Koneswaram Temple, Trincomalee – History
Origins
& Date of Establishment:
The construction time of Koneswaram has been estimated
by comparison between carved reliefs on the temple's ruins, literature on the
shrine and the inscriptions commonly
used in royal charters from the 5th to 18th centuries.
Koneswaram was likely founded before 400 B.C., although its exact date of
birth remains vague. The evidence extant attests to the shrine's classical antiquity. Construction of Hindu temples was made possible due to
the prevalent faith amongst the locals and mercantile communities in the region
during the Sangam period.
Kaviraja Varothiyan's Tamil poem inscribed on
the Konesar Kalvettu, the 17th century stone inscription
chronicle of the temple, gives the shrine's date of birth as circa 1580 B.C. Archaeologists
point to its initial phase consisting of a rock cave, multilayered brick shrine style popularly constructed to Tamil deities of a range
of faiths during the Sangam
period. Contemporary historians such as
S. Pathmanathan and Paul E. Peiris suggest Koneswaram temple has a recorded
history from 300, when it finds mention in the Vayu Purana.
Peiris notes that Koneswaram was one of the five recognized Iswarams of
the Hindu deity Shiva in Lanka before the sixth century B.C.; a widely famous
centre of deity worship long before the arrival of the mythical exile Vijaya to the island, attributed to the period 543 – 505
B.C. Koneswaram is the easternmost shrine of the Iswarams, the others
being Naguleswaram, Thiruketheeswaram, Munneswaram and Tenavaram. The historian Diogo
de Couto of the 16th century
adds Ramanathaswamy Temple, Rameswaram to this group of principle temples in the region
most revered on the Indian subcontinent.
Other writers point to the worship of Eiswara by
mythical royals on the island like Kuveni before the exile's arrival. Pathmanathan
differs from Peiris in his view on the shrine's birth however, stating that
Koneswaram temple was most likely established as a Hindu shrine by the
mercantile communities that frequented the island from the fourth-century
B.C. Kalinga region in India, where another temple dedicated to
Shiva in the form Gokarna Swamy at Mahendra mountains is found.
The Yalpana Vaipava Malai, an 18th century Tamil chronicle connects
the figure Vijaya and seven hundred of his followers to the shrine, stating
they extensively repaired the five Iswarams upon their arrival to the
island, before mixing with native tribes on the island forming matrimonial
links with the Tamil kingdom through Pandyan queens. The Encyclopedia Britannica currently appears
to follow this view, although in volume 10 of the encyclopedia, printed in
1974, the shrine's establishment is attributed to Tamil migrants. Encyclopedia Americana and New International Encyclopedia note that early
Tamil rulers erected the temple of a thousand columns on the hilltop.
King Ellalan Manu Needhi Cholan in 205 B.C. and the prince Kulakottan of the Chola
Dynasty extensively renovated the Koneswaram temple
and the Kantalai Tank, responsible for irrigating plains belonging to the
shrine. The latter's reign is alternatively attributed to between 1580 B.C. and
1250. Due to royal patronage by various Tamil dynasties from the early
classical to medieval era, the temple flourished in the early centuries of the
First Millennium. Hindus built at least three great stone temples with gopura
on Swami Rock during Koneswaram's zenith, one to Vishnu-Thirumal, one to the
goddess and the principal temple of the complex to Lord Shiva at its highest
eminence.
Under
Native Tribes:
Mahabharata, the Hindu epic written between 400 – 100 B.C. notes
that Koneswaram is at Gokarna bay, in the middle of the ocean and is the island
shrine of Uma's consort Shiva, known in the three worlds and worshiped by all
peoples from the subcontinent, including the native tribes Naga, Deva and the Yaksha, the rivers, ocean and mountains. It continues
that the shrine is the next pilgrimage spot for Hindus en route south following
Kanyakumari of the early
Pandyan kingdom and Tamiraparni island (Kudiramalai) and that worshipers should fast for three days at the
temple.
