Ceylon and Malayasia in Mediaeval Times PDF
Ceylon and Malayasia in Mediaeval Times PDF
Ceylon and Malayasia in Mediaeval Times PDF
By S. PAR,AN.dVITANA
Ceylon
tsengal which, on its eastern side, washes the shores of the }Ialay peninsula and the northern half of the Island of Sumatra-rancrs ri-hich are
the home of people of l{alay race. Should one sail directly eastrvards
from the eastern coasts of ceylon, the first land that one iaiouid meet
after passing the Andamans is the )Ialay Peninsula ; similarly, a
rnariner sailing westward from a port in the Malay Peninsula oi th"
western coast of northern Sumatra rvould touch land on the ea-stern or
southern coast of Ceylon. It may, therefore, be inferred that the
people of Ceylon and those of the llalay lands would have come in
contact rvith each other in ancient days if they took to seafaring. It
only in, certain periods of their history that the Sinhalese people
_was
had engaged themselves in seafaringl ; on the other hand, the Malays
at length here.
,r)
r.
pf.
J.
6.
/ol. VII,
"llir: jaiya inscril>tion; is clated in lialiyuge -t.132, i.e. r2Jo -r.cAccrri'r1ing tatlwCulavarzso as u'cll :ls the f>uirfual'i,, Carrdrabhanu first
rririrti Ceylon in tire clcventh -vear of P'arakramabiLhu II{i rvirose
?rcccssiorr, accorcling to the contemooriLry Hatlh,atattct,galla-uiltdrtt;ait.sai, took place after rEz.1 I'car-s had passecl from tl-Le Enlightenrncnt of
tiie LiLrcltiha, i.e. rz36 r.r'. 'lhus, flariclrabh;Lrru first came on thc:
L-lcr,jon scene in rzqT A.c. Ther ciate of his second expedition against
Ce1,-lon. in which he lost his lif'e, has not bcen erprcssly statecl, hut it
can bc infr-'rre
cl
II
had entrus-
48"
IN MEDI..\I]VAL
TIN{ES
f'on
q'
5.ttx.t1tit
''hich
Dha'rmakitti-thera carne
Nthaic,sn-tnarttfara-rn.atta-u,uiloitgcr,-kesnri-tsi.rtknnrh
sn,tlttlttt-l?,tratta-ua,(n*
durutihltttntai.t rorta-
1n
a,
). 1..
S. liri., 1t. j z.
lJ!tt -'lttunot'rlttttanits*
l he':r, ( .l,rnrl,o, rq5j, p. 66.
t
cditctl by
1,.
(1,/tdd,qa,nt,u\,
cditccl
by Galagarr.
Sar-ar.rarika.ir
l'iiituo.l;.'rrth
cl13pf6y, eclitccl bJ, Ilabirpilive
j:l 1r,-:r1t,
1t).":_X.irt1, 1,.3.1.
lledh:trihaia
is not certain r'vhether this religious mission took place before or after
the first armed conflict rvith Candrabhanu, but the arrival of Dhammakitti in Cevlon is mentioned after the nar-ration of the events connected
u,ith the first invasion bv Candrabhanu. fhe king to rvhonr presents
rvere sent for thc sake of l)hammakitti-tbera can bc no other than
llandrabhS.nu. The conclusion, thereforc', is that, not lring after the
lirst armed conflict betu'een Ceylon and T'arrrbalinga, norrnal peaceful
relations betueen the tu'o countrics \rere resumcl. It was perhaps on
the same occasion that, as stated in the Jinakd,l'atniilittE, a sacred
Buddha imagc rvas taken frorn Ceylon to l)harmaraja-nagara.18 "Ihis
might even have been includcd alnong the'religrous gifts'sent by
II to Tarnbarattha.lr)
there
rvere, orving to some reason or other, hostilities
Though
betrveen Ceylon and Tambalinga (Tambarattha) in the reign of ParAliramabahu lI, thcre rvas a long tradition of peaceful co-operation i1t
religious, and perhaps also in cconomic, matters bet*'een the trvo
countries. \l'e are in{orrnecl by a fragmentary slab-inscription of
Sundararnahadevr, coirsort of \rikramabahu II (rrrr-rr3?), that a
great dignitary of the Ceylon Sangha, by narnc Ananda, rvas instrumental in purifying the Orcler in'Iambarattha.zo 'l'his Ananda-thera,
eulogised in the epigraph as ' a banner raiscd aloft in (the firrnament of )
I-anka', appears to be identical rvith Ananda rvho r'vas the teacher of
the trvo rvell-knorvn P6,1i authors \redeha and lluddhappi].. In the
trvel{th century, Sinhalese authors rvho rvrote in Pili ai)pear to have
been concerned u'ith the rvinning of the approbation of scholars irl
'l'arnbarattlia as rvell as of those in Cevlon and South India.
ParSl<ramabahu
20.
Ebi.era'Plt.i,u Zeylutt.i,ca..
l-re
sac.
reaci a.s 1t,t Tntnborrr,{[lia )ruli-strdd/'i.flr.Iotlnttl r,j llrc {)rcutt:' Iudtc .\ccicl,,
The
IN IIEDIAEVAL TIMES
nagara referred
Tanj ong'Iembeling.
1:l
In vierv of the religious and other contacts u,hich this region had
rvith Ceylon, and for the bearing which it has on the ensuing discussion,
it is very important to determine the exact location of Tambarattha, but
there is no unanimity among scholars rvith regard to the matter.
As an inscl-iption referring to a 'Lord o{ Tambralinga' has been f ound in
that area, Professor G. Coedds has taken'I'arrrbralinga to have been the
region of u,hich the centre \\ias Ligor, the .ancient Dharniaraja-nagara,
Nakhon Si Thammarat in vuigar parlance.3l Sir Rolarid Braddetl,
holever, after an exhaustive examination tif references to Tan-mei-lou
ir.ncl Tan-m:r-iing, as the name appears in CtLinese rvritings, has given
r,'erv plausible reasons for locating Tambralinga furtlrer south, in the
Iiuantan area, u'here an important tril.rutilrv of tire Pahang river still
bears the narue of Tembeling, antl tirc hcaclland at its mouth is named
Tanjor.rg 'l-ernbeling.25 Sir Roland's iclentification has been acccpted
by Profcssor Nilakanta Sa-stri,26 but O. \\'. \\rolters, n'ho has recenth'
Ltrrldhdlt his eko t aru-.puttili le h i,
() o!.i a-7- ar tfi ay a
I thc
J,
.f i. i t til ari h rJr a, -a a nn a'tru, e dit ecl
I.aihd tale
23.
)+.
.[,tttrttul of the Rotal Asiatic Soci.ety, Malayut Branch(JRAS)V,ts). \:ol.
____3j.
\\IIl, pt II. pp. rff.
-:6. K. -\. Niiirkanta Sastri. A lli"story ,i South Ind.ia, rr'ap facing p. r9.1
JOUII,NAT,, R,.A.S.
(CiIYLON)
Vol. V!1,
(iYaia Serie.r),
11).i1)
to
llhe rest of this paper rvill marshall that evidcnce and attenrpt to
interpret it.
