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Kingdom of Kotte

The Kingdom of Kotte (Sinhala: කෝට්ටේ රාජධානිය, romanized: Kottay Rajadhaniya, Tamil: கோட்டை அரசு), named after its capital, Kotte, was a Sinhalese kingdom that flourished in Sri Lanka during the 15th century.

Kingdom of Kotte
කෝට්ටේ රාජධානිය
1412–1597
Flag of Kotte
  The Kotte Kingdom at its greatest extent
  Kingdom of Kotte after the death of Parakramabahu VIII of Kotte in 1518
  The Kingdom of Kotte (under Dharmapala of Kotte) in 1587
CapitalKotte
Official languagesSinhalese
Religion
Theravada Buddhism
GovernmentMonarchy
Monarch 
• 1412–1467
Parakramabahu VI
• 1472-1480
Bhuvanaikabahu VI
• 1484-1518
Parakramabahu VIII
• 1551–1597
Dharmapala
Historical eraTransitional period
• Capital moved from Gampola
1412
• Disestablishment
27 May 1597
Map of Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte (1557–1565)

Kotte, under the rule of Ming-backed Parakramabahu VI,[a] conquered the Jaffna kingdom and the Vanni principalities, and brought the country under one flag. It led to a punitive invasion against the Vijayanagar dynasty and captured a port, which was converted to a trade route.

The Kotte Kingdom was largely dissolved during the Sinhalese-Portuguese War, as it faced attacks from rival Sinhalese kingdoms, the Kingdom of Sitawaka and Kingdom of Kandy. Dom João Dharmapala handed it over to the Portuguese, thus leading to the formation of Portuguese Ceylon. The remainder was annexed into Sitwaka and Kandy.

Etymology edit

The term Kotte is said to have derived from the Sinhalese word kotta (කෝට්ට) and Tamil word kōttei which mean fortress.[1][b]The word Kotte was introduced by Nissankamalla Alagakkonara, who was the founder of the fortress. They were believed to be from the city of Vanchi, identified with Kanchipuram of Tamil Nadu.[4] The Alagakkonara family have also been identified to be of Tamil ancestry of Vallanattu Chettiar.[5][6]

History edit

Kotte was founded as a fortress by Minister Alakesvara (1370–1385) of the Alagakkonara clan of the Kingdom of Gampola during the reign of Vikramabahu III of Gampola to checkmate invasions from South India on the western coast; Parakramabahu VI later made Kotte his capital city in 1412. It was well protected by the large swamp that surrounded the area.[7]

Parakramabahu VI first became the king of Raigama in 1412, then, in 1415, he made Kotte his capital. The King upgraded the existing citadel and built a new royal palace. Parakramabahu VI waited until ties between the Vijayanagara Empire and Jaffna Kingdom were severed. First, he captured the Vanni and made its leaders loyal to him. Prince Sapumal was the commander of the Kotte army at the time. Tamil served as one of the court languages of the Kotte Kingdom at this time.[8]

Rise edit

In 1450, Parakramabahu VI had, with his conquest of the Jaffna kingdom in northern Sri Lanka, unified all of Sri Lanka. At its height, the Kingdom oversaw one of the greatest eras of Sinhalese literature. Notable poets at the time were Buddhist monks such as Thotagamuwe Sri Rahula Thera, Weedagama Maihree thero, and Karagala Wanarathana thero. By 1477, however, 10 years after the death of Parakramabahu VI, regional kingdoms became more powerful. Most notably a new Kingdom was founded in the central hill-country of the island by Senasammata Vikramabahu who successfully led a rebellion against the Kotte Kingdom in 1469.

Rule from Kelaniya edit

Parakramabahu IX of Kotte moved the capital to Kelaniya in 1509 and it stayed there until 1528.

