya,
under which Siddharta attained spiritual enlightenment and supreme wisdom.
With the
exception of the period of the invasion of the Tamil princes, at the beginning
of the 2nd century BC, Anuradhapura remained the
political and religious capital of Ceylon during 10 centuries. Its
apogee was reached under the reign of Dutthagamani who, in 161 BC, expelled the
Tamil invaders, re-established Buddhism in the place of Brahminism and endowed
the site with extraordinary monuments: Dagaba Minisaweti, Dagaba Rubanwelisaya,
the Brazen Palace, etc.
Anuradhapura was sacked and taken by the
Pandyan kings during the 9th century and then returned against payment of a
ransom.
The
majority of the monuments were restored but the city never recovered after its
destruction in AD 993 by King Chola Rajaraja I. Having lost its position as
capital, it was deserted in favour of Polonnaruwa.
Source:
UNESCO/CLT/WHC
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