GUARDSTONE (Muragala)
GUARDSTONE (Muragala)
GUARDSTONE (Muragala)
The rectangular blocks of stone which stand on each side of the steps at the
Guardstones.
The special word used for them is not known from any ancient source, but
beings, the latter being taken, so to say, as guards, the name of Guardstone
Some of the figures, especially the Nāga-rājas with multiple cobra hoods
forming an aura round the head, are works of great beauty which contain a
Rarely and in the remote districts away from metropolitan influences and
But these were apparently haphazard motifs, not falling into any scheme
obviously a motif was selected from one of several. In this selection there
The design could not have been picked up at random. In other words we
faces:
bhūta)
3. Nāga-rāja
He inferred this from the circumstance that he did not find the Bahirava
Polonnaruva.
The Sinhalese Buddhist who sets out on a journey would seek no better
sign of the outcome of his mission than that a person with a pot full of
The water- filled pot placed at the entrance greets the eye of the invitee to
inauspicious sign. The pot is more natural, with flowers, leaves and stalks.
These would realistically convey the idea of fullness. In the early carved
Bahirava
demons, living close to the earth, guarding buried treasures and requiring
revealed.
Most pairs of Bahiravas wear on their head a stylized padma (Lotus) and
the saṅkha (Shell), respectively, which are expressed in the artistic idiom.
The largest of these pairs are in Abhayagiri Dageba, Anuradhapura, where
In the course of time the restrictions were relaxed and human figures
became prominent. It was also possible that, at the same time, a number of
inchoate ideas (one being that of a guard) were associated with the (human)
Bahirava apart from the very specific reason for his existence here on a
Guardstone.
The most prominent of them is his pot-belly, and we are of the opinion that
this is exactly why the motif was selected in preference to many another,
when the time was considered ripe for an animate device to take the place
Again, he noted that the idea of water is further indicated by lotus and shell.
There- fore, he suggests that the idea of the Pot filled with water is precisely
the idea which the Bahirava represents; that though the visible form has
From literary sources we gather that Saṅkha and Padma were two gate-
Saṅkha and Padma are water-spirits; they are associated with the nāgas
the chiefs of the tribe of serpents. The general idea prevails in Nepal and
Naga Rāja
Sri Lanka, too, has some believes on Naga spirits. This connection is
They belong to the fifth or sixth century at the latest and show the Naga-
much larger size than when the pair are represented together in later times.
Later on, the Naga-raja came to be prominent and the Bahirava was
suggest that it is because of the same symbolic idea. "In Buddhist tradition
both Varuna and Sagara, really gods of the sea, have become converted
Bahirava)
Every Naga-raja carries a pot in one hand and holds a long spray in the
other. These unvarying features convey an exact idea and take us back to
The stūpa was close to the embankment of a reservoir and dated about the
Yapahuva, a fourteenth- century rock citadel: They are women and each is
holding up a jar in one hand. We can see how though the outward form has
changed, yet the symbol itself has remained through the many centuries