Arrival of the Portuguese edit

The Portuguese arrived in Sri Lanka in 1505,[9][10] landing in Galle Harbour. Once they learnt that they had arrived in Sri Lanka, they sailed to Colombo.[9] They were taken by a tortuous route to the capital, Kotte, which was actually quite close by. This was done in order to create the impression that the kingdom was too far inland to make invasion from the harbour feasible. This plan was, however, spoilt by the fact that the Portuguese who remained with the ship fired the ship's cannon repeatedly, which sound was heard by the Portuguese party being taken to Kotte.[11] This incident gave rise to the local saying "Parangiya Kotte Giya Vage" ("like the Portuguese went to Kotte")[11] [පරන්ගියා කොට්ටේ ගියා වගේ], which refers to doing something or going somewhere in a roundabout route instead of a direct route. However, during this meeting, the Portuguese managed to secure a trade agreement with the Kotte king.[12]

Demise edit

 
Political map of Sri Lanka following the "Spoiling of Vijayabahu"

Kotte Kingdom's downfall began with an event in 1521 that became known as the "Wijayaba Kollaya". The Kotte King Vijayabahu VII's three sons mutinied and killed their father dividing the kingdom among themselves.[13] This gave rise to three minor kingdoms, Kotte, Sitawaka and Principality of Raigama.[14] The divided Kingdom of Sitawaka became more powerful with local popular support and the Kotte Kingdom had to rely on Portuguese for help. The king of Kotte after Wijayabe Kollaya, Buvenekabahu VII, got assistance from the Portuguese in order to defeat his brother, Mayadunne. He also allowed his daughter's son, Prince Dharmapala, to be baptized as a Catholic by the Portuguese. After Buvenekabahu had named Dharmapala as his heir, he was shot – supposedly by accident – by a Portuguese soldier.

In 1565,[15] the capital of Kotte was abandoned by Dharmapala of Kotte due to frequent attacks from the Kingdom of Sitawaka led by Mayadunne and his son Rajasinghe I; he was taken into Colombo under Portuguese protection.[16] Most of the areas of Kotte Kingdom were annexed to the Kingdom of Sitawaka[17] however after the downfall of Sitawaka in 1594, these areas were re-annexed to the Kotte kingdom.[18] In 1597 Dharmapala gifted the Kotte Kingdom to the Portuguese throne and the Kotte era was officially ended.

Military edit

The military of the Kotte kingdom was closely associated with both its rise and demise. Poems written in this era give vivid accounts of the contemporary military. Before the arrival of the Portuguese, firearms had not been widely adopted but it is believed that firearms had been introduced to Sinhalese by Arab traders due to the similarity of the design of Sinhala firearms to Arab guns and the Portuguese expressing unfamiliarity with the designs of Sinhalese ordinance used by 1519. However, the use of heavy armour and firearms by Europeans would also result in locals rapidly adopting firearms.[19][20]

The military consisted of four main departments, namely

  • Æth – elephant regiments
  • Aśwa – horse regiments
  • Riya – chariot regiments
  • Pābala – infantry regiments.

Notable commanders of Kotte army edit

In the final periods of the kingdom, the Portuguese were often in charge of the military.

Significant military victories of Kingdom of Kotte edit

  • Capture of Jaffna in 1450
  • Capture of Vanni, making its chieftains tribute-paying subordinates
  • Successfully subsidising a rebellion in central hills started by Jothiya Situ.
  • Invading a port of the Vijayanagar Empire as retaliation to looting a ship belonging to Kotte, and making that port a tributary paying port of the kingdom.

Trade edit

The kingdom was situated near Colombo, a very important port at the time. Moorish merchants from India and Arabia dominated the trade of the kingdom until the arrival of the Portuguese. The spice trade, e.g. in cinnamon, cardamom, black pepper, dominated the exports while gemstones also was a big export. After the conquest of Jaffna, Kotte possessed the pearl trading which gave an enormous wealth to the kingdom. Portuguese who arrived there as traders were able to secure a trading deal with the kingdom on their first visit.

Literature edit

One of the greatest fields that flourished under his rule was literature and art since the king himself was very fond of them. Royal patronage was given to literature paving way to a golden age of literature in the island.

