Online Encyclopedia

ANURADHAPURA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 157 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANURADHAPURA  , a ruined

city of
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Ceylon, famous for its ancient monuments . It is situated in the North-central province, Anuradhapura became the capital of Ceylon in the 5th century B.C., and attained its highest magnificence about: the commencement of the Christian era . In its prime it ranked beside Nineveh and Babylon in its
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colossal proportions—its four walls, each 16 m. long, enclosing an
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area of 256 sq. m.,—in the number of its inhabitants, and the splendour of its shrines and public edifices . It suffered much during the earlier Tamil invasions,; and was finally deserted as a royal residence in A.D . 769 . It fell, corn-pletely into decay, and it is only of
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recent years that the jungle has been cleared away, the ruins laid
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bare, and some measure of prosperity brought back to the surrounding country by the restoration of hundreds of
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village tanks . The ruins consist of three classes of buildings, dagobas, monastic buildings, and pokunas . The dagobas are bell-shaped masses of
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masonry, varying from a few feet to over 'co 1in circumference . Some of them contain enough masonry to build a
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town for twenty-five thousand inhabitants . Remains of the monastic buildings are to be found in every direction in. the shape of raised stone plat-forms,
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foundations and stone pillars . The most famous is the Brazen Palace erected by King Datagamana about 164 B.C . The pokunas are bathing-tanks or tanks for the supply of drinking-
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water, which are scattered everywhere through the jungle .

The city also contains a sacred Bo-

tree, which is said to date back to the
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year 245 B.C . The railway was extended from Matale to Anuradhapura in 1905 . Population: town, 3672; province, 79,110 .

End of Article: ANURADHAPURA
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