Podcasts about anuradhapura

City in North Central Province, Sri Lanka

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Best podcasts about anuradhapura

Latest podcast episodes about anuradhapura

Globetucker
Globetucker - Étape 41 : le Sri Lanka !

Globetucker

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 67:32


Dans cet épisode de Globetucker, on part à la découverte du Sri Lanka en compagnie de @clara.intheclouds & @Othy.e. Une île envoûtante où nature, culture et spiritualité s'entrelacent. En compagnie de nos invités, nous explorerons les merveilles de l'île : des temples majestueux de Kandy et Anuradhapura aux paysages spectaculaires des plantations de thé d'Ella, en passant par les plages sauvages de la côte sud.Nous parlerons aussi des saveurs uniques de la cuisine sri-lankaise, des moyens de transport locaux comme le mythique train bleu, et des expériences hors des sentiers battus, entre safaris et rencontres authentiques avec les habitants.Globetucker, un programme WANAMedias proposé par l'OdioO ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

SBS Sinhala - SBS සිංහල වැඩසටහන
How Bodhi Dhamma Temple in Australia cares for a sapling of Sri Mahabodhi from Sri Lanka - ඕස්ට්‍රේලියාවේ වැඩ වසන ජයශ්‍රී මහා බෝධීන් වහන්සේගේ අංකුර බෝධ

SBS Sinhala - SBS සිංහල වැඩසටහන

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2024 9:18


Listen to SBS Sinhala discussion about the bodhi dhamma temple in Bendigo that houses a direct sapling of Sri Mahabodhi of Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka. - ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ අනුරාධපුර ශ්‍රී මහාබෝධීන් වහන්සේගේ අංකුර බෝධීන් වහන්සේ නමක් තැන්පත් කර ඇති වික්ටෝරියා ප්‍රාන්තයේ බෙන්ඩිගෝ නුවර බෝධි ධම්ම විහාරස්ථානයේ සිදුකෙරෙන පුදපූජා මෙන්ම 2025 ජනවාරි පළමු වෙනිදා සිදු කිරීමට නියමිත ආශිර්වාද පූජාව ඇතුළු සාම්ප්‍රදායික පිළිවෙත් පිළිබඳව SBS සිංහල සේවය සිදුකළ සාකච්චාවට සවන් දෙන්න.

The History of Sri Lanka
12. The Final Curtain

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 10:47


21 CE – 66 CE   “By blood a king, in heart a clown.”  Alfred Lord Tennyson King Amandagamani Abhaya's ascent to the throne in 21 CE was both fair and orderly.  Even so, the dynastic DNA had long before morphed into a penchant for regicide, and in 30 CE this fatal habit was to reappear, heralding the dynasty's final moments – ones that not even the most sensational or improbable soap operas could ever hope to emulate. There was little if any warning.  It all just happened.  Kanirajanu Tissa, King Amandagamani Abhaya's brother waited just 9 years before wielding the family knife, killing his sibling in 30 CE and seizing the throne for himself.Proving right the old adage that one's crimes eventually catch up with you,  Kanirajanu Tissa's own reign was terminated after just 3 suspiciously short and turbulent years when in 33 CE, Chulabhaya, son of the assassinated Amandagamani Abhaya became king. He is down in the records as having died naturally, though this might credibly require a reworking of the word's definition. Chulabhaya managed to last little longer, but pragmatists now sensibly took to counting reigns in multiples of months, not years.   Three years later, in 35 CE Chulabhaya too was dead and his sister Sivali took the throne in 35 CE.The ascension of Sri Lanka's second female head of state, Queen Sivali, in 35 CE probably did more to hasten, rather than slow down, the Vijayan dynasty's final tryst with oblivion.  What she lacked in the blood thirsty and ruthless qualities that had so marked out Anula, the country's first female ruler, she did not seem able to make up for with any resolute authority. Perhaps it was already too late for all that.  For decades now the kingdom's rulers had demonstrated a greater interest in seizing the throne than ever ruling it with wisdom or strength. Sivali's rule laid bare the incipient civil war that had been raging through the palace corridors earlier.  The only difference this time was that the dynasty suddenly found itself with another dynasty to deal with, the Lambakarna - and not just itself, exhausting enough as that was.Sivali bobs up and down in the months succeeding her ascension vying for control of the state in what looks like a three cornered struggle between herself, her nephew Ilanaga and the Lambakarnas. Little about this period of Sri Lankan history is certain, except that from around 35 CE to 38 CE civil war preoccupied the entire country and left it without any plausible governance.For a time Ilanaga seemed to be ahead of the pack.  But he then seems to have scoured a perfect own-goal when he demoted the entire Lambakarna clan for failing to attend to him in what he regarded as a right and proper fashion.  This abrupt change in their caste, in country held increasingly rigid by ideas of caste, galvanised them into full scale rebellion.  The king – if king he really was – fell and fled into hill country, returning 3 years later at the head of a borrowed Chola army to take back his throne in 38 CE.The Lambakarna Clan were put back in their place, though it was to prove but a temporary place at best.  Ilanaga's reign lasted another 7 years, before his son Chandra Mukha Siva succeeded in 44 CE. Despite the chaos of this period of Sri Lankan history, and not without a little irony, it is astonishing to record how one of these last Vijayan kings – probably Ilanaga or his son Chandra Mukha Siva - still managed to find time to send an embassy to Rome.  Pliny the Elder records the event which occurred at some point in the reign of the luckless Emperor Claudius (41 – 54 CE).  And at almost the same time a reciprocal one seems to have happened back in Sri Lanka with the (probably) accidental arrival of a Roman called Annius Plocamus. Evidence of links between the two kingdoms can be found in both countries.  Archaeologists working near the Via Cassia north of Rome identified an 8-year old mummy from the second half of the 2nd century CE they called Grottarossa.  Amongst her artefacts was  a necklace of 13 sapphires from Sri Lanka.  And dating a few decades before this in Sri Lanka there is unmistakable evidence of Roman  influences at the Abhayagiri Vihara monastery site in Anuradhapura.  Here, nestling amongst the  sculptured carvings of elephants and bulls are to be found winged cupids and griffins – and the acanthus leaves common on almost all Greek and Roman art.Back in Rome, as the Emperor Claudius was getting ready to be murdered by his wife, Agrippina so ushering in the calamitous reign of Nero, back in Sri Lanka King Ilanaga's son and successor, Chandra Mukha Siva, was facing the same fate in 52 CE – albeit at the  hands of his own brother Yassalalaka Thissa in 52 CE.  The stage was now set for one of most eccentric periods of island governance.With the ascension of the regicidal Yassalalaka Thissa, the last chorus of the Vijayan throne sounded, in Frank Sinatra style: “and now the end is near, and so I face the final curtain.”With a story too bathetic to be encumbered by any inconvenient disbelief, The Mahavaṃsa recounts the bizarre end of this once great dynasty in 60 CE.“Now a son of Datta the gate-watchman, named Subha, who was himself a gate-watchman, bore a close likeness to the king. And this palace-guard Subha did the king Yasalalaka, in jest, bedeck with the royal ornaments and place upon the throne and binding the guard's turban about his own head, and taking himself his place, staff in band, at the gate, he made merry over the ministers as they paid homage to Subha sitting on the throne. Thus, was he wont to do, from time to time.Now one day the guard cried out to the king, who was laughing: `Why does this guard laugh in my presence?' And Subha the guard ordered to slay the king, and he himself reigned here six years under the name Subha Raja.” Despatched by his own lookalike, Yassalalaka Thissa, the last Vijayan king died, one hopes, seeing the unexpectedly funny side of assassination. King Subha's own reign lasted 6 years when, whetted by a 3 year rule back in 35 CE, the Lambakarna clan took royal matters back into their own hand and put the ex-palace guard to death.A new Lambakarna king, Vasabha, was now to take the throne.After 609 years, the Vijayan dynasty had come to an inglorious end. Despite a rich choice of murderous would-be rulers, kings such as Vijaya, Pandukabhaya,  Mutasiva, Devanampiya Tissa, and Dutugemunu, had been able to establish the confidence, culture, and mindset of an entire nation, giving it the ballast and energy necessary to propel itself forward for centuries to come.With a writ running at times across the entire island, they transformed a series of unremarkable warring statelets and villages into a nation.  They bequeathed it with a legacy of literature, architecture, religion, and infrastructure that no other dynasty bettered.Looking out at water rippling still over the great tanks they built with cutting-edge engineering; sitting in the shade of the magnificent palaces and courts constructed at Anuradhapura, reading inscriptions that point to the bounty of trade routes extending from the island to places as far away as Rome; in the ancient chants of Buddhist priests, the coinage, delicate statutory, frescos and books that survive to this day: in taking all of this in, you take as said an early nation every bit as impressive as any in the ancient world – and way ahead of most. Its laws regulated an dynamic state, its armies and weapons defended it with a rigour that was effective. Even as they disappeared from history, the achievements of the Vijayans lay befor...