Great poet monks of Kotte era edit

Notable art works of the era edit

 
A flag of the Catholic Karava Sinhalese who became Catholics during Kotte era

Sandesha poems edit

  • Kokila Sandesha
  • Paravi Sandesha
  • Gira Sandesha
  • Salalihini Sandesha
  • Hansa Sandesha
  • Nilakobo Sandesha

Poems and other anthology edit

  • Lowada Sangarawa
  • Buduguna Alankaraya
  • Gutthila kaawya
  • Kawyashekaraya
  • Parakumba Siritha
  • Saddharmarathnakaraya

Buddhist education institutions started in the era edit

These institutions paved way not only to the enhancement of Buddhist literature but also to the development of Ayurvedic medicine.

  • Padmawthi Piriwena, Karagala
  • Vijayaba Piriwena,Thotagamuwa
  • Sunethradevi Piriwena, Papiliyana
  • Siri Perakumba Pirivena, Ethul Kotte

Aryvedic medical books written in Kotte era edit

  • Waidya Chinthamani
  • Yoga Rathnakaraya

Religion edit

 
Kelani Viharaya

Buddhism was the state religion for most of its existence. Parakramabahu VI built a shrine for the Sacred Tooth Relic near the royal palace. Kotte Raja Maha Viharaya was also enshrined by Parakramabahu VI to celebrate the Esala Perahara Pegent, in Honor of the Sacred Tooth relic. He also repaired Kelaniya Raja Maha Vihara; which along with the Sri Perakumba Pirivena and Sunethra Devi Pirivena have become the most famous monasteries in the country.

Hinduism was also given a foremost place in society. Most of the Buddhist temples entrusted shrines of Hindu gods Vishnu, Murugan (god Katahargama) and goddess Paththini, and God Gambara as the provincial god. Prince Sapumal (crowned Bhuvanekabahu VI) had built a shrine near the ancient bo tree of the Kotte Raja Maha Viharaya as a vow to defeat Arya chakravarthi. Prince Sapumal is also credited for building or renovating the Nallur Kandaswamy temple in Jaffna.[23]

The Portuguese converted much of the population into the Roman Catholic faith. The last king of Kotte, Don Juan Dharmapala, was one of two Catholic Sinhalese monarchs in Sri Lankan history (the other was Kusumasena Devi), though several other contemporary kings had also been temporarily Catholic.[citation needed]

Baththotamulla edit

Battaramulla was a village that provided rice to the king's palace. The royal flower gardens were also located in this village in an area called Rajamalwatta.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ming-Kotte War#Aftermath
  2. ^ The word kotte is derived from the Tamil-Malayalam word, kōttai, which is derived from the Proto-South Dravidian word kōtt-ay, meaning fort. The word kōttai further evolved to kēāṭṭa in modern Malayalam.[2][3]

