THE LION MOUNTAIN
Sigiriya: THE LION MOUNTAIN
Sri Lanka
Sigiriya (Lion’s rock) is an ancient
rock fortress and palace ruin situated in the central Matale District of Sri
Lanka, surrounded by the remains of an extensive network of gardens,
reservoirs, and other structures. A popular tourist destination, Sigiriya is
also renowned for its ancient paintings (frescos), which are reminiscent of the
Ajanta Caves of India. The Sigiriya was built during the reign of King Kassapa
I (AD 477 – 495), and it is one of the seven World Heritage Sites of Sri Lanka.
Sigiriya may have been inhabited through prehistoric times. It was used as a
rock-shelter mountain monastery from about the 5th century BC, with caves
prepared and donated by devotees to the Buddhist Sangha.
The Sigiriya rock is a hardened magma plug from an extinct and long-eroded volcano. 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 approximately
370 m (1,214 ft) above sea level 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.[5]the name of sigiriya comes by the lions paw then only it
calling like Sigiriya.
The history of Sigiriya, however,
extends from prehistoric times to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The
earliest evidence of human habitation is in the Aligala rock-shelter which lies
to the east of the Sigiriya rock. This is a major prehistoric site of the Mesolithic
period, with an occupational sequence starting nearly five thousand years ago
and extending up to early historic times. The historical period at Sigiriya
begins about the third century B.C., with the establishment of a Buddhist monastic
settlement on the rock-strewn western and northern slopes of the hill around
the rock. As in other similar sites of this period, partially man made
rock-shelters or 'caves', with deeply-incised protective grooves or drip edges,
were created in the bases of several large boulders. There are altogether 30
such shelters, many of them dated by the donatory inscriptions carved in the
rock face near their drip-ledges to a period between the third century B.C.,
and the first century A.D. The inscriptions record the granting of these caves
to the Buddhist monastic order to be used as residences.
No comments:
Post a Comment