The History of Sri Lanka
7. Line of Attack

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 6:19


367 BCE – 205 BCE   “What goes up must come down”  Isaac Newton    The death of Sri Lanka's visionary king, Devanampiya Tissa, ushered in a period of unnerving calm.  All seemed fine with the state – and yet something, somewhere, was going fatally wrong, leaving it wide open to invasion.If there was a serious shortcoming in the reign of Devanampiya Tissa, it was his apparent lack of children; and in the 30 years that followed two of his brothers and possibly even an uncle took up the royal reins, with little obvious beneficial effect – as far as the country was concerned.  First up was Uththiya, one of old king Mutasiva's many sons.  His ten year rule from 267 BCE to 257 BCE is a marvel of obscurity. He was succeeded by his brother, Mahasiwa, whose own ten year rule, from 257 BCE – 247 BCE, goes almost as unremembered - apart from the fact that he built the Nagarangana Monastery. By the time Mahasiwa's uncle, Surathissa, took the throne in 247 BCE, things were clearly going most seriously wrong, and the young country would have been wise to take to heart the words of the Egyptian writer, Suzy Kassem: “Never follow a follower who is following someone who has fallen. Its why the whole world is falling apart.” For by now the kingdom itself was falling apart.  It had become so ineptly run and poorly defended as to lay itself wide open to invasion – the first recoded invasion of the country from South India. Three kings, and three decades on from the kingdom's apparent apogee, the governance of the country had clearly eroded – and badly.  The systems, protections, administration, and defences put in by the last two or three great kings had broken down, the reason a matter on which speculation could rest until the return of the dodo itself.  Why did it all go so very wrong?  No one knows.  But the state no long had its eye on the ball.  Clearly Devanampiya Tissa's heirs had in very short supply the ten perfections that make the life of Buddha aspirants positive: morality, renunciation, wisdom, energy, forbearance, truthfulness, resolution, kindness, equanimity, and liberality. The invasion came in the ignominious form of couple of Tamil horse traders, Sena and Guttik.Spotting the ultimate commercial opportunity (a kingdom) in the weak rule of King Surathissa, the traders met little resistance in conquering Anuradhapura and slaughtering the ineffectual Surathissa.  They were to rule it for 22 years, the first of a succession of Tamil invaders. It was a humiliating end to the golden years of the Vijayan dynasty.  And yet, like the immortal jellyfish, Turritopsis dohrnii, dead, in this case, did not mean dead - for the fight had not quite left the Vijayans.Out there in the wilderness lay Asela, another son of old King Mutasiva. After Surathissa was killed, Asela took refuge far south in the Kingdom of Ruhuna – a sub kingdom that had been established by Mahanaga, another son of King Mutasiva.Descending on the horse trader kings with much shattered dignity to put right, Asela killed them in battle. After decades of poor rule followed by a pair of asset stripping Indian merchants, there was much that King Asela had to put right.  But the task proved too much for him and his own rule was brought to an abrupt end 10 years later in 205 BCE when he himself was killed in battle by Ellara, an invading Tamil Chola.That he should meet such an end, after so much trouble to restore his family's right to reign, seems almost unfair – but as Nicholas Sparks gloomily observed ““life, I've learned, is never fair. If people teach anything in school, that should be it.” Ellara was to rule the Anuradhapuran Kingdom for 44 years, smashing the awesome edifice of Vijayan rule that had already given the island so much of its lasting cultural identity.  The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)

