Mahavamsa
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The Mahavamsa, also Mahawansha, (Pāli: "Great Chronicle") is a historical poem written in the Pāli language, of the kings of Sri Lanka. It covers the period from the coming of King Vijaya in 543 BCE to the reign of (334 – 361).
The first printed edition and English translation of the Mahavamsa was published in 1837 by , an historian and officer of the Ceylon Civil Service. A German translation of Mahavamsa was completed by Wilhelm Geiger in 1912. This was then translated into English by Mabel Haynes Bode, and the English translation was revised by Geiger. The revised English translation is now available on the internet[1].
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Buddhism
While not considered a canonical religious text, the Mahavamsa is an important Buddhist document. It covers the early history of religion in Sri Lanka, beginning with the time of the founder of Buddhism, Siddhartha Gautama. It also briefly recounts the history of Buddhism in India, from the date of the Buddha's passing away to the various Buddhist councils where the Dharma was reviewed. Every chapter of the Mahavamsa ends by stating that it is written for the "serene joy of the pious". It is in some sense a compilation of the good deeds of the Kings who were the patrons of the Mahavihara (temple) in Anuradhapura. However, the Mahavamsa, written by a great master of the Pali language and a historian of the first rank, turns out to be much more than a text for the "serene joy of the pious".
Historical Aspects
Buddhist monks of the Mahavihara maintained chronicles of Sri Lankan history, starting from the 3rd century BC. These annals were combined and compiled into a single document in the 5th century CE by the Buddhist monk Mahathera Mahanama. There is evidence according to Wilhelm Geiger that there was another compilation prior to this, known as Mahavamsa Atthakatha, and that Mahathera Mahanama relied on this text. Another earlier document known as Dipavamsa that survives today, is much simpler and contains less information than the Mahavamsa, and was probably compiled using the Mahavamsa Atthakatha as well.
A companion volume, the Culavamsa or Choolavansha ("lesser chronicle"), compiled by Sinhala Buddhist monks, covers the period from the 4th century to the British takeover of Sri Lanka in 1815. Culavamsa was compiled by number of authors of different time periods. The combined work, sometimes collectively referred to as the Mahavamsa, provides a continuous historical record of over two millennia, and can be considered as the world's longest unbroken historical account. The historical accuracy of the document, given the time when it was written, is considered to be astonishing[2], although the material prior to the death of Asoka is not trustworthy and mostly legend. However, that part of the Mahavamsa is one of the (rare) documents containing material relating to the Nagas and Yakkas,the dwellers of Lanka prior to the legendary arrival of Vijaya.
As it often refers to the royal dynasties of India, the Mahavamsa is also valuable for historians who wish to date and relate contemporary royal dynasties in the Indian subcontinent. It is very important in dating the consecration of the Maurya emperor Asoka, which is related to the synchronicity with the Seleucids and Alexander the Great. Thus it was the Mahavamsa account of the Empire of Asoka that lead to important Indian excavations in Sanchi and other locations, confirming the account. The accounts given in the Mahavamsa are also amply supproted by the numrous Stone inscriptions, mostly in Sinhala, found in the Island.[3] [4]. Modern historians like Karthigesu Indrapala [5] have also upheld the historical value of the Mahavamsa. It is in this sense that the Mahavamsa differs from the Mahabarata, Ramayana and other epics which have no direct historiographic value. If not for the Mahavamsa, the story behind the large stupas in Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka such as Ruwanwelisaya, Jetavanaramaya, Abhayagiri, and the ancient engineering works would never have been known.
The Greatest Epic Poem (Kaavya) written in Pali
Besides being an important historical source, it is the most important epic poem in the Pali language. Its stories of battles and invasions, court intrigue, great constructions of Stupas and water reservoirs, written in elegant verse suitable for memorization, caught the imagination of the buddhist world of the time. The Ruvanwelisaya was the tallest edifice in the world in that age. The engineering works of Parakramabahu were the greatest hydrulic works in the world in those times. Unlike many texts written in antiquity, it also discusses various aspects of the lives of ordinary people (see Chapter XXIII- XXVIII), how they joined the Kings army or farmed. Thus the Mahavamsa was taken along the silk route to many buddhist lands. Parts of it were translated and retold and absorbed into other languages. Valuable versions of the Mahavamsa exist in Burma and Thailand. The mahavamsa also gave rise to many other Pali works of the chronicle genre, making Sri Lanka of that period probably the leading world center in Pali literature.
