Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Sri
Dalada Maligawa
Kandy was the capital of the Sinhalese Kings from 1592 to 1815.
Fortified by a terrain of mountains and the difficult approach Kandy managed to
operate in independence from Dutch, Portuguese and the English till 1815. The
city is a world heritage site declared by UNESCO, in part due to this temple.
The
Sri Dalada Maligawa or The Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic is a temple in the
city of Kandy in Sri Lanka. It was built within the royal palace complex which
houses the one of the two surviving relic of the tooth of Buddha, an object of
veneration for Buddhists. The other tooth relic is believed to be enshrined in
a stupa called Somawathi Chethiya.
The
Sri Dalada Maligawa in Kandy, the temple which houses the Sacred Tooth Relic of
The Buddha, is possibly the most sacred Buddhist shrine in the world. It is
venerated not only by Buddhists in Sri Lanka but by Buddhists all over the
world.
King
Wimaladharmasuriya I (1592 - 1603), the first to select Kandy as the ruling
capital, originally built a two storied temple for the Relic and brought the
tooth relic from Delgamuwa near Kuruwita in Sabaragamuwa which had been hidden
for protection. Remains of this temple no longer exist.
Wimaladharmasuriya
II (1686 - 1706) built a three storied temple and his son King Viraparakrama
Narendrasinha (1706 - 1738), the last Sinhalese king to rule the country, built
a new two storied temple temple seeing that the old temple built by his father
had decayed.
The
last king of sri lanka, Sri Wickrama Rajasinghe (1797 - 1814) built the
Pattirippuwa (the Octagon). Originally, the Pattirippuwa (octagon) was part of
the royal palace. It was used by the king to address his follow countrymen.
Today the Pattirippuwa has become a part of the temple and houses ancient
textures written in ola leaves.
The
entrance to the temple complex is through the "Maha Vahalkada".
There are two walls on the sides of the "Vahalkada". The outer
wall is called "Diyareli Bamma" ('wall of water ripples').
This same pattern is also used in the wall surrounding the Kandy lake. The
inner wall is called "Walakulu Bamma" ('wall of clouds'). Both
these walls are built with holes to place oil lanterns during the night.
After
passing the "Vahalkada" and the moat, you come to a "Makara
Thorana". Next is the tunnel "ambarawa". Passing this
you come to the ground floor of the temple complex. The lower floor of the
building called "pallemaluwa". This inner chamber is fortified
with a large wooden door and decorated with bronze and ivory. The area in front
of the door is called the "Hevisi Mandapaya" (Drummers
Courtyard) where the daily rituals are carried out.
The
tooth relic is kept in the upper floor in the chamber called "Vadahitina
Maligawa" The door ot this chamber is covered with gold silver and
ivory. The tooth relic is encased in seven gold caskets studded with precious
stones. The outer casket is studded by precious stones offered to the tooth
relic by various rulers.
On
the right to the relic is the "Perahara Karanduwa" (relic
chamber used in the annual Asala Mangalaya perahara (procession) kept inside a
bullet proof glass display. This has been donated by India. Over the relic
chamber there is a golden lotus flower studded with precious stones hanging
from the ceiling.
On
to the left of the temple is the new building which houses the taxidermised
remains of the Maligawa Tusker - Raja. This magnificent tusker was captured in
the jungles of Eravur in the Batticaloa District 1925. He was purchased by
Tikiri Banda Manampitiya Dissawe for Rs 3,300/- in 1937 and was donated to the
temple by him. For over 50 years Raja carried the golden casket which carried
the tooth relic and in 1984 he was declared as a national treasure by the
government. This is only the second time a tusker has been declared a national
treasure. Raja died In 1988 after a long illness and then it was decided that
he to be taxidermised. This is first time a tusker has been taxidermised.
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