The History of Sri Lanka
8. The Just King

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 6:28


205 BCE – 161 BCE“The sword of justice has no scabbard.”  Antione De Riveral Invaders are rarely liked and often forgotten.  But the 44 year reign of the Tamil king, Ellalan, merits much more than a modest footnote in the island's story.  Unlike almost all other conquerors before or since, Ellalan cherished his kingdom as much as any man might his own home.  He came to rule – not rape and pillage.In the northern Tamil city of Jaffa stands a curious white clock tower, with Italianate windows, Roman pillars, and a little minaret. Built by subscription to honour the 1875 visit of Prince of Wales, it was damaged in the civil war and repaired, partly with the help of a later Prince of Wales, Charles, in 2002. Before it, as if leading a charge, is a golden elephant, ridden by a golden king – Elara, or in Tamil, Ellalan.Ellalan (205 BCE – 161 BCE) is a strange figure, his Tamilness eliciting not even a scintilla of condemnation in The Mahavamsa, which notes instead “a Damila of noble descent, named Elara, who came hither from the Cola-country to seize on the kingdom, ruled when he had overpowered king Asela, forty-four years, with even justice toward friend and foe, on occasions of disputes at law.,”The ancient text then goes onto illuminate Ellalan's many acts of justice and generosity. Just, to the point of terrifying, he even executed his own son for transgressing the law. Virtuous though he was, Ellalan was, all the same, a footnote for the Vijayans were not yet finished with their rule. The main line of succession had been destroyed, but a cadet branch existed in the southern Kingdom of Ruhuna, a Vijayan redoubt ruled over by the descendants of King Devanampiya Tissa's brother, Mahanaga.The Kingdom of Ruhuna had never really been part of the Anuradhapura domain. Indeed, since at least the reign of King Surathissa the Anuradhapura Kingdom itself had begun to fracture, The Mahavamsa pointing out the presence of 32 semi-independent Tamil states coexisting alongside King Ellalan's Anuradhapura.Ruhana at this time was fortunate enough to be ruled by the Vijayan King, Kavantissa, who pursued a focused and implacable strategy of soaking up the little would-be challenging kingships the boarded his land.  By the time of his death he had created a powerful southern state, one that was perfectly poised to help the family regain control of Anuradhapura itself.The death of King Kavantissa let loose a predictable sibling spat, carried out by his two sons,  Dutugemunu and Tissa.  In a series of trials involving elephants, the kidnapping of the dowager queen, and set-piece battles, Dutugemunu emerged victorious. His victory in his home kingdom was to have a profound impact on the island as a whole for it was in his reign that the Vijayans were to finally assert their dominance across the entire island.A notable adherent of Walt Disney's modus operandi (“Around here, however, we don't look backwards for very long”), Dutugemunu, throne secure, set off for the north with an army of chariots, monks, horses, a lucky spear, his favourite elephant (Kandula) and, states The Mahavamsa, Ten Giant Warriors (Nandhimitra, Suranimala, Mahasena, Theraputtabhya, Gotaimbara, Bharana, Vasabha, Khanjadeva, Velusamanna, and Phussadeva). Composed, as was normal of four units – elephants, horses, chariots, and infantry – the army was spectacularly successful.Having learnt much from his sagacious father, Dutugemunu began by first mopping up the splintered Tamil statelets in the north. The campaigns reached their climax outside the walls of Anuradhapura.The old king Ellalan, mounted on his elephant Mahapabbata, faced his younger rival, mounted on his elephant, Kandula.  Did he tremble when he heard Dutugemunu call out 'none shall kill Ellalan but myself'? We can but guess.  The ancient texts report that the deadly combat was honourable but decisive, a spear thrust finally ending Ellalan's life in 161 BCE.   The records state that "the water in the tank there was dyed red with the blood of the slain'. And perhaps in acknowledgment of Ellalan's fine reputation, the king had his victim cremated properly and a stupa constructed over the pyre. “Even to this day,” comments The Mahavamsa, “the princes of Lanka, when they draw near to this place, are wont to silence their music'.The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)