In the same time period, the Ramayana in written form
describes how King Ravana and his mother had worshipped Shiva at the shrine,
when the former wanted to remove the temple of Koneswaram when his mother was
in ailing health around 2000 B.C. This literature continues that as the king
was heaving the rock, Lord Shiva made him drop his sword. As a result of this a
cleft was created on the rock, today called Ravana Vettu –
meaning Ravana's Cleft.
Under
the rule of Kulakkottan:
The Chola royal Kankan (Kulakkottan), a descendant of the legendary King Manu Needhi Cholan of Thiruvarur, Chola
Nadu, restored the Koneswaram temple at Trincomalee and
the Kantalai tank after finding them in ruins. He was the son
of the king Vara Rama Tevan, who had been a prolific benefactor of the Konesar
temple. Kulakkottan visited
the Munneswaram temple on the west coast, before settling ancient Vanniars in the east of the island. According to the
chronicles, he extensively renovated and expanded the shrine, constructed
several lofty gopuram towers and lavished much wealth on it; he was crowned
with the epithet Kulakkottan meaning Builder of tank and temple.
Further to the reconstruction, Kulakottan paid attention
to agriculture cultivation and economic development in the area, inviting
the Vanniar chief Tanniuna Popalen and several families to a
new founded town in the area including Thampalakamam to maintain the
Kantalai tank and the temple itself. The effects of this saw the Vanni
region flourish. The Vanniar claim
descent from this chief. Kullakottan's restorations took place despite
interferences from the queen of the Pandyan King Pandia, who was absent from his throne in Anuradhapura on a visit to Jaffna.
Kullakottan constructed and re-established the large
temple of Shiva, the temple of Vishnu and that of the Mother-Goddess
(Tirukkamakkottam) on the promontory, these shrines of the compound becoming
the Three Pagodas of Tirukonamalai. The Yalpana Vaipava Malai and Konesar Kalvettu, as well as a 16th century Tamil inscription
in Trincomalee and Tamil copper-plate
inscriptions of the temple relate
many details about Kullakottan's founding of Trincomalee and the
Vanni. Modern historians and anthropologists agree as historically factual
the connection of the Vanniars with the Konesar temple. Dating the reign of the
king has proved difficult. The Konesar Kalvettu dates Kullakottan's renovations
to specifically between 432 – 440.
C. Rasanayagam notes that the Vanniar chiefs who were in
control of the temple could not have multiplied so fast within 150 years
causing the king Aggrabodhi I of Anuradhapura to take elaborate steps to
contain the Vanniars in 593. He argues the Vanniars of the Vannimai were a
buffer state between Trincomalee and Mannar from the classical period. Other
historians suggest that Kullakottan arrived to the island during the island's
reign of the Five Dravidians of Pandyan descent, between 103 – 88 B.C.,
corroborating the Yalpana Vaipava Malai equation of his grandfather
Manu Needhi Chola's identity with that of Ellalan
Chola, a historical king who ruled the
island from 205—161 B.C. that shared many character traits with the legendary
Manu Needhi.
In Geography of Avienus, a poem of Latin geographer
and writer Rufius
Festus Avienus in 350 A.D., the
author bases his writing on the island on Orbis descriptio by
Alexandrian Greek poet Dionysius Periegetes (117 – 138 A.D.), who called the island the
"great Island of Coliadis" whose inhabitants worship the
multi-towered Cholian temple to Venus on their Cholian rock promontory by the sea. A
twelfth-century commentary on Periegetes by Eustathius of Thessalonica also compares the shape of Konesar Malai to a
phallus.
The Portuguese historian De Quieroz cited poetic and
inscriptional evidence to date Kullakottan's renovations to 1589 B.C., based on
a Tamil poem by Kavi Raja Virothayan he read which was translated into English
in 1831 by Simon Cassie Chitty. A major temple of the compound was built to the
glory of the God Videmal by King Manica Raja 1300 years before the nativity
according to Oud en Nieuw Oost-Indiën written in 1726 by François Valentijn. Some consider the story of Kullakotan to be mythical
based on the travails of historical figures such as Gajabahu
II, Kalinga
Magha or a Chola regent of Sri
Lanka.
