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Ayurveda Hospitals in ancient Sri
Lanka
by Prof. W. I. Siriweera (Summary of a guest lecture
delivered at the sixth International Medical Congress organised by the
Peradeniya Medical School Alumni Association and the Faculty of Medicine.)
The archaeological evidence as well as references in chronicles and
literature indicate the existence of four types of hospitals during the period
of the Rajarata civilisation. Their gradual growth cannot be traced in stages
but it is certain that towards the late Anuradhapura period they had attained a
fairly advanced stage.
These hospitals can be broadly divided into four
categories viz: (a) monastic hospitals where inhouse treatment was provided for
ailing monks for short or long periods; (b) hospitals for laymen where inhouse
treatment was provided (c) maternity homes and (d) hospitals where only outdoor
treatment was provided.
Of these substantial amount of archaeological
data is available pertaining to hospitals attached to monasteries. The remains
of hospitals at Mihintale, Anuradhapura, Madirigiriya, Dighavapi and Dombegoda
near Maligavila can be dated to the late Anuradhapura period. Those of the
hospital at the Alahana Parivena Complex at Polonnaruwa can be assigned to the
twelfth century. Besides these, the chronicle refers to a hospital for monks
outside the city of Anuradhapura constructed by the Commander-in-chief of the
army during the reign of Mahinda IV (956-972).
The restored foundation
indicates that the Mihintale hospital was a 68.6m x 38.1m rectangular building.
The main entrance to the building was in the south. As one enters the building
on the right hand side there is a 5.18m x 4.27m room. This may have been used as
a dispensary. The large hall seems to have been the waiting hall for the
patients.
To the left and north of this hall are two rooms presumably
used for examining patients. Beyond was the inner court at the center of which
are found signs of an image house. Around the inner court was a corridor leading
to 32 residential rooms for inhouse patients.
Each of these measures
3.96m x 3.96m. The doors of all these rooms have been placed facing the image
house. Presumably the resident monks meditated around the image house in the
mornings and evenings. To the north-east of the building is a stone paved room
where a medicinal trough externally measuring 213 x 74 x 60 centimeters used for
immersion therapy was placed.
This room could be entered through a door
from the eastern corridor near rooms of the patients as well as from outside the
building through a door in the east. There had also been a jantaghara or a room
where steam and hot water therapy was administered in the hospital building. The
remains of a separate building which could be the kitchen of the hospital are
visible in the northern side beyond the hospital.
Pieces of two large
containers have been found in excavations done in 1954 at the Mihintale hospital
complex. These pieces have been fitted together and the containers which are of
West Asian origin are now displayed at the Anuradhapura museum. As some cement
paste had been applied on the interior of these containers to make them
air-tight it can be reasonably concluded that they had been used to store
medicines at the hospital. Unfortunately the exact location in the hospital
where these have been excavated have not been recorded. If it had been done so
the identification of the storage room in the hospital could have been easier.
The remains of the ancient Madirigiriya hospital are found about 50
meters to the north of the famous Madirigiri vatadage in Tamankaduwa in the
Polonnaruwa district. This hospital is small in size when compared with the one
at Mihintale.
The foundation which has been restored suggests that it
was a 15.8m x 15.8m square building. Encircling the centre court of the building
is a corridor and beyond that are rooms of the inmates. The stone trough used
for immersion therapy is now kept near the image house about 67 meters to the
north of the hospital. The trough has been removed there by the Department of
Archaeology for safekeeping.
The external length of the trough is 230
centimetres and the breadth is 64 centimetres. The height is 58 centimetres.
Near the Thuparama Stupa at Anuradhapura vestiges of a yet another
hospital with a medicinal trough in situ are visible. As at the Madirigiriya
hospital here too the main entrance is through a door located in the eastern
side of the building. The foundation of the building has not been preserved well
but existing remains indicate that as at Mihintale, a centre court around an
image house and rooms for inmates were important aspects of this hospital as
well.
The Ruvanvali Stupa complex contains remains of another hospital
attached to the Mahavihara. The distance from the outer wall of the stupa to the
hospital is approximately 46 meters. The stone medicinal trough (externally
measuring cm. 224 x 75 x 60) found in situ is identical with that of the
Thuparama hospital and there are signs of an image house and rooms for inmates.
However the area is full of various other ruins belonging to different eras and
therefore a correct picture of the plan of the hospital has not emerged so far.
The foundations of the hospitals at Dighavapi and Dombegoda have not
been preserved well. But the layout of the hospital at the Alahana Parivena
Complex at Polonnaruwa has been restored by the Cultural Triangle in 1982. The
restorations indicate that it was smaller in size than the Mihintale Hospital.
The total length of the building is 44.8 meters.
The breadth is 33.3
meters. The rooms of inmates are of varying sizes and each of them seems to have
accommodated a number of inmates. There had been an image house at the center of
the courtyard facing these rooms. Unlike in other hospitals, the baths and
toilets for the inmates had been constructed just adjoining their rooms.