References edit

  1. ^ Somaratne, G. P. V. (1984). The Sri Lanka Archives, Volume 2. Department of National Archives. p. 1.
  2. ^ Minahan, James (30 May 2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World A-Z [4 Volumes]. Abc-Clio. ISBN 9780313076961.
  3. ^ Southworth, Franklin (2 August 2004). Linguistic Archaeology of South Asia. Routledge. ISBN 9781134317776.
  4. ^ de Silva, K.M. (1981). A History of Sri Lanka. Delhi: University of Ceylon. p. 86.
  5. ^ Tambiah, Stanley Jeyaraja (15 July 1992). Buddhism Betrayed?: Religion, Politics, and Violence in Sri Lanka. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226789507.
  6. ^ Ray, H.C. (1960). History of Ceylon, Vol.1, Part II. University of Ceylon. pp. 691–702.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ "The Kotte Dynasty and its Portuguese allies". Humphry Coddrington. Retrieved 3 January 2008.
  8. ^ Aiyangar, S. Krishnaswami; de Silva, Simon; M. Senaveratna, John (1921). "The Overlordship of Ceylon in the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries". The Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland. 28 (74): 127. JSTOR 43483739.
  9. ^ a b S.G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p 8. (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  10. ^ Declercq, Nico F. (2021). "Chapter 43: The appearance of the Portuguese and the Establishment of the Portuguese Kingdom of Kotte". The Desclergues of la Villa Ducal de Montblanc. Nico F. Declercq. pp. 723–746. ISBN 9789083176901.
  11. ^ a b Paul E. Peiris, Ceylon the Portuguese Era: Being a History of the Island for the Period, 1505–1658, Volume 1. Tisara Publishers: Sri Lanka, 1992. p 36. (Link). OCLC 12552979.
  12. ^ S.G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p 11 (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  13. ^ B. Gunasekara, The Rajavaliya. AES reprint. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services, 1995. p. 75–77. ISBN 81-206-1029-6
  14. ^ S. G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p. 17. (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  15. ^ Paul E. Peiris, Ceylon the Portuguese Era: Being a History of the Island for the Period, 1505–1658, Volume 1. Tisara Publishers: Sri Lanka, 1992. p. 195. (Link). OCLC 12552979.
  16. ^ S. G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p. 48. (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  17. ^ S. G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p. 49. (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  18. ^ S. G. Perera, A History of Ceylon For Schools – The Portuguese and Dutch period. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon: Sri Lanka, 1942. p. 65. (Link). OCLC 10531673.
  19. ^ Deraniyagala, P. E. P. (1942). "Sinhala Weapons and Armor". The Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland. 35 (95): 97–142. ISSN 0304-2235. JSTOR 45385041.
  20. ^ Weerakkody, P.; Nanayakkara, A. (2005). "Sinhala Weapons and Armor: Adaptation in Response to European Style Warfare". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ A. Sebastian, A Complete Illustrated History of Sri Lanka. Vijitha Yapa Publications, 2012. p 397. ISBN 9789556651492
  22. ^ Himbutana, Gopitha Peiris (29 January 2006). (PDF). Lake House. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  23. ^ Paranavitana, Senarat (1966). Ceylon and Malaysia. Lake House Investments. p. 140. ISBN 9780842607919.

External links edit

  • හත්වැනි බුවනෙකබාහුගේ වටිනාපහ පුවරු ලිපිය (VII Buwanekabahu) 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine (in Sinhala)
  • හෙළ සාහිත්‍යයේ ස්‌වර්ණමය යුගය හා කෝට්‌ටේ සවැනි පරාක්‍රමබාහු රජතුමා 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine (in Sinhala)