The History of Sri Lanka
9. Rise and Fall

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 6:15


161 BCE – 103 BCE   “There is a great deal of ruin in a nation.”  Adam Smith For a glorious, albeit extended moment, it seems as if the Vijayan good times had returned. Dutugemunu's nature, clear from his early childhood, was naturally geared to dominate, take control, and direct.  Not for nothing does island history remember him as “the great”. Certainly, his victory in 161 BCE left him ruling nearly the whole of the island – more territory by far than even that of the great king, Pandu Kabhaya. And as if to confirm the return of Vijayan order, the construction of more buildings commenced. Anuradhapura expanded exponentially, its infrastructure, utilities, water resources so upgraded as to ensure that it would flourish for centuries to come, the longest surviving capital city of the Indian sub-continent. Still more spectacular was the building of many of its most celebrated structures.  A large monastery, the Maricavatti, was erected, together with a nine-story chapter house for monks, with a bright copper-tiled roof; and most famous of all, what is today called the Ruwanweliseya, the Great Stupa which housed Buddha's begging bowl.  The building programme was not restricted to the capital alone – 89 other temples are said to have been constructed, along with hospitals and smaller tanks.  Trade opened up with the west, the ports busy with merchants from Arabia, Persia and possibly even Rome. But back at the palace, events were going less smoothly. Dutugemunu's heir, Saliya, having fallen for a girl from one of the lowest castes, was disinherited.  The ailing king, dying before his eye-catching Stupa was finished, ensured the throne passed instead to his own brother, Saddha Tissa in 137 BCE.For the next 33 years it seemed as if life had got back to normal, or to whatever passed for normal amidst the seemingly indestructible building and gardens of Anuradhapura. King Saddha Tissa busied himself building the obligatory new monastery and, more usefully, a tremendous water tank, the Duratissa Reservoir which held 336 million cubic feet of water.But as the late British prime minister Harold Macmillan remarked on the unpredictability of politics, the sudden appearance of “events, dear boy, events,” was to unseat everything.Saddha Tissa's death, 18 years later in 119 BCE, set off a power struggle, with his son, Thulatthana, taking the throne – though not for long.  It also fired the gun to start the dynasty's race towards its next great disaster, just 15 years later.Thulatthana's coronation was a crowing too soon.  He was not, in all probability, the next legitimate heir, that honour going to his older brother, Lanja Tissa.  But Lanja Tissa was busy far south of Anuradhapura, in Ruhuna, and so not on site to determine the right order of succession. Inevitably, war broke out – albeit briefly.  Thulatthana was defeated and killed and for the rest of 119 BCE to 109 BCE, Lanja Tissa ruled the kingdom, with, no doubt, much justified satisfaction. His death, ten years later, brought his brother, another son of King Saddha Tissa to the throne, Khallata Naga.Khallata Naga's inheritance was much impoverished by the events of the past years.  Something was broken within the kingdom – some abiding sense of order and law.  The palace coup and murder around king Thulatthana had shunted the state back to how it was in 205 BCE, when the luckless king Asela was killed, having been unable to repair the damage reaped on the kingdom by his more careless rulers.And just now, it was all to depressingly similar.  Dynastic self-harm had normalized treason, regicide, and rebellion.  The state was unstable. And ungovernable.Inevitably therefore, Khallata Naga found himself busy quelling rebellions – but to no avail.  Killed by his own chief general in 103 BCE, another messy power struggle broke out before Valagamba – yet another son of King Saddha Tissa – took the throne in 103 BCE by killing the general and – in an act of reckless trust - adopted the general's son and marrying his wife.The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)

The History of Sri Lanka
6. The Moment of Truth

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 9:34


367 BCE - 205 BCE   “When a defining moment comes along, you define the moment, or the moment defines you.”  Kevin Costner    A modest mystery immediately greets the hard pressed historian on encountering the death of Sri Lanka's first and possibly greatest king, Pandu Kabhaya.  His impossibly long reign – some 70 years ( - and that following an extended youth tormenting and eventually killing his uncle)  – defies all reasonable expectation of life expectancy at the time. Some scholars, fretting at the impossible arithmetic athleticism of the great king, helpfully suggest an extra king at this point – a shadowy name emerges from antique mists: Ganatissa, said to be a son of Pandu Kabhaya. Or was he a grandson?  Or just a royal blind alley?  It is a mystery that is never likely to be cleared up, but if Ganatissa was an invisible king, Mutasiva, said to have been Pandu Kabhaya' son, emits at least the glimmer of glorious light.  His existence is not in question.  His reign was long, and he is said to have enlarged Anuradhapura creating Mahamevnāwa, an enormous park noted for its flowering trees and fruits. And mindful of his dynastic obligations, Mutasiva also produced 9 sons, 5 of whom would rule after him.  Certainly, something went very right during the reigns of Pandukabhaya, (?Ganatissa) and Mutasiva for during this period, civil war, that had rocked the reigns of Panduvasdeva's sons, draws not even the merest whisper in the chronicles.  This period of calm government would have enabled the state to become increasingly centralised, and in so doing, embedded Vijayan rule and the ascendency of the Anuradhapura Kingdom across the island.  Mutasiva's peaceful death, in 307 BCE, made clear that the Vijayans were there to stay. It turned out that this was the best of all possible times to take stock of the kingdom, and lift its game.  And it was fortunate that when Sri Lanka's paramount defining moment occurred, it had a king talented enough to make best sense of it, though in the decades after his death, all was nearly lost by feeble heirs and violent invaders.  Devanampiya Tissa, old King Mutasiva's second son, is described by The Mahavaṃsa as being "foremost among all his brothers in virtue and intelligence". To get anywhere close to this remarkable king (307 – 267 BCE)  you should take yourself off to a mountain in Mihintale, 16 kilometres east of Anuradhapura.  There stands a modest, much weathered, armless stone statute of Devanampiya Tissa, just over six feet high, gazing out across the grand ruins and remains of the religious citadel. It marks the very spot where Sri Lanka became Buddhist. Gaze into the stoney eyes of the king – for, unlike so much other statutory, this one, argue the scholars, actually dates from very close to the death of this Buddhist welcoming monarch. Like the Vijayans, Buddhism also came from India - and it has naturalised so completely across the island that it is impossible grasp any aspect of the country's past or present, without first comprehending the centrality of this, its main religion.  It arrived through a series of intimate stories in which faith follows friendship – for King Devanampiya Tissa had struck up a pen-pal relationship with the celebrated Indian Buddhist emperor, Ashoka. Gifts followed letters, and a missionary followed the gifts when Ashoka despatched his own son, Mahinda, to Sri Lanka. The young missionary prince was to live on the island for 48 years, out-living Devanampiya Tissa, and dying, aged 80 after a lifetime spent promoting Buddhism, the beneficiary of a state funeral at which his relics were interred in a stupa in Mihintale. For it was at Mihintale that Mahinda first met Devanampiya Tissa. The king, it was said, was out hunting. Expecting a stag, the ruler instead found himself a missionary. A testing exchange on  the nature of things followed, and then a sutra was preached. The rest, as they say, is history. The conversions began, and the country's history took the most definitive turn in its long journey, becoming - and remaining to this day - a Buddhist country first and foremost, with all that this entailed.  So great were the number of conversions that the king especially built the Maha Vihare (The Great Monastery) in the pleasure gardens of Anuradhapura to house the growing number of Buddhist monks; and for centuries afterwards, the building was to become the centre of Theravada Buddhism in Sri Lanka. The evidence for all this comes, of course, from The Mahāvaṃsa Chronicle.  But it is very likely that Buddhism penetrated the island much earlier.  Even so, it took the backing of a king to ensure that the religion became so dominant so fast.  And as it did so, it accrued some of the many rituals and ceremonies of the pre Buddhist cults, especially those associated with agriculture and demons.  It also helped spread a common language and script, and with it, the power of the centre for the king was also the formal guardian of the Sanga – the religious organization. Clearly, Mahinda, the young missionary had painted a compelling picture of his new island home in his letters home for he was soon joined by his sister, the nun, Sanghamitta.  She brought with her a golden vase in which grew a sapling of Bodhi-Tree taken from the very one under which Buddha himself is said to have attained enlightenment. Accompanied by a number of other nuns, Sanghamitta landed in the north of the island and was met by King Devanampiya Tissa himself. The party were ceremonially escorted to Anuradhapura along a road softened with white sand.  The Bodhi sapling was planted in the Mahameghavana Grove in Anuradhapura, where it still grows. Saṅghamitta later ordained Queen Anula and the women of the court in Buddhism and stayed on in the island, promoting the religion. She died in 203 BCE aged 79, her death prompting national mourning. A stupa was erected over her cremation site in front of the Bodhi-Tree in Anuradhapura. The king himself built a monastery and temple caves at Mihintale, a site that over successive years grew and grew. Indeed temple caves rapidly became the architectural hit of the time with ordinary people funding a stone mason to do all the necessary work.  Between the third century BCE and the first century CE nearly 3,000 such caves were recorded. Other notable buildings followed: monasteries, palaces, the 550 acre Tissa Wewa water tank, still in use today; and the Thuparamaya of Anuradhapura, the county's first stupa - which enshrined the right collarbone of Lord Buddha and whose remains today stretch out over 3 ½ acres.  Devanampiya Tissa's death after a long reign brought to a gradual end a golden period of Vijayan peace and prosperity.The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is a...

