Girihandu Seya Explained

Building Name:Girihandu Seya
Native Name:ගිරිහඬු සෑය
கிரிஹன்டு சாய
Location:Thiriyai, Trincomalee, Sri Lanka
Coordinates:8.8704°N 81.0073°W
Province:Eastern Province
District:Trincomalee
Heritage Designation:Archaeological protected monument[1]
Architecture:yes
Architecture Type:Buddhist Temple

Girihandu Seya (also known as Nithupathpana Vihara)is an ancient Buddhist temple situated in Thiriyai, Trincomalee, Sri Lanka. The temple is supposed to be the first Buddhist Stupa in Sri Lanka,[2] [3] believed to be constructed by two seafaring merchants Trapusa and Bahalika.[4] The names of the two merchants are recorded in a rock inscription found in the Vihara premises. According to the inscription, Girihandu Seya was built by the guilds of merchants named Trapassuka and Vallika where the names are written as Tapassu and Bhalluka in later Sinhala chronicles. Some scholars also hold the view that Mahayana influenced seafaring merchants from the Pallava Kingdom were responsible for the construction of this temple.[5]

The Stupa in the Vihara is highly venerated by the people, as it is believed to contain the hair relics of Buddha.[6] The temple has been formally recognised by the Government as an archaeological site in Sri Lanka.

The temple

The temple is situated on a small hillock near the sea coast about 47km (29miles) to the north of Trincomalee. The summit is occupied by a Vatadage containing the Stupa in the centre. The Stupa was originally small in size and had been enlarged in the 8th century A.D.[1] The Vatadageya covers the Stupa with concentric circles of stone pillars similar to Thuparama and Lankarama Stupas at Anuradhapura. The stone made circular platform of the Vatadageya is opened to the four directions and accessed by flight of steps with guardstones (Muragala) and balustrades (Korawak Gala) showing the usual Sinhalese architecture. On the terraces lower than the Vatadageya are vestiges of monastic structures including ruined buildings, stone pillars, flight of steps, ponds, and remains of a stone bridge. The slope of the hill are some rock caves, two of which contain Brahmi inscriptions, one in the pre-Christian form of that script and the other dating from about the first century.[7] To the South of the Vatadageya is another rock inscription engraved on the a rock surface, which contain eleven line of writings revealing the names of two merchants as well as the temple.

The short prose inscription in the Vihara, written in Sanskrit, states that it was indited in the 23rd year of the reign of king Silamegha, Lord of Simhala. This monarch in the inscription is identified with the king Aggabodi VI (741-781 A.D.) whose envoy Amoghavajra, a Mahayana teacher of great repute arrived in China in 742 A.D. Near to the temple is the Nithupathpana tank which is said to be constructed by King Vasaba (67–111 AD). The temple was repaired later by king Vijayabhahu I (1055–1110 AD).[8]

The inscription with names

The inscription covers an area of 20 ft by 5 ft written in Sanskrit language with the resembling South Indian Pallava Grantha scripts.[9] On the whole the scripts are not quite identical with any of the known scripts of South India.[10] Similar scripts also have been found in the graffiti on the gallery wall at Sigiriya where it contains a single Sanskrit verse and several verses in Sinhalese. Mahayana images and sculptures of the Pallava style belonging to the 8th century AD was found at this site.[11] [12]

The inscription records an account of two sea-faring merchants. Most of the part of the document is occupied by a long eulogy of a shrine name Girikandi Caitya. The eulogy is followed by the pious wish of the author whose name is not found in the preserved portion. The final lines state that Girikandi Caitya was founded by the guilds of merchants named Trapussaka and Vallika. The record ends with a Buddhist formula about the transitoriness of things.

Trapussaka and Vallika

See main article: Trapusa and Bahalika. The names Trapussaka and Vallika are said to be corruptions of Trapusa (Tapussa and Tapassu in Pali) and Bhallika, the names of two merchants who offered food to the Buddha immediately after his enlightenment. The chronicles, Mahavagga, Lalitavistara and Nidanakatha state that the two merchants from a country called Ukkala (Utkala in Sanskrit), were led to the Buddha by a Deva (Deviyo) and there they received some hair relics from the Buddha. They further state that the two merchants built a Stupa in their native country to enshrine the hair relics. It is said that the Chinese pilgrim Hieun Tsang had noticed the remains of two Stupas built over the hair relics, on his journey from Balkh to Bamian in Gandhara.