kingdom, kotte, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions January 2021 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kingdom of Kotte news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kingdom of Kotte Sinhala ක ට ට ර ජධ න ය romanized Kottay Rajadhaniya Tamil க ட ட அரச named after its capital Kotte was a Sinhalese kingdom that flourished in Sri Lanka during the 15th century Kingdom of Kotteක ට ට ර ජධ න ය1412 1597Flag of Kotte The Kotte Kingdom at its greatest extent Kingdom of Kotte after the death of Parakramabahu VIII of Kotte in 1518 The Kingdom of Kotte under Dharmapala of Kotte in 1587CapitalKotteOfficial languagesSinhaleseReligionTheravada BuddhismGovernmentMonarchyMonarch 1412 1467Parakramabahu VI 1472 1480Bhuvanaikabahu VI 1484 1518Parakramabahu VIII 1551 1597DharmapalaHistorical eraTransitional period Capital moved from Gampola1412 Disestablishment27 May 1597Preceded by Succeeded byKingdom of Gampola Kingdom of KandyKingdom of SitawakaPortuguese CeylonMap of Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte 1557 1565 Kotte under the rule of Ming backed Parakramabahu VI a conquered the Jaffna kingdom and the Vanni principalities and brought the country under one flag It led to a punitive invasion against the Vijayanagar dynasty and captured a port which was converted to a trade route The Kotte Kingdom was largely dissolved during the Sinhalese Portuguese War as it faced attacks from rival Sinhalese kingdoms the Kingdom of Sitawaka and Kingdom of Kandy Dom Joao Dharmapala handed it over to the Portuguese thus leading to the formation of Portuguese Ceylon The remainder was annexed into Sitwaka and Kandy Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Rise 2 2 Rule from Kelaniya 2 3 Arrival of the Portuguese 2 4 Demise 3 Military 3 1 Notable commanders of Kotte army 3 2 Significant military victories of Kingdom of Kotte 4 Trade 5 Literature 5 1 Great poet monks of Kotte era 5 2 Notable art works of the era 5 2 1 Sandesha poems 5 2 2 Poems and other anthology 5 3 Buddhist education institutions started in the era 5 4 Aryvedic medical books written in Kotte era 6 Religion 7 Baththotamulla 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEtymology editThe term Kotte is said to have derived from the Sinhalese word kotta ක ට ට and Tamil word kōttei which mean fortress 1 b The word Kotte was introduced by Nissankamalla Alagakkonara who was the founder of the fortress They were believed to be from the city of Vanchi identified with Kanchipuram of Tamil Nadu 4 The Alagakkonara family have also been identified to be of Tamil ancestry of Vallanattu Chettiar 5 6 History editKotte was founded as a fortress by Minister Alakesvara 1370 1385 of the Alagakkonara clan of the Kingdom of Gampola during the reign of Vikramabahu III of Gampola to checkmate invasions from South India on the western coast Parakramabahu VI later made Kotte his capital city in 1412 It was well protected by the large swamp that surrounded the area 7 Parakramabahu VI first became the king of Raigama in 1412 then in 1415 he made Kotte his capital The King upgraded the existing citadel and built a new royal palace Parakramabahu VI waited until ties between the Vijayanagara Empire and Jaffna Kingdom were severed First he captured the Vanni and made its leaders loyal to him Prince Sapumal was the commander of the Kotte army at the time Tamil served as one of the court languages of the Kotte Kingdom at this time 8 Rise edit In 1450 Parakramabahu VI had with his conquest of the Jaffna kingdom in northern Sri Lanka unified all of Sri Lanka At its height the Kingdom oversaw one of the greatest eras of Sinhalese literature Notable poets at the time were Buddhist monks such as Thotagamuwe Sri Rahula Thera Weedagama Maihree thero and Karagala Wanarathana thero By 1477 however 10 years after the death of Parakramabahu VI regional kingdoms became more powerful Most notably a new Kingdom was founded in the central hill country of the island by Senasammata Vikramabahu who successfully led a rebellion against the Kotte Kingdom in 1469 Rule from Kelaniya edit Parakramabahu IX of Kotte moved the capital to Kelaniya in 1509 and it stayed there until 1528 Arrival of the Portuguese edit The Portuguese arrived in Sri Lanka in 1505 9 10 landing in Galle Harbour Once they learnt that they had arrived in Sri Lanka they sailed to Colombo 9 They were taken by a tortuous route to the capital Kotte which was actually quite close by This was done in order to create the impression that the kingdom was too far inland to make invasion from the harbour feasible This plan was however spoilt by the fact that the Portuguese who remained with the ship fired the ship s cannon repeatedly which sound was heard by the Portuguese party being taken to Kotte 11 This incident gave rise to the local saying Parangiya Kotte Giya Vage like the Portuguese went to Kotte 11 පරන ග ය ක ට ට ග ය