CHAP. IX
KINGS OF THE LOWER DYNASTY.
- Sovereigns of the Lower Dynasty, a feeble race 385
- Kings who were sculptors, physicians, and poets 386
- Earliest notice of Foreign Embassies to Rome and to China 387
- Notices of Ceylon by Chinese Historians 387
- Fa Hian visits Ceylon A.D. 413 387
- Anecdote related by Fa Hian (note) 388
- History of "the Sacred Tooth" 388
- Murder of the king Dhatu Sena, A.D. 459 389
- Infamous conduct of his son 391
- The fortified rock Sigiri 392
CHAP. X.
DOMINATION OF THE MALABARS.
- Origin of the Malabar invaders of Ceylon 395
- The ancient Indian kingdom of Pandya 395
- Malabar mercenaries enlisted in Ceylon 395
- B.C. 237. Revolt of Sena and Gutika 395
- B.C. 205. Usurpation of Elala 396
- B.C. 103. Second Malabar invasion 396
- A.D. 110. Third Malabar invasion 396
- Jewish evidence of Malabar conquest (note)396
- A.D. 433. Fourth Malabar invasion 397
- The influence of the Malabars firmly established 398
- Distress of the Singhalese in the 7th century, as described by Hiouen Thsang 399
- A.D. 642. Anarajapoora deserted, and Pollanarrua built 400
- The Malabars did nothing to improve the island 401
- A.D. 840. A fresh Malabar invasion 401
- The Singhalese seek to conciliate them by alliances 402
- A.D. 990. Another Malabar invasion 402
- Extreme misery of the island 402
- A.D. 1023. The Malabars seize Pollanarrua and occupy the entire north of the island 403
CHAP. XI.
THE REIGN OF PRAKRAMA BAHU.
- A.D. 1071. Recovery of the island from the Malabars 404
- Wijayo Bahu I. expels the Malabars 405
- Birth of the Prince Prakrama 405
- His character and renown 405
- Immense public works constructed by him 406
- Restores the order of the Buddhist priesthood 406
- Intercourse between Siam and Ceylon 406
- Temples and sacred edifices built by Prakrama 407
- The Gal-Wihara at Pollanarrua 407
- Ruins of Pollanarrua 408
- Extraordinary extent of his works for irrigation 409
- Foreign wars of Prakrama 409
- His conquests in India 410
- The death of Prakrama Bahu 410
CHAP. XII.
FATE OF THE SINGHALESE MONARCHY.
ARRIVAL OF THE PORTUGUESE, A.D. 1505.
- Prakrama Baku, the last powerful king 411
- Anarchy follows on his decease 411
- A.D. 1197. The Queen Leela-Wattee 412
- A.D. 1211. Return of the Malabar invaders 412
- The Malabars establish themselves at Jaffna 413
- Early history of Jaffna 413
- A.D. 1235. The new capital at Dambedenia 413
- Extending ruin of Ceylon 414
- Kandy founded as a new capital 414
- Successive removals of the seat of Government to Yapahoo, Kornegalle, Gampola, Kandy, and Cotta 415
- Ascendancy of the Malabars 415
- A.D. 1410. The King of Ceylon carried captive to China 416
- Ceylon tributary to China 417
- Arrival of the Portuguese in Ceylon 418
PART IV.
SCIENCES AND SOCIAL ARTS.
CHAPTER I.
POPULATION, CASTE, SLAVERY, AND RAJA-KARIYA.
- Population encouraged by the fertility of Ceylon 421
- Evidence of its former extent in the ruins of the tanks and canals 422
- Means by which the population was preserved 423
- Causes of its dispersion—the ruin of the tanks 424
- Domestic life similar to that of the Hindus 425
- Respect shown to females 425
- Caste perpetuated in defiance of religious prohibition 425
- Particulars in which caste in Ceylon differs from caste in India 425
- Slavery, borrowed from Hindustan 425
- Compulsory labour or Raja-kariya 426
- Mode of enforcing it 427
CHAP. II.
AGRICULTURE, IRRIGATION, CATTLE, AND CROPS.
- Agriculture unknown before the arrival of Wijayo 429
- Rice was imported into Ceylon in the second century B.C. 429
- The practice of irrigation due to the Hindu kings 430
- Who taught the science of irrigation to the Singhalese (note) 430
- The first tank constructed B.C. 504 431
- Gardens and fruit-trees first planted 432
- Value of artificial irrigation in the north of Ceylon 432
- In the south of the island the rains sustain cultivation 432
- Two harvests in the year in the south of the island 432
- In the north, where rains are uncertain, tanks indispensable 432
- Irrigation the occupation of kings 434
- The municipal village-system of cultivation 434
- "Assoedamising" of rice lands in the mountains 434
- Temple villages and their tenure 434
- Farm-stock buffaloes and cows 435
- A Singhalese garden described 435
- Coco-nut palm rarely mentioned in early writings 436
- Doubt whether it be indigenous to Ceylon 436
- The Mango and other fruits 437
- Rice and curry mentioned in the second century B.C. 437
- Animal food used by the early Singhalese 438
- Betel, antiquity of the custom of chewing it 438
- Intoxicating liquors known at an early period 439
CHAP. III.
