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Sandakada pahana - Moonstone
Used in entrances to Temples, Shines
and Palaces. T he elaborate mooonstone at it's base is in itself a
distinctive element of ancient sculpture in the island. These semi-circular
slabs of granite or gneiss acquired increasingly complex bands of
decorations over the years. They range from the near abstract tongues of
fire and bands of creeper vines - to symbolic interpretations of the four
perils of life.
The latter consists of the elephant, a symbol of birth, the bull indicative
of decay ; the lion, resent in disease. and the geese, a symbol of death.
Some also band of geese, which represents the distance between good and
evil. To some, the moon-stone is symbolic of transcending worldly
temptations and achieving nibbane.At the heart of many moonstones is a lotus
petal. Buddhists regard the lotus as a sacred flower, a symbol of the male
and female creative forces that prevails throughout Sri Lankan art,
architecture, sculpture and literature. It figures in the legend attached to
the birth of the Bud-dha, when seven lotuses sprang into bloom at his feet
as he took the first seven steps of his life. The lotus bloomed again in
profusion at the moment he reached the state of Enlightenment.
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