The inscription is engraved on a stone slab, which was discovered in October 1926 when the foundation of the western side of the enclosing wall of the Thūpārāma in Anuradhapura was cleared. The slab was set up vertically on the inner face of the foundation such that only about one foot (30.48 cm) of the slab would have been visible above the original ground level. The inscription is a grant issued by king Gajabāhu I (r. c. 113 – c.135 A.D.), who is referred to here by the name of Gamiṇi Abaya, as in many of his other inscriptions. The text tells us that the king granted certain incomes derived from the Goṇagiri-utaviya (a tank or a tract of paddy fields) to the monks of the Raṭaṇa Araba monastery. The royal grant ends after the fourteenth letter of the sixth line where traces of two short vertical strokes used as punctuation marks are seen. The rest of the record is in the nature of a postscript added later – but not far removed in time from the original grant, as there is no appreciable difference in the script – to the effect that the city accountant, whose name is not preserved, gave in exchange the water-revenue of the Nakaravavi tank (Nuwara Wewa).
Metadata | |
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Inscription ID | IN03110 |
Title | Thūpārāma Slab Inscription of Gajabāhu I |
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Parent Object | OB03090 |
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Responsibility | |
Author | Senarath Paranavitana |
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Language | සිංහල |
Reigning monarch | Gajabāhu I |
Commissioner | |
Topic | grants certain incomes derived from the Goṇagiri-utaviya (a tank or a tract of paddy fields) to the monks of the Raṭaṇa Araba monastery; a postscript notes that the city accountant, whose name is not preserved, gave in exchange the water-revenue of the Nakaravavi tank |
Date: | |
Min | 113 |
Max | 135 |
Comment | Basis for dating: approximate reign of Gajabāhu I (r. c. 113 – c.135 A.D.). |
Hand | |
Letter size | 8.89 cm |
Description | Letter size varies from 2½ inch to 3½ inches (6.35 cm to 8.89 cm). Southern Brāhmī alphabet of the 2nd century A.D. |
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Campus: | |
Width | 152.4 |
Height | 86.36 |
Description | 7 lines shallowly inscribed on the dressed surface of a stone slab. The first two lines are badly weather-worn and a part of the stone containing about three letters has been chipped off at the bottom left-hand corner. |
Decoration | |
Bibliography | |
References | Edited and translated by S. Paranavitana in Epigraphia Zeylanica 3 (1928-33) 114-119, no. 6. |
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