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Railway to the Sacred City and Pilgrims from the South: This presentation envisages the connection between building railways and pilgrimage to Anuradhapura

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dc.contributor.author de Zoysa, A.
dc.date.accessioned 2018-06-01T07:45:17Z
dc.date.available 2018-06-01T07:45:17Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.citation de Zoysa,A.(2017). Railway to the Sacred City and Pilgrims from the South: This presentation envisages the connection between building railways and pilgrimage to Anuradhapura. The International Conference on Land Transportation, Locomotive Heritage and Road Culture - 2017, Centre for Heritage Studies,University of Kelaniya,Sri Lanka,2017. p.78-79. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/18823
dc.description.abstract From a larger research on the “Rediscovery of Anuradhapura” by the British Orientalists and its elevation from a “Buried City” to a “Holy City”, I wish to present how modern transport enhanced pilgrims to visit Anuradhapura which triggered off events that finally led to the Anurdhapura Riots in 1903. I also argued in this study, that maybe the most affluent “new Buddhists” from the maritime mercantile sector of the coastal region from Chilaw to Colombo, supported this venture and not the Buddhists of the Upcountry Kandyan or Sabaragamuwa Region. During the times of the last Kandyan Kings only a few sites such as the Sri Maha Bodhi and Ruvanveliseya were visited by pilgrims. As there were no excavations of Auradhapura prior to the British occupation of Ceylon, the city remains as recorded in the writings of colonial administrators as a “buried city” that had to be excavated? In 1890 the Archaeological Survey of Ceylon undertakes the clearing of the sites and in 1894 four years later, publishes its first to seventh progress reports with actual drawings of embellishments on pillars and ground plans of stupas by Hocart. This marks the earliest endeavors to re-discover Anuradhapura from a “Buried City” of the mid eighteenth century to a “Ruined City”. Walisinha Harischandra’s (1876-1913) advent to the Buddhist Nationalist Movement seems to mark lobbying for the liberation of Anuradhapura to reclaim the city for the Buddhists and rebuild it for the pilgrims in its past glory, challaging the British who wished to preserve it as an archeological park of ruins. In 1894 Anagarika Dharmapala proposes Harischandra to take the position of secretary of the Mahabodhi Society branch in Anuradhapura. Harischanda seems to be following the trials of the colonial administration using Western knowledge, not the vernacular handed down by the pilgrims to Anuradhapura, in his initial quest to discover the city unknown to the western educated Sinhalese of the coastal region. Harischadra visits Anuradhapura for the first time as late as in 1899. He, like all other westernized Buddhists living on the coastal belt, does not seem to have acknowledged the value of the first capital till then. Just as Dharmapala wished to institute a “Holy City” in Bodhgaya, Harischanda was to make Anuradhapura the “Holy City” in the island. In 1902 the ‘Ruvanvälisēya veli chaitya Samvardhana Samithiya’ was inaugurated as the focal point for more organized activism independent from British intervention. The next year of the performance of ‘Sirisanga Bō Charitaya’ (1903) by John de Silva in Colombo gives the “Emotional fundament” for English speaking Buddihists in the quest of a National History of the Sinhalese. The Anurdhapura riots irrupt the same year. In 1904 there seems to a train service to Anuradhapura - one in the morning from Colombo and the return in the evening. Accommodation for the pilgrims seem to have been built by Mrs. S. S Fernando of Colombo and Mr. Simon de Silva of Negambo by already in 1897. The train service transports supporters from Colombo to Anuradhapura. I have also pointed in my research of an emergence of nostalgia of the glorious past was supported by other historical plays at the Tower Hall by John de Silva and Charles Dias. One may add the fact that by 1909 the Lankālōka press was publishing ‘Anuradhapura Puvat’ informing the Buddhists of the latest activities of the liberation of the city – using the print media in Sinhala to mobilize Buddhists. Momentum seems to gather in the turn of the century when trains transport printed newspapers and pamphlets from Maradana. Harischandra makes use of archaeological evidences and translations of inscriptions to substantiate the claim for the “Sacred City of Anuradhapura”. Harischanda in his ‘The Sacred City of Anuradhapura’ (1908) gives instructions to pilgrims to proceed from one place of interest to another. Into this proposed itinerary he weaves in the history of the city as narrated in the Mahāvaṃśa and photographs from the Skeen Collection. This presentation will trace the “Round Pilgrimage” (Vata Vandanava) suggested by Harischandra comparing it with the itinerary suggested in unpublished Vandanakavi from the archives of the Library of the National Museum. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher The International Conference on Land Transportation, Locomotive Heritage and Road Culture - 2017 en_US
dc.subject Anuradhapura en_US
dc.subject Pilgrims en_US
dc.subject Transport en_US
dc.title Railway to the Sacred City and Pilgrims from the South: This presentation envisages the connection between building railways and pilgrimage to Anuradhapura en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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