EARLY COMMERCE, SHIPPING, AND PRODUCTIONS.
- Trade entirely in the hands of strangers 440
- Native shipping unconnected with commerce 440
- Same indifference to trade prevails at this day 441
- Singhalese boats all copied from foreign models 442
- All sewn together and without iron 442
- Romance of the "Loadstone Island" 443
- The legend believed by Greeks and the Chinese 443
- Vessels with two prows mentioned by Strabo 444
- Foreign trade spoken of B.C. 204 444
- Internal traffic in the ancient city of Ceylon 445
- Merchants traversing the island 445
- Early exports from Ceylon,—gems, pearls, &c. 445
- The imports, chiefly manufactures 446
- Horses and carriages imported from India 447
- Cloth, silk, &c., brought from Persia 447
- Kashmir, intercourse with 447
- Edrisi's account of Ceylon trade in the twelfth century 448
CHAP. IV.
MANUFACTURES.
- Silk not produced in Ceylon 450
- Coir and cordage 450
- Dress; unshaped robes 450
- Manual and Mechanical Arts—Weaving 451
- Priest's robes spun, woven, and dyed in a day 452
- Peculiar mode of cutting out a priest's robe 452
- Bleaching and dyeing 452
- Earliest artisans, immigrants 452
- Handicrafts looked down on 453
- Pottery 453
- Glass 454
- Glass mirrors 454
- Leather 454
- Wood carving 454
- Chemical Arts—Sugar 455
- Mineral paints 455
CHAP. V.
WORKING IN METALS.
- Early knowledge of the use of iron 457
- Steel 457
- Copper and its uses 457
- Bells, bronze, lead 458
- Gold and silver 458
- Plate and silver ware 458
- Red coral found at Galle (note) 459
- Jewelry and mounted gems 459
- Gilding.—Coin 460
- Coins mentioned in the Mahawanso 460
- Meaning of the term "massa" (note) 460
- Coins of Lokiswaira 461
- General device of Singhalese coins 461
- Indian coinage of Prakrama Bahu 462
- Fish-hook money 463
CHAP. VI.
ENGINEERING.
- Engineering taught by the Brahmans 464
- Rude methods of labour 464
- Military engineering unknown 465
- Early attempts at fortification 465
- Fortified rock of Sigiri 465
- Forests, their real security 466
- Thorns planted as defences 466
- Bridges and ferries 466
- Method of tying cut stone in forming tanks 467
- Tank sluices 467
- Defective construction of these reservoirs 467
- The art of engineering lost 468
- The "Giants' Tank" a failure 468
- An aqueduct formed, A.D. 66 469
CHAP. VII.
THE FINE ARTS.
- Music, its early cultivation 470
- Painting.—Imagination discouraged 472
- Sculpture.—Statues of Buddha 475
- Architecture, its ruins exclusively religious 478
- Domestic architecture mean at all times 478
- Stone quarried by wedges 478
- Immense slabs thus prepared 479
- Columns at Anarajapoora 479
- Materials for building 479
- Mode of constructing a dagoba 480
- Enormous dimensions of these structures 480
- Monasteries and wiharas 481
- Palaces 482
- Carvings in stone 483
- Ubiquity of the honours shown to goose 484
- Delicate outline of Singhalese carvings 488
- Temples and their decorations 488
- Cave temples of Ceylon 489
- The Alu-wihara 489
- Moulding in plaster 489
- Claim of the Singhalese to the invention of oil painting 490
- Lacquer ware of the present day 490
- Honey-suckle ornament 491
CHAP. VIII.
SOCIAL LIFE.
- Ancient cities and their organisation 493
- Public buildings, hospitals, shops 493
- Anarajapoora, as it appeared in 7th century 493
- The description of it by Fa Hian 495
- Carriages and Horses 495
- Horses imported from Persia 495
- Furniture of the houses 496
- Form of Government.—Revenue 497
- The Army and Navy 498
- Mode of recruiting 499
- Arms.—Bows 499
- Singular mode of drawing the bow with the foot (note) 499
- Civil Justice 500
CHAP. IX.
SCIENCES.
- Education and schools 501
- Logic 502
- Astronomy and astrology 503
- Medicine and surgery 504
- King Buddha-dasa a physician 504
- Botany 505
- Geometry 505
- Lightning conductors 506
- Notice of a remarkable passage in the Mahawanso 507
CHAP. X.
SINGHALESE LITERATURE.