Under
Pallavas:
In the 6th century, a special coastal route by boat
travelled from the Jaffna peninsula southwards to the Koneswaram temple, and
further south to Batticaloa to
the Thirukkovil. Koneswaram temple of Kona-ma-malai is mentioned
in the Saiva literature Tevarams in the late sixth century A.D. by Thirugnana
Sambandar. Along with Ketheeswaram temple in
Mannar, Koneswaram temple is praised in the same literature canon by the 8th
century Nayanar Saint Sundarar in Tamilakam. Koneswaram henceforth is glorified as one of 275 Shiva Sthalams (holy Shiva abodes glorified in the Tevarams) of
the continent, part of the "Paadal Petra Sthalam" group. The only other holy temple from Eela Nadu (the country of the temple as named in the Tamil
literature) is Ketheeswaram.
During this period, the temple saw structural
development in the style of Dravidian rock temples by the Tamil Pallava
Dynasty. This occurred when Pallava King Narasimha
Varman I (630–668 A.D.) armies
conquered the island and when the island was under the sovereignty of his
grandfather King Simhavishnu (537–590
A.D.), when many Pallava-built rock temples were erected in the region and this
style of architecture remained popular in the next few centuries. The 8th
– 10th century Kanda Puranam (a Puranic Tamil literature
epic and translation of the Skanda Puranam) authored by Kachiyappa
Sivachariyar of Kanchipuram describes the Koneswaram shrine as one of the
three foremost Shiva abodes in the world, alongside Chidambaram temple in Tamil Nadu and Mount Kailash of Tibet.
Several inscriptions written in the Tamil and Vatteluthu scripts interspersed with Grantha characters relate to the temple from this period.
Koneswaram temple is mentioned in the 10th century Tamil Nilaveli
inscriptions as having received a
land grant in the Tamil country of one thousand seven hundred and ten acres
(two hundred and fifty four veli) of dry and wet land to meet its daily
expenses – revealing the temple's role in providing various services to
the local community by 900—1000 A.D. The fertile Koddiyapuram area of
Trincomalee district paid one hundred avanams of rice to the shrine and was
tasked with growing oil seed for Koneswaram annually.
Under
Chola Empire:
Trincomalee figured prominently during the medieval
golden age of the Tamil Chola
Dynasty, due to the proximity of the
Trincomalee bay Harbour with the rest of the continent and its benefits for
the Chola's maritime empire and
the two powerful merchant guilds of the time – the Manigramam and the Five Hundred Lords of Ayyavolu in their trade with the far east and conquest
of Srivijaya of
the Malay archipelago & Indonesia. The Koneswaram temple compounds and its adjacent region,
from Periyakulam & Manankerni in the north, Kantalai and Pothankadu in the west, and Verugal in the
south, formed a great Saiva Tamil principality.
Residents in this collective community were allotted
services, which they had to perform at the Koneswaram temple. An inscriptional
record containing a praiseful poem of Rajaraja Chola I, who ruled the
northern Malabar country from 993 to 1014 A.D. was discovered in the 1970s
within the premises of the Koneswaram temple. The 1033–1047 A.D. Tamil
inscriptions of the nearby Choleeswaram temple ruins of Peraru, Kantalai and the Manankerni inscriptions reveal the administrative practices of the Chola
King Ilankeshvarar Devar (Sri Cankavanamar) with the Koneswaram shrine and
the Trincomalee region at the time.
Construction activities at the temple were aided by
architect and Chola dignitary Muventavelan Kanavati. The Palamottai inscription from the Trincomalee district, found amongst the
inscriptions in nearby Kantalai, records a monetary endowment to the "Siva
temple of Then Kailasam (Kailash of the South)" by a Tamil widow for the
merit of her husband. This was administered by a member of the Tamil military
caste – the Velaikkarar, troops deployed to protect shrines in the state that
were closely associated to King Ilankeshvarar Devar.