While the Culavath,sa and the Pfijataln state that thc buik of
rvitlr the
Pfi,jaual.t.,
tvritten
less
Pciionnaru, at a time wilen its author coulcl possibly have himseif seen
l'Ialala soldicrs against r,i'hom the Sinhalese of his da1' \\raged a liIe ancl
rleatlr stnrgglc. Accorcling to the Ptrjaaall,, Ilagha landicl in Ceylorl
, 27. JJulldi;t of the Salrcol oj Ori,ental anrl Aftico"t,t Stttdies, I-ondon, Vot.
XXI, pt. .j, pp. 537fl.
':E. . llr1j0itah, eclitecl bv I:). Gunaselia,r':r, \r:1s:rla-lnudali, pp. .14 and 45.
*Tlre printed lte-rts ,rf the 1lr7.ic7,i:alt, givc the name J[ttlalu, as .Il-a-lltt. anc] Gun:rsekara tlans:rt.s lLLe u'ord a.s 'iLtrle-bodied ruen'. 'lhc Sinhalcse Ietter la,
being u:sually rvritten in rnanuscripts tvith :r pronounced llourish totr,:rrrls thr
riglrt,- trvo,la's coming one aftcr the other c:tn be ea.silv.nistaken as joinetl
together. 7n tlvl I'ujaaa,li (34th chaptcr) too, the word iVala.la has becn read
by Gulrasek ara as l.Ia,lla. r'hile the critical cdition of the text bv \/et'ble
Mebopitiye lledhailiara-thera (p. z5) gives the correct rcading lItl,ia.
IN MIIDIAE\TAL
T.IMES
u'ith z4,ooo
}falalas,2e
Farirkranrabahu
II
32.
l{aayo,4ehhnra., Canto
X, r'. r i3.
l-,.,1. V I
I, (.\'cit'
Sr';
jc..
of
l\[alabar.
its military
occupation
by
ttrr"e
lanctr
tn,at,tttrtuuall,
centurSz,3e r.viric}r
is rlainh'
. l l'."J
IN }IEDIAEVAL
TIMES
in the trvelfth ancl thirteenth centuries, thc former tvas not taken b1the Sinh.alese scholars to be the same as Lorver J3urma, rvhich.uvas rvelihnor,vn to tirem as Aramana at that time. With regar-d to the locatiotr
that
pp. 9r-93'
l0
While the Cfr,latarilsa has it that lXagha came {r-o'r Kalir)ga, the
Hattltauarr'agall,a-vihura-tazisa states that the enemies u.ho deJrovecl
H a ll hau a. t t a gal
la
-a
i hrT r tt
-t
a rit s a.
The earlier o{ the trvo Sinhalese versions of this rvork, datecl r3Nz
t.c.,ll: the reading .f amltudvt,t'a-prad.elayen in place oI Jaufiud.Ifa ol
the Pali original as no\v accepted.sz This expresston .lambu.di,i,fxpradeia is norvhere found in ceylon literature rvhere the Indian sirl*
continent is clearlv meant bv it. on the other hand, an a,uthoritatir.*
Sanskrit tvork dealing, amonq other things, r.vith the geography of the
that precisely the one from r'r'hich we have concludecl lIagha to har,r:
inflicted lriurself .n ce-vlon. 'I'he vat,uhuran,a, rn its seciion dealing
r'vith the geography of the u'or\d (bhwuana-tintd.sa), descr:ibing the
regions to thc south of the llharata-varFa, states tirat ttr.cre ;rrr: sir
Cilauarhso, chapter 8o, vv. 58,
--..13
Nihoya-sahgraha,
op. cit, p. zz"
59 and
73
l pa. XXXIV, p.
2.5;
Sz.
Sumatri is deriveci.
II
S ahh
B hdt at
54. For a
du| p
sumrn'-rry
of
alnt
u is
eu
a ca
ar ah.
Chapter 48, vr'. r3-r4 and 4rproposed identificatio-ns, see JE,4S1|'18, X\i, pt.
Suuar1tadulpa,
I, pp. 5zff
12
his
area.
must be peopie of
tiat
cnap. 74, v.
people.
^ 59.
Geschrift,en,
LII,
pp. 67-72.
Sumzr,tra
, in
Verspreidt
I3
seirch for Sita, t'clers to liiratas anrl liarnac[.]as-u'ho live ort islarrds irr
those regions, and u,ho are described as 'having golden coloured
trimbs, pleasing in appearancc, eating uncooked fish, moving about in
the water and fierie. like tigers '.6i 'lhese Kira"tas \\'cre the people
assumes the
Kirirtas.
try merchants and others from North lndia. One of tht: earlicst
nricut.,,t ces of the name l{at,clha is found in thc -f unahlharana oi the
Siniralese poct Kuinaradasa.6; 1'his merely ir-rdicatc-* thai Kataha n'as
1,,1i,,e Ii;t,1tJ ltyo"yat,tt
1
r. li ivdtdli,
liarrmclt iLdi: ca
Anm*tt[nd..4attas tatv a
A ttt m -I?rlnzir.yulta,
i al a c ar r:i glL o r d
See tr'Ia.jumdar-,
I t,r.,,,e \.,,,..t;ti1.,,.,:rlri,,,!,r,,r,,o,ej,rptrcr.
lt
ent
li. \. r].
Kivdta
dui'p ar.:d,sitzalr
ar au 7 d, g ltt t7 i t i s nt. y td. !.t'
IJ
k;r)s.
I,rr,clrinrc(l
ftr,
l)oi'ltotl, ni-/t,tl)haual,t si 1o-r 1[x1 f-1,,r,,,,,,,i*.",,v1
rlisci'linrrv rrrl,.: [,,r 11,.
'ruitlrncu oJ thc Srrrig/,r rlrirtr.-.ir
r.,,r.,,fi"r'jl,e
rl..rll, ol" 1-:rrtjil..rl',,:rl,rlrrr
'!\'e
rlre
t'i,
^rrc,r is not to
l)y tnc son'. Helc tlLe rclcrerrt.e
a ., ,"i,n princi1,2_
Iity, brt trr the rvhole of the Island. Accorcling t<, -li"
the -nLi"
baiiaati-ind.' the
c ulat' aits a, canclrabhanu was driven ract< riten
r.i.i..r' trr.'.
lsland; on his second inva_sion, he is saicl to have b;".dj ii"*"*.r,ra
not go aw_ay o,n this occasion as
,.
dicr on ilre
,rccarion
Ma*r.",
r'the other hand, h:r-ving been'vethe.rrcr of_first
Itrronna.r, wor-i"s:.ilJ,
the kirrg of the rvhole fsland, as ar-linoulo,lg;,1 .;;. 'fri' ori.iol
lristorians
were partisans of Irarrr,kramubrrh.r' ti. rtt olr,"tr.,,
'l'hoKudumiyamalai epigr-a_ph
in
thc
can only be ;"rtin.a it
)l'or,L'
Javaka referrecl to tirerci' .oai lragna, ancr
!!e
lf a king rvho is usrrally referred tE as a Kalinga
'ot ca'drabhanu"
.o"ia ut
tirnes,be callerl a .f a.varic, it shourd r,e possihre orr thi, othe.'l',"na
Irrr 4 gtn* kn{)\vn as a .llval<a to be also,les.r.ibcd;rs
a l(alingrr. In
{a'ct, the tr'vo'anres appear to have bee' intcrchargealrte.
