Ranmasu Uyana

Ranmasu Uyana is a park in Sri Lanka containing the ancient Magul Uyana (Royal Gardens). It is situated close to Isurumuni Vihara and Tissa Wewa in the ancient sacred city of Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka. It sits on approximately 40 acres (16 ha), and is a noted example of Sri Lankan garden architecture of the pre-Christian era. According to an inscription found in Vessagiriya, the water to the park was supplied by Tessa Wewa and then released to rice fields around Isurumuni Vihara.[1][2]

A pond at Ranmasu Uyana

In the park are various ponds, and the remains of small buildings. According to legend it is believed that Prince Saliya met Asokamala in this garden.

Ranmasu means Goldfish. The Royal Goldfish Park has the Star Gate map which is encircled by fish. [3]

History

Royal gardens were first constructed here in the time of King Tissa (3rd century BC), when the reservoir was built. However, the pleasure pavilions and other fixtures seen today date from the 8th-9th centuries AD.

Star Gate Situated in Ranmasu Uyana

Claims published on the internet and television documentaries that a carving within the park known as Sakwala Chakraya it was an interface or stargate "between humans and some intelligent species from outer space" have been called "absurd" by archeologists who suggest the carving could simply be an early world map.[4][2]

gollark: FPGA you?!
gollark: Hmm, you know, I could optimize this bootloader a bit if I used self-modifying code.
gollark: The other other one... reads numbers, maybe.
gollark: I think one of these is meant as a self-replicator, and the other writes numbers.
gollark: ```x86asmLOOP2:inc INCBUFadd TEMP !-50 INCBUFmnz TEMP I !LOOP2LOOP:re 8 BEE#wr 1 BEE#! 01 BEEmov I !LOOPTEMP: ! 0BEE: ! 0INCBUF: ! 4```And the other other one.

See also

References

  1. Cooray, Nilan (2012). The Sigiriya Royal Gardens: Analysis of the Landscape Architectonic Composition. TU Delft. pp. 25–. ISBN 9781480030978.
  2. "Stargate at Ranmasu Uyana". Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  3. {{cite web |url= https://amazinglanka.com/wp/sawala-chakraya/
  4. Gunerathane, Malshan. "Ran Masu Uyana: Fact and fiction". Daily News. Sri Lanka: Associated Newspapers of Ceylon. Retrieved 18 March 2015.


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