Around the 3rd to 4th century C.E., writers at the Anuradhapura Maha Vihara in Sri Lanka assembled something the world had never seen before: a full historical chronicle of an entire island civilization, written in Pali, tracing the arrival of the Buddha’s teaching, the lineage of kings, and the spread of a faith across the Indian Ocean world. The Dipavamsa — “Chronicle of the Island” — was born.
What the evidence shows
- Dipavamsa: The text is widely regarded as the oldest surviving historical record of Sri Lanka, compiled from earlier sources called Atthakatha around 300–400 C.E.
- Pali literature: The chronicle was likely the first completely original Pali text composed in Sri Lanka — a landmark in the literary history of the Buddhist world.
- Anonymous authorship: Scholars believe the Dipavamsa was written by multiple Buddhist monks or nuns, and may have originated in part with the nuns’ community — among the last major texts composed without a named author.
A chronicle born from community memory
The Dipavamsa did not emerge from a single brilliant mind. It was drawn from older Atthakatha — commentarial texts maintained in Sinhalese — and shaped by a community of practitioners at the Mahavihara, the great monastery at Anuradhapura that served as the institutional heart of Theravada Buddhism in Sri Lanka.
The chronicle opens with an extraordinary scope: the Buddha’s three legendary visits to the island, the arrival of the Sacred Tooth Relic and the Bodhi tree sapling, the founding of the Buddhist order in Sri Lanka, and the reign of kings stretching back centuries. Its preamble announces all of this with the direct confidence of people who know they are preserving something essential.
What makes the text distinctive is its relative restraint. Where the later Mahavamsa — the grander, more polished chronicle that followed — reached for drama and miracle, the Dipavamsa often chose the more measured account. In its version of the founding legend of Vijaya, the ancestor of Sri Lanka’s ruling lineage, the supernatural is dialed back. The fearsome Sinha is described not as a lion-man but simply as an outlaw who attacked caravans — a rougher, more human story.
The question of who wrote it
One of the Dipavamsa’s most intriguing qualities is the genuine uncertainty around its authorship. Scholar Hugh Neville proposed in the 19th century that the text may have originated with the nuns’ community at one or more Viharas, rather than with monks. His reasoning: the chronicle gives unusual attention to the nuns of Sri Lanka, and it describes Sangamitta — the daughter of the Emperor Ashoka, who brought the Bodhi tree sapling to the island — as being “particularly proficient in history.”
If Neville was right, the oldest historical chronicle of Sri Lanka was shaped in significant part by women. That remains unproven, but it is a reminder that the institutional memory of ancient communities was often broader than later narratives suggest.
The text was also among the last major Pali works to be composed anonymously — a tradition of collective, communal authorship that would give way in later centuries to named authors and more individual literary voices.
Lasting impact
The Dipavamsa served as the direct source material for the Mahavamsa, compiled in the 5th century C.E. and considered one of the greatest religious and historical epics in the Pali language. The historical chronology in both texts — the succession of kings, the dates of major events — is now believed by scholars to be largely reliable from the period following the death of the Emperor Ashoka onward.
That means the Dipavamsa did something unusual: it preserved accurate historical memory across centuries. The Pali Text Society and scholars worldwide continue to draw on it as a primary source for the ancient history of both Sri Lanka and India. When historians reconstruct the spread of Buddhism across South and Southeast Asia, the Dipavamsa is one of the few textual anchors they have.
The text also mattered geographically beyond Sri Lanka. Scholar Tilman Frasch demonstrated that a longer, less corrupted version of the Dipavamsa was preserved in Burma — today’s Myanmar — suggesting that monastic networks across Southeast Asia maintained and copied the text with great care. One such manuscript survives in the John Rylands Library in Manchester, carried there across centuries and oceans.
Hermann Oldenberg’s 1879 translation into English brought the chronicle to Western scholarship, opening a window onto a historical tradition that European historians had largely overlooked. Buddhist textual traditions across Asia had been preserving intricate historical and philosophical knowledge for centuries before European contact, and the Dipavamsa is among the clearest examples.
The city of Anuradhapura itself, where the Mahavihara stood, is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site — a recognition of the deep continuity between the physical place, the institutional community, and the written record that community produced.
Blindspots and limits
The Dipavamsa was a Theravada document, written from the perspective of the Mahavihara — and it shows. The text explicitly positions Theravada Buddhism as the true heir of the original Sthaviravada school of India, while portraying rival early Buddhist schools as “thorns.” It is history told by one community, shaping its own legitimacy, and readers should hold that awareness alongside its genuine value as a historical source.
The pre-Vijaya history of Sri Lanka — the lives and knowledge of the island’s Indigenous Vedda people — receives no meaningful place in the chronicle’s account. Their presence on the island long predates the events the Dipavamsa describes, and that silence is part of the text’s historical context.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Dipavamsa
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights win recognition for 160 million hectares at COP30
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on ancient history
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