The history of
Mihintale is the history of Sri Lanka Buddhism, which begains
with the story of an Indian
missionary called Mahinda, since this is, literally, mahinda's
Mountain. This was where King Devampiyatissa met with a strange
hunting accident that led to his conversion. He was on a deer
hunt one day in the year 247BC when his quarry gave him an unexpected
jolt. Instead of the deer he expected to uncover, he found a
man
in monk's robes. It was the indian prince mahinda, sent on a mission
by his father, King Tissa, who with the Zeal of a recent convert
had imprinted his new-founded religion on his own country and was
looking to spread thev word. Buddhism soon overwhelmed the island,
embraced with fervour by the Sinhalese people, Whilst in India
it declined. Always happy to backdate for spiritual puposes, the
legend claims that the Buddha himself sanctified this mountain
three centuries before the advent of mahinda. Regardless of your
beliefs, the beautiful shrines, stupas, caves, and above all
the wondrous setting, make Mihintale unforgettable.
All over the world high places are given religious significance,
with the result that devotees are always climbing steps-sometimes
on their kness. The three flights of steps at Mihintale, totalling1,840,
take the pilgrim through the shadows of the spreading temple
trees to the summit. They were built in the regin of Bhathika
Abhaya (22BC to AD7), but a later paved road provides a short
cut. The first flight of steps is wide and shallow. The climb
is sufficient to require regular deep breaths and a meditative
pace.
At the end of the first flight to your right is the 2nd century
BC
Kantaka Cetiya, one of the
earlist religious monuments on the island, excavated in 1934. the 130-metre
(425ft) base consists of three giant steps of dressed stone,
a characteristic of sinhalese stupas. Above them the dome has
worn down to resemble a heap of masonry, reaching 12 metres (40ft)
in height. It would originally have been much more impressive
at over 30metres (100ft) high.
The highlights of the building are the four ornamental facades
called vahalkadas facing the cardinal points. The eastern facade
is the best preserved with horizontal rows of carvings separated
by strips of plain stone. There are beautiful frizes of dwarfs
and elephants among the symbloic patterns, and on either side
the wall is finished off with a tall carved pillar holding rather
weathered lions aloft. The south facade also has some very ornate
pillars carved with symbolic animals and plants. There is also
a small relief figure of a naga, which is one of the earliest
figure sculptures on the island. Despite its worn apperance,
you can see that it is gracefully posed with the weight on one
leg, so even in these archaic times the Sinhalese sculptors were
very sophisticated.
South of this ancient stupa is something even older: an inscription
on a rock in large Brahmi characters - the forerunner to the
pali script. It is found on a tury BC. These rock shelters constitute
the bare minimum in desirable residences. A channel was carved
in the overhanging boulder to act as a dripstone moulding and
help keep out the rain, but that was all. If you crawl through
the cave yoy will find a sheer cliff face where the resident
monks would sit on narrow ledges for a spot of meditation. Thousands
of them perched on the precipice like sleeping cormorants; cross-legged
and sublimely unaffected by vertigo.