Kanniya Hot Springs

Kanniya Hot Spring Kanniya Hot Spring Kanniya Hot Spring

The Kanniya Hot Springs (Sinhala: ??????? ?????? ???, Tamil: ??????? ????????????) is a site with hot wells located in Trincomalee, Sri Lanka. There are seven wells in a square shape. Wells are only 3–4 feet deep and you can clearly see the bottom. The temperature is considerably high but vary slightly from one spring to another. Wells run out of water, when 10-15 buckets of water are taken out

History

The old ruins of the monastery still visible over the area, but it seems that most of those artifacts were destroyed during the Sri Lankan Civil War. On 9 September 2011, the seven hot water wells, Chaitya mound and other scattered building ruins in the site were formally recognised by the Government as archaeological protected monuments. The designation was declared under the government Gazette number 1723

A Stupa mound belonging to the early Anuradhapura period and an inscription of 1-2 centuries A.D. were found from the recent archaeological excavations done at the site. The inscription reveals that the waters of five tanks located in nearby area were reserved for the usage of Buddhist monks who were residing in a temple.

In the Ceylon Gazetteer of 1834, the remains of a temple sacred to Ganesha are documented at the site of the hot wells.

In a handbook for travellers published in 1955, the seven hot springs at Kanniya are described as being sacred to Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims alike. The ruins of a dagoba, a Vishnu temple and a mosque are said to stand together near the site. The book further describes the local tradition that the wells were created by Ravana

Legend

Religious Hindu rituals dedicated to lost loved ones are observed by the Sri Lankan Tamils at this site, believed in folklore to have been started by Ravana, antagonist of the epic Ramayana. According to local folklore, this site is connected with the antagonist Ravana of the Hindu epic, Ramayana. Ravana and his mother worshipped Hindu God Shiva at the Koneswaram temple and the Hot springs of Kanniya. Ravana wanted to remove the temple of Koneswaram when his mother was in ailing health. As Ravana was heaving the rock, Lord Shiva made him drop his sword. When Ravana's mother heard the news, she was wrought with unbeatable sorrow. When Ravana returned, he found his beloved mother's demise and was disheartened. To perform his mother's rites, Ravana stuck the earth with his sword in several spots and several fountains sprang from these points. The water was hot and such was the beginning of the hot water springs

Mahabharata, the Hindu epic notes that hot well is near Gokarna bay, in the middle of the ocean and is the island shrine of Uma's consort Shiva, known in the three worlds and worshipped by all peoples from the subcontinent, including the native tribes Naga, Deva and the Yaksha, the rivers, ocean and mountains. It continues that the Koneshwara Temple and Hot water spring is the next pilgrimage spot for Hindus en route south following Kanyakumari of the early Pandyan kingdom and Tamiraparni islan

트린코말리 지역 소개

트린코말리는 스리랑카 동해안에 위치한 항구 도시입니다. 트린코말리 만은 넓은 규모와 안전한 항구로 유명합니다. 인도양의 다른 항구들과 달리 트린코말리는 날씨에 관계없이 모든 종류의 선박이 드나들 수 있습니다. 해변은 서핑, 스쿠버 다이빙, 낚시, 고래 관찰에 적합합니다. 또한 스리랑카에서 가장 큰 네덜란드 요새가 있습니다. 스리랑카의 주요 해군 기지와 공군 기지가 이곳에 있습니다.

대부분의 타밀족과 싱할라족은 이 지역 원주민으로서 이곳을 자신들에게 신성한 장소로 여깁니다. 트린코말리와 그 주변에는 역사적으로 중요한 힌두교 및 불교 유적지가 있습니다. 이러한 유적지는 힌두교와 불교 신도 모두에게 신성한 곳입니다.

동부 지방 소개

동부 지방은 스리랑카의 9개 지방 중 하나입니다. 이 지방들은 19세기부터 존재해 왔지만, 1978년 스리랑카 헌법 제13차 개정으로 지방 의회가 설립된 1987년까지는 법적 지위를 갖지 못했습니다. 1988년부터 2006년까지 이 지방은 북부 지방과 일시적으로 합병되어 북동부 지방을 형성했습니다. 이 지방의 주도는 트링코말리입니다. 동부 지방의 인구는 2007년 기준 1,460,939명이었습니다. 이 지방은 민족적, 종교적으로 스리랑카에서 가장 다양한 지방입니다.

동부 지방의 면적은 9,996제곱킬로미터(3,859.5제곱마일)입니다. 이 지방은 북쪽으로 북부 지방, 동쪽으로 벵골 만, 남쪽으로 남부 지방, 서쪽으로 우바, 중부, 북중부 지방으로 둘러싸여 있습니다. 이 지방의 해안은 석호로 이루어져 있으며, 가장 큰 석호로는 바티칼로아 석호, 코킬라이 석호, 우파르 석호, 울라칼리 석호가 있습니다.