වග which refers to doing something or going somewhere in a roundabout route instead of a direct route However during this meeting the Portuguese managed to secure a trade agreement with the Kotte king 12 Demise edit nbsp Political map of Sri Lanka following the Spoiling of Vijayabahu Kotte Kingdom s downfall began with an event in 1521 that became known as the Wijayaba Kollaya The Kotte King Vijayabahu VII s three sons mutinied and killed their father dividing the kingdom among themselves 13 This gave rise to three minor kingdoms Kotte Sitawaka and Principality of Raigama 14 The divided Kingdom of Sitawaka became more powerful with local popular support and the Kotte Kingdom had to rely on Portuguese for help The king of Kotte after Wijayabe Kollaya Buvenekabahu VII got assistance from the Portuguese in order to defeat his brother Mayadunne He also allowed his daughter s son Prince Dharmapala to be baptized as a Catholic by the Portuguese After Buvenekabahu had named Dharmapala as his heir he was shot supposedly by accident by a Portuguese soldier In 1565 15 the capital of Kotte was abandoned by Dharmapala of Kotte due to frequent attacks from the Kingdom of Sitawaka led by Mayadunne and his son Rajasinghe I he was taken into Colombo under Portuguese protection 16 Most of the areas of Kotte Kingdom were annexed to the Kingdom of Sitawaka 17 however after the downfall of Sitawaka in 1594 these areas were re annexed to the Kotte kingdom 18 In 1597 Dharmapala gifted the Kotte Kingdom to the Portuguese throne and the Kotte era was officially ended Military editThe military of the Kotte kingdom was closely associated with both its rise and demise Poems written in this era give vivid accounts of the contemporary military Before the arrival of the Portuguese firearms had not been widely adopted but it is believed that firearms had been introduced to Sinhalese by Arab traders due to the similarity of the design of Sinhala firearms to Arab guns and the Portuguese expressing unfamiliarity with the designs of Sinhalese ordinance used by 1519 However the use of heavy armour and firearms by Europeans would also result in locals rapidly adopting firearms 19 20 The military consisted of four main departments namely AEth elephant regiments Aswa horse regiments Riya chariot regiments Pabala infantry regiments Notable commanders of Kotte army edit In the final periods of the kingdom the Portuguese were often in charge of the military Alagakkonara Parakramabahu VI of Kotte Manikka Taleivar 21 Bhuvanekabahu VI known also as Sapumal Kumaraya or Chempaka Perumal Veediya Bandara Prince of Ambulugala Samarakone RalaSignificant military victories of Kingdom of Kotte edit Capture of Jaffna in 1450 Capture of Vanni making its chieftains tribute paying subordinates Successfully subsidising a rebellion in central hills started by Jothiya Situ Invading a port of the Vijayanagar Empire as retaliation to looting a ship belonging to Kotte and making that port a tributary paying port of the kingdom Trade editThe kingdom was situated near Colombo a very important port at the time Moorish merchants from India and Arabia dominated the trade of the kingdom until the arrival of the Portuguese The spice trade e g in cinnamon cardamom black pepper dominated the exports while gemstones also was a big export After the conquest of Jaffna Kotte possessed the pearl trading which gave an enormous wealth to the kingdom Portuguese who arrived there as traders were able to secure a trading deal with the kingdom on their first visit Literature editOne of the greatest fields that flourished under his rule was literature and art since the king himself was very fond of them Royal patronage was given to literature paving way to a golden age of literature in the island Great poet monks of Kotte era edit ven Thotagamuwe Sri Rahula Thero 22 ven Waththawe ven Weedagama MaithreeNotable art works of the era edit nbsp A flag of the Catholic Karava Sinhalese who became Catholics during Kotte eraSandesha poems edit Kokila Sandesha Paravi Sandesha Gira Sandesha Salalihini Sandesha Hansa Sandesha Nilakobo SandeshaPoems and other anthology edit Lowada Sangarawa Buduguna Alankaraya Gutthila kaawya Kawyashekaraya Parakumba Siritha SaddharmarathnakarayaBuddhist education institutions started in the era edit These institutions paved way not only to the enhancement of Buddhist literature but also to the development of Ayurvedic medicine Padmawthi Piriwena Karagala Vijayaba Piriwena Thotagamuwa Sunethradevi Piriwena Papiliyana Siri Perakumba Pirivena Ethul KotteAryvedic medical books written in Kotte era edit Waidya Chinthamani Yoga RathnakarayaReligion edit nbsp Kelani ViharayaBuddhism was the state religion for most of its existence Parakramabahu VI built a shrine for the Sacred Tooth Relic near the royal palace Kotte Raja Maha Viharaya was also enshrined by Parakramabahu VI to celebrate the Esala Perahara Pegent