David Allan Easton

Photographs Sri Lanka's

Ancient Temples & Palaces

 The arrival of Buddhism in Sri Lanka

began at Mahintale in 247BC.

O ne day King Devanampiya Tissa was following a deer in a forest near the hill at Mihintale, east of the great city of Anuradhapura, then capital of Sri Lanka. On rising ground he met Emperor Ashoka’s son Arahath Mahinda.

Mahinda was a Buddhist missionary monk and he stopped to talk with the King, allowing the deer to go and the two of them to continue their conversation.

Mahinda persuaded the King that all mammals, birds and other creatures enjoy an equal right to live in this land, wherever they may wish. The land belongs to all the people and all the animals. The King is only the temporary ruler and not the owner of this land.

The monk’s words impressed the King and he was persuaded to take Buddhism as his belief and renounce animal hunting. Mahinda also advised King Devanampiya Tissa to designate Mihintale and the surrounding jungle area as a sanctuary for wildlife.

Thus the first Wildlife Sanctuary on earth was established in 247BC.

And that same first Sanctuary for animals in human history still exists in Sri Lanka.

Except now, it has been joined by many more.

The Mihintale Wildlife Sanctuary is managed by Sri Lanka’s Department of Wildlife Conservation with a history going back over two thousands years. Apart from the wildlife sanctuary, King Devanampiya Tissa built a fine Buddhist temple in Mihintale. He also built a monestary and 68 caves for the monks to reside in and it remains the site of one of the oldest hospitals in the world. At the foothill of Mihintale, ruins of the ancient hospital with medical baths can still be seen.

Sri Lanka.

So much more than you can see

in a lifetime.

Click on any of the smaller photographs below, to enlarge the image and see the caption.

Ruwanweliseya, Anuradhapura 144BC.
8th Century Buddha at Aukana 11.36m (37 ft 3 in) tall.
Ambasthale Dagoba & Aradhana Gala (Meditation Rock) Mihintale
Ambasthale Dagoba at Mihintale
Lord Buddha Statue at Mihintale.
Highest Dagoba at Mihintale Rock.
Pansala at Anuradhapura. Ancient Temple.

Pansala at Anuradhapura

Anuradhapura - Foundations & falling pillars.
Aradhana Gala (Meditation Rock) at Mihintale at Sunset.
Lord Buddha Statue at Mihintale, Sri Lanka. The home of Sri Lankan Buddhism since 2,500 BC.
Flowers for Ambasthale Dagoba at Mihintale. Always brought all day & evening, every day & night.
Galle Fort Lighthouse (built 1938) by the British at the 350 year-old Dutch Fort.
Sigiriya Water Garden built 477 – 495 AD
Sigiriya Ancient Rock Fortress since 477AD. Looking Northeast.
Sigiriya (Lion's Rock) looking Southeast.
View from Sigiriya looking Southwest.
Sigiriya (Hill-top Palace) from Kandalama at Sunset.
Pansala at Anuradhapura. Ancient Temple.

Ruwanweliseya Stupa. The most sacred stupa in Sri Lanka at Anuradhapura Scared City.

Sigiriya looking East from the top.
Sigiriya looking West from the top.
Sigiriya looking West from the top.
Anuradhapura (A 2,500-Year-Old Buddhist Sacred City) viewed from Mihintale in Northern Sri Lanka.
Pond at Magul Maha Viharaya, near Lahugala, Eastern Province, Sri Lanka.
Little World's End, Horton Plains National Park, The Central Highlands, Sri Lanka.
Eternal Buddhist Temples of all Sri Lanka. This is Ruwanweliseya.
Science & Engineering Graduates at Sri Dalada Maligawa (the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic of Lord Buddha) is a Buddhist temple in the Central Hill City of Kandy (Nuwara), Sri Lanka.
Girihadu Seya, 6th Century BC. The oldest Buddhist temple in Sri Lanka & the World on the Northeast Coast of Sri Lanka.
Girihadu Seya, 6th Century BC. The oldest Buddhist temple in Sri Lanka & the World on the Northeast Coast of Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka. So much more than you can see in a lifetime.