The inscription is engraved on a series of slabs originally built into an inside wall of the so-called Häṭa-dā-gē, ‘the Shrine of Sixty Relics’, at Poḷonnaruva. It was discovered by S. M. Burrows in 1885, along with another inscription in the vestibule of the shrine (IN03079) and one in the adjoining portico (IN03078). Consisting of eight lines, the inscription dates from the reign of Kīrti-Niśśaṅka-Malla (1187-1196 A.D.) and provides a tactfully worded exhortation to Buddhist monks to exercise care in the selection of persons for admission to the priesthood and to desist from doing things contrary to the teaching of the Buddha.

Bibliographic information

An incomplete transcript and translation were published in Burrows 1887: 74. Edited and translated in full by Wickremasinghe in Epigraphia Zeylanica 2 (1912-27) 96-98, no. 16.

Inscription Concordance

Burrows (1887) 74

Epigraphia Zeylanica 2 (1912-27) 96-98, no. 16