Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T17:22:45.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Vijayan colonization and the archaeology of identity in Sri Lanka

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Robin Coningham
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7 1DP, England. r.a.e.coningham@bradford.ac.uk
Nick Lewer
Affiliation:
Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, Bradford BD7 1DP, England. n.lewer@bradford.ac.uk

Extract

In my tours throughout the interior, I found ancient monuments, apparently defying decay, of which no one could tell the date or the founder; and temples and cities in ruins, whose destroyers were equally unknown. SIR JAMES EMERSON TENNANT(1859: xxv).

There are competing, yet interlinked, identities in Sri Lanka through which people ‘establish, maintain, and protect a sense of self-meaning, predictability, and purpose’ (Northrup 1989: 55). These have become established over hundreds of years, and communities are attributed labels including Sinhala, Tamil, Vadda, Buddhist and Hindu (Coningham & Lewer 1999: 857). Sri Lanka is now experiencing what Azar (1990) has called a ‘protracted social conflict’, wherein a section of the Tamil communities led by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are engaged in a struggle to establish a Tamil honieland or Eelam. International links, especially with south India, have had important implications on the formation of identities in Sri Lanka. Here we will focus on a key influence which has deep archaeological and political implications, whose interpretation has informed and distorted the present understanding of the concept and evolution of identities. This theme, the Vijayan colonization of the island, illustrates the formulation of identities, especially as derived from a historical chronicle, the Mahavamsa, which was ‘rediscovered’ by colonial officials in AD 1826 and has played a major role in determining the dynamics of this conflict.

Type
Special section
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allchin, F.R. 1990. Patterns of city formation in Early Historic South Asia, South Asian Studies 6: 16374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azar, E. 1990. The management of protracted social conflict. Aldershot: Dartmouth Books.Google Scholar
Bechert, H. 1978. The beginnings of Buddhist historiography: Mahâvamsa and political thinking, in Smith, B.L. (ed.), Religion and legitimation of power in Sri Lanka: 112. Chambersberg: Anima Books.Google Scholar
Begley, V. 1981. Excavations of Iron Age burials at Pomparippu, 1970, Ancient Ceylon 4: 49142.Google Scholar
Bell, B.N. & Bell, H.M.. 1993. H.C.P. Bell: archaeologist of Ceylon and the Maldives. Denbigh: Archetype Publications.Google Scholar
Bertolacci, A. 1817 (reprinted 1983). A view of the agricultural, commercial and financial interests of Ceylon. Deliwala: Tisara Prakasakayo.Google Scholar
Bond, G. 1992. The Buddhist revival in Sri Lanka: religious tradition, reinterpretation and response. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.Google Scholar
Codrington, H.W. 1939. A short history of Ceylon. London: Macmillan & Co.Google Scholar
Coningham, R.A.E. 1995. Monks, caves and kings: a reassessment of the nature of early Buddhism in Sri Lanka, World Archaeology 27(2): 22242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coningham, R.A.E. 1999. Anuradhapura: The BritishSri Lankan excavations at Anuradhapura Salgaha Watta 1: The site. Oxford: Archaeopress. Society for South Asian Studies Monograph 3.Google Scholar
Coningham, R.A.E., Allchin, F.R. Batt, C.M. & Lucy, D.. 1996. Passage to India: Anuradhapura and the early use of the Brahmi script, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6(1): 7397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coningham, R.A.E. & Lewer, N.. 1999. Paradise lost: the bombing of the Temple of the Tooth — a UNESCO world heritage site in Sri Lanka, Antiquity 73: 85766.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davy, J. 1821 (reprinted 1983). An account of the interior of Ceylon. Dehiwala: Tisara Prakasakayo.Google Scholar
De Silva, C.R. 1981. Sri Lanka. A history. Berkeley (CA): University of California Press.Google Scholar
Deraniyagala, S.U. 1992. The prehistory of Sri Lanka. Colombo: Archaeological Survey Department.Google Scholar
Eller, J. 1999. From culture to ethnicity to conflict. An anthropological perspective on international ethnic conflict. Ann Arbor (MI): University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godakumbura, C.E. 1946. The Dravidian element in Sinhalese, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 11:83741.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guruge, A.W.P. 1989. Mahavamsa: the great chronicle of Sri Lanka. Colombo: Lake House.Google Scholar
Jeganathan, P. 1995. Authorising history, ordering land: the conquest of Anuradhapura, in Jeganathan, P. & Ismail, Q. (ed.), Unmaking the nation: the politics of identity and history in modern Sri Lanka: 10636. Colombo: Social Scientists Association Google Scholar
Knox, R. 1911. An historical relation of Ceylon. Glasgow: James Maclehose & Sons.Google Scholar
Leach, E.R. 1990. Aryan invasions over four millennia, in Ohnuki-Tierney, E. (ed.), Culture through Time: 22745. Stanford (CA): Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Little, D, 1994. Sri Lanka: the invention of enmity. Washington (DC): United States Institute of Peace Press.Google Scholar
Northrup, T. 1989. The dynamic of identity in personal and social conflict, in Kriesberg, L. Northrup, T. & Thorson, S. (ed.), Intractable conflicts and their transformation. Syracuse (NY): Syracuse University Press: 5582.Google Scholar
Obeyesekere, G. 1995. On Buddhist identity in Sri Lanka, in Romanucci-Ross, L. & De Vos, G.A (ed.), Ethnic identity. creation, conflict, and accommodation: 22247. Walnut Creek (CA): AltaMira Press.Google Scholar
Parker, H. 1909. Ancient Ceylon. London: Luzac & Co.Google Scholar
Ragupathy, P. 1987. Early settlements in Jaffna. Madras: Mrs T. Ragupathy.Google Scholar
Rasanayagam, C. 1926 (reprinted 1984). Ancient Jaffna. Delhi: Asia Educational Services.Google Scholar
Renfrew, A.C. 1987. Archaeology and language. London: Jonathan Cape.Google Scholar
Robb, J. 1991. Random causes with directed effects: the Indo-European language spread and the stochastic loss of lineages, Antiquity 65: 28791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roychoudhury, A.K. 1984. Genetic relationships between Indian populations and their neighbours, in Luckacs, J.R. (ed.), The people of South Asia: the biological anthropology of India, Pakistan and Nepal: 28393. New York (NY): Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seneviratne, S. 1984. The archaeology of the megalithic black and red ware complex of Sri Lanka, Ancient Ceylon 5: 237307.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. & Sherratt, S.. 1988. The archaeology of Indo-Europeans: an alternative view, Antiquity 62: 58495 Google Scholar
Tainter, J.A. 1988. The collapse of complex societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tambiah, S.J. 1986. Sri Lanka: ethnic fratricide and the dismantling of democracy. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tennant, J.E. 1859 (reprinted 1977). Ceylon. Deliwala: Tisara Prakasakayo.Google Scholar