King Gajabahu II who ruled Polonnaruwa from 1131 to 1153 A.D. is
described in the Konesar Kalvettu as a devout worshipper of Lord Shiva and a
benefactor of the temple of Konamamalai. King Chodaganga Deva, a
descendant of King Vira Rajendra Chola's grandson Ananta Varman Chodaganga Deva – the progenitor of the Eastern Ganga Dynasty of Odisha and Andhra
Pradesh – made rich donations after
visiting Konamamalai on Tamil
New Year’s Day 1223 A.D., according
to a Sanskrit inscription in Grantha script excavated on a doorjamb at the
Hindu temple. A millennium-old Tamil inscription of the Chola Vatteluthu
alphabet was discovered in October 2010 when digging for construction on an
esplanade on the right side of Konesar Road leading to the shrine.
Under
Pandyas:
Involvement of the medieval Pandyan
Dynasty in the affairs of the Tamil
country became stronger after the conquest of Pandyan king Srimara Srivallabha from 815 – 862, a strongly welcomed intervention
by the local Tamils on the island. While under Pandyan suzerainty in 1262
A.D., Prince Jatavarman
Veera Pandyan I, brother and lieutenant
of King Jatavarman Sundara Pandyan I repeated his brother's 1258 conquest
of the island to intervene and decisively defeat Chandrabhanu of Tambralinga, a usurper of the northern Tamil throne; he proceeded
to implant the Pandyan bull flag of victory and insignia of a "Double
Fish" emblem at Konamalai while he subjugated the other king of the
island.
Historically, the Pandiyans were known to have sculpted
two fishes facing each other on the ceilings of their multi-storey temple gopurams once they were completed (and left it with one
fish in case it was incomplete). Sundara Pandyan had renovated the gopurams by gold plating the roofs and installing gold
gilded Kalasam atop them, a work of art displaying affinity to Dravidian
architecture. Swami Rock at this time is described as "Kona ma-malai,
around which the ocean waves swept pearls, gold, precious stones, and shells
from the depth of the ocean and heaped them along the shore."
Local residents contributed to the wealth of the temple
under the Pandiyan’s rule of the north of the island. The 13th century
Tamil stone inscription in Kankuveli village records the assignment by Vanniar chiefs
Malaiyil Vanniyanar and Eluril Atappar of income and other contributions from
the rice fields and meadows of the Vannimai districts of the ascending Jaffna kingdom to the
Koneswaram shrine.
Under
Jaffna Kingdom:
The Tamil Aryacakravarti dynasty kings of the Jaffna
kingdom paid homage to the Koneswaram
shrine under its sovereignty, offering gifts of gold and silver. Among the
visitors were King Singai Pararasasegaram and his successor King Cankili
I. King Jeyaveera Cinkaiariyan (1380—1410 A.D.)
had the traditional history of the temple compiled as a chronicle in verse,
entitled Dakshina Kailasa Puranam, known today as the Sthala Puranam of Koneswaram
Temple.
The literature describes how from the middle of Sivanoli Padam Malai, three rivers or "kankai" (Ganges) were
generated to rise out of Shiva's foot print – Mavillie-Kankai flowing towards the North, reaches Shiva's abode
at Trincomalee, and falls into the sea south of it. Manikka-Kankai flows towards the East and
passes by the temple of Kadirkamam, dedicated to Muruga, son of Shiva, and then falls into
the eastern sea. Kavary-Kankai flows towards the West, and passes into the
place of Shiva called Thiruketheeswaram at Manthottam in Mannar. These three
rivers are described as "highly meritorious streams". He shipped
stone blocks from Trincomalee to the temple of Rameswaram to renovate its sanctum sanctorum.
Jeyaveera Cinkaiariyan's successor Gunaveera
Cinkaiariyan (Pararasasegaran V), a trustee at Rameswaram who also oversaw
structural development of that temple and the promotion of Saivite belief,
donated part of his revenue to Koneswaram. The powerful Jaffna emperor Marthanda Cinkaiariyan (Pararasasegaram
III) took the Moroccan traveler Ibn
Battuta to Sivanoli Padam Malai in
1344 A.D. along with four yogis who were in the habit of visiting the foot-mark
on the mountain peak annually; and with these men they were also accompanied by
four Brahmanas and ten of the king's companions.
