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Object ID | OB03014 |
Title | Vessagiri Rock B Cave 10 |
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Inscription(s) | IN03016 |
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Author | Don Martino de Zilva Wickremasinghe |
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Description | |
Material | Rock / gneiss |
Object Type | Cave |
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Details | A cave underneath a boulder towards the north end of Rock B at Vessagiri, close to Cave 9 (see OB03013). The south-east face of the boulder has a dripline and an inscription. The north-east [?] end of the boulder rests on a smaller rock, which has been undercut to make another cave (see OB03015). |
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Place | Vessagiri |
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Place | Vessagiri |
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Details | Vessagiri, or more commonly in Sinhalese Vessagiriya, is the traditional name of a forest-bound cluster of rocks in Anurādhapura. The site features three hummock-boulders of gneiss rock in a line from north to south (Rock A, Rock B and Rock C). The hummocks are surrounded by the ruins of a monastery, which had its cells in the caves of Rocks B and C (twenty-three caves in total). Some of the caves are inscribed with dedications to the Buddhist priesthood. The site is traditionally identified as that of Vessagiri Vihāra, stated to have been built by King Dēvānampiya Tissa in the third century B.C. This identification is supported by the probable age of the cave inscriptions, the style of the ruined buildings and the relative position of the site, in respect to the neighbouring Isurumuṇiya (Issarasamaṇaka) Vihāra, also built by Dēvānampiya Tissa. |
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