i?i.i"rr"u
ior this view is fur-niGlied by the f)u.ti'ba,treri-a.rro| it i. ro1"."orr.
desfribes three
.separate inviders against l'hom }raraki"-"rran., rr
had to fight. All
of them are said io have lanrlerl .ttn itt.t tii.""
zrt_var-i'us ports i'- ccylon ; hence none of them coulcl be
icientical i.i,ithr
or Ja_yabahu rvho had cstablishcd tlrrmsclrcs in CeVlon belorc
*"qTu
rarakrcrnabahu "r r came io the throne. of the.e thrce invatlers,
one is
gamu,raj a u"a tn" it ird .ta"rn
:i!:15:tii8u-,r aj a..the second tamaliri
JrLvaka-raja. lVc lrave seeri above rtrat ihe t<ing
L+T:31?,,.
i^.:1h"
of
t amairnqarru
was the same as ttrre Javaka. 'I'hus it is clear that itris
rvork has made trvo separate indiviclirals out of til,o titles ,ritl"
.nrr.*
perso-nage.- The sarne process appears to have given rise
l"
iii"
i[*a
invacler" It seenrs that Canclritha'r., r"a.s Lriorri .r-:a".f*."f",
'l-amalingarnu-r'aja and Kalirrgrr ja.
ra
arrd laler geirr.ralions iool< the
tttt": as.reler''g to three diflerent individuals. In this text, the
9::_q
.ep'cscntcd as r-tainring_thc kingdorn of his granrltarhcr.
l:i,Jlq1]:llcrs
rr
rne Karrnga KlnH \\as { rLnrlrahhinu, ]lc $as. on this evid6ncc, rel,.,.te,l
to ]<ings rvho ruled at Polonnaru bef.re the Darirbad.r,i p.rroa.'-.-'. Pnough evidence.has bee,n brought forw,ard, I thinl<, to establish
that.Magha rvas a ilIalay,,and ttrat tYre Kaiiriga'f-;r,.i;i.;. rr-'],"ir.a
*'as in Mala\rasia, not in hiclia. Canclrabhanu"an,l Ma"fr.--lr,,1]'
irra.r*
a- inirnieai t,r llrc peoplc of Cerlon ; IIJgh:L anrl lris fi"f"L. ,r1 ,r.1",..
;,,
lrarticrilar, have becn co'icicmnecl in mtit sinhalcie r,i.t,n."i'rriilii,g"
for hav'i*g destrol-etl .the cit;z of polonnai-u antl its }i..rlv shrl,.,"s,
persecuterl the riidcihist.rcrigion,. rlisorganisccl thc sociai-s1,rt."r'ora
corrarnittcd vario's a.borninable crimes. rt shorilcl, rr."-.".,,, rl,,",rt"a
?-n: '(r i Viiaya. -canclrabhir'u-and \rira pa+clya ' in Tijttschri.it .uoov rrttriscrrc:
-,,
'1' ao.l- Lan d,- ctt I" ol lii n k Lmde, LX XVII,,
_
o 32, p
p. . S'rff .
16
CTEYLON
t|.rc Ni,haytt^saigraha and in the Sad,tlhaynteyatnrTka,ra, on the othcrh a*cl, Il a gha or Kalinga Vij ayabahu is re{errcd to rvithout anv animositlz,
In
it is
categoricaliy statecl
Prut Candral.'hanu and lttrgha r-ere not the onlV nlalay 1.rilcrs 5,ho
had connectio's rvith Ceylon. After the death of Paraliramabahu
the Great, thcr:c u'ere a number of mlers at ])olonnaru u'ho arc' statecl to
hin'c come from I{aliriga, or belongeci to the l{aliriga clvtrastv. am(rrg
'rr
hoirr Ni(Sarirkamalla is thc bcst l<iroivn. ]datrirnoniai alliances
betu,een ttrre l<irgs of Ccrrlon arrd tire royaitv of I(aiiiga ar:e recorr-Led in
thc chr:onicle for the periocl o{ ovor: tlvo cerrturic,s before the accessiou
oi Parir"ki:anta.irahri l. As it ir:rs bcen clemonstratcC that Xlirgira tlre
lialingan ."r'as a llalay, ttrre qucstion riaturallv arises nhether tire eurlierIiaiiriga Jiings u'ei:e also of llaiuv origin. 1'o ali sr';clents of Ceylon
.history, tirc prescnt rr-riter not excluderl,t:, tire iclentity of the liome of
Nii(arirl<arriaila a.rrcl others u ith thc I{aliirga o{ India ha"s been
as c.,ricletrt a.s tirat the sun nlovcs rounci the ear-th. I{as not Iianing;t
of India bccn rnentioned in the lcgericl o{ Vijava, alicl ila," not the 'lloot}r
Iteijc been brougirt fi'orn that region ? IIas there not becn a SirirhapuL-:L in tlis lialinga :rnc1 have not the l{aiinga rulers of (ieylon ltor-nc a
nanle or trvo that lere in vogre amorlg the liastem Gangas oi ihat
,rurrtrv ? lirrt, in -pitc ol tlrc f.rct tliat tlr,.trristoly
tlr,. Jrrtliarr
lialiriga is now l<nou,n is consiclerabh detaii, no royal 'rf
house eristell
tirerc at this periocl arisri-ering 'rr.r tire detaiis rvhich Nis.(arirl<arnal1a
givcs about his fan^ilv in ]ris ou'n ci'rigraptrrs. 'l'he clildculties tlra-t onc
encounters rvhen one tal<es the Kaliiga iiings oI Ocylon to havc come
translation, p. 22. 'l'he nolcis ' in the lirst palt of
appe:rring in this transl:rtion shoulrl, on the :luthority of the SalilJrey'nia,ratnrlh,ara, be corrccted to ' precccling his reign '. Sce also Surl.dltaynaat'etttr1h,cr,ra, p. 39c, rvherc the reatling is Kiiliriga Itija.yabilnt maharajcirn gi
t tdhiynta 1,fi, rtbhdqQlrl,i.
72.
his reign
Ni,hdya-sa,fi,grtr./za,
'
57ff.
tT
{rom the ancient Indian land of that name rray best be stated in the
'
. . cliaptcr. j9 of the cltfilarntitsa refers tr-r vijayabalr''s marr.iagc
rvith the l(alinga pr-incc-is Tilolasunclari ancl the'settlement of tic
three Iialiriga. princes of. Sirhhapura, capital o{ I{ariiga, in his kiirgclorn. In tiris connection [ieiger (chtr,iaaaitsa. tiig. translation,
nagara'.76
^,
?6_. D. C. Sirkar in The History-and Culture of the Indi,an peopte, yolune \-,
for Etnpire, pp. :67-:68.
