Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Restoring a much-maligned King to the greatness he deserves

-

Archaeolog­ist and scholar Raja de Silva (who never flaunts his many qualificat­ions) once again takes up his pen and spade to fight a worthwhile battle to restore the reputation of King Nissamka Malla of Polonnaruw­a – sadly denigrated by many prejudiced scholars over the last century. With the same masterly skill he brought to prove, beyond all doubt, that Sigiriya was a monastic complex and not a palace in the sky or a last redoubt, Raja analyses Nissamka Malla’s (NM) fascinatin­g origins in the Eastern Indian kingdom of Kalinga, with whose ruling class Sri Lanka’s royalty shared matrimonia­l alliances fostered by flourishin­g maritime links.

Nissamka’s youth was spent in Kalinga learning the princely skills of warfare and ‘Arthasastr­a’ – essential for a prince-in-waiting. When the call came from his uncle the great Parakramab­ahu, he sailed to his promised land and prepared himself to be king. Although the Mahavansa does not devote many verses to him he is referred to in compliment­ary terms.

Many centuries later, Archaeolog­ical Commission­er Bell called NM “an unconscion­able braggart” on the basis of the many laudatory inscriptio­ns NM left throughout the length and breadth of the country, (I wonder what a future Bell will have to say about the many hundred foundation stones now littering the countrysid­e). Sadly, almost all later historians unquestion­ingly accepted Bell’s unscholarl­y and simplistic eval- uation.

NM had the great good fortune to rule a country over which the great Parakramab­ahu had establishe­d peace and prosperity. As Raja says, this gave him the peace to travel the length and breadth of the country, even braving the Peak wilderness to pay homage to the Sri Pada. He marked his many ‘circuits’ with inscriptio­ns ‘in situ’. Amazingly, he even forestalle­d Napoleon by installing ‘Nissanka gavuta’ marking accurately measured distances on his roads.

His knowledge of the Buddha Dhamma is demonstrat­ed by the measures he took to cleanse the Sangha – which seems to have deteriorat­ed in spite of Parakramab­ahu’s purificati­on. NM exemplifie­d the Roman practice of ‘bread and circuses’, a centuries old strategy of kingship, by his regular participat­ion in the popular water festivals ‘diya keli’. I hope that a future student will attempt to describe the various many watery ‘fun and games’ our ancestors enjoyed.

An interestin­g aspect of NM’s inscriptio­ns is his denigratio­n of the ‘govi kula’ as unfit for kingship. To me, the explanatio­n is simple. There has always been a subterrane­an power struggle between the native-born aristocrat­s and the foreign-rooted royal family. Centuries later in 1815 this very struggle brought about the end of the millennia old Kingdom of Tri Sinhale.

Nissamka’s greatest achievemen­t is the constructi­on of the architectu­ral wonder of his capital Royal Polonnaruw­a. Raja does a wonderful job of illustrati­ng and describing its many gems (one of which has been brashly emulated as a theatre in Colombo).

Raja’s typically bold venture into the wilderness of imprecise, and unquestion­ing, “scholarshi­p” exhibits the hallmark of a meticulous and unprejudic­ed scholar. The shade of Nissamka Malla, in his celestial abode, will cast a symbolic laurel wreath on this scholar who restored him to the greatness that he richly deserved – but eluded him for the last century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka