Mirisawetiya Vihara
The Mirisaweti Stupa is
a memorial building, a stupa, situated in the ancient city of Anuradhapura,
Sri Lanka. King Dutugemunu (161 BC to 137 BC) built the Mirisaveti
Stupa after defeating King Elara. After placing the Buddha's relics in
the scepter, he had gone to Tissa Wewa for a bath leaving the scepter.
After the bath, he returned to the place where the scepter was placed, and it
is said that it could not be moved. The stupa was built in the place where the scepter
stood. It is also said that he remembered that he partook in a chilly curry without
offering it to the Sangha. In order to punish himself he built the
Mirisavetiya Dagaba. The extent of this land is about 50 acres (20 ha).
Although the king Kasyapa I and Kasyapa V renovated this,
from time to time it was dilapidated.
More than two
thousand years ago – during the second and first centuries BC – the first
monumental stupa’s locally known as dagaba’s were built in Sri Lanka.
Such dome-shaped monuments were containing relics of the historical Buddha or
of Buddhist saints. And like all man-made structures, these dagaba’s built
of brick needed to be conserved and restored at regular intervals. In times of
neglect the large dagaba’s started to crumble and were overgrown by
tropical vegetation. The roots of trees would penetrate the layers of brick and
cause cracks thus further increasing damage. According to the Mahavamsa,
the Mirisavetiya (Maricavaṭṭi) Dagaba was built on the spot where the kunta (royal
standard) of Duṭṭhagamaṇi (c. BC 161–137) had been
stuck in the earth and could not be removed. (Mhv. 26.11–19). Duṭṭhagamaṇi built a large dagaba despite the warnings
recorded in the Mahavamsa: "If our king shall begin to build so great
a stupa, death will come upon him ere the stupa be finished; moreover, so great
a stupa will be hard to repair". (Mhv. 29.52–53). The oldest reference to
restoration works about two hundred fifty years after the initial construction
of the Mirisavetiya refers to Gajabahu I (c. 114–136 AD) who is
credited with the making of a mantling for the dagaba. About one hundred years later
the chattravali was restored by Voharikatissa (c. 209–231 AD). Kassapa
V (914–923 AD) restored the dagaba and the vihara. During
the 11th century the Mirisavetiya and all other stupas and monasteries
were ransacked by Cholas from South India. Among numerous other renovation
projects, Parakramabahu I (1153–1186 AD) enlarged the Mirisavetiya Dagaba to a
height of about 36.5 meters. Restorations were resumed again by Nissankamalla
(1187–1196 AD). For the next seven hundred years, the dagaba’s and
Buddhist monasteries of Anuradhapura lay mostly in ruins. It seems reasonable
to assume that by the beginning of the 19th century, almost all formerly intact
ancient dagaba’s and temples had fallen into a state of partial or total
disrepair due to a variety of factors, such as lack of maintenance and
defective building materials. The Mirisavetiya Dagaba shared the same fate of
being totally overgrown.
As already
mentioned above, dagaba’s needs to be restored at regular intervals. Henry
Parker visited Anuradhapura for the first time in 1873 and recorded that the
Mirisavetiya was little more than a conical mound covered with large trees and
bushes, all the upper part having slipped down in a talus around its base. Anuradhapura’s
first government agent J.F. Dixon, with the help of James G. Smither, first
cleared the area surrounding the dagaba. Excavations of the Mirisavetiya
were resumed in 1883 and the ruins of two image houses on the northern and
southern sides of the dagaba were discovered. In 1888 the first
attempt of renovation began using prison labor under the direction of the
public works department utilizing a grant from the King of Siam, but the work
could not be completed. According to H.C.P. Bell, the Archaeological
Commissioner, by 1890 the ground around the Mirisavetiya had been cleared for a
considerable time, and all ruins that existed above the surface were known.