T he Srru ggle
JOUR'NAT,, Ii.A.S.
18
(CEYLON)
rScr'ies), 1{)i9
ot
In the
Vinaya-sanl'ta
greatest literary himinary during that reign. The I'inavu,rth,ain the latter half of the til-eifth ceutury"
The purpose of the comment n-as to give information about tire TelrLgu
Ianguage which, as is u'ell-knorvn, is and r'vas spoken not only btr the
people of the regions usuoill'callecl Anc'thra, but also by the inhal.ritarrts
of Southern I(alinga in rvhich nere lricated l)antapr.rra and Sirirhapura.
I3y the term 'Andharata', the author of the l/inaya-sattnn prubably
meant a linguistic, and not a political territory, coinprisilig all
areas in which Telugu \vas tire language of the people. T'li.is is
supported by the fact that the Siamese chronicles, r,t'ltich rnust have
derived tbeir information frorn Sinhalese traditions, locate I)antapura.,
the capital of l(alinga, in .4ndhradt'Fa.;8 Evidencc furnislrrd hv rlrc
paiaeography of the earliest inscr-iptions found in Further trndia ancl
other data point to the fact that the Telugu-speaking regions plal'erl a
most important role in the diffusion of Intlian culture to the \[alat'
Peninsula and beyond.Te It has also been surmised that, as a rcsuit of
political upheavals, some o{ the clispossessecl Bucldhist plinces from
these regions nigrated to Malayasia, and tra"nsferred the naures of their'
original homelands to the nelv kingtloms rvhich they founded there.i{}
That Telugu r'vas spoken in'fambalinga up to the trvelfth centrrry, at
ieast by the ruling classes, is a fact of considerable signilicance li'hich is
salnticcay& was thus rvritten
77.
'Iamalinga-reta
8o. J. L.
Moens
IN },I]IDI-{EVAL TIMES
19
_. -'i-he inscriptions
sinhalese
sculptures
.of
in
Lieylon and referc'ces iir
of tilrt rarly
Bucictrhaslrr;sais
centuries, rl,ure u.as
theras
i* ancient
times is also supportect by the ."f*r"r-r." rn the Malay Annals ti> .trr
Amdan-1agq:a, a king of which figures in the pecligree of the l,falacca
Sultans.83 This Amdan-nagara has been talien by scholars to be
Hamdan in Persia, for the confused accounts in theie Annars cunn{}ct
the rulers of Amdan-nagara with characters well-knoryn in r:;larnic
history. But these Annal,s,
long after the conversion of the
'vritten
Malay people to Islam, might
very well have i<lentified piaces ancl
persons in ancient Malaya u,ith those figuring in the histoiical w.or]<s
.:rf their rrew fail h.
8r. The fact that'r'elugu r'vas spoken r'-Tambariirga in the trvel{th century
rnay be of.importance in the identification of that countr|, by :rscertaininp; whether
traces of l'elugu are noticeable in any o{ the language.s a'd dialects njrv spoken
in ttrose regions"
V^ol.
. 82. -Epigraphia.lndica,
Archaeology,
Vol. XI, pp. r5-r8.
l0
.IOURNAL, lt.-{..q.
(CIIYT,ON)
Vol"
VII,
(Nea'Barrz.s), ]9ir!}
va+lra. A rvork purporting tr-r be this poem \\ias existing at the bcginning of the thirtecnth centriry, but as its language r,as unintelligibie to the a\,-erage man) a Pali poern, the tell-knou,n Dc\lltriuayitsu,
composecl in rzro by Dhamrnakitti, a h"igh clignitarl,
basecl on it,
Sarigira. 'fhc original Sinhalese poem is no longer extant..
ol tlie Ceyloir"vas
:rnd u'e cannot thercfore be certain to rvtrrat extent Dhammakitti
follorvecl his source. \Ye mat', holever, presume that for the main
traclitionai historv ire follori-eci his source faithfuliy, but he perrnitted
to jntrocluce certain literary embellishments"
In acldition to the Pali poi-.rn, Dhammakitti also rvrote a s-ord-to-."r'orc'l
pir.r'aptrrase in Sinhalese, uhicir is still extant.
Ilrincess
Hernamd.16", assume
accompanied by her, came to the spot where the relic was deposited,
recoveled it and continued their journey southwards on foot. After
being miraculously delivered from dangers which threatened them and
the Relic, they travelled a considerable distance and arrived at the
seaport of Tamalitti, from ivirich they tool< ship to Ceylon.sa It is
of particular interest to us that the seaport called Tamalitti in the Pali
text is called Tamalingama in the Sinhalese Sanne.85 And, for geographical and historical purposes, the form of the name given in the Sanne,
in which the freeclom of the author is not circurnscribed by considera-
Daladd,sirita,.
84.
8i.
Dd,lltduath'sa, chapter
pP. 46ff.
87.
CTEYLON
21
'lr-hich and Palura rcasonably lits in rvith tlrt: narrative of the Datlriaailtsa. Once arrived hcre, thc fugitirres rvoulcl not have gone back to
the cit_v, investecl by the enenry, anil changed the clirection of their
'lhe
Dutl,t1,voi'n.sa
't,herr the ship brinsing the Tooth Relic to Ceylon star'ed on its
\.c)jiage. Chao Jn-kua, describing tire sea-route frorn Lambri in
\orthcrn Srrmatra to Ceyion, says : 'r,vith thc north lr'inrl vorr cotre
rvithin a little more than twenty clavs to tlLe ,-ountrv .i I{*i-la.t-t
'lhis clctail also indicates that it
{Ccr'lon) ' (JR-4S, rE96, p. 48o).
Ratamalarhsi-thcra, p. 5r.
22
-JOURNAL, R,.A.S.
(CI''LON)
:l'ri-i. :1 ]/oya-ge
Pt-'ninsnla
Hence,
of the
Cirao Ju-kua, are. under tle name Tan-ma-ling, rvhich oU"loiriv .oi.*.pnnds to Tambalinga, the ea-rrier references, srich as in srrng iiih, .all
it
'l'a.n-mei-leou, as transcribed_by French
Sinorogists, ttrc trais.rilpiion ot
flr.i'i*rt i*
iou iiit or
rendered into Pfr,li as 7-ambalitiga. ancr i'to incorreci San surit asiaioral.inga. The Pali and -Sinhalese writers of ceylo' thus hacl
i".1in.ut.,
ftrr_referring
to this Malayan seaport as
.f ltAStll IJ, XXXIII, pt" iii, pp. r-ro. ilire grouncls on whic:il
^ wo. !'/oi1.ers
o.
rvorrrcr r:rirninatcion-*";-'tio (Euildi, ,,y tt,i- siiJa ,i'or;'"r"i
ur.rd, A_frittn Studits, XXI, pp.
SSI-SS+) are not':rc1equ.rre.
gr, SyJvain I.cvi, Ptoltnl:e, ctc.,pp. z(t-27.
'lr ,Jl al,11b'tllttt'rrtit.s'r-gr.ant.h_i.f uht-uiltatatut editcrl by Blad:r1tar lJharrrrlr_
lr.. I'.i.:,:1., Llrrr.r \r-r,rl;.i llt.r-r, i,.
