Chaitya Parvata
Author:Laxman Burdak, IFS (R) |
Chaitya Parvata (चैत्य पर्वत) is a mountain in Sri Lanka mentioned in Mahavansa. It has been identified with mountain Mihintale - the cradle of Buddhism in Sri Lanka.[1]
Origin
Variants
- Chaitya Parvata (चैत्य पर्वत) (लंका) (AS, p.344)
- Cetiyapabbata = Cetiya-mountain/Cetiya mountain (Mahavansa/Chapter 16, - Ch.17, - Ch.19, - Ch.20, - Ch.21, - Ch.23, - Ch.34, - Ch.35)
- Cetiyagiri/Chetiyagiri (चैत्य गिरि)
- Chaityagiri (चैत्य गिरि)
- Mihintale (मिहिन्ताल)
History
Mihintale is a mountain peak near Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka. It is believed by Sri Lankans to be the site of a meeting between the Buddhist monk Mahinda and King Devanampiyatissa which inaugurated the presence of Buddhism in Sri Lanka. It is now a pilgrimage site, and the site of several religious monuments and abandoned structures.
In Sinhala Mihin-Thalé literally means the “plateau of Mihindu”. This plateau is the flat terrain on top of a hill from where Arahat Mihindu was supposed to have called King Devanampiyatissa, by the King's first name to stop him shooting a deer in flight. Hence, “Mihin Thalé” is a specifically Sinhala term.
This is said have been called Cetiyagiri or Sagiri, even though it was more popularly known as Mihintale - the cradle of Buddhism in Sri Lanka.
Chetiyagiri in Sanchi Inscriptions
Chetiyagiri is mentioned by Cunningham[2] in an inscription at the Buddhist Stupa of Sanchi of the Ashoka period as under:
1. Devānam(piya) Magadhe (raja).
2. . . (a)bhi(vādemā)nam Chetiyagiri.
3. . tikhi-cha(Dha)magiri . ikeye sangham.
4. bhokhati-bhikhunābhikhāmavisedāto.
5. nidu . ti sanani . . chhava annā
6. Sasivi(ye) petaviye. Ichhahime Sān-
7. -ti Sangham samage milathitike siyāti.
The drift of this inscription, at least as I understand it, seems to be the following- :—
- " Devanampriya, king- of Magadha, offers his salutation to the community of Chaityagiri (and perhaps to that of Dharmagiri also) . . . with a gift of food for the Bhikshus, much emaciated (with their austerities ?) . . . and prays that the Santi community may always be united."
In my account of the great Sanchi Tope I have already identified the present name of Sanchi with the Sanskrit Sānti, which I presume was the name of the great Vihar on the Chetiyagiri, or "Hill of Chaityas" If my reading of Dhamagiri he correct, we may identify the " hill of religion" in the long spur which stretches northward as far as Kānākhera. This hill is still covered with ruins, which no doubt once formed a part of the vast religious establishment of Sanchi-kānākhera.
चैत्य पर्वत
विजयेन्द्र कुमार माथुर[3] ने लेख किया है ...चैत्य पर्वत (AS, p.344) बौद्ध ग्रंथ महावंश 16, 17 में उल्लिखित है, जिसकी रचना 'भदन्त महानामा' द्वारा सम्भवत: पाँचवीं-छ्ठी शती. ई. में की गई थी। यह पर्वत श्रीलंका में स्थित बताया गया है। इस पर्वत का अभिज्ञान 'मिहिन्ताल' पर्वत से किया गया है।
External links
References
- ↑ Aitihasik Sthanavali by Vijayendra Kumar Mathur, p.344
- ↑ The Bhilsa topes: Inscriptions, P. 261
- ↑ Aitihasik Sthanavali by Vijayendra Kumar Mathur, p.344