in Honor of the Sacred Tooth relic He also repaired Kelaniya Raja Maha Vihara which along with the Sri Perakumba Pirivena and Sunethra Devi Pirivena have become the most famous monasteries in the country Hinduism was also given a foremost place in society Most of the Buddhist temples entrusted shrines of Hindu gods Vishnu Murugan god Katahargama and goddess Paththini and God Gambara as the provincial god Prince Sapumal crowned Bhuvanekabahu VI had built a shrine near the ancient bo tree of the Kotte Raja Maha Viharaya as a vow to defeat Arya chakravarthi Prince Sapumal is also credited for building or renovating the Nallur Kandaswamy temple in Jaffna 23 The Portuguese converted much of the population into the Roman Catholic faith The last king of Kotte Don Juan Dharmapala was one of two Catholic Sinhalese monarchs in Sri Lankan history the other was Kusumasena Devi though several other contemporary kings had also been temporarily Catholic citation needed Baththotamulla editBattaramulla was a village that provided rice to the king s palace The royal flower gardens were also located in this village in an area called Rajamalwatta See also editKastane Lascarins Saddharmarathnakaraya Siege of Kotte 1557 1558 List of Sri Lankan monarchs History of Sri LankaNotes edit Ming Kotte War Aftermath The word kotte is derived from the Tamil Malayalam word kōttai which is derived from the Proto South Dravidian word kōtt ay meaning fort The word kōttai further evolved to keaṭṭa in modern Malayalam 2 3 References edit Somaratne G P V 1984 The Sri Lanka Archives Volume 2 Department of National Archives p 1 Minahan James 30 May 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations Ethnic and National Groups Around the World A Z 4 Volumes Abc Clio ISBN 9780313076961 Southworth Franklin 2 August 2004 Linguistic Archaeology of South Asia Routledge ISBN 9781134317776 de Silva K M 1981 A History of Sri Lanka Delhi University of Ceylon p 86 Tambiah Stanley Jeyaraja 15 July 1992 Buddhism Betrayed Religion Politics and Violence in Sri Lanka University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226789507 Ray H C 1960 History of Ceylon Vol 1 Part II University of Ceylon pp 691 702 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Kotte Dynasty and its Portuguese allies Humphry Coddrington Retrieved 3 January 2008 Aiyangar S Krishnaswami de Silva Simon M Senaveratna John 1921 The Overlordship of Ceylon in the Thirteenth Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries The Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland 28 74 127 JSTOR 43483739 a b S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 8 Link OCLC 10531673 Declercq Nico F 2021 Chapter 43 The appearance of the Portuguese and the Establishment of the Portuguese Kingdom of Kotte The Desclergues of la Villa Ducal de Montblanc Nico F Declercq pp 723 746 ISBN 9789083176901 a b Paul E Peiris Ceylon the Portuguese Era Being a History of the Island for the Period 1505 1658 Volume 1 Tisara Publishers Sri Lanka 1992 p 36 Link OCLC 12552979 S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 11 Link OCLC 10531673 B Gunasekara The Rajavaliya AES reprint New Delhi Asian Educational Services 1995 p 75 77 ISBN 81 206 1029 6 S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 17 Link OCLC 10531673 Paul E Peiris Ceylon the Portuguese Era Being a History of the Island for the Period 1505 1658 Volume 1 Tisara Publishers Sri Lanka 1992 p 195 Link OCLC 12552979 S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 48 Link OCLC 10531673 S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 49 Link OCLC 10531673 S G Perera A History of Ceylon For Schools The Portuguese and Dutch period The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Sri Lanka 1942 p 65 Link OCLC 10531673 Deraniyagala P E P 1942 Sinhala Weapons and Armor The Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland 35 95 97 142 ISSN 0304 2235 JSTOR 45385041 Weerakkody P Nanayakkara A 2005 Sinhala Weapons and Armor Adaptation in Response to European Style Warfare a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help A Sebastian A Complete Illustrated History of Sri Lanka Vijitha Yapa Publications 2012 p 397 ISBN 9789556651492 Himbutana Gopitha Peiris 29 January 2006 Ven Thotagamuwe Sri Rahula Thera Scholar monk par excellence PDF Lake House Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Paranavitana Senarat 1966 Ceylon and Malaysia Lake House Investments p 140 ISBN 9780842607919 External links editහත ව න බ වන කබ හ ග වට න පහ ප වර ල ප ය VII Buwanekabahu Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Sinhala හ ළ ස හ ත යය ස වර ණමය ය ගය හ ක ට ට සව න පර ක රමබ හ රජත ම Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Sinhala Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Kotte amp oldid 1179485387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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