In 1468 A.D. Saint Arunagirinathar
Swamigal paid homage at Koneswaram
during his pilgrimage from Jaffna's Nallur Kandaswamy temple to Kadirkamam. At Koneswaram, he offered a garland
of Thiruppugazh verses
in praise of the Sthalam. The population, he stated, at Koneswaram, where the
deep ocean rolled its furious waves, was vast, the temple well organized and
the priests well versed in the Four Vedas. The shrine of Muruga, adoring son of Konesar and his consort, was near one
of the gopuram entrances of the complex.
A rich collection of local texts written since the
fourteenth century record the traditions pertaining to the shrine, including
Konamamalai temple's use of the alternate name "Maccakeswaram". A
temple of a thousand columns, during this medieval period, Koneswaram attracted
pilgrims from around the Coylot Wanees Country and across Asia, culminating in
it becoming the richest and most visited place of worship in the world of any
faith.
The last rites during the funeral of King Bhuvanekabahu VII of Kotte, a Hindu monarch who signed all of his official
proclamations in Tamil were conducted at Koneswaram in 1551. His closest
religious official and most trusted ambassador was of Hindu faith.
Historian Diogo do Couto described the Pagode of Triquinimale as
a principle temple of its kingdom while Portuguese Catholic priest and author
Fernão de Quieroz described it as the "Rome of the Hindus of the Orient more frequented by pilgrims than Rameshwaram, Tirumalai-Tirupati, Kilvelur, Kanchipuram, Jagannath in Odisha or
Vaijayanti in Bengal."
Furthermore, he described the splendor of the
famous temple of Tenavarai at its zenith as
similar in its greatness on the island to Koneswaram and how idolatrous navigators would descry Koneswaram from the sea. In
a 1613 written letter by Jesuit fray Manuel Barradas, Koneswaram is described
as a "... massive structure, a singular work of art. It is of great
height, constructed with wonderful skill in blackish granite, on a rock
projecting into the sea, and occupies a large space on the summit”. King Ethirimana
Cinkam had resisted a call by D.
Hieronymo de Azevedo the previous year to aid the latter in building a fortress
in Trincomalee. The enterprise was abandoned.
With the defeat of King Cankili
II, all of the territory of the kingdom of Jaffna,
comprising Trincomalee and Batticaloa, was assigned to the "spiritual
cures of the Franciscans." This decision was taken by the bishop of
Cochin, fray Dom Sebastião de S. Pedro. By the end of 1619, a small
Danish fleet had arrived at
Trincomalee; in May 1620, the Danes occupied Koneswaram temple and began works
for the fortification of the peninsula before being defeated.
17th
Century Destruction:
The shrine was attacked and destroyed on 14 April 1622,
the Tamil
New Year’s Day, by the Portuguese general Constantino de Sá de Noronha (who called
it the Temple of a Thousand Pillars). Eleven brass lamps had been lit
in the shrine and the main statues were taken out to town during the their procession in the festive period, during which
time Portuguese soldiers entered the temple dressed as Iyer priests and began robbing it. In an act of
religious zeal, the temple was then levered over the edge into the sea.
Fleeing priests buried some of the temple's statues in
the surrounding area, and all remaining priests, pilgrims and employees were
massacred. The final monument of the temple complex was destroyed two years
later in 1624. Temple stones and its carved pillars were used to
construct Fort Fredrick to strengthen the colonists' influence over the
eastern seaboard of the island against other invading European armies,
including the Dutch navy during the Dutch–Portuguese Wars. A new church and village were built in and around the
fort.
An extensive campaign of destruction of five hundred
Hindu shrines, the Saraswathi Mahal Library and forced conversion in the
Tamil country was conducted by the Portuguese upon their arrival to the island and conquest of the Jaffna kingdom; the temple had been paying protection fees of 1280 fanams a year to the Portuguese. Trincomalee witnessed
several naval battles of Europe's Thirty Years' War under Phillip II's man Filipe de Oliveira. Between 1639 and 1689 A.D., the Ati Konanayakar temple was built in nearby Thampalakamam to house the
idols on procession that survived.
