At the moment when Ritigala Jayasena's head was severed by the kick, he remembered Lord Saturn. So, seeing what had happened, Lord Saturn, who was suddenly disturbed, took a varahek's head and attached it to Jayasena's head, which was separated from the head. It is said that Jayasena, who was resurrected, gave birth to the great grave devil or "Mahasona".
The mountains intercept moisture-bearing winds and generate orographic precipitation, which makes the mountains wetter than the surrounding lowlands. During the northeast monsoon (December to February), Ritigala experiences the highest rainfall (125 cm) in the entire dry zone.
The wet micro-climate at Ritigala is a singular occurrence in the north central plains, ancient Sri Lanka’s “Wewu Bandi Rata” meaning “the land of rainwater reservoirs” in Sinhalese.
The climate at the summit is in sharp contrast to the climate at the foot; it is cooler in comparison to the hot and dry climate of the region. The mist and cloud cover which cover the summit during the southwest monsoon results in high vapor condensation, in turn, turning the earth moist when the plains all around are in a drought.
According to popular belief, non-human Lord Hanuman of supernatural powers traveled over Ritigala, and, by accident, dropped a chunk off a mountain of the Himalayan range he was carrying from India to Lanka for its medicinal herbs. Lord Rama's brother, Prince Lakshmana was mortally wounded in battle and only a rare herb in the Himalayas could save his life. The pocket of vegetation of healing herbs and plants at the strange mini-plateau at the summit of Ritigala, which is distinct from the dry-zone flora of the lower slopes and surrounding plains at Ritigala, could thus be accounted for.
Lord Hanuman has visited Lanka on a previous occasion. That was when he was sent by Lord Rama in search of his consort Sita. It was King Ravana, who seized Sita from Parnasali in India, the holy hut of Lord Rama, and brought her to Asok Vana, a beautiful park at Sita Eliya (close to Nuwara Eliya or Little England, as the British called it three millennia later) on the Pusparaga (Dadumonara) in an air chariot, without touching her. (The peacock logo of Air Lanka, the predecessor of Sri Lankan Airlines and successor of Air Ceylon, is a stylized version of Rawana’s air chariot.) Having found the location where Sita was held, Hanuman made use of Ritigala Kanda as a launching pad to take a leap across to South India. Incidentally, Ritigala is the highest prominence between the central plains of Sri Lanka and the coast of southern India.
The ruins of Ritigala monastery are located on the eastern side of the mountain at the foot of the gorge which separates the main peak of the northern ridge of the range. The ruins cover an area of 24 hectares (59 acres). The monastery precinct begins in the office of the on-site branch of the Department of Archeology of Sri Lanka close to the foot of the reservoir named Banda Pokuna. The ancient man-made reservoir is a feat of engineering with a band of polygonal plan completing a circumference of 366 meters. The construction of the reservoir is credited to King Pandukabhaya (437 -367 BC). The reservoir, possibly served a ritual bathing purpose, with visitors, bathing there before entering the monastery.
The order of the ritual bathing tank, ruins of the entrance complex, and a pedestrian path seem to indicate devotees in large numbers visiting the monastery. The procession is similar to that of Kataragama where pilgrims begin with a cleansing bath at the Kataragama Manik river and end with an offering to the God Skanda, the benevolent Hindu deity of Kataragama at the main shrine.
The edge of the reservoir is followed in a clockwise direction to arrive at the other bank and across the bed of the stream feeding the reservoir. The steep steps here onwards lead up to a beautifully constructed pavement, a stone path 1.5 meters wide that meanders upwards through the forest, linking the major buildings of the monastery. The stone cut path is laid with interlocking four-sided slabs of hewn stone. Three large circular platforms at intervals along the pavement allow for rest.
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