Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Saturday, December 28, 2013
The ancient burial site of Ibbankatuwa, Dambulla, Sri Lanka.
'Ibbankatuwa
is also somewhere you will find it interesting to visit during your visit
to Dambulla. This site is situated close to the Dambulla town on Dambulla –
Kurunegala main road.
Archaeologically
the ground dates back to around 750 BC to 400 BC. Here,several tombs can be seen
covered with stone slabs and another interesting fact is those tombs had
contained personal items such as clay pots, necklaces etc. Some items had
contained Gem Stones which are seen in India giving some hints about the links
with the India. Archeologists present several arguments on this site as the
people lived in this area has had trade with a foreign country as beads, glass
and terra-cotta were discovered.'
The road from Avissawella to Ibbankatuwa:-
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Sights at the Kandalama tank bund, Sri Lanka.
Water lily flower. |
The highway over the Kandalama tank bund and the distant hills. |
The 'Kandalama Hotel' complex across the tank at the foot of the hills. |
A lone fisherman in an outrigger canoe on the Kandalama tank. |
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Cave temples at Dambulla, Sri Lanka.
The entrance to one of the cave temples. |
A corridor outside the cave temple. |
Statues of Lord Buddha inside the cave temple. |
Note the paintings on the roof of the cave. |
'The
ensemble of Dambulla is an outstanding example of the religious art and
expression of Sri Lanka and South and South-East Asia. The excavated
shrine-caves, their painted surfaces and statuary are unique in scale and
degree of preservation. The monastery includes significant masterpieces of 18th
century art, in the Sri Lankan school of Kandy.
The rock
of Dambulla is the centre of a Buddhist cave-temple complex established in the
3rd century BC and occupied continuously until today. Its location has marked a
transportation node between the Eastern and Western Dry Zones and between the
Dry Zones and the central mountains throughout the history of Sri Lanka. The
cave-temple complex is established on an inselberg or erosional remnant of
importance in the study of the island's geological history. The site also
includes evidence of human occupation going back to the prehistoric period,
including the megalithic cemetery at Ibbankatuwa.
The site
has been in continuous use for over 22 centuries, when it was occupied by a
Buddhist monastic establishment, following the arrival of Buddhism on the
island. Remains of 80 rock-shelter residences established at that time on the
site have been identified. Most probably in the 1st century BC, the uppermost
group of shelters on Dambulla's south face was transformed into shrines. These
transformations continued and were intensified between the 5th and 13th
centuries: cave-temples were extended into the sheltering rock, and brick walls
constructed to screen the caves. By the end of the 12th century, with the
introduction by King Nissanka Malla of sculpture to the caves on the upper
terrace, echoing the rock carving that had preceded it, the caves assumed their
present general forms and layout.
The next
major phase of development took place in the 18th century when, following a
long-standing tradition, the upper terrace was restored and refurbished. All
the painted surfaces within the caves were painted or overpainted in a style
characteristic of the Kandy school of the late 18th century. At that time, the
modest Buddhist figures in the caves were repainted, maintaining original
details and iconography; the fronting screen walls were rebuilt and roofed to
form an outer veranda. Throughout the 19th century, following the loss of royal
patronage in 1815, periodic repainting of sculptures and deteriorating surfaces
continued. In 1915, thanks to the efforts of a local donor, cave No 5 was
entirely repainted. In the 1930s, the veranda was rebuilt incorporating a
mixture of European and Asian detailing, and the complex's entrance porch was
reconstructed in a conjectural 18th century style.
This
cultural landscape is an extraordinary and unique complex: the cave-temple,
rock paintings in five caves and 157 statues of various sizes. Dambulla bears
witness in its richly layered composite nature to the use of the entire site
for close to four millennia. The larger site incorporates a set of individual
units reflecting all phases of site development from the megalithic period to
the present day, including a monastic chapter house, bo-tree temple, dagoba and
the earliest known village revealed by archaeological research in Sri Lanka.
Those are located within a site of considerable natural beauty and power.
