The inscription is engraved on the western slope of a long hummock of granite rock about a mile to the north of Topaväva. It was found by H. C. P. Bell, the Archaeological Commissioner, in September 1901 whilst exploring a collection of ruins discovered the previous year during the construction of a new road from Minneriya to Poḷonnaruva. Covering a smoothed area of rock, the inscription is located to the north of a flight of steps leading up to a ruined building, which has been identified with the Prīti-dānaka-maṇḍapa (‘joy-conferring pavilion’) of king Niśśaṅka-Malla, who ruled between 1187 and 1196. The purpose of the inscription was to commemorate the consecration of the Prīti-dānaka-maṇḍapa as a sanctuary whereby every one entering its premises had the right of asylum. The text begins with a Sanskrit verse in sragdharā metre, before giving an account of king Niśśaṅka-Malla’s birth and parentage, his administrative and charitable acts, the religious edifices and alms-houses he built, his tours in Ceylon, the so-called invasion of Southern India, and finally the erection and consecration of the Prīti-dānaka-maṇḍapa.
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Inscription ID | IN03093 |
Title | Poḷonnaruva Prīti-Dānaka-Maṇḍapa Rock Inscription |
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Parent Object | OB03073 |
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Responsibility | |
Author | Don Martino de Zilva Wickremasinghe |
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Language | සිංහල , संस्कृतम् |
Reigning monarch | Niśśaṅka-Malla |
Commissioner | |
Topic | commemorates the consecration of the Prīti-dānaka-maṇḍapa as a sanctuary whereby every one entering its premises had the right of asylum |
Date: | |
Min | 1187 |
Max | 1196 |
Comment | Basis for dating: reign of Niśśaṅka Malla (1187-1196 A.D.). |
Hand | |
Letter size | 5.08 |
Description | Letter size varies from 1½ to 2 inches (3.81 to 5.08 cm). The letters belong to the same type as other inscriptions of Niśśaṅka-Malla. |
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Description | Campus dimensions not reported. 45 lines engraved on a smoothed area on the western slope of a long hummock of granite rock. The inscription is engraved between ruled lines 2¼ inches (5.72 cm) apart. |
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Bibliography | |
References | Edited and translated by Wickremasinghe in Epigraphia Zeylanica 2 (1912-27) 165-178, no. 29. |
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