Bell added that a description of the Mirisavetiya entourage would not be
possible at present. Sixteen years later, by 1906, the second attempt of
restoration of the Mirisavetiya Dagaba was much advanced and the paved platform
on which the dagaba stands had been unearthed. The Archaeological
Department tried to repair the Stupa by mantling the remaining mound with
bricks, but this work was abandoned by them later when the height of the new
dome stood at 60 feet. All four Vahalkaḍas, also known as frontispieces, described H. C. P. Bell
as Mandapaya and formerly partly hidden under tons of debris, were freed by
1906. The North Mandapaya, excavated in 1903, was described as being in a
perfect condition. The East Mandapaya had little damage, the South Mandapaya
was in a wonderful state of preservation, and the West Mandapaya was as perfect
as the North Mandapaya. Today only one Vahalkaḍa survives more or less intact.
According to A. M. Hocart, in 1928 all four cardinal points of the Mirisavetiya
Dagaba Vahalkaḍa
structures were built of gneiss. It has been proposed that these represent
later copies of the damaged dolomite marble originals. At present, after
the fourth restoration, the last two times by the Archaeological Department of
Sri Lanka under the supervision of Roland Silva, only the West Vahalkaḍa remains intact. However, it had to
be restored after having been destroyed when the renovated dagaba collapsed
on 9 June 1987. Of the other three Vahalkaḍas that were in a perfect condition one hundred years ago,
only damaged remains of one of the three others survive. During the 20th
century, various renovation works of the Mirisavetiya Dagaba were carried out,
although some were without detailed written records. An anonymous photograph
documents restoration works in the 1920s. It likely appears to document the
second attempt by the Archaeological Department of Sri Lanka to encase the
Mirisavetiya Dagaba with bricks. From 1980 onward, a third attempt was
undertaken to renovate the Mirisavetiya Dagaba. It was done through the efforts
of a Stupa Development Society with the help of the Department of Archaeology
under the supervision of Roland Silva (1933–2020), Archaeological Commissioner
and Director-General, Cultural Triangle. The restoration attempt ended with the
sudden collapse of the newly renovated Mirisavetiya Dagaba on 24 June 1987, the
day before the Poson (June Month) Poya Day. The collapse, which also destroyed
the only surviving Vahalkaḍa, occurred immediately as the chanting started in the
all-night Pirith Ceremony, triggering theories of a "curse of the
gods". Large segments of the new brickwork of the Stupa separated and fell
off due to the several vertical cracks that already earlier had been noticed on
the dome. This happened in the presence of the assembly of monks presided over
by Sirimalwatte Sri Ananda Thero (1973–1989). Among the distinguished guests
present were President Ranasinghe Premadasa, ministers, ambassadors as well as
the whole press corps and countless onlookers. The wide media exposure led to a
public outcry and was a big embarrassment for the government as well as the
Archaeological Department and the UNESCO Cultural Triangle project. This
calamity prevented the planned pinnacle unveiling ceremony and enshrinement of
relics on Poson (June Month) Poya Day. Instead, the collapsed dagaba had
to be demolished. This was achieved by using pneumatic hammers and took almost
three years to be accomplished. After the low-quality bricks of the third
attempted restoration had been removed, only the weak inner core of the
original Stupa survived. In 1990, the reconstruction of a new dagaba with
bricks and layers of reinforced cement began at the spot where the Mirisavetiya
Dagaba used to be, again supervised by Roland Silva, the Archaeological
Commissioner. The new dagaba, that represented the fourth attempt at
restoration, was ceremonially unveiled on 4 June 1993, the Poson (June Month)
full moon day. Although the archaeologists had wished not to plaster the newly
built Stupa, it was nevertheless done at the request of the Buddhist council.
The covering of the newly built dagaba with white plaster was
finished in 1996. The present monument that encloses the remnants of the
original dagaba has lost all characteristics of the original edifice.
The present Mirisavetiya Dagaba is 192 feet (59 meters) in height and 141 feet
(43 meters) in diameter.
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