There had been two entrances to the hospital from the east and the
south. The southern door led into a 9 x 4 meters room. The stone trough
externally measuring 248 x 80 x 56cm. had been placed on the left of the room.
The granite paved ground of this room has been sloped towards the north and
water that led from it has been diverted into a drain.
The stone trough
is slightly different from those at Mihintale and Anuradhapura but bears a close
resemblance to the one at Medirigiriya. Not only the cavity in which a patient
was laid but also the complete granite structure has been scooped out in the
form of a human being both at Medirigiriya and Polonnaruwa.
Several
common features are discernible in all these hospitals. Walls had been erected
around all of them so that they were isolated from the rest of the buildings in
the monastic complexes. All the hospitals had been located in easily accessible
plains. Similarly constructions have been designed to allow maximum ventilation
in the buildings.
As stated earlier there is a dearth of archaeological
material pertaining to hospitals for laymen. A reference in the Mahavamsa
suggests that there were eighteen hospitals at the time of Dutthagamani (161-137
B.C.). The chronicle also refers to the construction of hospitals in the reigns
of Buddhadasa (337-365 A.D.), Upatissa I (365-406 A.D.), Mahanama (406-428
A.D.), Dhatusena (455-473 A.D.), Udaya I (797-801 A.D.), Sena I (833-853 A.D.),
Sena II (853-887 A.D.), Kashyapa IV (898-914 A.D.), Kashyapa V (914-923 A.D.),
Mahinda IV (956-972 A.D.) and Parakramabahu I (1153-1186 A.D.). The
inscriptional evidence confirm some of these constructions.
The
Kukurumahandamana Pillar inscription datable to the reign of Kashyapa IV refers
to immunities granted to a land belonging to the hospital built by the Commander
in Chief named Sen near the Ceremonial Street of the inner city of Anuradhapura.
A slab inscription found at Abhayagiriya datable to the reign of Kashyapa V
refers to a royal hospital (Rajvedhala) built by the king along the same street.
The Dorabavila Pillar inscription mentions grants made to the same
hospital. It is reasonable to conclude that at least some of the above mentioned
hospitals were residential hospitals for laymen.
The sources contain
several references to maternity homes. The Pandukabhaya legend of the Mahavamsa
refers to the construction of a building known by the term Sivikasala. According
to the Vamsatthappakasini, the commentary of the Mahavamsa, it was either a hall
where a Siva Linga had been placed or a maternity home.
This indicates
that at the time of the writing of the Mahavamsa, there had been state maternity
homes. Nevertheless references in the chronicles and literature to ordinary
women or royal princesses ordinary women or royal princesses entering lying in
homes (vijayanaghara, timbirige) should not be construed to mean that they
entered common maternity homes for confinement.
The tradition of
segregating the expectant mother on the eve of delivery, in a dark room of her
own house, which was prevalent in ancient Sri Lanka continues in rural areas
even at present. Moreover, it is most unlikely that in semi feudal ancient
society the expectant princesses of royal households were sent to common
maternity homes for giving birth to children.
Nevertheless there are at
least two references which clearly point to the existence of public maternity
homes in the country. The chronicle mentions the construction of maternity
homes, Pasavantinamsala by king Upatissa I (365-406 A.D.). An inscription set up
during the reign of Kashyapa IV (898-914 A.D.) refers to the construction of a
maternity home (timibirige) by Senal Nakan, Chief Secretary of the state.
According to this inscription several plots of land from an area to the north of
Anuradhapura had been allocated for the upkeep and maintenance of this maternity
home.
There were several places where treatment was provided for outdoor
patients. Some of the hospitals erected by kings and key officials, referred to
in the chronicles and inscriptions would have been hospitals for out-patients.
Even hospitals to which patients were admitted for treatment consisted of
out-patients' divisions as well. These establishments for dispensing medicine
were known by the term behetge.
The Kiribatvehera Pillar inscription
belonging to the reign of Kashyapa IV (898-914 A.D.) records donations made to a
dispensary (behetge) named Bamunu Kumbara. The Vessaagiri Slab inscription of
Dappula IV (924-935) too contains some information on a behetge.
Archaeological remains at Arankale monastery in the vicinity of
Hiripitiya close to Wariyapola suggests the existence of a large out-door
patients' hospital, possibly datable to the late Anuradhapura period. The length
of the foundation of this hospital which has been restored is 26.1 meters. Its
breadth is 12.2 meters.
Unlike in the hospitals at Mihintale,
Medirigiriya etc. Here are no signs of the existence of rooms for inmates or of
a medicinal trough in this location. On the other hand large grinding stones,
pestles used horizontally and vertically and nearly sixty furnaces or kilns in
situ suggests that Arankale behetge was a place where medicines were prepared
and dispensed to a large number of outdoor patients and perhaps to dispensaries
around the country. Grinders are wasted in the middle suggesting their use for a
long time.
Source : Ceylon Daliy News
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