Particular
care has been taken in developing approaches to conservation which are in tune
with the site's qualities, and the capacities of available conservators. One of
the site's distinguishing characteristics is the regular renewal of decorated
surfaces over time; conservation measures devoted to stripping back layers of
later painting on wall surfaces or sculpture to reveal earlier images, would be
ignoring the worth of the ongoing tradition which has regularly ensured
complete repainting of surfaces.
As well,
the physical nature of the cave setting, with its latent moisture and migrating
salts problems, has prompted much of the painting 'repair' that has taken
place. Equally, limited tests, during conservation efforts, suggest that little
earlier work survives, most later overpainting having prompted reinstatement of
new base surfaces and obliteration of the old. The Jeevan Naide family, charged
with care of the wall paintings since early in the 18th century BC, is still
employed, working with ola leaf manuscripts which provide a clear idea of the
complex layout and associated painting techniques. Technical missions to the
site in 1990 and 1991, working with local apprentices and the Jeevan Naide
family, brought science and tradition together in treatment of the site.'
Source: UNESCO/CLT/WHC
Click on web-link below to see
some still photographs taken by me on a trip there in October 2013:-
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Kanthaka Chaithya, Mihinthale, Sri Lanka.
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Thursday, December 19, 2013
Kanthaka Chathya, Mihinthale, Sri Lanka.
Kantaka Chethiya was renovated in 1930′s to the current status.
When this stupa was discovered, it has been a just a mound of earth covered by
various debris. This has been known as the Kiribadapavu Dagaba, Kiribat Vehera,
or Giribhanda during this time. But a stone inscription found close by has
identified the original name of this stupa as Kantaka Chethiya.
It is
unknown who built this stupa but it is said that the King Lanjatissa (119-109
BC) has built a stone mantel built for this stupa. Therefore we can assume that
the stupa was built prior to 119 BC. The present stupa is 425 feet in diameter
and is about 40 feet high. This stupa is most popular for one of the most well
preserved vahalkada which can be seen today.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Mihinthale sights, Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka.
'Buddhism was
introduced to Sri Lanka at Mihintale in 247 B.C. King Devanampiyatissa of Sri
Lanka, who was on a hunting expedition, became a disciple of Buddha after the
Buddhist missionary Mahinda preached a sermon. He was followed by his queen,
his ministers, officials and the people. Mihintale thus became historically and
religiously significant, and ever since it annually attracts pilgrims during
the June full moon to commemorate the official introduction of Buddhism to Sri
Lanka. To accommodate the lay and scholarly interest in Mihintale, both the
sacred area and the town have undergone several phases of development, including
a site museum. A rock inscription records the finest description of the running
of a monastery in the 9th century A.D. It refers to the 200 or more serfs who
assisted the religious congregation of 2,000. It also records the salaries paid
to the physician, the surgeons, the teachers, potters, cooks and other workers.
The lay assistants were instructed to submit the list of expenditures once a
week, a summary of accounts at the end of each lunar month, and a balance
sheet at the end of each year.
Refectory hall
(left), stone inscriptions (above) and the relic chamber (below) at Mihintale
where Buddhism was introduced to Sri Lanka by Prince Mahinda, the son of Indian
Emperor Ashoka, in 247 B.C.'
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
The caves at Mihinthale, Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka.
Caves used by Buddhist Monks in ancient times. |
Stone stairway leading to the 'Kanthaka Chaithya'. |
‘In
the 3rd century BC, area of Mihinthalawa was a thick jungle area inhibited by
wild animals and was a hunting ground reserved for the royals. All this
changed in 250 BC when the son of the Indian Emperor Asoka, Mahinda Maha
Thero arrived at the Missaka Pauwa to meet king Devamnampiyatissa for the
first time and asked the famous questions to decide whether he is intelligent
enough to understand the philosophy of the Buddha. Initially Mahinda Maha
Thero’s residence, but later Mihinthale became a main centre for Theravada
Buddhism.
Mihinthale
is a collection of four mountains each about 1000 feet in height. They are
1. Mihinthalawa
2. Ath Vehera mountain
3. Anaikutti mountain
4. Rajagiri Lena mountain
Mihinthalawa
is the main mountain and where the Aradhana gala (The rock of invitation) and
the main Mahaseya stupa is situated’.
|
A flower seller at the beginning of the ascent to Mihinthale. |