Political Significance
The Mahavamsa has, especially in modern Sri Lanka, acquired a significance as a document with a political message [6]. The British historian Jane Russell [7] has recounted how a process of "Mahavamsa Bashing" began in the 1930s, especially from within the Tamil Nationalist movement. The Mahavamsa, being a history of the Sinhala Buddhists, presented itself to the Tamil Nationalists and the Sinhala Nationalists as the hegemonic epic of the Sinhala people. This was attacked by G. G. Ponnambalam, the leader of the Nationalist Tamils in the 1930s. He claimed that most of the Sinhala kings, including Vijaya, Kasypa, Parakramabahu etc., were Tamils. An inflammatory speech attacking the Sinhalese and the Mahavamsa by G. G. Ponnambalam in 1939, in Navalapitiya lead to the first Sinhala-Tamil riots engulfing Navalapitiya, Passara, Maskeliya and even Jaffna [7], [8]. The riots were rapidly put down by the British colonial government and did not lead to the terrible ampleur of the post-indepenent conflicts.
Various writers have called into question the morality of the account given in the Mahavamsa, where Dutugamunu regrets his actions in killing the Chola king Elara and his troops. The Mahavamsa equates the killing of the invaders as being on par with the killing of "sinners and wild beasts", and the King's sorrow and regret are assuaged. This is considered by some critics as an ethical error. However, Buddhism does recoginze a hierarchy of sinful actions. Thus the killing of an Arhant (a saint) is more sinful than the killing of a less worthy being. Buddhists would assert that killing an elephant is a bigger sin (bad karma) than killing an ant. The same type of thinking is enshrined in the Hindu law of Manu where harming a "Brahamin" and a "chandala" have vastly different consequences, and animal sacrifices are allowed in Hindu ritual. Thus the Mahavamsa is true to the Buddhist ethics of its time. The important thing to note is that Dutugamunu regreted his act, and this was also required by the Buddhist example of Asoka who became a pacifist after a series of bloody military campaigns.
An eminent historian who has come to the defence of the Mahavamsa is Karthigesu Indrapala [5]. He has argued that the popular presentation of the Mahavamsa as a work of Sinhala Buddhist Chuvanism is incorrect, and that the Mahavamsa writer was singularly fair in his presentation. However, the Mahavamsa will continue to be used and misused by Sri Lanka's political zelots for their own narrow purposes.
Bibliography
Editions and Translations
- Turnour, George (C.C.S.): The Mahawanso in Roman Characters with the Translation Subjoined, and an Introductory Essay on Pali Buddhistical Literature. Vol. I containing the first thirty eight Chapters. Cotto 1837.
- Sumangala, H.; Silva Batuwantudawa, Don Andris de: The Mahawansa from first to thirty-sixth Chapter. Revised and edited, under Orders of the Ceylon Government by H. Sumangala, High Priest of Adam's Peak, and Don Andris de Silva Batuwantudawa, Pandit. Colombo 1883.
- Geiger, Wilhelm; Bode, Mabel Haynes (transl.); Frowde, H. (ed.): The Mahavamsa or, The great chronicle of Ceylon / translated into English by Wilhelm Geiger ... assisted by Mabel Haynes Bode...under the patronage of the government of Ceylon. London : Pali Text Society 1912 (Pali Text Society, London. Translation series ; no. 3).
- Guruge, Ananda W.P.: Mahavamsa. Calcutta: M. P. Birla Foundation 1990 (Classics of the East).
- Ruwan Rajapakse, Concise Mahavamsa, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 2001
Possibly an early edition (of parts?):
- Upham, Edward (ed.): The Mahavansi, the Raja-ratnacari, and the Raja-vali : forming the sacred and historical books of Ceylon; also, a collection of tracts illustrative of the doctrines and literature of Buddhism: translated from the Singhalese. London : Parbury, Allen, and Co. 1833 (3 vol.).
References
- ^ Mahavamsa on-line in English
- ^ K. M. de Silva, History of Sri Lanka, (Penguin) 1995
- ^ Geiger's discussion of the historicity of the Mahavamsa found at this site
- ^ Paranavitana and Nicholas, A concise history of Ceylon, Ceylon University Press 1961
- ^ a b K. Indrapala, Evolution of an Ethnicity, 2005
- ^ H. Bechert, "The beginnings of Buddhist Historiography in Ceylon, Mahavamsa and Political Thinking", Ceylon Studies Seminar, Series 2, 1974
- ^ a b Communal politics under the Donoughmore Constitution, 1931-1947, Tissara Publishers, Colombo 1982
- ^ Hindu Organ, June 1 1939 issue (Newspaper archived at the Jaffna University Libraray)
See also
Guruge, Ananda W. P. Mahavamsa: The Great Chronicle of Sri Lanka, A New Annotated Translation with Prolegomena, ANCL Colombo 1989
External links
- Geiger/Bode Translation of the Mahavamsa
- The Mahavamsa - The Great Chronicle of Sri Lanka
- "Concise Mahavamsa" on-line version of: Ruwan Rajapakse, P.E. (2003). Concise Mahavamsa: History of Buddhism in Sri Lanka. Maplewood, NJ : Ruwan Rajapakse. ISBN 0-9728657-0-5.
- Online-Pali-Text on tipitaka.org.
- The History of Sri Lanka