-rr.
'i'hitparaiiisa (Siltralcse)
eclitecl by lhc Rcr.. Panclit Galag;L1ra S^riurarir. 93'
J3
rhcre
r1.1{r-
phy
(d,ela^uirodha), bccause
nlrmerolrs
tt
t.
96.
Kc,iifi..qu-uetrc
2+
.IOUfiNAL. R.A.S.
Sinhirlese Sanne
of tlrc
(CTIYI'
ON)
Vol.
It
Da1c.1in,
is
q'ite obvio's
ttrrai-
a.grrre
t.
llll
though these beasts niay irot have been aliogether absent in iis forests.
The mention of Aramar.ra (Lor,ver tsurma) in co'traclistinction to,
I(aliirga, u,ith regard to its elephants, suggests that these trvo countries
rvere in the same-part,of the u.orld. These consiclerations ri'oulcl justify
the conclusion that the Iiatinga knorvn to the Sinhalese of the'tenth,
to trvelfth centurie.s las a regio' in the northern part of the l{alav
Peninsula.
l{tJ{r
25
chapters
'o
the location of i{oJing in Ccntral Ja.va. Rut this vierv has been
subjected to strong, ind in my opinion, cogent c-riticism b5'- Col'
Gerini, Ir. J. L. Moens and Sir Roland llraclrlell. Gerini and Moens
rvould' locat-e Ho-ling in the Malalz Peninsula, tlie former- in the region
of Keclah, the latteiin the Lalacia area. )[oen's view has been subjected to a<lverse criticisnr by Professor: Nilakanta Sastri rn'ho appeals
to favour the earlier view of locating HoJi'g in Jeva. Coedds adheres
to the earlier vier.v.101 Rut the identification of this Ho-ling (Kalinga )
with chci-p,o (Javaka) r,ould secm to suppor:t the location in the Mala-v
Peninsula if we attach importance to the identification by the l-inayasat,ma oI Tambalinga with Jdval<a.102
In the Keclah Annals, embodying the traditions of the Malays,
rvritten long after their conversionio islam, a country callecl Kalangi
is mentioned in the story of the legenclary 1<i.ng Marong Xlahavatlgsa
who was the traditional iounder of the kingdoni of Larkasuka' Ihis
king is siLid to har-e sent envoys to 1(alangi rc'luFsting the hand.o{.the
datrthter of its rrrler for one of his sons. Considcring the dcscrtptlon'
of tfirs country given in llte l{edah Anttals, it has been identified rvith
;'Kalangi ' is taken to be a form of ' Kalinga
This
Lou'er Burma.
"103
agrees rvith the vier,v oithe Sinhalese prince r'ho in{ormed Couto that
I{"atnga *,as somer,vhere in Tenneserim. ,\n .ld Sundanese chlonicle
knowi as Carita Paralwangan, in giving a list of tle countries ancl their
a:ulers concluered by the .]ayanese king Saijalia of the eiglrth centur5',
ror. For TToJing sceGerini, Ilesearr:Jtes sfr'., pp 1-:f[., Sir-Ito]rnd Tiraclrlellin
i, pp. :1T., l{ocns in ;J t[,1.:-ttn. \\-i], p!, ii, lrir.31g,
IRlSllB, XXI\,-, it.
-IGIS,-\-ol.
\rII, pp. r5ff. :rnrl (]' Cocdt.^, Les Etats, etc', p])'
fiiialranta .'lastri in
. arncl r E3i.
The Ktluyaiehitava,, Catto X, r'. r':3. clescr..ibt's tire liing of Jzrva' (Dliva)
as lrringing ri'hite s:rnd:rl rvood antl canphor, tlrc i-'i:letructs of ]ris countrr-'
13611., r.56f
\o7.
r:o3"
./fl--1S;11R, \-o1.
X\r, pt.
3, p. 97.
2ti
Vo[. VII,
(Naza
Sorles), Jg59,
la'd of ricringaud it_s rurer sarg sri vij aya. ror This
r.vnurd
estalrlish that to the auth,r of triis chro'iJre 'Kiiis
; rvas
1xarffi)
tlre nanre of sri \rijaya- -i'lre orci 1uvun"r" poent Nagaraltritapam*
in''hrd'r:. ir.tcrritorv nainerl I(elang'arnong the
dcpcndJn.i"--,"i,, ,r.u
-\lalay l)-ninsrrla, of tlrc.^ingrlomof J\lajapahit.,r, ;ini.i*,.,,g,;r,rr"
name iras been Ro'ranised
'lran.g. Eclrisi savs that thefrorn the I{avr script, is iclentifiecl rvith
israncr of Kra berofgeai, i.i"g iu"r*a
.frrlrr'-zrl 'iiirrrli, or rnrria.n pi-incc, t"r',i.rr
1,i ."=e_,^according^ to Jlocrrs, is
equivalent to .the Kaling prince of ftfuj-p,c,'.rou
in(:rntions the
,h", l;;;';iri'.,n1"
-aJ*
,_
a Khmer rvord meaning' -store-house,, . rnarlcet,,
;; ;;;;il;i;"",. r*
of tire name rnav be, its airproximation in souncl
I']:i::::
ltl: :,1*t"
to
clear; lrarnes lil<e this, to., coulcl huro-b"r,,u
.
forms like lialinga,, jrrsf o* tt,*
:1._ _1"-:.'Kalrriga'.is
gr\'(."1r
ir 5ansl<rit garb, resrriting in
native nanre of the peopre of aregion
the clas.cir:al Indian foim of Caitpa.
i'
Irrcro-Lhin" rr;,
fr;; lur,r.iin,"
have considered
it
ackling
"";;l;i;;;,,""
ki""g;;f
ir." r<""rir,r.
Ii. N. -fayasr.r'al
has stated
that'the
tion ol Sirirhapura,
a capital
pura near the Malay lreninsula, Singapore, was rrot {ounded r.rntil r.34o,
ancl cannot be the same as the citv rvith u,hicii rnecliaeval Sinhalese
rovaltru iratl rclations.ll? Nor l'ns Singaitur':r, u'hich is said to har,'e
existed on the rvest cclast of the Malay Peninsula,r1'r of an earlv enough
clate {crr it to be talien as the Sirirhapura of the CFlavathsa and Ni6Sarhl<amalla's epigraphs. 'Ihere lvas, honever, another: Sirirhapura in the
rvhich stili bears that name, u'ith obvioris phonetic-:rl changes due to,
passage of tirne.
