The hill-range of Riṭigala is located about twenty-five miles south-east of Anurādhapura and eighteen miles north-east of Dam̆bulla. This commanding position, as well as the shelter which the mountain’s numerous rocks and caves afford, may account for its importance in ancient times, both as a stronghold of contending clans and as a place of refuge for fugitive princes and religious devotees. The name of the mountain range may be derived from the site’s trees (Sinh. ‘riti’), from the Pali name ‘Arittha’ (‘safety’, in reference to the range’s function as a place of shelter) or even from Maha Arittha, the chief minister of King Devanampiya Tissa (reg. c. 250-210 B.C.). The range has numerous caves, rocks, ruins and inscriptions. Two of the inscriptions name the area as ‘ariṭa-gama’, confirming the identification of the site as Ariṭṭa-pabbata (or -sēla), a mountain range mentioned in the Sri Lankan chronicle, the ‘Mahāvaṁsa’. The range has also been associated with Mt Aristha of the Indian epic the ‘Rāmayana’.
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Object ID | OB03030 |
Title | Riṭigala Nā-ulpata Cave |
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Inscription(s) | IN03047 |
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Author | Don Martino de Zilva Wickremasinghe |
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Description | |
Material | Rock |
Object Type | Cave |
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Details | One of a group of more than a dozen caves scattered among the boulders in the west/south-west spur of the Riṭigala mountain range. The cave is inscribed with a dedication to the priesthood. |
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Place | Riṭigala |
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Place | Riṭigala |
Authority | Wickremasinghe, Don Martino de Zilva. (1904-12). ‘No. 10. Riṭigala Inscriptions,’ Epigraphia Zeylanica 1, pp. 135-153. |
Details | Discovered for scholarship by H. C. P. Bell (the Archaeological Commissioner of Ceylon) in 1893. |
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