Senarath Paranavithana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Senarath Paranavitana
Born (1896-12-26)26 December 1896
Metaramba, Galle, Sri Lanka
Died 4 October 1972(1972-10-04) (aged 75)
Nationality Sri Lanka Sri Lankan
Ethnicity Sinhalese
Education Metaramba Government School,Bona Vista School Galle, Leiden University
Occupation Archeologist and an Epigraphist
Religion Theravada Buddhism
Spouse(s) Roslyn Kitulgoda
Old photograph of Senarath Paranavitana

Senarath Paranavitana (Sinhala:සෙනරත් පරණවිතාන) (26 December 1896 – 4 October 1972) was a pioneering archeologist and epigraphist of Sri Lanka. His works dominated Sri Lankan archaeology and history in the middle-part of the 20th century. He became the Archeological Commissioner in 1940, following H. C. P. Bell, and Don Martino de Zilva Wickremasinghe in that position.

Paranavitana was born on 26 December 1896 at Metaramba, Galle, and had his early education at the Metaramba Government School. He later entered Bona Vista School in Galle. He studied Oriental languages at Ranweligoda Pirivena in Heenatigala and was a school teacher at the Udugampola Government School. Paranavitana joined the Department of Archaeology in 1923. He married in 1930. Paranavitana received his Ph.D. degree in 1936 from the University of Leiden and was appointed Archaeological Commissioner on 1 October 1940 in which capacity he served diligently till December, 1956.[1] The next year, in 1957, he was appointed Professor of Archeology at the Peradeniya campus of the University of Ceylon.

Even though Paranavitana's period began with the onset of the Second World War, his erudition and energy resulted in seventeen fruitful years as the Archaeological Commissioner of Ceylon. Sri Lankan history and prehistory were illuminated by his academic and popular writings which are filled with insight, profound learning and a vital sense of history. Known for his contributions to and editing of Epigraphia Zeylanica, his most celebrated magnum opus was Sigiri Graffiti, published in two folio volumes by Oxford University Press.[2]

Some of the epigraphical texts published after Paranavitana's retirement present a number of problems for historians. In 1996, for example, Ananda W. P. Guruge subjected his later work to detailed scruntiny in his paper "Senarat Paranavitana as a Writer of Historical Fiction in Sanskrit."[3] The problem was reviewed comprehensively a short time later by D. P. M. Weerakkody.[4] The general consensus that has emerged subsequent to these publications is that all of Paranavitana's later readings need to be double-checked before being treated as sound epigraphic and historical evidence.

Paranavitana made numerous contributions to foreign and local journals in the fields of epigraphy, history, art, architecture, religion, languages and literature, most notably the University of Ceylon Review. The following monographs may be noted specifically:[5]

  • The Shrine of Upulvan at Devundara (1953)
  • The God of Adam's Peak (1958)
  • Ceylon and Malaysia (1961)
  • Inscriptions of Ceylon Vol.l (1970)
  • The Greeks and the Mauryas (1971)[6]
  • Arts of Ancient Sinhalese (1971)
  • Inscriptions of Ceylon Vol. ll (published posthumously)
  • Story of Sigiriya (published posthumously)
  • Sinhalayo

Notes

  1. Premasara Epasinghe, "Dr. Senarat Paranavitana - Father of Archaeology," Daily News, 26 December 2008. Retrieved online June 2012 from http://www.dailynews.lk/2008/12/26/fea02.asp
  2. S. Paranavitana, Sigiri Graffiti. Being Sinhalese verses of the eighth, ninth and tenth centuries, 2 vols. London: Oxford University Press, for the Archaeological Survey, Ceylon, 1956.
  3. Ananda W. P. Guruge, "Senarat Paranavitana as a Writer of Historical Fiction in Sanskrit," Vidyodaya Journal of Soc. Science 7 (1996), pp. 156-79.
  4. D. P. M. Weerakkody, Taprobanê: Ancient Sri Lanka as known to Greeks and Romans (Brépols, Turnhout, Belgium, 1997), pp. 184-95.
  5. Online listing here: http://copac.ac.uk/search?author=PARANAVITA%CC%84NA,%20Senerat.
  6. Reviewed by Ludo Rocher, Journal of the American Oriental Society 95 (1975), p. 141 see http://www.jstor.org/stable/599270.

External links

External links in Sinhala

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.