Thc Srd emperor Yang'li in 6o7 sent a mission uncler the leaclersliip of Ch'ang Chirn to the kingclor:n jn tl'rc lfalav Peninsu]a called
(lh'ih-t'u bv the Chinese. An account of tlLis nrission is containcd in
theSu,i,Sht,t,andhasbeentranslatcrlb1r llr. Hsii Yun-ts'iao. 1'hecapital
oi the kingclom, u.hich tvas reachecl aftcr. passirrg another kingcloin
named Lang-ya-hsii (I-ankasuka) ri.hich lav tci the north., is given in the
Chinese account as Shih-tz-e-cheng, u'hich liter-ally tnean. 'the l"ion
Citv'. i.c. Sirirhapr-rra. I'Ir. Hsii Yun-ts'iao iclcntifies it rvith Singora
rllricir, in his rvords, ' tnthe fuIayitinr,e Cha.ri of (-hong F[o coulcl be iderntified rr"itlr Srrrr-ku-na, in Chang T-'ttng T'iett and Ch't'ng 7-'u.ils I{'ao as
Srrng-clrir-lao,in Hai Ktto Wen Ch,ien, Lt.t as Sung-ctrrii ancl in Hai Lu as.
Sung-k'a, ri'hich is now a pcipular narne anlong the ()r,ersea-Chinese.
The tenn Singora camc fi-om Sanslirit, rneaning the ' Lion Seat cr the
LionCitv '.r1d Singora, thus,is apia<tc r,r-itira histor-r'ertending from at
least as carlv as the beginning of the sevcnth ct-'ntur\i up to thc fifteenth,
ancl is stiii of considerable importanr:e. 'llrat thc present name i-*.
cleriverl lrom Si,rh,hat'xnra can 6* gi1-sil-f cor.nitrehenderl. 'lhe fonn Szzraliu-nagiventn ChengHo's charts (betterknori-nas\\ir-Pci-Llhihcharts)115,
indicates that Singora rvas l<nou'n as Sirirha-nagara as rvell as Sirhhapura.
'[he name Ch'ih-t',it, also speit Tc/t'e-t'ou, of t]re sta.te nhich hacl
its capital, is gencrallv interprelecl as meaning ' Ited
Harth ', di'e to the colour of the soil in that part of the l{alay Pe ninsula,;
Sirirhapura as
R. C.
ti:t.
r09.
2E
t1o. E.l:igru.phicr, Zeyluttit:ct:, Vol. II, pp. r 09, r r-5 ancl :27.
r. I{. N.'fayasu.al, IIistt)},y of Indi,a, t5c> A.D.lo 35c) A..f).,p.250.
rr2. C;erini, Researcfigs, etc., p.42.3, il. r.
r r:]. .l R,4SlIB, \-ol. XYIII, parti, p.
7-;.
it4. .jRASlIB, XXIII, pt. i, pp. rj-i5.
r r.i. .i R 4 SI'I R, X\-, pt. iii, pp. r1T.
rr
28
comprises the narrorn'necl< of the Peninsula, and v'as of grcat irnportance in antiquity for international commerce betrveen triina ancl'the
west. flhe merchants lvho *.ished to avoid the pirate-i'fested _ctr-aits
of Singapore and shorten the tirne taken b1' the journey, callecl at ports
on the urestern or the eastern coast of the pc'insula, asihe .rrr*, *a1o b",
arnd had their goocis tr-ansportecl overlanrl. Tire region thus could
very rvell have been callt-.c1 ' :r bridge ' or ' a carrreway ,. Its rlilers
mnst have anrassecl considcrable n ealth in consequence oi this comrn.,rce
lvhich^passed througir tireir lancl, ancl accluir-etla power ancl influence
properly appreciatecl, o' the basis -of fhe hypothesis thai Kalinga
meant, to the Sinhalese_of-this period, a region in }lalayasia. The inscription of Sundara-mahaclevi in the ltaravidiye cave dt nml,,tagata
contairrs tlre_phrase dn'olttttu-miil.d,ti ttfatt among the eulogistic"relerences to that qucerr ' rvho surpassed'Siri in heiuty ,. \\{ckrema_
singhe,rvhofirstedited this inscripiion,ll. has left it paittv
""r*a, ona
did,not attempt t-o translateit
lu1ty. lrelrreacl it c6rrecily, tootr'il a,
hssapa
lic
rsrnies). t0E9
TIIIES
29
rlfoens. De
is 'trvo'
lcasons that irave alreailv been statecl, u-oul d aclniii ably suit that part of
ihe l'[al'a,r' Pcninsula in u'hich Singora is situetccl. One of the overland
i'nutcs acros-c the Peninsula u'as {ronr Iietlah to Singora. 'Ihe name
ilanslitered as -lo-p'o-tcng in Chinese u'oulcl have becn a cogna.tc fonn
;n tlte local',.ernacular-.
it
r'21. Ctrluuarhsa, chap. .5rr, r"r'. 46-49. 'l'he name of the princess
in tlre chronicle as Sundli; {or the correction, see Epigraphio
;1iven
\'ol. TI, p.
\22.
rE6.
\2q"
.JR-1SLIB,
723. By
XVII, plr.
3ro-327"
is wrongl1.
ZeSianica"
3r|
Vol. VII,
(-Aleza csertre-*). I
';
nil
n.*orrr'
,. One cannot
-urr.i"rrt
and seht is
u"
king of Indian culture . being called lryimagine
u: ,rn*l.' -ieaairrg
J*r"i"g
' Ar'ro'r causeu'ay '. r, therefJrg,
to
amena ttre
,l.topor"
,carlsc\vay
warrna to
,arttna- It
clitrere"i;ri], il,*
'syilable rtma lrom rma, tris coulct have l,een inadvert""ttl' ,r"-,;1i"it ou
the engraver, or lvor' orit. It is :r.iso possible tfr"t u-.fifiJu;;;;;;r;
that of the nexus yhna .ras actuall-v pronouncecl
",
ur
r*n, iii-tL""lonr"
haileri.
rvritings.
thai irtte in
io,ry
e*u.
r25.
:1,J1
qrg,
R:iitiult
i.n.
3.
r27,
ittr5 i6g
Ciilqua1i15e.
corr r o5- it s
c1;rn..63, \,\:..
irr pli,
t)a.ssage
3l
sent to Gajabihu II by her mother, and in the rvords put into thc mouth
,rf Quecn Ratnavali,'aking born of the Sornavarilsa' catr refer- to nr-r
,ither than ttrtr.t ruler. It is generally accepted that 'Somavarhsa '
rlrcans tlre 'Luuar clynasty', but the phrase Sorna-ra,ia-l>aranparrTltetr,
i,iitatii
.;rq,lns
ri
a.n
t;t
ltJg
Lhc Ramdry&no-.13o
'lr'irrd, there is no clor-ibt that the scconcl js tire Sinhalese fornr oi Juhaha,
''i'lrich is the origin o{ the Ara-bic Zaltcg or Zabaj , and Ial:a,iitt or
u oI Ptolemy. 'fhus 'nle find. tJrat a pcrson to rvhom fin'rtrtt-s ri'crr-"
"::lr.ltail.i
r:E.
r?9.
r3o.
2(13
(i_Il
3)
J"OURliAl.,. R.-q.S.
granted b1i
tlrat
:L
(CEr-LON)
'{,-oL
Javaktr or JaLraka.
It n'oulel be noticerl that" Dei;otulu-miiti{la allr.lll u"L)an-datVfiu, which.