The destruction of the Konesar temple is historically
viewed as the biggest loot of one of the richest temples of Asia. Gold, pearls,
precious stones and silks collected for more than a millennium were robbed
within a few hours. A site plan by De Quieroz states: "On the first
rise to the summit of the rock was a Pagoda, another at mid-ascent – the principal one of them
all at the highest eminence, visited by a concourse of Hindus from the whole of
India." He describes three temples of the compound on the promontory,
stating that pilgrims leaped from the last temple into the ocean in sacrifice
to their idols.
In his dispatch to Philip III, King of Portugal, Constantine described: "The land of the Pagoda is
600 fathoms long and 80 feet at its broadest, narrowing to 30 feet."
Regarding a prophetic Tamil inscription de Noronha found at the site, he added
"When I went there to make this Fort, I found engraved on the Pagoda,
among many other inscriptions, one that ran thus: Kulakottan has built this
pagoda."
18th
– 20th Century:
Under Dutch
Ceylon, most of Trincomalee town was
administered under Jaffna-dependent Vanniars again, while the fort was occupied
by the Dutch on what they called "Pagoda Hill". Batticaloa district remained dependent to Trincomalee's fort until
1782. No ceremonies were permitted to take place on Swami Rock until British
rule of the island, when pilgrims were
permitted to return and worship Shiva at the fortressed sacred site. By the
mid-19th century, sailors, the high priest and other pilgrims visited the rock,
broke a coconut and said prayers, performing sacred rites every January. Fruits
and other offerings were often cast over the edge of the cliff, falling to the
ruins below.
The first photograph of the shrine's remains and its
promontory was taken in 1870. Literature on the shrine began to be written as
the site began to regain popularity among pilgrims. Thirukonasala
Puranam was written during the 19th century by Tamil scholar
Masilamanipillai Muttucumaru on the temple and the Thirukonasala Vaipavam on Koneswaram was written by V.
Akilesapillai in 1889, published sixty years later in 1952.
Idol
recovery, ruins and 20th Century Reconstruction:
In 1950, the Urban Council of Trincomalee recovered a number of the original shrine's
statues buried five hundred yards from the Koneswaram site. The discovery
occurred during digging for a water
well. The statues are of gold and copper alloy bronze and are believed to be from the tenth century A.D.
They depict a seated figure of Shiva (in the form of Somaskanda), Shiva as Chandrasekhar, his consort goddess Parvati, the goddess Mathumai Ambal and Lord Ganesha. They were taken in procession around the region
before being reinstalled at Koneswaram.
Other Koneswaram statues that survived remain at the Ati
Konanayakar temple. A pillar from the original temple stands under a
decorated Vilvam (Aegle marmelos) tree on Swami Rock. In 1956, while scuba
diving, photographer Mike Wilson and
author Arthur C. Clarke discovered ruins from the sunken original temple
spread on the shallow surrounding sea-bed. Relics found by Wilson and Clarke
included masonry, architecture, idol images, carved columns with flower
insignias, and stones in the form of elephant heads.
These ruins, as well as the pillar on Swami Rock,
display Tamil, Pallava, and Chola architectural influence of the 3rd–9th century era. Corroborated
by the discovery of Pallava Grantha and Chola script inscriptions and Hindu images
found in the premises, this suggests that the dynasties took a keen interest in
the temple. Wilson and Clarke also retrieved the legendary Swayambu lingam from the ocean floor. According to legend, this
large natural stone obelisk was one of 69 naturally occurring lingams from time
immemorial originally found on Mount Kailash of Tibet and housed in Koneswaram
by King Ravana – his most sacred power object from mythological
times. This lingam was reinstalled at the Koneswaram site.
Publishing their findings in the 1957 book The
Reefs of Taprobane, Clarke expresses admiration for Swami rock's three-thousand-year
veneration by Hindus. Identifying at least three Hindu temples as having
been built on and around Swami rock, Clarke describes the tenth century A.D.
Koneswaram idols as "among the finest examples of Hindu bronze sculpture
known to exist", the seated Shiva Chola
bronze "a masterpiece" and
the battered stone work at the foot of Swami Rock as "probably the most
photographed underwater ruins in the world." 350 years after its
destruction, Sri
Lankan Tamil Hindu people of
Trincomalee organized the temple restoration committee to restore the temple;
the old images were reinstalled amid opening ceremonies in the newly restored
shrine on 3 March 1963.
