Lahugala Kota Vehera

Lahugala Kota Vehera (Sinhalaː ලාහුගල කොට වෙහෙර) or Kota Vehara Raja Maha Vihara is an ancient Buddhist temple situated in Lahugala, Ampara District, Sri Lanka. The temple is located in Pansalgoda Grama Niladari division of Lahugala DS and lies on Colombo - Batticaloa main road about 10 km (6.2 mi) far from Pothuvil town. The temple has been formally recognised by the Government as an archaeological site in Sri Lanka. The designation was declared on 10 October 2014 under the government Gazette number 1884.[1] The protected monuments include the ancient Dagaba, building sites with stone pillars, flight of steps carved on natural rock plain and drip ledged caves. The Stupa in the Vihara has been identified as one of four Kota Vehera Styled structures found around Sri Lanka.[2]

Lahugala Kota Vehara
ලාහුගල කොට වෙහෙර
Religion
AffiliationBuddhism
DistrictAmpara
ProvinceEastern Province
Location
LocationLahugala, Sri Lanka
Geographic coordinates06°52′41.1″N 81°45′10.6″E
Architecture
TypeBuddhist Temple

Kota Vehera inscriptions

Ruins of an ancient pond and image house

Inscription no. 1

Reign: Bhathika Tissa (19 BC - 9 AD)
Period: 1st century AD
Script: Later Brahmi
Language: Old Sinhala
Text: Siddham! Devanapiyatisa rajaha marumakanakaha Kutakana rajaha puta Gamini Abaya......
Content: "Hail! Gamini Abhaya, son of Kutakanna Tissa, grandson of king Devanampiya Tissa......"

Inscription no. 2

Reign: Gajabahu I (112 - 134)
Period: 2nd century AD
Script: Later Brahmi
Language: Old Sinhala
Content: "Sabaya, the minister of king Gamini Abhaya (Gajaba) having exempted from taxes the hundred karises (400 amunas) of paddy land under Digalaka tank, donated it to Digalaka Vihara. Furthermore ten karises (40 amunas) of paddy land were offered for the activities of the Cetiya and one karisa (4 amunas) has been donated for lighiting lamp at the Stupa"

gollark: I assume they meant to use them for longer-distance journeys, so hardly. Besides, the sky is big.
gollark: You do use pilots for takeoff and landing, but I don't know how required that is.
gollark: They're better at it. Since the sky is predictable and mostly empty.
gollark: Planes can mostly autopilot themselves.
gollark: You just point the pointy end vaguely toward the horizon and press W and S to keep it there.

See also

  • Dadigama Kota Vehera
  • Deliwala Kota Vehera
  • Damila Maha Seya

References

  1. Gazette 1884 & 10 October 2014, p. 917.
  2. "Lahugala Kota Vehera – ලාහුගල කොටවෙහෙර". Amazing Lanka. Retrieved 18 January 2017.

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.