\ie h:rvc cor:rclucled to bc names of regions in 1\{ala1.a-sia, irave unclergouc
consi.lera.ble phonetic chantcs. J'lte name: rnust havr lt,:en iti- use
among tirc.Sinhalese people for a trong tinie, indicating that ther, hactr
continuerl intercourse r.ith these regions. Apart {rom rcferenies tn
regular sea-vovages bett-een Ce\-lon and Sur.ar],.rabhuini in the Pali
comnentaries, this is aiso proved bv an inscription of the Javanese king
Airlanga (torg - ro.19), rvhich mentions the arr-ival in the ports of hii
kingdtxl of Singhala (Sinhaiese) mr:rchants, in adclition to tliose of
other nationalities of India and Further Inclia.111
-cellillg birclc.rra
If
NiS3arhkamalla caute
from Singora in
the
trrim soirie ti:oops from
p.. roo.
33
,,lrrces,
lrro,ntions a
'iirlnf
hr:
TI, p. r78.
r,3.1. Bircls of gorgeous plumage figure among the articlcs ot' .trib'ute ' scnt by
nlaiayan potentates 6 the Chines; Court.
r35. BI{1, tsz7, Deel 83, pp" 46E-9.
__
I{rJfr
iiouclrer, i
tl,
t t
r'
z:z
-5.
'Ihis
Vo!.
It
lI,
(Ne ra ,Sei
ier)" l9i$
Irrclia in the eighllr. vcar of I*rlyAr-ravati \\ras nalned Ati 'r'ri this narne;
recalls t! | orlc's nind Atli in Adi NI ulu.ya , the narne of a miiitary lcacler
u:ho reirtlitrl against Vijar-aixLhu I carly in that monarcll's reign.lr:l
Ati ar.d ,4di can lrc {orms, assumerl in onlinary Sinha.iese speech, of t}r.e
o1d ll"..Ja3r hdji, t]ae ro1'a1 titi'. ,1li )Iuluya rvoulcl tbus be r.<luivalent
t.o Xla!,aya.-rdio, or -rd,\!a.ra" l\'[a"nakira, the narne of ;r generai of this
perioci rlrentioned in the l)uith:oli, and Erapatta, thc name given to
Vil;rarnabahu II in the llinipe slab-inscription,r{r also appear: to be
norl-Sinllefese.
NiSsarirkamalla, in scver"al of his inscliptions, boasts of the vast
$.eaith
plinccs
inade l-rer-r:. too, fol e-r-agger-ations, br-rt thcsc clailns cannot be pnle
ipvgnfilrn,r of his panvgcrists. II h,e s':rs a princc from thc l{ala.v
Feninsu,la, ]re nrust have commanc-lecl a considerable fleet of sea-gcing
rressels, *-ith r.ihich he coulrl Jrave rir.ided the coasts of those lirncls.
Sonre of his nar.'ai cornilanclers might c.ven have been engagecl in
piratica.l activities rhich frntishecl him u,ith a part of tlrc l-ealth so
extrar-ag;rntlJ. spent b1' hin-r.
ln
{]I]]Y-LOI!_
AND MAI,AYASI.\
II{
]\TEDIA.IIYAL
TIME$
3i;
familv.
Alrnost
rLll
j'ludrlhism.
,.,,xtorcl
_ l'he narrre ' Vijaya ', thougtrr it is thiLt of the eponyrnous hero of the
in tlie chronicles, I'is not a comnon o;e in ancient Ceylon"
It cloes not occur in the earliest inscriptions ; anong thc l<ing,r of Ceylon
tLp to ttrre eleventh century, it u'as borne only by one shado$'y figur:e it
thc thircl century. On the other ha.nr-[, a" king nime lrisapatma
lVijaya'i';,ti'rnili in 43,3 ancl another namecl Shi-li-pi-jia-1'a (Sri \'ijaya; in
45a,
Sirrtralese
36
l'ol. VIl,
(Ncru Serirs),
l9i9
being
in this vicinity, and local royal families claimed dcscerrt from them.r5l
It would thus be seen that traditions similar to ttrrose related o{ Ceylon
kings n'ere also attached to the royal famiiies of this part of the l{alay
it is rvorthy
NiSsarhkanralla came
The Ctllauarhsa, in its account of the rvars dui-ing the Cola occupation o{ the Island in the elevent}r century, has recorded that a prince
named Jagatipala of the line of Rama came to Ceylon from Ayojiha
anit,after alhort pcriocl of po\ver, rl'as slain iu battle by the Clolas.152 Thc
inscriptions of the Cola king ltajadhiraja refer to a Vira Saiani:gan,
descriled as a ruler of Kannakucci, -,'i-ho simiiarly came to grief at tire
hancis of the Colas. From chlonological consiclerations and thtl
similarity of the fortunes of .|agatrpaizr ancl Vira -Salamegan, the tu'rr
have been ic1entifiecl. 'lhe recor-c1-* of Rajendra II refcr to this Vile
Salainrlgan, as' king of l{alingas of the stlcrng armv ''r5:r Thus u'e fint1
rhat a liiug riho is saicl to have corne fronr A:'ojjha (Avodhya) in oire
IN MEJfIAEVITI,
T]NIES
3i
ir.i.t-orirt is callecl the liins of thc l{alingas in t}re ot}rer. llhere r,vas no
.,!,..otl.h\'lr in li:LlirilJa irr {ncli:r; on t1rc ciihcr }i:inc1, n'e have seen above
,,111t. accor',:1ing to Slntralese tradiiion recorclecl bv Portugucse
I,i.tlrians, \'-ijiL1'a rvas at otrcc o{ Ajota (i.e. A1'ot1h1-i) a-s uell as of
ri;iiinga. 'l'he trvo pltrce-na.mts, therefclre, r,.ferrerl tu onc and the
.rr.nre rt-.qion r,vhir:h, to the Sinhalese of the sixtcenth centnry, rvas in the
,r'i| of tlie lilalay Peninsuia. I{aliriga t'as i;crhaps the name ot
r,rr: country, r,hile Ayojiha (A1,-odhyA) was a. city therein. Vira
:-,;.lanrfigan ali,as Jagetlpala nrust, therefore, be ta"ken as a prince
i lvould
^'iurtify it.
A c'lcscenclant of Jagatipala r,vhose daughter became first queen of
i, ijayabahul, is referred toin the Culaaathsd
as of Ariya stock.1l,4 This
r','rLcl 'Ari5r2', u'ithcut doubt, means Itajputs in tire Cu,at:athsa
'rrri:orotof thereign of \rijaj-aLal,u l\-,rt;birtiineednotne."rsa.ilyhave
lliis same caunotation rvherevcl it has been nsecl. A rvarrior prince ol
.'..riyade-qa, Viradeva by name, ioriL of Palandipa, macle a boid bid to
r':ipture the thronc of Cleylon, ancl almost succecclccl, r.r'hen Vikranra-
,rrLm
';rl-e, ire might have championed the cause of that prince rvho,
'lrough husband of a daughter of thc first rnah,esl of 1''ijal.abahu,
lrerl been coinpletelv ignorcrl both by historians as u'el1 as bv the
ilignittuies l.lio settled the succession after the death of Vijay.rl:riliu I. It is perhaps not b1: acciclent tirat, in ali the three names,
'i ira Salalmagan, \iiradeva and \''irarramma, there is
Vtyaas an eiement.