The History of Sri Lanka
2. Travellers from the North

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 9:31


1,500,000 BCE to 543 BCE.   “Wide open and unguarded stand our gates.” Thomas Bailey Aldrich.  Adam's Bridge was a bridge crying out for repair, even before the great storm of 1470 shattered it forever.  Unpredictable, and uneven, sailing had long been the better option.  But for Sri Lanka's first settlers – who had still to master boats – a short walk from India was all it took.   And walking was what the island's first settlers did: Palaeolithic and later Mesolithic migrants from the Indian mainland who simply strolled across, their effortless trek belying the extreme complexity that hundreds of years later would colour Sri Lanka's relationship with India – from war, intermarriage, Buddhism itself - and the borrowing of kings.   Since Jurassic times, some two hundred million years ago, Sri Lanka had, as part of India, broken off from the great Gondwana sub content that had been formed in the Triassic era a hundred million years earlier. Adam's Bridge was becoming the sole point of access to the far south; but by 7,500 BCE it was almost unwalkable. Beguiling hints of these earliest inhabitants are still only just emerging.  Excavations conducted in 1984 by Prof. S. Krishnarajah near Point Pedro, north east of Jaffna revealed Stone Age tools and axes that are anything from 500,000 to 1.6 million years old.  As the fossil record demonstrates, the land they inhabited was ecologically richer and more dramatic than it is today, teaming not simply with a plenitude of the wildlife still found in Sri Lanka today, but with hippopotamus and rhinoceros as well. Hundreds of millennia later, one of their Stone Age descendants was to leave behind the most anatomically perfect modern human remains yet uncovered on the island.   Balangoda Man, as he was to be named, was found in the hills south of Horton Plains inland from Matara, a short walk from the birthplace of Sirimavo Bandaranaike. His complete 30,000 year old skeleton is bewitchingly life-like.   Probing his remains, scientists have concluded that Balangoda Man and his heirs were eager consumers of raw meat, from snails and snakes to elephants. And artistic too, as evidenced in the ornamental fish bones, sea shell beads and pendants left behind.  All across the island, similar finds are being uncovered, pointing to a sparce but widespread population of hunter gathers, living in caves – such as Batadomba, Aliga and Beli-lena in Kitulgala. The tools and weapons found in these caves, made of quartz crystal and flint, are well in advance of such technological developments in Europe, which date from around 10,000 BCE compared to 29,000 BCE in Sri Lanka. Later evidence indicates that Stone Age hunter-gathers then made the transition to a more settled lifestyle, growing, at least by 17,000-15,000 BCE, oats, and barley on what is now Horton Plains, thousands of years before it even began in that fulcrum of early global civilization - Mesopotamia. Astonishingly, their direct descendants, the Veddas, are still alive today, making up less than 1% of the island's total population, an aboriginal community with strong animist beliefs that has, against the odds, retained a distinctive identity.  Leaner, and darker than modern Sri Lankans, their original religion - cherishing demons, and deities - was associated with the dead and the certainty that the spirits of dead relatives can cause good or bad outcomes. Their language, unique to them, is now almost – but not quite - extinct. And perhaps it was the Vedda or their spirits that Fa-Hsien, the 5th century CE traveller had in mind when he conjured up his fable of early Sri Lanka in his book  “A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms:”  “The country originally had no human inhabitants, but was occupied only by spirits and nagas, with which merchants of various countries carried on a trade. When the trafficking was taking place, the spirits did not show themselves. They simply set forth their precious commodities, with labels of the price attached to them; while the merchants made their purchases according to the price; and took the things away.“ Fa-Hsien's colourful travelogue shows just how readily the early origins of the country depend on myth and fable. Centuries passed before there are finally some tantalising hints of the Stone Ages' transition into the Iron Age, and with it more evidence of new waves of colonization into the island from India.   As new travellers arrived from the sub-continent, Balangoda man and his ancestors were pushed into the more inaccessible parts of the country, especially the rainforests, a small part of which, Sinharaja Forest Reserve, miraculously survives in its original state today. Using the progressive technology of the iron age, the new colonists were able to clear land and plant crops, mine for metals like copper, and even establish pearl fisheries. By 1500 BCE there is evidence of cinnamon being exported to the ancient Egyptians.   A series of major excavations in Anuradhapura dating to around 900 BCE has uncovered abundant treasure including artefacts that show the use of iron, the domestication of horses and cattle, the use of high-quality pottery and possibly even the cultivation of rice.  The settlement was large – even by today's standards: 4 hectares.  Other equally large settlements undoubtedly wait still to be found.   One that has already been unearthed and studied are the burial mounds at Ibbankutuwa near Dambulla that date back to around 1,000 BCE.  Here a wealth of pottery vessels interned with the dead contain ornaments of bronze and copper, beads and, most interesting of all, such stones as carnelian and onyx that could only have come to the island from India.  Other such sites exist in places like Padiyagampola and Jamburagala in Yala. By the early 7th century BCE evidence comes of the use of the Brahmi script using a language that is an early form of Sinhala.  Inventive, adaptive, increasingly sophisticated - urban living was arriving – whether as an independent island-wide development or because of the rapid spread of urbanised culture from India still using Adam's Bridge as a convenient thoroughfare, is still the stuff of impassioned academic debate. Either way, the evolutionary ball was rolling like never before.  From urban living, came city states.  And into one of these, in 543 BCE , stepped the Indian Prince, Vijaya. The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked. The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)

The History of Sri Lanka
4. Rough Weather

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 5:52


505 BCE – 437 BCE.   “No matter how rough the sea, I refuse to sink.”  Unknown.  Prince Vijaya's greatest achievement, apart from surviving, was less what he did than what he left behind – a dynasty that ran (ignoring regnal interruptions) for over 600 years, putting it comfortably ahead of Mings and Moguls, Valois, French Bourbons, German Hohenzollerns, Tudors, Stuarts, and Aztecs.    The very earliest foundation stories of the Sinhala nation start with him, covering 47 monarchs (including, that is, more than a handful of extraneous royal interlopers), from Vijaya to the unrelated rogue, Subharaja, ruling 3 ever larger kingdoms - Tambapanni, Upatissa Nuwara and Anuradhapura, facing off three major Tamil invasions, until in the end, they toppled themselves. But just as the Vijayan dynasty started, it almost came to a premature end for Prince Vijaya died in 505 BCE, after a 38-year reign, leaving no credible son to inherit the throne.   Fortunately, one of his followers – possibly his chief minister, Upatissa - had founded a petite kingdom of his own close by - Upatissa Nuwara.  And he appears to have loyally stepped into the breach when Prince Vijaya died, ruling for a year until Panduvasdeva, Vijaya's nephew arrived from India to assume the throne.   With Panduvasdeva arrival, the time of kings was robustly on its way, albeit at first, little different from the many kingdoms that vied with one another across Tamil Nadu and into India.   Ruling for 30 years (504 - 474 BCE), Panduvasdeva was just what the nascent dynasty needed to entrench itself, his greatest achievements being to rule for decades and produce heirs, albeit ones fixated on familicide.  Whether his many sons all came from the same wife or not is unknown, for the harem was to be a key institution of the royal court, and a magnet for intrigue and politics until the last king of the last kingdom breathed his last. Panduvasdeva moved his capital to the fortress of Vijithapura, close to what would later become its great capital, Anuradhapura.  Today, he is chiefly remembered for the chaos that later enveloped the country as his 10 sons battled against the morbid predictions of a court soothsayer who predicted that they would all be killed by their nephew, Pandu Kabhaya, son of their only sister, Princess Citta.   Abhaya, Panduvasdeva's eldest son took the throne from his father in 474 BCE.  It seems possible that he was smart enough to know that, as king, he had been promoted beyond his level of competence.  He ruled with eroding confidence until being dethroned by his brother, Tissa in 454 BCE.   Abhaya's ousting was merely the most public expression of the rising sibling civil wars that had overtaken the country as Panduvasdeva's sons vied for prominence. Spared his life, Abhaya retreated into a wise obscurity, sensibly declining his nephew's later offer to retake the crown, settling instead for the far less pressured job of running Anuradhapura.   Tissa, Abhaya's immediate replacement, was of a haunted man.  Chief amongst his brothers, he was eager to head off the sinister predictions of the court soothsayer. But it was not to be.  His rule was characterised by an ultimately unsuccessful balancing act:  feuding with his bothers (many of whom died in the troubles) whilst keeping at bay his nephew Pandu Kabhaya.  As civil war rocked the new nation, Tissa's repeated attempts to find and slay his nephew, Pandu Kabhaya, were all foiled and his reign (454 BCE – 437 BCE) came to a predictable end when Pandu Kabhaya killed him in battle. The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)

