Ancient Ruins & Sacred City of Anuradhapura This remarkable city of Anuradhapura is Sri Lanka’s most sacred town and has some of the most extensive ruins in the world. This city served as a great monastic centre. It remained residence and royal capital for over 100 successive Sinhalese Kings for around 1500 years from the 4th century BC to the 8th century AD, after which it was abandoned and the capital moved to Polonnaruwa. Anuradhapura has eight main places of veneration, known as “atamasthana”. They are; Sri Maha Bodhi The Sri Maha Bodhi, the oldest historical...
Popular posts from this blog
New mysterious riddles of Sri Lanka. What unites the ancient civilization of the Indian subcontinent with Africa, Atlantis and South America? MIHINTALE, SIGIRIYA AND YAPAHUWA: MYSTERIOUS TRIANGLE OF SACRAL OBJECTS, MEMORY OF WHOSE WENT THROUGH THE MILLENNIUMS. CHAPTER 4 OF A DETAILED PHOTO ESSAY ON SIGIRIYA. This is a continuation of the: Chapter 1. Detailed Photo Essay on Sigiriya, or Lion's Rock, in Sri Lanka: Thoughts and Impressions of My Visit. Chapter 2. Sigiriya - what is it? A 'Garden of Eden' or The Fountains of Paradise? and Chapter 3. What Pidurangala is – a monastery in caves or an ancient Over-the-Horizon Early Warning Radar next to the Sigiriya "Lion's Rock"? The "lion's Rock" of Sigiriya, placed near the mysterious Pidurangala "pyramid rock", really appears as a heart of the vast complex located in Sri Lanka, the memory about the importance of which and all of its sacred items have reached our da...
Irrigation systems of ancient Sri Lanka 1 Man made lake for 1 sq Kilometer in the dry zone Irrigation systems of ancient Sri Lanka consist of a large number of village reservoirs to gigantic reservoirs and a intrinsic network of water canals connecting these tanks while supplying water to farming land. There about 30,000 reservoirs in Sri Lanka of which the majority was built form 3rd century BC to 12th century. This compared to the Sri Lankan dry zone land area of about 40,000 sq. kilometers (where almost all the tanks are located), is almost equivalent to one reservoir for each sq. kilometer. The first large reservoir to be built in recorded history is Abaya Wewa in 3rd century BC. From that day onwards Sri Lankan tank builders developed a remarkable expertise on controlling large bodies of water which allowed them to built massive reservoirs which no other civilization ever could have dreamt of. The breakthrough which made the Sri La...
Comments
Post a Comment