Tantirimale is located 36 km northeast of the city of Anuradhapura in the north central dry plains of Sri Lanka.
Reaching Tantirimale
Tantirimale monastery can be reached by
Anuradhapura-Mahavillachchiya road: 27 km along road is Sri Wimalagnana road to
the right. Tantirimale is located another 18km onwards the turn. The motorable
road from Anuradhapura has made Tantirimale a popular place of pilgrimage among
the Sinhalese Buddhists of Sri Lanka.
Tantirimale ancient monastery
The Tantirimale monastery is a vast panoramic site having
sprawling extensive boulders spreading over 250 acres in the midst of thick
forest covers. The climb and the walk around the caves and restored ruins is a
pleasant experience. Walking to the right and reaching the top of the rock, we
reach the Bodhi tree, one of the first eight offshoots of the original
Bo-sapling brought to Sri Lanka during the time of King Devanampiyatissa in the
third Century BC.
The Dagoba
It is not known of an existence of a dagoba at the monastery
during the ancient time. The small modern dagoba on the summit of the largest
and highest rock at Tantirimale was built in the year 1976. Walking to the left
of the dagoba one reaches the newly-built Image house. An evening stroll round
the Tantirimale complex is a pleasant and satisfying experience.
Tantirimale monastery ruins
The reclining Buddha statue carved on the northern slope of
the rock is 45 feet in length while the sedentary Buddha statue carved into the
rock face is 8 feet in height. Stone pillars in front of the sedentary statue
indicate that once a roof had sheltered the statue. Scattered around the site
are pillars and stones, some carved and others rough seem to lie where those
were queried. The flight of stairs, the unfinished images of deities on the
rock surface has made the archeologists believe the monastery had been
abandoned by the residents and the craftsmen in haste.
Bathing pond
Behind the image is a dragon arch and descending from there
at a fair distance is a pond, according to the villagers, that never run dry.
Close to the bathing pond is a cluster of caves of which one had been made use
as a library. Inscriptions in Brahmi script are found at the caves. A stone
structure therein appears to be that of a building that once had been used for
rituals.
Pre-historic drawings of two caves near the Tantirimale
monastery
The caves at Tantirimale had been inhabited prior to the
recorded history of Sri Lanka. In two of the rock caves are Paleolithic cave
paintings discovered by John Still in 1910. The discovery was published in the
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (C.B.), vol. xxii-vol. xxix.
The first cave is 6.50 meters wide and extends up to 3.75
meters high while the second cave is 3.60 meters in width and 3.70 meters in
height. Some of the primitive drawings therein were done by Aborigines of Sri
Lanka called Veddah while the rest had been drawn by the Megalithic man during
the pre-historic period.
History of Tantirimale
Tantirimale , a main junction on the road from Mantota (Mannar,
the former harbour to the north of the Island) to Anuradhapura, , during the
period of King Devanampiyatissa, was one of the first colonies of the Aryan
Sinhalese who arrived from East India in 543 BC. The historical chronicles of
Sri Lanka records that when the Bo-sapling was brought from India to Sri Lanka
by Buddhist nun Theri Sanghamitta, "the village of the Brahman
Tivakka" was one of the places where the foreign delegation and the local
royal group rested on their way to Anuradhapura. As a token of appreciation of
the hospitality of the Brahmin, an offshoot of the Bo-sapling was presented to
him.
Since then Tantirimale had been a Buddhist monastery for
centuries. The golden era of Tantirimale was during the 7th to 8th centuries.
Then the monastery was destroyed by the marauding Dravidian invader Kalinga
Maga from Southern India on his way from Mantota towards Anuradhapura. Judging
from the unfinished works of stone carvings at Tantirimale, it can be concluded
that all the peasants and craftsmen had fled the village and the monastery at
the invasion by the marauder.
Rediscovery of Tantirimale
In the year of 1960, a 23-year-old Buddhist monk from the
neighboring Ulukkulama Village by the name of Kudakongaskada Vimalagnana thero
took upon himself to have the villagers from the surrounding areas settled at
Tantirimale with a view to protect and develop the sanctified pilgrimage site.
When Tantirimale was re-discovered by Ven. Kudakongaskada Vimalagnana Thera,
the reclining statue and the Samadhi statue were severely damaged by the
treasure hunters who had burrowed and mined into the ruins in search of
treasures. Although the Samadhi statue is now restored, the attempts to restore
the reclining statue since 1974 by the Department of Archeology of Sri Lanka
haven’t been satisfactory.The Bo tree exists to date at the monastery is the
most sanctified object of veneration at Tantirimale .
Picture gallery of Tantrimale Monastery
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