According to inscriptions found in the caves which honeycomb the base of the rock fortress,
Sigiriya served as a place of religious retreat as far back as the third century BC,
when Buddhist monks established refuge in the locale. It wasn’t until the fifth century AD,
however, that Sigiriya rose briefly to supremacy in Sri Lanka, following the power struggle
which succeeded the reign of Dhatusena (455-473) of Anuradhapura. King Dhatusena had two sons,
Mogallana, by one of the most desired and finest of his queens, and Kassapa,
by a less significant consort. Upon hearing that Mogallana had been declared heir to the throne,
Kassapa rebelled, driving Mogallana into exile in India and imprisoning his father,
King Dhatusena. The legend of Dhatusena’s subsequent demise offers an enlightening
illustration of the importance given to water in early Sinhalese civilization.
Threatened with death if he refused to reveal the whereabouts of the state treasure,
Dhatusena agreed to show his errant son its location if he was permitted to
bathe one final time in the great Kalawewa Tank, of which the construction he had overseen.
Standing within the tank, Dhatusena poured its water through his hands and told Kassapa
that this alone was his treasure. Kassapa, none too impressed, had his father walled up in a
chamber and left him to die. Mogallana, meanwhile, vowed to return from India and reclaim his
inheritance. Kassapa, making preparations for the expected invasion,
constructed a new dwelling on top of the 200-metre-high
Sigiriya rock – a combination of pleasure palace and indestructible fortress,
which Kassapa intended would emulate the legendary abode of Kubera, the god of wealth,
while a new city was established around its base. According to folklore,
the entire fortress was built in just seven years, from 477 to 485 AD.
The long-awaited invasion finally materialized in 491, Mogallana having raised
an army of Tamil mercenaries to fight his cause. Despite the benefits of his indestructible fortress,
Kassapa, in an act of fatalistic bravado, descended from his rocky abode and rode boldly
out on an elephant at the head of his troops to meet the attackers on the plains below.
Unfortunately for Kassapa, his elephant took fright and bolted leading the battle. His troops,
thinking he was retreating, fell back and left him to face off the battle. Facing capture and defeat,
Kassapa killed himself. Following Mogallana’s quest, Sigiriya was handed over to the Buddhist monks,
after which its caves once again became home to religious ascetics seeking peace and solitude.
The site was finally abandoned in 1155, after which it remained largely forgotten,
except for brief periods of military use by the Kingdom of Kandy in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries,
until being rediscovered by the British in 1828.
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