The inscription covers all four sides of a stone pillar, which was found in 1857 near the Horaboraväva (Horaborawewa or Soraborawewa). Situated about three miles to the north-east of Mahiyaṅgaṇa, this tank is the most important of the ancient irrigation works in the province of Ūda. Writing about the Horaborawewa in 1857, John Bailey, then Assistant Government Agent at Badulla, described the pillar as lying in the midst of a forested area, which he speculated was once a range of paddy fields (Sessional Papers 1857, quoted in Herbert White, Manual of the Province of Uva [Colombo: H. C. Cottle, 1893], p. 33). However, when the tank was restored in 1870, the pillar was removed to Badulla and set up near the junction of the Kandy and Baṇḍāravela roads. It stood in this location for over fifty years without attracting any scholarly or antiquarian attention until H. W. Codrington made an eye-copy and transcript of the inscription in 1920.

 

Containing two hundred and three lines and close to two thousand akṣaras, the text is the longest known pillar inscription in Sri Lanka. The inscription is dated in the second year of Siri Saṅg-bo Udā. Paranavitana identifies this king as Udaya III and, following Hultzsch, dates the start of his reign to 941 A.D., making the date of the inscription about 942 A.D. On palaeographic grounds, the text may be ascribed to the middle decades of the 10th century A.D. The inscription outlines certain rules enacted for the administration of a village named Hopiṭigamy in the Sorabara division. These rules take the form of a charter granted by the king to some mercantile corporations at the place. They enrich our understanding of the lives of peasants and traders in tenth-century Sri Lanka, demonstrating – for instance – that local mercantile corporations were empowered to levy fines, arrest murderers and assist royal officers in the administration of justice.

Metadata
Inscription ID IN03108
Title Badulla Pillar Inscription
Alternative titles
Parent Object OB03088
Related Inscriptions
Responsibility
Author Senarath Paranavitana
Print edition recorded by
Source encoded
Digitally edited by
Edition improved by
Authority for
Metadata recorded by
Authority for metadata
Metadata improved by
Authoriy for improved
Language සිංහල
Reigning monarch Siri Saṅg-bo Udā (Udaya III?)
Commissioner
Topic outlines certain rules enacted for the administration of a village named Hopiṭigamy in the Sorabara division
Date:
Min 940
Max 960
Comment The inscription is dated in the second year of Siri Saṅg-bo Udā. Paranavitana identifies this king as Udaya III and, following Hultzsch, dates the start of his reign to 941 A.D., making the date of the inscription about 942 A.D. On palaeographic grounds, the inscription may be ascribed to the middle decades of the 10th century A.D.
Hand
Letter size 3.81 cm
Description Letter size varies from ½ inch to 1½ inches (1.27 to 3.81 cm). Sinhalese alphabet of the middle of the 10th century A.D.
Layout
Campus:
Width 26.67
Height 355.6
Description 203 lines covering all four sides of a quadrangular stone pillar (47 lines on the first side, 49 lines each on the second and third sides and 58 lines on the fourth side). The letters are engraved between ruled lines 2 inches (5.08 cm) apart. The first side of the pillar is considerably weather worn. The second and third sides are in a better state of preservation, save for three or four lines at the top of the pillar, where the stone is damage. The fourth side is the worst preserved and, to add to the difficulty of deciphering the text, the engraver has compressed two lines of writing between each of the ruled lines.
Decoration
Bibliography
References Edited and translated by S. Paranavitana in Epigraphia Zeylanica 3 (1928-33) 71-100, no. 4.
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