OB03068 Poḷonnaruva Stone Bath Slab Fragment
IN03088 Poḷonnaruva Stone Bath Slab Inscription
The inscription is engraved on a fragment of a stone slab found in the Tōpaväva village. The fragment originally formed part of a flagstone in the rectangular bath on the promontory at Tōpaväva. Numerous baths were discovered on the promontory in 1901. The other fragments of the flagstone are missing but Wickremasinghe was able to reconstruct the slab’s inscription after recognising that it was the same as the Rankot-dāgaba pillar inscription (IN03087), except for the concluding sentence which states the purpose for which the cistern was used by king Niśśaṅka-Malla. This king reigned from 1187 to 1196 A.D. No specific date is given in the inscription but, as Wickremasinghe notes, the text must have been composed after the fourth year of Niśśaṅka-Malla’s reign because it refers to the king’s visit to Anurādhapura, which took place in his fourth regnal year, and to his later tours of inspection.
OB03067 Poḷonnaruva Rankot-Dāgaba Pillar
Rankoth Vehera, Polonnaruwa.
IN03087 Poḷonnaruva Rankot-Dāgaba Pillar Inscription
The inscription is repeated on each of the four pillars which once supported the roof of an open pavilion on the southern terrace of the Ruvanväli or Rankot-dāgaba in Poḷonnaruva. According to the inscription, this pavilion was built to provide a place from which king Niśśanka Malla could pay his adorations to the relics enshrined in the dāgaba. Presumably, the pavilion originally contained an āsana (throne) or dias for this purpose. The pillars are square at the top and bottom with an octagonal section in the centre. All four pillars are fallen and two are broken. The inscription gives an account of some of Niśśaṅka-Malla’s acts, before describing the king’s use of the pavilion. Niśśaṅka-Malla reigned from 1187 to 1196 A.D. No specific date is given in the inscription but, as Wickremasinghe notes, the text must have been composed after the fourth year of Niśśaṅka-Malla’s reign because it refers to the king’s visit to Anurādhapura, which took place in his fourth regnal year, and to his later tours of inspection.
Of the four copies of the inscription on the four pillars, two were first transcribed and translated by Rhys Davids in 1875 for the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. The third copy was edited by Müller in Ancient Inscriptions in Ceylon (1883). The information below relates to the fourth copy, which was transcribed and translated for the first time by Wickremasinghe in Epigraphia Zeylanica 2 (1912-27). The fourth copy differs from the other three in the number of lines on each side and also in the beginning and end of each line.
OB03066 Poḷonnaruva Rankot-Dāgaba Gal-Āsana
Rankoth Vehera, Polonnaruwa.
IN03086 Poḷonnaruva Rankot-Dāgaba Gal-Āsana Inscription
The inscription is engraved around four sides of the smoothed upper surface of a stone seat (āsana). It was discovered in the jungle some two hundred yards to the east of the ruin known as Ran-kot-vehera in Poḷonnaruva. The inscription consists of six lines and dates from the reign of Niśśaṅka-Malla (1187-1196 A.D.). It gives an account of some of Niśśaṅka-Malla’s acts, before identifying the seat as the one which the king occupied to watch the construction of the Ruvanväli-dāgaba at Poḷonnaruva. Wickremasinghe notes that the stone-seat inscription must be earlier than the Galpota inscription (IN03081) because the latter post-dates the completion of the Ruvanväli-dāgaba. This dāgaba was built to a height of eighty cubits and adorned with a golden pinnacle, from which it gets its present name: Ran-kot-vehera (‘golden-spire-monastery’).
OB03065 Poḷonnaruva Kāliṅga Park Gal-Āsana
Niśśaṇka-Malla’s Council Chamber, Polonnaruwa.
IN03085 Poḷonnaruva Kāliṅga Park Gal-Āsana Inscription
The inscription is engraved around four sides of the smoothed upper surface of a stone seat (āsana). It was found outside the ruin of king Niśśaṇka-Malla’s Council Chamber on the promontory overlooking the Tōpa-väva tank in Poḷonnaruva. Consisting of eight lines and dating from the reign of Niśśaṅka-Malla (1187-1196 A.D.), the inscription begins with a panegyrical account of the king’s munificence and some of his acts. This account is similar to that given in Niśśaṅka-Malla’s Dambulla inscription (IN03032) and in the Häṭa-dā-gē Portico slab (IN03078). The inscription then proceeds to state that the ‘lion-seat’ is the one on which His Majesty sat whenever he witnessed the musical performances in the Kāliṅga Park. It also asserts that the stone itself was brought for this purpose from Eṇ̆ḍera-galla, which Wickremasinghe identifies with the village Eṇ̆ḍēru-gala (7.915035, 80.679343), situated about five miles west of the famous rock-fortress Sīgiri and half a mile from Inamalawa on the Dambulla-Trincomalee high road. The exact locality of the Kāliṅga Park, mentioned in this inscription and reputedly formed by Niśśaṅka-Malla, is uncertain. However, if the original site of the present ‘lion-seat’ was somewhere near the spot outside the ruin of the ‘Council Chamber’ where it was unearthed, then the Park must have occupied open ground on the eastern side of the structure.
OB03064 Poḷonnaruva Kalā-Krīḍā-Vinoda-Gal-Āsana
The Quadrangle (Dalada Maluwa), Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka
Detail of the Kalā-Krīḍā-Vinoda-Gal-Āsana at the Quadrangle (Dalada Maluwa), Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka
IN03084 Poḷonnaruva Kalā-Krīḍā-Vinoda-Gal-Āsana Inscription
The inscription is engraved around four sides of the smoothed upper surface of an oblong stone seat (āsana), which stands near the north-east corner of the Piḷimagē (‘image-house’) in the group of ruins on the Tōpa-väva quadrangle (the Dalada Maluwa) in Polonnaruwa. According to H. C. P. Bell, the seat was brought from the shrine of Thūpārāma, where it had been improperly utilised as a flower altar. It is therefore not clear where exactly the seat originally stood. The inscription consists of four lines, beginning with a Sanskrit stanza. It records that king Niśśaṅka-Malla sat on this seat to witness the entertainments of various artists after he had returned from his campaign in India and had completed the restoration of Buddhist monuments in Ceylon. Niśśaṅka Malla reigned from 1187 to 1196 A.D. A slab-inscription at Ruvanväli-dāgaba (IN03077) states that Niśśaṅka Malla undertook the reparation of the dāgabas in Anurādhapura in the fourth year of his reign i.e. 1191-92 A.D. As the present inscription refers to this campaign of restoration, it must date from 1191 A.D. or later.