The Pujavaliya, a 13th-century Sinhalese religious work definitely states that the two merchants Tapassu and Bhalluka built a Stupa, enshrining the hair relics after they went on a sea voyage and came to the island of Sri Lanka. It further state that the two merchants came to the place called Girihandu and placed the casket of the relic on the summit of the rock and went for the eat. When they returned after having cooked and eaten their meals they couldn't move the relic casket from the place where it was. Finally giving honour to it they covered the casket by a heap of stones and went their way. It is said that in later times there was a Vihara named Girihandu at that place.

Meanwhile, the Burmese Buddhists also firmly believe that the two merchants enshrined the hair relics of Buddha in their own Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thiriyaya. 15 January 2018. Department of Archaeology. 15 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160915073524/http://www.archaeology.gov.lk/web/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=101%3Athiriyaya&catid=51%3Asites&Itemid=99&lang=en. dead.
  2. Web site: Girihandu Seya lit up after 27 years. 15 January 2018. The Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka). Wijeya Newspapers. 5 June 2012.
  3. Web site: Girihadu Seya to be renovated. 15 January 2018. Independent Television Network. ITN news. 25 November 2017. 16 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180116081159/http://www.itnnews.lk/local-news/girihadu-seya-to-be-renovated/. dead.
  4. Web site: Uniqueness of Girihanduseya Temple. 15 January 2018. Daily News (Sri Lanka). Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Limited. 27 June 2002.
  5. Book: Indrapala, Karthigesu. The evolution of an ethnic identity: the Tamils in Sri Lanka c. 300 BCE to c. 1200 CE. Karthigesu Indrapala. 2005. M.V. Publications for the South Asian Studies Centre, Sydney. 9780646425467. 218. en.
  6. Web site: Thiriyaya back to its glory. 15 January 2018. Sunday Observer. Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Limited. 7 June 2009.
  7. Book: . Epigraphia Zeylanica being lithic and other inscriptions of Ceylon. H.W. Codrington . . 1933–34 . IV. Asian Educational Services . 81-206-0930-1. New Delhi . 1994 . 151. en.
  8. Book: Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society# Historical topography of the ancient and medieval Ceylon. C.W. Nicholas. VI. 1963. 45–46. en.
  9. Book: The History of Ancient Aryan Tribes in Sri Lanka: Yaksas, Nagas, Devas, Sakyas. E. M. C. Amunugama. A J.R. Jayewardene Cultural Centre publication . 1994. 65. en. At this site there is a rock inscription 20*5 feet with eleven lines in Pallava grantha-script of a 6th century A.D., referring to two merchants Tapassu and Bhalluka who built the first dagoba on top of the mound, ... .
  10. Book: Wijesekera, Nandadeva . Archaeological Department Centenary (1890-1990):Inscriptions. II. Commissioner of Archaeology, 1990 . 1990. 127. en. Like the scripts of the Kuccaveli record, the scripts of the present record (Thiriyaya record) is also not quite identical with any of the South Indian scripts.
  11. Book: The iconography of Avalokiteśvara in Mainland South East Asia. Cūṭivoṅgs. Nandana. 2002-01-01. Aryan Books International. 9788173052354. 61. en.
  12. Book: Ray, H. C.. University of Ceylon:History of Ceylon. I, Part I. 1959. Ceylon University Press. Colombo. 403. en.
  13. Book: Contribution of Buddhism to the World Culture: Papers Presented at the International Conference on Contribution of Buddhism to the World Culture. Kalpakam Sankarnarayanan . Rabindra Panth . Ichijō Ogawa. II. Somaiya Publications . 2006. 9788170392637. 125. en. Many countries of Southeast Asia, especially Myanmar, maintain a special veneration for the Hair Relic of the Buddha. The great Shwedagon at Rangoon (Fig. 7) is believed to contain a few strands of hair from the Buddha's head, given to the two merchant brothers Tapussa and Bhalluka, who offered the Master the first meal after his Enlightenment..