All Topics  
Sigiriya

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link

 

Sigiriya


 
 

Sigiriya (Lion's rock) is an ancient rock fortress and ruins of a castle situated in central Matale DistrictMatale District

Matale is a district of Sri Lanka. ...
 of Sri LankaSri Lanka

Sri Lanka, officially the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka , is a tropical island nation off the southeast c...
. It is a popular tourist destination and also popular for the ancient paintings (frescos) very similar to the paintings in Ajanta Caves of IndiaIndia

India , officially the Republic of India, is a country in South Asia....
. It was built during the reign of King Kasyapa (477 – 495 AD) and one of the seven World Heritage SiteWorld Heritage Site Overview

A UNESCO World Heritage Site is a specific site that has been nominated and confirmed for inclusion on the list maintained ...
s in Sri Lanka.

Sigiriya may have been inhabited through prehistoric times. It was used as a rock-shelter mountain monasteryMonastery

Monastery, a term derived from the Greek word ??ast????? monasterion, denotes the habitation-and-workplace of a communit...
 from about the 5th century BC, with caves prepared and donated by devotees to the Buddhist SanghaSangha Summary

Sangha is a word in Indian languages that can be translated roughly as "association" or "assembly"....
.
The garden and palace were built by Kashyapa. Following Kasyapa's death, it was again a monastery complex up to about the 14th century, after which it was abandoned. The ruins were discovered in 1907 by British explorer John Still. The Sigiri inscriptions were deciphered by the archeologist Senarath ParanavithanaSenarath Paranavithana

Professor Senerath Paranavitana was a pioneering archeologist and epigraphist of Sri Lanka....
 who published a renowned two volume work, published by Oxford, known as "Sigiri Graffiti". He also wrote the popular book "Story of Sigiriya".[Mahavansa]], the ancient historical record of Sri Lanka, describes King Kasyapa as the son of King Dhatusena. Kasyapa murdered his father by walling him alive and then usurping the throne which rightfully belonged to his brother Mogallana, Dhatusena's son by the true queen. Mogallana fled to India to escape being assassinated by Kasyapa but vowed revenge. In India he raised an army with the intention of returning and retaking the throne of Sri Lanka which was rightfully his. Knowing the inevitable return of Mogallana, Kasyapa is said to have built his palace on the summit of Sigiriya as a fortress and pleasure palace. Mogallana finally arrived and declared war. During the battle Kasyapa's armies abandoned him and he committed suicide by falling on his sword. Chronicles and lore say that the battle-elephant on which Kasyapa was mounted changed the course just to get to a better fighting position/place but the army misinterpreted it as the King fleeing. Thereafter the army abandoned the king altogether. Moggallana returned the capital to Anuradapura and turned Sigiriya into a monastery complex.

Alternative stories have the primary builder of Sigiriya as King Dhatusena, with Kasyapa finishing the work in honour of his father. Still other stories have Kasyapa as a playboy king, with Sigiriya a pleasure palace. Even Kasyapa's eventual fate is mutable. In some versions he is assassinated by poison administered by a concubine. In others he cuts his own throat when isolated in his final battle.

.
Still further interpretations have the site as the work of a Buddhist community, with no military function at all. This site may have been important in the competition between the MahayanaMahayana

Mahayana is one of the major branches of Buddhism....
 and TheravadaTheravada

Theravada is the oldest surviving Buddhist school, and for many centuries has been the predominant religion of Sri Lanka a...
 Buddhist traditions in ancient Sri Lanka

The site located in Central ProvinceCentral province

Central Provinces exist in several countries....
, Matale DistrictMatale District

Matale is a district of Sri Lanka. ...
(N7 57 00)(E80 45 00) co-ordinates.

Archaeological remains and features

Sigiriya rock is the hardened magma plugVolcanic plug

A volcanic plug, also called a volcanic neck or lava neck, is a volcanic landform created when lava hardens with...
 from an extinct and long-eroded volcanoVolcano

A volcano is a geological landform on the surface of the Earth where magma from the planet's interior erupts to the surfac...
. It stands high above the surrounding plain, visible for miles in all directions. The rock rests on a steep mound that rises abruptly from the flat plain surrounding it. The rock itself rises 370m and is sheer on all sides, in many places overhanging the base. It is elliptical in plan and has a flat top that slopes gradually along the long axis of the ellipse.

Sigiriya consists of an ancient castle built by King Kasyapa during the 5th century AD. The Sigiriya site has the remains of an upper palace sited on the flat top of the rock, a mid-level terrace that includes the Lion Gate and the mirror wall with its frescoes, the lower palace that clings to the slopes below the rock, and the moatMoat

A moat is a manmade body of water that surrounds an area or building of significance, and almost always exist for the purpos...
s, walls and gardens that extend for some hundreds of metres out from the base of the rock.

The site is both a palace and fortress. Sufficient remains to provide the visitor with a stunning insight into the ingenuity and creativity of its builders.

The upper palace on the top of the rock includes cisterns cut into the rock that still retain water. The moats and walls that surround the lower palace are still exquisitely beautiful.

Site plan

Sigiriya is considered as one of the most important sites of urban planning of the first millennium, the site plan is considered very elaborate and imaginative. The planning had combined concepts of symmetry and asymmetry to intentionally interlock the geometrical plan and the natural form of the surroundings. The west side of the rock lies a park for the royals which is symmetrically planned, the park contains water retaining structures which includeds sophisticated sub/surface hydraulic systems of which some are working even today. The south contains a man made reservoir, these were extensively used from previous capital of the dry zone of Sri Lanka. Five gates were placed at entrances. The more elaborate western gate is thought to be reserved for the royals.

The Gardens

The landscape of the Sigiriya city is considered to one of the most important aspects of the site, the gardens are one of the oldest landscaped gardens of the world. Gardens take three distinct but linked forms they are Water, Cave and boulder gardens. The water gardens are the more sophisticated in design and can be seen in the western precinct. The water gardens contained pools of various depths with streams flowing over slabs of marble. Underground hydraulic systems provide water into the fountains which even operate today. Other water gardens found combines pavilions with water courses which were used to cool the pavilions. Boulder gardens had a different design concept to the water gardens, the gardens included pathways, pavilions etc.

The Mirror Wall


Originally this wall was so well polished, the king could see himself whilst he walked alongside it. Made of a kind of porcelain, the mirror wall now contains verses scribbled by visitors to the rock. Well preserved it has verses dating from the 8th century. People of all types wrote on the mirror wall, they took to varying subjects like love, irony, experiences of all sorts. It has now been banned to write on the mirror wall.

Further reading

  • Story of Sigiriya, by Professor Senerath Paranavitana.
  • The Mystique of Sigiriya: Whispers of the Mirror Wall, by W. J. M. Lokubandara

See also

  • Place names in Sri Lanka
  • Tourism in Sri LankaTourism in Sri Lanka

    Tourism is one of the main industries in Sri Lanka....


External links



Image gallery

Outer Gardens and Moat


The complex is surrounded by an extensive set of walls and man made pools.

Gardens

Lower Palace

Mirror Wall and Lion Gate

Paintings (Frescos)

Top of the Rock

News