The History of Sri Lanka
5. The Kingdom Maker

The History of Sri Lanka

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 8:36


437 BCE – 367 BCE.   "It was the nearest thing to heaven."  An Affair to Remember.    Barely 100 years into their first royal dynasty, Sri Lanka had the great good fortune to encounter Pandu Kabhaya's  - one of its greatest kings.  Inheriting, at best, a kinglet, he passed onto his successors a fully functioning kingdom that for over 200 years became a byword for opulence, sophistication, and progress. Pandu Kabhaya's (improbably long) 70 year reign (437 to 367 BCE ) would have come as a blessed relief to family and subjects alike after so much dynastic squabbling.  Had he failed, it is likely little more would ever have been heard of this fledgling dynasty.   Credited with a smart intelligence that helped him see off repeated pre-ascension assassination attempts, the king set in train the real beginnings of the Anuradhapura Kingdom when he moved his capital to the site and, in Louis XIV-style, began building.  By then the site of Anuradhapura was already some 200 years old and covered over 20 acres. Pandukabhaya took it to still greater heights.   His rule harnessed the country's expertise in all areas of human endeavour - from farming and engineering to administration and construction, in order to build a capital, and through it, dominate the entire island.  Documented remains of a great survey he conducted to assess his kingdom show some 700 villages spreading out across the island from the city of Anuradhapura across land described as raja Ratna – the King's country. This domination was to take time; and for several centuries the kingdom co-existed with other smaller realms to the east and south before it was able to asset its pre-eminence. From the start Pandu Kabhaya's rule respected his Vedda allies, the Yakkhas, Cittaraja and Kalavela, clans of the island's earliest original inhabitants. The Mahāvaṃsa records his beneficial diligence:   “He settled the Yakkha Kalavela on the east side of the city, the Yakkha Cittaraja at the lower end of the Abhayatank…and on festival-days he sat with Cittaraja beside him on a seat of equal height, and having gods and men to dance before him, the king took his pleasure, in joyous and merry wise.  He laid out also four suburbs as well as the Abhaya-tank, the common cemetery, the place of execution, and the chapel of the Queens of the West, the banyan-tree of Vessavana and the Palmyra-palm of the Demon of Maladies, the ground set apart for the Yonas and the house of the Great Sacrifice; all these he laid out near the west gate.  He set 500 candalas to the work of cleaning the town, 200 candalas to the work of cleaning the sewers, 150 candalas he employed to bear the dead and as many candalas to be watchers in the cemetery. For these he built a village north-west of the cemetery and they continually carried out their duty as it was appointed.   Toward the north-east of the candala-village he made the cemetery, called the Lower Cemetery, for the candala folk. North of this cemetery, between (it and) the Pasana-mountain, the line of huts for the huntsmen were built thenceforth.  Northward from thence, as far as the Gamani-tank, a hermitage was made for many ascetics; eastward of that same cemetery the ruler built a house for the nigantha Jotiya. In that same region dwelt the nigantha named Giri and many ascetics of various heretical sects. And there the lord of the land built also a chapel for the nigantha Kumbhanda. Toward the west from thence and eastward of the street of the huntsmen lived five hundred families of heretical beliefs.  On the further side of Jotiya's house and on this side of the Gamani tank he likewise built a monastery for wandering mendicant monks, and a dwelling for the ajivakas and a residence for the brahmans, and in this place and that he built a lying-in shelter and a hall for those recovering from sickness.  Ten years after his consecration did Pandu Kabhaya the ruler of Lanka establish the village-boundaries over the whole of the island of Lanka.”  As the ancient Athenians were putting the finishing touches to the Acropolis and the nascent Roman Republic issuing its first laws, the palaces and structures of Anuradhapura rose up through the jungle, a tropical Versailles founded on land that betrayed evidence of human occupation going back to at least 10th century BCE – roughly the same time when Solomon became king of Israel.   Anuradhapura was to become one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities – and for 1,500 years was the capital of the island state.  As the Dark Ages fell across the West and society there returned to wattle and daub, the kingdom's engineering, and architectural talents, nurtured over centuries, endowed Anuradhapura with an almost inexhaustible tally of spectacular new temples, pools, stupas, gardens, palaces, and dwellings.  Nor did he appear to neglect the utilitarian, building hospitals, cemeteries, sewers and, in a marvellous feat of ancient engineering, constructing bisokotuwas to regulate the outflow of water from tanks and sluices to secure them against destruction in the annual floods Trade thrived exponentially; and there are even intriguing hints, documented by The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka, of a small group of Greek merchants living in the royal city itself. Credited with ending the guerrilla warfare that marked the resistance of the original island dwellers against the Vijayans, Pandu Kabhaya's reign not only brought stability but bequeathed future constancy to the island, as his own son, Mutasiva, came to the throne in 367 BCE for a reign (to 307 BCE) that was almost as golden.  Sometimes, not often, a country gets lucky, and with this father-son duet, Sri Lanka undoubtedly did. The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.   The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast) 

Postcards From Nowhere
How Buddhism shaped Sri Lankan food

Postcards From Nowhere

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 8:56


543 BC, Lord Buddha had left the earth, and his body was cremated in a sandalwood pyre at Kushinagar, in modern-day Uttar Pradesh. His left canine tooth was retrieved from the funeral pyre by his disciple, Khema. Over the decades, it changed hands and found itself in Kandy, Sri Lanka. So important was this tooth, that palaces were built around it. And thus began a tradition of ritual offerings at these palaces. This week, we travel to Sri Lanka and uncover how Buddhism shaped the food of the country, and how its principles are incorporated into everyday Sri Lankan food practice. Till then Check out the other episodes, Anne Frank, Lootera and Endless Life of TreesThe Trees that built VeniceElm Trees, National Revolutions and Modern PaperEuropean Impressionism, Japanese Nationalism and Cherry Blossom TreesThe tree that built New ZealandLiving Fossils, National Identities and 200 MM year old trees You can check previous episodes of 'Podcasts from Nowhere' on IVM Podcasts websitehttps://ivm.today/3xuayw9You can reach out to our host Utsav on Instagram: @whywetravel42(https://www.instagram.com/whywetravel42 )You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: IVM Podcasts - Apps on Google Play or all other major audio platforms.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

