Kingdom of Polonnaruwa
The Kingdom of Polonnaruwa was the Sinhalese
kingdom that expanded across the island of Sri Lanka and several
overseas territories, from 1070 until 1232. The kingdom started expanding
its overseas authority during the reign of Parakramabahu the
Great.
It had a stronghold in South India since its
involvement in a civil war in the Pandya country. During this
war, Pandya Nadu was seized as a province administered by the
military of Polonnaruwa. The tributaries of the Chola empire, Tondi and
Pasi, also came under its military rule. Rameshwaram
was under Sinhalese rule until 1182. Its currency Kahapana was
struck in these provinces. During the occupation of South India, construction
works were undertaken.
Despite being a kingdom, it had been under the control of its
royal military, which captured power twice and remained dominant in politics.
Other militaries also had captured power in the kingdom. The kings of
Polonnaruwa also had to crush rebellions from several parts of the country,
including the Kingdom of Ruhuna under Sugala.
Following the capture of the kingdom's capital Polonnaruwa by
Hindu invader Kalinga Magha, who established himself in there, a
new Buddhist kingdom was established in Dambadeniya, while the city of
Polonnaruwa was recaptured in an invasion, it was not reestablished as the
capital.
After ruling the country for over 1,400 years, the Kingdom of
Anuradhapura fell in 1017 to the Chola King Rajaraja and his son Rajendra, who
took King Mahinda V as a prisoner of war to Tamil Nadu; he died there in 1029.
The Cholas shifted the capital from Anuradhapura to Polonnaruwa and ruled for
nearly 53 years. Polonnaruwa was named Jananathapuram by the Cholas. King
Vijayabahu I (or Kitti) eventually defeated the Cholas and re-established the
Sinhalese monarchy. Polonnaruwa had always been considered an important
settlement in the island, as it commanded the crossings of the Mahaveli River
towards Anuradhapura.
3 years after restoring Anuradhapura, Vijayabahu prepared to
fight a possible invasion. He moved the capital out of Anuradhapura to a more
defensive position, Polonnaruwa.
After the victory at Polonnaruwa, Vijayabahu had to face more
rebellions. This caused him to delay his coronation, which took place in 1072
or1073, eighteen years after being crowned as Vijayabahu in Ruhuna, and after a
military campaign that lasted seventeen years. Polonnaruwa was renamed
Vijayarajapura and chosen as the capital. The coronation ceremony was held in a
palace built for this purpose in Anuradhapura, the former capital of the
country. Vijayabahu married Lilavati, the daughter of Jagatipala of Kanauj, as
his queen. He later married Tilokasundari, a princess from Kalinga, with the
view of strengthening ties with the Kalingas.

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