Some of the artefacts from the demolished temple,
including De Sa de Noronha's translation of the prophecy sent to Portugal, are
kept in the Ajuda Library of Lisbon (Bibliotheca da Ajuda), along with a painting and
map of the original shrine. The chronicler António Bocarro shows three monuments of the Trincomalee
Koneswaram Temple Compounds on the extremity of the peninsula in his map of
the Livro das plantas das
fortalezas cidades e povoaçois do Estado da India Oriental document of 1635, but these temples are missing
from the copy of the document stored at the Paço Ducal di Vila Viçosa library in Lisbon.
The stone inscription discovered by the temple's
destroyer has a Double-Fish insignia and its engraved prophecy, translated from
ancient Tamil script, warns of the "coming of the Franks" after the
16th century. The prediction reads "O King! The franks shall
later break down the holy edifice built by Kullakottan in ancient times; and no
future kings of this island will rebuild it. Following the successive reigns of
the cat eyed, the red eyed and the smoke eyed nations it will voluntarily
revert to the Tamils." Pandyan king Jatavarman Veera Pandiyan’s
insignia of the old Koneswaram temple and a portion of the prophetic
inscription are seen today at the door entrance to Fort Fredrick. The
Kumbhabhishekams were performed during 1963 and 1981.
Buddhist
Claims & Conflicts:
A temple dedicated to a deity in "Gokarna"
city is mentioned in a 5th century A.D. religious and historical
literary work called Mahavamsa. It mentions that Mahasena (334–361) a Mahayanist zealot known for his temple destructions, who ruled a
central kingdom of the island from the southern city of Anuradhapura destroyed temples dedicated to a deity in Gokarna
and built Buddhist Viharas in its place. A twelfth-century commentary on
Mahavamsa indicates that the destroyed deity temple had a lingam – a form of Shiva in it. The interpretation of
deity temples into specifically a Siva temple by the commentary on Mahavamsa is
disputed by Sinhalese writers such as Bandu De Silva.
Sri Lanka has had a history of conflict between its
minority Hindu Tamils and majority Sinhalese Buddhists since its political
independence from Great Britain in 1948 which led to the Sri Lankan Civil War. Since the 1950s Sinhalese Buddhists have claimed that
the Tirukoneswaram temple was originally exclusively a Buddhist temple. They
cite and interpret historical information of three Pagodas at the Koneswaram
site as alluding to Buddhist temples. Buddhists have also claimed that the
site was the location of the ancient Gokarna
Vihara built by King Mahasena.
It was also based on an assertion made by
historian Senarath Paranavithana in reading a 13th century Sanskrit donative inscription in Grantha Tamil script made
by a Chodaganga Deva found in the Hindu temple's premises. The inscription
reads that Deva landed in Gokarna in 1223. No evidence, archaeological or
otherwise, supports the claim the Vihara existed at the site. Other sources
indicate that the complex may have had Hindu and Buddhist sections prior to its
destruction.
In 1968, the unity government of majority Sinhalese
dominated United National Party and the minority Tamil dominated Federal Party collapsed over disagreements about declaring the
holy Hindu site a protected area. A committee appointed by a Federal Party
Minister to study the viability of declaring the site protected was disbanded
without consultation by the Prime Minister at the time, Dudley
Senanayake, after receiving a letter of
complaint from a prominent Buddhist monk who objected because the temple area
would "get into the hands" of those "who are neither Sinhalese
or Buddhist".
The Federal Party withdrew its support to the government
following that action. According to journalists like T. Sabaratnam, this
incident had negative repercussions towards the future co-operation between
Tamil and Sinhalese communities. The temple and its environs are currently
occupied by the Sri Lankan Army, which maintains a base at Fort Frederick. On
21 September 2008, the chief priest of the temple Sivashri Kugarajakurrukal was
assassinated in a campaign that has targeted Hindu priests in the region.
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