History Tea Time
Royal & Noble Serial Killers – Female

History Tea Time

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 29:28


Today about 85% of all serial killers are male. On the rare occasions when a woman commits murder, it is far more shocking to society. But history reveals a handful of femme fatals who took the lives of others to gain power or even for their own sadistic pleasure. Royal and noble women were particularly well positioned to indulge their evil impulses. Wealth and power gave them nearly limitless freedom to prey on peasants, who in turn had little means of seeking justice. Today we'll investigate the cases of 5 female aristocratic serial murderers from history: Anula, Queen of Anuradhapura, ? – 44 BCE Elizabeth Báthory, Hungarian Countess 1560 – 1614 Catalina de los Ríos y Lisperguer, “La Quintrala”, Spanish & Chilean Noblewoman 1604 – 1665 Marie-Madeleine d'Aubray, Marquise de Brinvilliers 1630 – 1676 Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova, 1755–1762 Join me every Tuesday when I'm Spilling the Tea on History! Check out my Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/lindsayholiday Please consider supporting me at https://www.patreon.com/LindsayHoliday and help me make more fascinating videos! Intro Music: Baroque Coffee House by Doug Maxwell Music: From Russia with Love by Huma-Huma For business inquiries, please contact LindsayHoliday@ellifyagency.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/historyteatime/support

ThePrint
ThePrintPod: Spirituality or ‘occult'? Mahinda's visit to sacred city before resigning as PM raises questions

ThePrint

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 5:11


Mahinda Rajapaksa's visit to Anuradhapura caught the public eye in Sri Lanka, but this is hardly the first time his religious and spiritual beliefs have become a talking point. ----more---- https://theprint.in/world/spirituality-or-occult-mahindas-visit-to-sacred-city-before-resigning-as-pm-raises-questions/949063/ 

Creepy Conversations with Kalai and Gabby
Paranormal. Stargates - StonerTalk on Ancient Extraterrestrial Portals

Creepy Conversations with Kalai and Gabby

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 54:53


Nikki and Kalai cover the stargates in Asia, the Sakwala Chakraya at Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka and Silathoranam at Tirumala Temple, India. In this episode we covered: The history of Sakwala Chakraya at Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka The conspiracy theory surrounding the Sakwala Chakraya chart Other similar Stargates Abu Ghurab in Egypt Aramu Muru or the La Puerta de Hayu Marka in Peru The conspiracy theory behind Silathoranam at Tirumala Temple, India Subscribe on Patreon for episode videos and exclusive bonus content Resources: BBC Incredible Lanka Amazing Lanka So Sri Lanka BBC Travel Atlas Obscura Youtube Wikipedia

Monks in the Morning from Colombo Dhamma Friends
141 Happy Merit on Pilgrimage

Monks in the Morning from Colombo Dhamma Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2020 29:00


Today we are going to listen to a Dhamma Discussion where one of the Bhantes interviews a couple of kids from the Dhamma School about the many trips they have taken to Anuradhapura. They call these trips pilgrimages. A pilgrimage is a special kind of trip because we are going to a special place to […]

pilgrimage merit anuradhapura
Asia Rising
#124: The Collapse of Polonnaruva

Asia Rising

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2019 25:08


The collapse of Polonnaruva marked the end of the lowland kingdoms in Sri Lanka's arid north, and the end of a distinctive and successful form of hydraulic low-density urban settlement. Although historically understood as the result of Indian invasion, recent research at Anuradhapura has suggested the very economic system that enabled these kingdoms to flourish within a marginal environment, may have facilitated their collapse. Guest: Dr Keir Strickland (Archaeology, La Trobe University) Recorded 3 June, 2019.

Asian Studies Centre
The Production of Buddhist-Violence in Sri Lanka: A Reading through the Development of the Idea of Holy City of Anuradhapura in the Early-Twentieth Century

Asian Studies Centre

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2018 18:29


Pradeep Sangapala and Nihal Perera speak at the 'Interrogating Buddhism and Nationalism' workshop 28 January 2018.

Alumni Voices
Historian and trip scholar for Spectacular Ceylon, Dr Maria Misra (Christ Church, 1982)

Alumni Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2015 15:23


Dr Maria Misra shares her experiences as both a student and academic at Oxford University, as well as her love of South Asia, in this podcast. She explains how her intellectual interests have evolved from studying English and PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics) to specialising in the history of 20th century India and the British Empire. In the interview, Dr Misra, an Associate Professor of Modern History and a Fellow of Keble College, contextualises contemporary Indian politics and India's role in the world by mentioning India's diversity, Hindu nationalism, changing global power dynamics, and the importance of China. The podcast also focuses on Spectacular Ceylon - a visit for alumni to Sri Lanka in June 2016. Dr Misra will lead the tour and she describes its highlights, including the UNESCO World Heritage Site at Anuradhapura, centuries of Buddhist art, and the opportunities to see leopards and elephants. Find out more: https://www.alumni.ox.ac.uk/travel/spectacular-ceylon

Amateur Traveler Podcast (iTunes enhanced) | travel for the love of it

The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.

Amateur Traveler Travel Podcast
AT#202 - Travel to Sri Lanka

Amateur Traveler Travel Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2009 32:54


The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.

Amateur Traveler Travel Podcast
AT#202 - Travel to Sri Lanka

Amateur Traveler Travel Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2009 32:54


The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.