The inscription is incised on a fine granite slab found lying prone in the Tōpa-väva quadrangle (the Dalada Maluwa) in Polonnaruwa. The find was reported by H. C. P. Bell in his Annual Report of the Ceylon Archaeological Survey for 1903 (p. 11). The slab was subsequently framed with cement and placed upright near the Atadage in the Tōpa-väva quadrangle, where it stands today. Consisting of forty-nine lines in total, the inscription is written in Tamil with an introductory Sanskrit verse. It was erected by the members of the Vēḷäikkāṟa (or Velaikkara) community. As part of the expeditionary forces of Rājēndra Coḷa I, the Velaikkaras established themselves as a powerful force in northern Sri Lankan following the capture of Mahinda V in 1017–18 A.D. They were subjugated by king Vijaya-Bāhu I in 1073 A.D. but rebelled against his authority eleven years later, after he asked them to fight in his military campaign against their own kinsmen, the Coḷas. Although the king’s forces quickly quelled the rebellion, the Velaikkara community continued to hold considerable power. Indeed, such was their influence that, during the turbulent period of internal conflict that followed Vijaya-Bāhu I’s death, they were entrusted with the protection of the Sacred Tooth-relic Temple, which had been built (probably some twenty or thirty years earlier) by the minister Deva Senāpati under Vijaya-Bāhu’s orders. This inscription was erected around this time to provide written assurance that the Velaikkara soldiers would protect the sacred relics. The first part of the text serves as an introduction, describing Vijaya-Bāhu I’s charitable acts, including the building of the Tooth-relic temple. The second part details the provisions made by the Velaikkaras for the protection of the temple and relics. No date is given in the text but, drawing on a combination of palaeographic and historical evidence, Wickremasinghe argues that it dates from between 1137 and 1153 A.D., belonging either to the reign of Vikkama-Bāhu (1116–1137 A.D.) or, more probably, to that of his son Gaja-Bāhu (1137–1153 A.D.).

Metadata
Inscription ID IN03103
Title Poḷonnaruva Slab Inscription of the Vēḷäikkāṟas
Alternative titles
Parent Object OB03083
Related Inscriptions
Responsibility
Author Don Martino de Zilva Wickremasinghe
Print edition recorded by
Source encoded
Digitally edited by
Edition improved by
Authority for
Metadata recorded by
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Language தமிழ் , संस्कृतम्
Reigning monarch Gaja-Bāhu (?)
Commissioner members of the Velaikkara community
Topic describes Vijaya-Bāhu I’s charitable acts, including the building of the Sacred Tooth-relic Temple, then details the provisions made by the Velaikkaras for the protection of the temple and its relics
Date:
Min 1137
Max 1153
Comment No date is given in the text but, drawing on a combination of palaeographic and historical evidence, Wickremasinghe argues that it dates from between 1137 and 1153 A.D., belonging either to the reign of Vikkama-Bāhu (1116–1137 A.D.) or, more probably, to that of his son Gaja-Bāhu (1137–1153 A.D.).
Hand
Letter size 5.08
Description Letter size about 1 to 2 inches (2.54 to 5.08 cm) on average. The inscription is written in a mixed alphabet of Tamil, Grantha and Sinhalese characters, dating to a period between the tenth and the fourteenth centuries A.D.
Layout
Campus:
Width 83.82
Height 243.84
Description 49 lines engraved between ruled lines 2 inches (5.08 cm) apart on the smoothed surface of a granite slab.
Decoration Beaded framing surrounds the inscription and below are carved a pair of vases in mezzo relievo.
Bibliography
References First recorded with a provisional translation in the Annual Report of the Ceylon Archaeological Survey for 1903 (p. 11). A complete text and improved translation with explanatory notes was provided in the Annual Report for 1911-1912 (appendix E). Re-edited and re-translated by Wickremasinghe in Epigraphia Zeylanica 2 (1912-27): 242-255, no. 40.
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