Prehistory of Sri Lanka

Prehistory of Sri Lanka

The Prehistory of Sri Lanka dates back to about 125,000 BP and possibly even as early as 500,000 BP and covers the Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and early Iron ages. Evidence of a transition between the Mesolithic and the Iron age is scant.

Fluctuations in sea level led to Sri Lanka being linked to the Indian subcontinent from time to time over the past million years. The last such link occurred about 5000 BC.Deraniyagala (1996)]

Palaeolithic

Findings at Iranamadu indicate that there were Paeolithic people in Sri Lanka as early as 300,000 BP.Pichumani (2004)] There is definite evidence of settlements by prehistoric people in Sri Lanka by about 125,000 BP. These people made tools of quartz andchert which are assignable to the Middle Palaeolithic period.

Mesolithic

The island appears to have been colonised by the Balangoda People (named after the area where their remains were discovered) prior to 34,000 BP. They have been identified as a group of Mesolithic hunter gatherers who lived in caves. Fa Hien Cave has yielded the earliest evidence (at ca. 34,000 BP) of anatomically modern man in South Asia.

Several of these caves including the well known Batadombalena and the Fa-Hien cave) have yielded many artefacts that points to them being the first modern inhabitants of the island. There is evidence from Beli-lena that salt had been brought in from the coast earlier than 27,000 BP

Several minute granite tools of about 4 centimetres in length, earthenware and remnants of charred timber, and clay burial pots that date back to the Stone Age Mesolithic Man who lived 8000 years ago have been discovered during recent excavations around a cave at Varana Raja Maha vihara & also in Kalatuwawa area.

It is suspected that the hunter gatherer people known as the Wanniyala-Aetto or Veddas, who still live in the Central, Uva and North-Eastern parts of the island may be descendants of the Balangoda people.

The skeletal remains of dogs from Nilgala cave and from Bellanbandi Palassa, dating from the Mesolithic era, about 4500 BC, suggest that Balangoda People may have kept domestic dogs for driving game. The Sinhala Hound is similar in appearance to the Kadar Dog, the New Guinea Dog and the Dingo. It has been suggested that these could all derive from a common domestic stock. It is also possible that they may have domesticated jungle fowl, pig, water buffalo and some form of Bos (possibly the ancestor of the Sri Lankan neat cattle which became extinct in the 1940s.) [Deraniyagala (1992), p. 454]

The Balangoda People appear to have been responsible for creating Horton Plains, in the central hills, by burning the trees in order to catch game. However, evidence from the plains suggests the incipient management of Oats and Barley by about 15,000 BC.Deraniyagala, nd]

Mesolithic-Iron age transition

The transition in Sri Lanka from the Mesolithic to the Iron Age has been not been adequately documented. A human skeleton found at Godavaya in the Hambantota district, provisionally dated back to 3000 - 5000 BC was accompanied by tools of animal-bone and stone. [http://www.lankadeepa.lk/2008/08/21/front_news/01.htm Walawe gang moayen ipærani maanavayek, Lankadeepa, 21 August 2008.]

However, evidence from Horton Plains indicates the existence of agriculture by about 8000 BC, including herding of "Bos" and cultivation of oats and barley. Excavations in the cave of Dorawaka-kanda near Kegalle indicate the use about 4300 BC of pottery, together with stone stools, and possibly cereal cultivation.

Slag found at Mantai dated to about 1800 BC could indicate the knowledge of copper-working.

Cinnamon, which is native to Sri Lanka, was in use in Ancient Egypt in about 1500 BC, suggesting that there were trading links with the island. It is possible that Biblical Tarshish was located on the island (James Emerson Tennent identified it with Galle). [Galle : "Tarshish" of the Old Testament]

Early Iron age

A large settlement appears to have been founded before 900 BC at the site of Anuradhapura where signs of an Iron Age culture have been found. The size of the settlement was about 15 hectares at that date, but it expanded to 50 ha, to 'town' size within a couple of centuries. A similar site has been discovered at Aligala in Sigiriya. [Deraniyagala, 2003]

The earliest chronicles the Dipavamsa and Mahavamsa say that the island was inhabited by tribes of Yakkhas (demons), Nagas (cobras) and devas (gods). [Mahawamsa, chapter 1] These may refer to totemist iron age autochthones.

Pottery dating back to 600 BC has been found at Anuradhapura, bearing Brāhmī script (the earliest extant examples of the script) and non-Brahmi writing, which may have arisen through contact with Semitic trading scripts from West Asia.

The emergence of new forms of pottery at the same time as the writing, together with other artifacts such as red glass beads, indicate a new cultural impulse, possibly an invasion from North India. The Brahmi writing appears to be in Indo-Aryan Prakrit and is almost identical to the Asokan script some 200 years later); none appears to be in Dravidian - corroborating the view that Indo-Aryan was pre-dominant from at least as early as 500 BC in Sri Lanka.

Notes

References

*Citation
last = Deraniyagala
first = Siran U
authorlink =
title = Early Man and the Rise of Civilisation in Sri Lanka: the Archaeological Evidence
publisher = WWW Virtual Library Sri Lanka
date = nd
url = http://www.lankalibrary.com/geo/dera2.html
accessdate =09-08-2008

*cite book
last = Deraniyagala
first = Siran
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = The Prehistory of Sri Lanka
publisher = Department of Archaeological Survey
date = 1992
location = Colombo
pages = 454
isbn = 955 9159 00 3

*Citation
last = Deraniyagala
first = Siran U
authorlink =
title = Pre- and Protohistoric settlement in Sri Lanka
work = XIII U. I. S. P. P. Congress Proceedings- Forli, 8 – 14 September 1996
publisher = International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences
date = 1996
url = http://www.lankalibrary.com/geo/dera1.html
accessdate =09-08-2008

*Citation
last = Deraniyagala
first = Siran U
author-link =
title = The Urban Phenomenon in South Asia: a Sri Lankan Perspective
work = Urban Landscape Dynamics - symposium; Abstracts
publisher = Uppsala University
year = 2003
url =http://www.arkeologi.uu.se/afr/symposium/abstracts/Deraniyagala1.htm
accessdate =09-08-2008

*Citation
title = Galle : "Tarshish" of the Old Testament
work =
publisher = WWW Virtual Library Sri Lanka
date =
url = http://www.lankalibrary.com/heritage/galle6.htm
accessdate =09-08-2008

*Citation
last = Geiger (trans)
first = Wilhelm
coauthors = Mahanama
title = Mahawamsa
url = http://lakdiva.org/mahavamsa/chap001.html
accessdate =09-08-2008

*Citation
last = Pichumani
first = K
authorlink =
coauthors = T S Subramanian, S U Deraniyagala
title = Prehistoric basis for the rise of civilisation in Sri Lanka and southern India
journal = Frontline
volume = 21
issue = 12
date = 05 - 18 June 2004
url =http://www.lankalibrary.com/geo/prehistory.htm
accessdate =09-08-2008


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