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Anula of Anuradhapura

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Queen of Anuradhapura
Anula
Queen of Anuradhapura
Reign48 BC – 44 BC
PredecessorNiliya
SuccessorKutakanna Tissa
BornKingdom of Anuradhapura
Died42 BC
Kingdom of Anuradhapura
ConsortChora Naga
Kuda Tissa
ReligionBuddhism

Queen Anula of Anuradhapura (died 44 BC) was the first queen regnant inSri Lankan history (48 BC – 44 BC). Anula initially rose to power as a consort of KingChora Naga (also known as Coranaga and Mahanaga), son of KingValagambahu ofAnuradhapura. However, in her five-year reign, she poisoned her way through at least four other husbands and consorts, causing her to governRajarata on her own eventually.[1][2]

Queen Anula of Anuradhapura differs from another famous figure in Sri Lankan history, also named Anula. She is a different figure as she is KingDevanampiyatissa's sister-in-law, the first woman in Sri Lanka to be ordained as abikkhuni. The primary source for Anula's reign is theMahavamsa, chapters 34 and 35.

Life

[edit]

Queen Anula is known to have lived during the 1st century BC. During this era, Sri Lanka was in an unstable state as it was at war. Many betrayals and strife occurred due to this circumstance, causing many rulers to be overthrown. It is also clear that people were hungry for power – they did anything they could to obtain significant control over the place.

Sri Lanka was also governed by the Kingdom of Anuradhapura, which was established around the 4th century BC until the 10th century AD. Anuradhapura was the capital of the kingdom, which was a city located in North Central Province in Sri Lanka. This capital was located approximately 127 miles north of Colombo, which is the island's current capital. The city is now known as the UNESCO World Heritage Site.

In the 1st century BC, the Anuradhapura Kingdom was administered by an individual named Chora Naga, who is a progeny of Vijaya, which was known as Mahanaga. According to the Mahavamsa, Chora Naga, the son of Vattagamani Abhaya, was perceived as a dissident figure during the time by which his father's successor –Mahakuli – ruled. When Mahaculi Mahatissa died,Coranaga took over his position and became the new King of Anuradhapura. He was known to have ruled the kingdom for approximately 12 years.[3][4]

Chora Naga destroyed “eighteen viharas (Buddhist monasteries),” as stated by theMahavamsa, in a time by which he couldn't find refuge or protection during the rebellion era. The Mahavamsa claims he is a “fool” because of this occurrence.

Reign

[edit]

After ruling the kingdom for 12 years, Chora Naga died after the ingestion of poisoned food given to him by his consort, known as "the infamous Anula".[3] The reason why Anula murders her husband is unclear. However, it is known that during her marriage with Chora Naga, she was intrigued by the palace guard named Kuda Tissa, the son of Mahakuli Mahatissa.

Because of the power that Queen Anula held, marrying Kuda Tissa brought him to power, making him the new King of Anuradhapura.[5]

The nameKuda also meanslittle. Therefore, it is possible that the new king was only a child and, effectively, under Anula's control. He ruled for around three years before his death.

The Mahavamsa mentions, “And for love of this same palace-guard Anula now killed Tissa also by poison and gave the government into the hands of that other.” This indicates that Anula was attracted to a different palace guard named Sivia, who gained power and became the new king. The cycle repeats as Sivia is also then murdered through poison by Anula after only about a year and two months of ruling the kingdom.

Queen Anula is known to marry people from the lower class, such as a carpenter named Vatuka, a wood carrier, known as Darubathika Tissa, and one from the higher class, which was a palace priest named Niliya. With all these husbands, she would poison them to gain power herself eventually and rule the Kingdom of Anuradhapura.

This was stated in The Mahavamsa as it says: “When the princess Anula (who desired to take her pleasure even as she listed with thirty-two of the palace-guards) had put to death Niliya also with poison, the queen ANULA herself, reigned four months.”

Deposition and death

[edit]

Her power over the kingdom was cut short asKutakanna Tissa, the second son of Mahaculi, arrived back in Anuradhapura after fleeing the place due to fear of Anula. During his time when he was fleeing the kingdom, Kutakanna formed an alliance with many individuals, producing an army to fight Queen Anula. He then “burned the licentious Anula in the palace” (Mahavamsa) on a funeral pyre after his army found her in the palace.[3][4]

Kutakanna Tissa then became the new ruler of Anuradhapura and governed the kingdom for 32 years.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Holt, John (2004-12-29),"The Buddhist Visnu: Religious Transformation, Politics, and Culture",The Buddhist Visnu, Columbia University Press,doi:10.7312/holt13322,ISBN 978-0-231-50814-8, retrieved2024-01-20{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  2. ^Devadas, Udaya Mohan; Silva, Ariyamuni Priyanthi (2017), Cho, Yonjoo; Ghosh, Rajashi; Sun, Judy Y.; McLean, Gary N. (eds.),"Underrepresentation of Women in Leadership in Sri Lanka",Current Perspectives on Asian Women in Leadership: A Cross-Cultural Analysis, Current Perspectives on Asian Women in Leadership, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 139–159,doi:10.1007/978-3-319-54996-5_9,ISBN 978-3-319-54996-5, retrieved2024-01-20{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  3. ^abc"Mahavamsa - 33".www.budsas.org. Retrieved2017-08-30.
  4. ^ab"Mahavamsa - 34".www.budsas.org. Retrieved2017-08-30.
  5. ^Blaze, L. E. (2004).History of Ceylon. Asian Educational Services.ISBN 978-81-206-1841-1.
Anula of Anuradhapura
Anuradhapura monarchs
Regnal titles
Preceded byQueen of Anuradhapura
48 BC – 44 BC
Succeeded by
Pre-Anuradhapura period
House of Vijaya (543–237 BCE)
Anuradhapura period
House of Vijaya (543–237 BCE)
Chola dynasty (237–215 BCE)
House of Vijaya (215–205 BCE)
Chola dynasty (205–161 BCE)
House of Vijaya (161–103 BCE)
The Five Dravidians (103–89 BCE)
House of Vijaya (89 BCE–66 CE)
House of Lambakanna I (66–436)
The Six Dravidians (436–463)
House of Moriya (463–691)
House of Lambakanna II (691–1017)
Anuradhapura from Rohana
Polonnaruwa period
House of Vijayabahu (1055–1187)
House of Kalinga (1187–1197)
House of Vijayabahu (1197–1200)
House of Kalinga (1200–1209)
House of Vijayabahu (1209–1210)
Lokissara (1210–1211)
House of Vijayabahu (1211–1212)
Pandyan dynasty (1212–1215)
Eastern Ganga dynasty (1215–1236)
Transitional period
House of Siri Sanga Bo (1220–1597)
House of Senasammata Vikramabahu (1469–1592)
Kandyan period
House of Vimaladharmasuriya (1592–1739)
Nayaks of Kandy (1739–1815)
Italics indicate regent.·♀ indicate the queen.
(543 BC–66 AD)
Kingdom of Tambapanni
(543 BC–437 BC)
Kingdom of Anuradhapura
(437 BC–237 BC)
(215 BC–205 BC)
(161 BC–103 BC)
(89 BC–66 AD)
regent
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