'r|hether this conjecture l'ith regard to the identity of \riradeva is
l,iausible or not, he appears to have come from the Malav Peninsula, for
t5.1.
.t55.
rjb.
\'\. J(,-l;,
38
citl'
Palancla
given by Ptolemv among tire inland torvns in the Golden Iihersonese.
'Ihis has been identified tvith Perak b5r Gerini. With regarcl to thc-sc
princes being lreLd to be of Ali5-a lirreage, it ntav not be rritirout signiircance that the Alyacakravartis of .jaffna, according to a traclitiou recorcled by Qaeyroz,were so nanrert becagse they originated from Brahmins,
natives of Gujar:rt, called t\rus, i.e. Aryas.l:'7 Gujalat and the adjoinallswering to Palandipa, of which he rvas lord, rve have a
clf
h,stathsika. The phrase has been translated by Geiger as 'lr'ho lurd been
ri'ounded in the shoulder by a slxtar'.lt{r Sttla cloes not mean ' spear '
but a ' stake ' on ri'hich culprits u'ere impaled , ancl aitsa lneatls ' side ',
and not 'shouldcr'. The phrase as it appears in the text of the
Cu,lauaitsa is clearly corrupt, and Geiger has done the best to extract
some sense out of it. \Vith our knorvleclge that the Kaiir)ga princes
came from the l{alay Peninsula, \ve can connect this pirrase rvith
Salakat, the name of a piace on tire south-lvestern coast of the \{alav
Peninsula,l60 aftel rvhich the Strait of Singapore was cailed the Sea of
Salairat by the Arabs, to rvhich had been addecl the X'Iala.v rtord lasilr,
meaning ' sea'. Perhaps the error is duc to the author of tlis part of
the Culauatiasa himself, u'ho clid not com,prehend the rneaning of a
phrase hke Sqlahat-tasih, ancl rendered it as u'e find it in the toxt nou'.
We will next clispose of certain atgJuments rvhich might bc aclcluced
in support of the prevailing vien,that Kaliirga in the histoly o{ \''ijayabahu I and his successors at Polonnartt \\'as in Eastern India. One of
the kinsmen of Vijavabalntt's ntahesti, r'r,ho came from Sirirhapura,
hore the name 'Xtladhukalr:rava ', rvhich is almost the same as 'tr{adhukd.ildrn4ava', a name bome by princes oJ the liastern Gairga rlynasly of
Kalinga.t;t One of the trvo principal qucens of Ni3Sarirkamalla,
trialyanavati, rvho later asccnded the throne as sovereign, i,q said in the
(ialpota inscription to havc been of the Gairga-t'arhsa,laz l'hii:h rvas the
3fJ
195!)
1',]1.G.,
,;rcling
in
ar'Fa"ta u,ere
lq:ntur\', clefeatcd and kilied the ruler of Gariga-nagara, and married his
'ricter.1(;:i '-[]ie Ganga-variisa to rvhich I{alyanavati belonged could verv
':l r,tll havc been the ruiing farnily of this Gaiga-nagara.
Nirisra.rirl<arna11a, in his Galpota
r,vas in noble Dadrbacliva
liirhbapura
io
Kaliriga
in India as rvell.
For-, accorcling
to
Budclhist netiei,
:liiddhas are born only in the MadhyadeSa", and Kalinga is outside that
,!:lcred land. No Sinhalese Buddhist rvould admit the possibility of a
liuddha being born in a Telugu-speaking country, and such lvas the
, egion of Kaliirga in India I'here Sirirhapura was situated. This q'ould,
liolever, be possible, and Ni3sarirkamalla vindicated, if the view held
ir.1' sonr.e that the rvhole of Jambudvipa is l\,Iadhyadela (Mlanoratha^
:i'ilranl,, P.T.S. Edition, Vol" II, p. 37) be accepted.
Sahasarnalla,, after he left his home Sirhhapura in Kalinga to,
iorne to Ceylon,_is said to have remainecl for tw-o years at Kiiigai'oftda-patana (Gangai-kotda-pattanam) in the Cola country, un'til
t-r,,nc1itions in ceylon were made favourable by his supporters foi him to
.rscend the throne of Polonnam. It might be argued that this points tr>
XVII,
p. 56"
40
JOURII;\L, 11.A.S.
(CFIYLON)
Vol
41
r'r'as, of course, a
lr,tt thc cir.pital ancl' turneil tou,ards llaiayn l.tt'* There
Cevlon, and
if ,f .i:..,,'r"i,:1 , n.,nely the cr.rttr:rInro,tnIai'tous region,.in
iti,,"',rrir q"oi"Irt,i""tilesigrlati.rrr occrll': in the chronicle' it is rrsualll'
it."t ..,"r t oj ttie trtu"a itself rl.liich is meant. llut the subsequerrt couf,se
,,i*tl-r"**";;;"lir,-e in tl'e chronicle n'ould inclicate that it \\'as not the
,i"l,'-rl" ,l"qiorr ,.,f lhe Islanrl. Lrrrt thc 14alay Peninsul:1, xhat. rva<
l,'.'',,;1"
For, afrt'r'he ]La'1 lcIL
L as:l rt'[rige irr
"fi,r'S"tto
'd't'i'sii1"aplacccalted"',t,alrgaheardoi.at
ii'rr.xt
lre
,, ,:.ni,"1,^\'rrru.-dhapnia,
-a
ancl
,,,,.i- Ar#rrrr-gailga'.1ije There-Sena Ii set up miiitlrl' guards,
'
n
orrlrl
'
Gaiiga-t1r-aya-mukha
expressiori
The
,, r,oit.a cler.ei-opfrents.
l,. fr.tt"rrlerlcld.ed as'the tno niouths of the Gangi' or'the mt-'uths of
the
,1,- i.* t,.rrgaui, rr..l may b. taken as denoti'g ihe.a.ea bet*een
be easih'
c-ould
ri
hich
dclta,
the
i.e.
Mahaviili-gar1ga,
tLe
irro"lfr"r"of
i,,.
,li:{cnc1ec1
or near it
r66.
ol
,a
a67.
iii-i"iil"ii.*in
"t"
r68. cftlauaritsa, chap- 5o, v. rg. The expr-ession here used is Malal'dbltiwtthhn
jrlio ' went headed tor'r'ards l\{alaya
169. Cflauahsa. chao. 5o, v. 37." Geiger's translation, pt' i, p' r4r'
1Zo. trbid., vv.
17r.
3811.
42
I'ol. VIL
(-v"eru Serzies),
l9J!)
sent
a general to rendcr mil.itary assista'cu ro ih" py' r.1,,!,i,,ri
oi F]r*. i,,
Lower Ilu'na, rvhich hacl been invadecr r""..i ti-d
rry th; ii;h;i"r"
before.858, and had appeaiecl to hirn fo, n"1p.
To uniertake .ur,".or