Città di Bandarawela
Fuggite tra gli spettacolari altopiani di Bandarawela, dove il nostro accogliente rifugio vi invita a vivere un'esperienza di serenità e avventura. Godetevi panorami mozzafiato, esplorate le piantagioni di tè e immergetevi nella ricca cultura di questa affascinante cittadina collinare. Il vostro idilliaco rifugio a Bandarawela vi aspetta.
Dowa Raja Maha Viharaya
Dowa Raja Maha Viharaya (also known as Dowa Cape Temple) lies few kilometres away from the Bandarawela town on the Bandarawela – Badulla Road. This temple is thought to be done by King Walagamba in the in first century BC. This is one of the many temples built by the king while taking refuge in the Uva Province after an Indian invasion.
The temple has gain popularity mainly due to its massive 38 feet Buddha Statue carved in the granite rock. But this temple also hides some secrets that time has forgotten.
The uncompleted image of the Buddha is carved out of a granite boulder which is well hidden form the main road. No much of attention has been given to this statue and it seems to be slowly breaking up. At the top pf the boulder is a small stupa. This stupa is the on the same level as the road and it is the only indication of a temple to a traveler on the road.
At the rear of the image house is a small stupa inside a cave. Behind this stupa, inside the cave is a tunnel called the Ravana Guhawa guarded by a figure of a Clay King Cobra. This 11 km long tunnel is said to be connecting the Ravana Maha Viharaya at Ella and the Bogoda Raja Maha Viharaya. But unfortunately this tunnel entrance has been sealed off with cement by the temple due to various vandalism acts by treasure hunters. It said that the king disappeared from the area overnight using the the tunnels and thus the working on the Buddha Statue was abruptly stopped.
The Image house built inside the cave is full of colourful murals and Buddha Images and consist of 3 chambers. On the sides of the main entrance to the image house is two guardians, one with a elephant in its mouth and the other with a bull (?) in its mouth. It is said to be they are Watuka and Kuvera, two Rakshasa tribal leaders, guarding the entrance to the shrine room. The door frame of the Image House in the temple is made out of solid rock and has a inscription to say it was built in 1880. The outer most chamber is filled with murals from the Kandyan Era. Entrance to the second chamber is decorated with a elaborated Makara Thorana . In the second chamber is a row of Buddha images along with paintings. The rock canopy is decorated with various motifs. Hidden in these decorations is a rare painting of “Eth – Gon Satana” ( a elephant – bull fight )
Entrance to the 3rd chamber is a simple wooden door and inside is two reclining statues of Buddha along the contours of the cave.
The Bo Tree is on a higher elevation than the image house. On this platform is a small pond surrounding a rock. This rock forms a natural water sprout and water continuously flow through small openings at the the top of the rock.
Informazioni sul distretto di Badulla
Badulla è il capoluogo della provincia di Uva, in Sri Lanka. Badulla si trova a sud-est di Kandy, quasi completamente circondata dal fiume Badulu Oya, a circa 680 metri (2200 piedi) sul livello del mare ed è circondata da piantagioni di tè. La città è dominata dalla catena montuosa Namunukula. Badulla dista circa 230 km da Colombo, verso le pendici orientali delle colline centrali dello Sri Lanka.
Badulla e i suoi dintorni sono altamente raccomandati per gli ecoturisti, poiché il Parco Nazionale di Horton Plains e i monti Knuckles sono raggiungibili in poche ore.
Luoghi speciali a Badulla: il tempio di Muthiyangana, il tempio di Dhowa, l'antico ponte di legno di Bogoda, le cascate di Rawana.
Informazioni sulla provincia di Uva
La provincia di Uva è la seconda provincia meno popolata dello Sri Lanka, con 1.187.335 abitanti, creata nel 1896. È composta da due distretti chiamati Badulla e Monaragala. Il capoluogo di provincia è Badulla. Uva confina con le province orientale, meridionale e centrale. Le sue principali attrazioni turistiche sono le cascate di Dunhinda, le cascate di Diyaluma, le cascate di Rawana, il Parco Nazionale di Yala (che si estende in parte nelle province meridionale e orientale) e il Parco Nazionale di Gal Oya (che si estende in parte nella provincia orientale). Le colline di Gal Oya e le montagne centrali costituiscono gli altopiani principali, mentre i fiumi Mahaweli e Menik e gli enormi bacini idrici di Senanayake Samudraya e Maduru Oya sono i principali corsi d'acqua della provincia di Uva.