- The Pali language 512
- The temples the depositaries of learning 512
- Historiographers employed by the kings 512
- Ola books, how prepared 513
- A stile, and the mode of writing 513
- Books on plates of metal (note) 513
- Differences between Elu and Singhalese 513
- Pali works
-
- Grammar 514
- Hardy's list of Singhalese books (note) 515
- Pali books all written in verse 515
- The Pittakas 515
- The Jatakas—resemble the Talmud 516
- Pali literature generally 516
- The Milinda-prasna 516
- Pali historical books and their character 517
- The Mahawanso 517
- Scriptural coincidences in Pali books (note) 518
-
Sanskrit works:
- Principally on science and medicine 520
- Elu and Singhalese works:
CHAP. XI.
BUDDHISM AND DEMON-WORSHIP.
- Buddhism as it exists in Ceylon 523
- Which was the more ancient, Brahmanism or Buddhism 523
- Various authorities (note) 523
- Buddhism, its extreme antiquity 524
- Its prodigious influence 524
- Sought to be identified with the Druids (note) 524
- Buddhism an agent of civilisation 525
- Its features in Ceylon 526
- The various forms elsewhere 527
- Points that distinguish it from Brahmanism 528
- Buddhist theory of human perfection 528
- Its treatment of caste 530
- Its respect for other religions 530
- Anecdote, illustrative of (note) 530
- Its cosmogony 531
- Its doctrine of "necessity" 532
- Transmigration 533
- Illustration from Lucan (note) 533
- The priesthood and its attributes 534
- Buddhist morals 534
- Prohibition to take life 534
- Form of worship 535
- Brahmanical corruptions 536
- Failure of Buddhism as a sustaining faith 537
- Its moral influence over the people 538
- Demon-worship 539
- Trees dedicated to demons (note) 540
- Devil priests and their orgies 541
- Ascendency of these superstitions 542
- Buddhism as an obstacle to Christianity 543
- Difficulties presented by the morals of Buddhism 544
- Prohibition against taking away life (note) 544
PART V.
MEDIÆVAL HISTORY.
CHAPTER I.
CEYLON AS KNOWN TO THE GREEKS AND ROMANS.
- First heard of by the companions of Alexander the Great 549
- Various ancient names of Ceylon (note) 549
- Early doubts whether it was an island or a continent 550
- Mentioned by Aristotle 550
- Alleged mention of Ceylon in the Samaritan Pentateuch (note) 551
- Onesicritus's account 552
- Megasthenes' description 552
- Ælian's account borrowed from Megasthenes (note) 552
- Ceylon known to the Phoenicians and to the Egyptians (note) 552
- Hippalus discovers the monsoons 553
- Effect of this discovery on Indian trade 554
- Pliny's account of Ceylon 555
- Story of Jambulus by Diodoros Siculus (note) 556
- Embassy from Ceylon to Claudius 556
- Narrative of Rachias, and its explanation (note) 557
- Lake Megisba, a tank 557
- Early intercourse with China 558
- The Veddahs described by Pliny 558
- Interval between Pliny and Ptolemy 558
- Ptolemy's account of Ceylon 559
- Explanation of his errors 559
- Ptolemy discriminates bays from estuaries (note) 559
- Identification of Ptolemy's names 560
- His map 560
- His sources of information 561
- Agathemerus, Marcianus of Heraclea 562
- Cosmas Indicopleustes 562
- Palladius—St. Ambrosius (note) 562
- State of Ceylon when Cosmas wrote 563
- Its commerce at that period 563
- In the hands of Arabs and Persians 564
- Ceylon as described by Cosmas 565
- Story of his informant Sopater 566
- Translation of Cosmas 567
- The gems and other productions of Ceylon—"a gaou" (note) 567
- Meaning of the term "Hyacinth" (note) 568
- The great ruby of Ceylon, its history traced (note) 568
- Cosmas corroborated by the Peripius 570
- Horses imported from Persia 570
- Export of elephants 570
- Note on Sanchoniathon 571
CHAP. II.
INDIAN, ARABIAN, AND PERSIAN AUTHORITIES.
- Absurd errors of the Hindus regarding Ceylon 578
- Their dread of Ceylon as the abode of demons 578
- Rise of the Mahometan power 579
- Persians and Arabs trade to India 579
- Story in Beladory of the first invasion of India by the Mahometans (text and note) 580
- Character of the Arabian geographers 581
- Their superiority over the Greeks 581
- Greek Paradoxical literature 582
- A.D. 851. The two Mahometans 583
- Their account of Ceylon 583
- Adam's Peak 583
- Obsequies of a king 584
- Councils on religion and history 584
- Toleration 585
- Carmathic monument at Colombo (note) 585
- Galle, the seat of ancient trade 586
- Claim of Mantotte disproved 587
- Greek fire (note) 588
- "Kalah" is Galle 589
- The Maharaja of Zabedj help possession of Galle 589
- Evidence of this in the Garsharsp-Namah 590
- Derivation of "Galle" (text and note) 591
- Aversion of the Singhalese to commerce 592
- Identification of the modern Veddahs with the ancient Singhalese 593
- Their singular habits, as described by Robert Knox, Ribeyro, and Valentyn 593
- For this reason the coast only known to strangers 595
- Arabian authors who describe Ceylon 595
- Cinnamon, no mention of 599
- Was cinnamon a native of Ceylon? 599
- No mention by Singhalese authors 600
- No mention of by Latin writers 600
- The Regio Cinnamomifera was in Africa (note) 600
- Ibn Batuta describes Ceylon 604
-
- His Travels 605
CHAP. III.
