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Gardens
of Sigiriya
The gateway to the western precinct lies across the inner
moat. It had an elaborate gate-house made of timber and brick
with a tiled roof. The moat is perfectly aligned with a mountain
peak in the distance
Only
the southern side of the garden has been excavated, leaving
the identical northern half for the archaeologist of the future.
In the entire Sigiri-Bim, over 200 village tanks and rural
sites have been investigated.
The
water gardens of the western precinct are symmetrically planned,
while the boulder garden at a higher level is asymmetrically
planned. The water garden displays one of the worlds most
sophisticated hydraulic technologies, dating from the Early
Historic Period.
This
shows an interconnection of macro- and micro-hydraulics to
provide for domestic horticultural and agricultural needs,
surface drainage and erosion control, ornamental and recreational
water courses and retaining structures and also cooling systems.
The
Macro system consisted of the Sigiri Maha weva, the manmade
lake with a 12 km dam, running south from the base of the
rock, a series of moats, two on the west and one on the east
fed from the lake. At micro level are, the water control and
the water retaining systems at the summit of the rock and
at various levels with horizontal and vertical drains cut
in to the rock and underground conduits made of cylindrical
terracotta pipes.
WATER
GARDENS
The miniature water garden just inside the inner wall of the
western precinct, consists of water pavilions, pools, cisterns,
courtyards, conduits and water courses. The pebbled or marbled
water-surrounds covered by shallow slowly moving water would
have served as cooling devices with an aesthetic appeal with
visual and sound effects, which could be visualised by a visitor
who could spend a little time.
The
largest water garden has a central island surrounded by water
and linked to the main precinct by cardinally-oriented causways.
This was created 5 centuries before those at Angkor in Cambodia
or Mughal gardens in India. The central island would have
been occupied by a large pavilion.
The
water is in four L-shaped pools, connected by underground
water conduits at varying depths, to provide different water
levels. The pool on the south-west, is divided into a large
bathing pool, with a corbelled tunnel and steps leading down
into it. The other pool is smaller with a central boulder
on which was a brick-built pavilion.
The
fountain garden is a narrow precinct on two levels. Western
half has two long and deep pools, with shallow serpentine
streams draining into the pools. These had been paved with
marble slabs. These streams display the fountains, which have
been made from circular limestone plates with symmetrical
perforations, which are fed by underground water conduits
and operate by gravity and pressure. There are two shallow
limestone cisterns which would have served as storage and
pressure chambers for the fountains. These fountains are still
active during the rainy season from November to January.
On
either side of the fountains are four large moated islands
, oriented north-south, cutting across the central axis of
the water garden. This too shows the symmetrical repetition.
The flattened surfaces of the islands were meant for the Summer
Palaces or water pavilions. Access to the pavilions
were across bridges cut into the surface rock.
The
Octagonal pond is at a point where the water garden and the
boulder garden meet, a still higher level from the rest of
the water garden. It is at the base of a towering boulder.
There is a raised podium and a drip ledge, which would have
formed the bathing pavilion . The pond is surrounded by a
wide terrace also octagonal.
BOULDER
GARDEN
The boulder garden at a higher level from the symmetrical
water garden is a totally different organic or asymmetrical
concept, with winding pathways, natural boulders. Almost every
rock and boulder in this garden must have had a building of
brick and timber. It also has the Cistern Rock which has a
large cistern made of huge slabs of granite. There is also
the Audience Hall rock, with a 5 metre long throne carved
out of the rock
The
entrance to the inner citadel (15 hectares) is made of a massive
brick and stone wall, which forms a dramatic backdrop to the
water garden and to the rock and the palace on the summit
towards the east of it. The wall runs from the Octagonal pond
to the bastion on the south-east, which is formed of wide
brick walls linking a series of boulders surrounding a cave
pavilion with a rock-cut throne.
TERRACE
GARDEN
The Terrace Garden at the base of the rock is fashioned out
of the natural hill , made with rubbled retaining walls, each
terrace running in a concentric circle around the rock, each
rising above the other.
The
Palace garden on the summit was the domestic garden with its
terraces and rock cut pools.
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