CEYLON AS KNOWN TO THE CHINESE.
- Early Chinese trade with Ceylon 607
- Early Chinese travellers in India 607
- Chinese translations of M.S. Julien 608
- List of Chinese authors relating to Ceylon (note) 608
- Their errors as to its form and site 609
- Their account of Adam's Peak and its gems 609
- Chinese names for Ceylon 610
- Curious habit of its traders 611
- They describe the two races, Tamils and Singhalese 611
- Origin of the cotton "Comboy" 612
- Costume of Ceylon 612
- Early commerce 613
- Works for irrigation noticed 613
- Island of Junk-Ceylon 614
- Galle resorted to by Chinese ships 614
- Vegetable productions 614
- Elephants, ivory, and jewels 615
- Skill of Singhalese goldsmiths and statuaries 615
- Pearls and gems sent to China 615
- No mention of cinnamon 616
- Chinese account of Buddhism in Ceylon 616
- Monasteries for priests first founded in Ceylon 616
- Cities of Ceylon in the sixth century 617
- Patriotism of Singhalese kings 617
- Domestic manners of the Singhalese 617
- Embassies from China to Ceylon 618
- Chinese travels prior to the sixth century 619
- Fa Hian's travels in sixth century 620
- First embassy from Ceylon to China, A.D. 405 620
- Narrative of the image which it bore (note) 620
- Ceylon tributary to China in sixth century 620
- Hiouen-Thsang describes Ceylon in the seventh century (note) 621
- Events in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries 621
- King of Ceylon carried captive to China, A.D. 1405 623
- Last embassy to China, A.D. 1459 625
- Traces of the Chinese in Ceylon 626
- Evidences of their presence found by the Portuguese 626
- Modern Chinese account of Ceylon (note) 626
CHAP. IV.
CEYLON AS KNOWN TO THE MOORS, GENOESE, AND VENETIANS.
- The Moors of Ceylon 629
- Their origin 629
- The early Mahometans in India 629
- Arabians anciently settled in Ceylon 630
- Real descent of the modern "Moormen" 631
- Their occupation as traders, ancestral 632
- Their hostilities with the Portuguese 633
- They might have been rulers of Ceylon 633
- Indian trade prior to the route by the Cape 634
- The Genoese and Venetians in the East 634
- Rise of the Mongol empire 635
- Marco Polo, A.D. 1271 635
- Visits Ceylon 636
- Friar Odoric, A.D. 1318 636
- Jordan de Severac, A.D. 1323 (note) 637
- Giov. de Marignola, A.D. 1349 (note) 637
- Nicola di Conti, A.D. 1444 637
-
- The first traveller who speaks of Cinnamon 638
- Jerome de Santo Stefano (note) 639
- Ludov. Barthema, A.D. 1506 639
- Odoardo Barbosa, A.D. 1509 640
- Andrea Corsali, A.D. 1515 (note) 640
- Cesar Frederic, A.D. 1563 641
- Course of trade changed by the Cape route 642
- Irritation of the Venetians 643
ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE FIRST VOLUME
MAPS.
| "Gobbs" on the East Coast | By ARROWSMITH | 45 |
| "Gobbs" on the West Coast | ARROWSMITH | 46 |
| Ceylon, according to the Sanskrit and Pali authors | SIR J. EMERSON TENNENT | 318 |
| Map of Ancient India | LASSEN | 330 |
| Position of Colombo, according to Ptolemy and Pliny | SIR J. EMERSON TENNENT | 559 |
| Ceylon, according to Ptolemy and Pliny | SIR J. EMERSON TENNENT | 560 |
PLANS AND CHARTS.
| Geological System | By | 12 |
| Currents in the N.E. Monsoon | 43 | |
| Currents in the N.W. Monsoon | 44 | |
| Diagram of Rain in India and in Ceylon | DR. TEMPLETON | 66 |
| Diagram of the Anthelia | DR. TEMPLETON | 73 |
| Plan of a Fish-corral | 211 | |
| Summit of a Dagoba, with Lightning apparatus | 509 |
WOOD ENGRAVINGS.