What exactly we know about the Greatest king on this earth- King Sri Ravana

kasun_gaja

Junior member
  • Sep 22, 2008
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    This is from a game i played sometime a go... LOOK AT THE SIMILARITY.........

    ATLANTIS = SRI LANKA ?????

    .hrxau014082-02.jpg


    9dgTJN678832-02.jpg


    Suddo danna wa kataawa.. Eyala apen aran giyapu denuma tawama eyala langa tiyanawa.. Meeyakku apen huuragena kaala apitama kokaa pennanawa..
     

    YasasSudaraka

    Active member
  • Apr 25, 2008
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    අම්බලන්ගොඩ
    godak honda thread ekak... mama meke okkoma kiyewwe ne thama...

    oyala berida me gena web site ekak karala hamaotama balanan publish karanna... me oyala dana thorathuru okkoam ekata danna... :)

    දැනට කට්ටිය http://www.ravana.tk කියන url එක පාවිච්චි කරල බලන්න. තව ඉස්සරහදි අපි මේක website එකක් දක්වා වර්ධනය කරමු. :yes::yes::yes:
     

    YasasSudaraka

    Active member
  • Apr 25, 2008
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    අම්බලන්ගොඩ
    Special Notice:
    I hope the Elakiri.com Creaters won't angry with us using www
    .ravana.tk url as a short form url for this thread. Because i hope it won't harm the terms and agreements of this forum. Besides it will help elekiri.com to create more society for their forum.
     

    KHz

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    Feb 12, 2009
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    Suddo danna wa kataawa.. Eyala apen aran giyapu denuma tawama eyala langa tiyanawa.. Meeyakku apen huuragena kaala apitama kokaa pennanawa..
    මචන් දන්නැති හින්දයි අහන්නෙ මේක පියාබන්නෙ කොහොමද කියල දන්නවනම් පොඩ්ඩක් කියල දෙන්න පුළුවන් ද ?? :)
    මන් සෑහෙන කාලෙක ඉදන් මේක හොයනවා ඒත් හරි විස්තරයක් හොයාගන්න බැරි උන හින්දයි ඇහුවෙ :)
    මේක ඇත්තක් නම් මේක උඩ යන මොකක් හරි තාක්ෂණයක් ඇතිනෙ .. සමහර විට ඒක දැනට අපේ තියෙන භෞතික විද්‍යා මූලධර්ම වලින් පැහැදිලි කරන්න බැරි වෙන්නත් පුළුවන්
    මාතෘකාවෙන් පිට යනව වගේ නම් සමාවෙන්න ... ඒත් මන් හිතන්නෙ මේක රාවන කතාවට අදාලයි :)
     

    kasun_gaja

    Junior member
  • Sep 22, 2008
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    මචන් දන්නැති හින්දයි අහන්නෙ මේක පියාබන්නෙ කොහොමද කියල දන්නවනම් පොඩ්ඩක් කියල දෙන්න පුළුවන් ද ?? :)
    මන් සෑහෙන කාලෙක ඉදන් මේක හොයනවා ඒත් හරි විස්තරයක් හොයාගන්න බැරි උන හින්දයි ඇහුවෙ :)
    මේක ඇත්තක් නම් මේක උඩ යන මොකක් හරි තාක්ෂණයක් ඇතිනෙ .. සමහර විට ඒක දැනට අපේ තියෙන භෞතික විද්‍යා මූලධර්ම වලින් පැහැදිලි කරන්න බැරි වෙන්නත් පුළුවන්
    මාතෘකාවෙන් පිට යනව වගේ නම් සමාවෙන්න ... ඒත් මන් හිතන්නෙ මේක රාවන කතාවට අදාලයි :)
    Meeka Hemihita Kiyawanna... Meeke Wistara tiyanawa..
     

    KHz

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    Feb 12, 2009
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    Meeka Hemihita Kiyawanna... Meeke Wistara tiyanawa..
    ස්තූත්යි මචන් මන් ඔය පොතෙන් ටිකක් විතර කියවල තියෙනවා ..... මට ඔය හරිය අහුවුනේ නෑ ... මන් ආයි කියවල බලන්නම් :)
    කොයි හරියෙ වගේද ඒ ගැන තියෙන්නෙ ??
     

    YasasSudaraka

    Active member
  • Apr 25, 2008
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    මචන් දන්නැති හින්දයි අහන්නෙ මේක පියාබන්නෙ කොහොමද කියල දන්නවනම් පොඩ්ඩක් කියල දෙන්න පුළුවන් ද ?? :)
    මන් සෑහෙන කාලෙක ඉදන් මේක හොයනවා ඒත් හරි විස්තරයක් හොයාගන්න බැරි උන හින්දයි ඇහුවෙ :)
    මේක ඇත්තක් නම් මේක උඩ යන මොකක් හරි තාක්ෂණයක් ඇතිනෙ .. සමහර විට ඒක දැනට අපේ තියෙන භෞතික විද්‍යා මූලධර්ම වලින් පැහැදිලි කරන්න බැරි වෙන්නත් පුළුවන්
    මාතෘකාවෙන් පිට යනව වගේ නම් සමාවෙන්න ... ඒත් මන් හිතන්නෙ මේක රාවන කතාවට අදාලයි :)

    මේකත් බලන්නකො

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/243178/Vimanas-King-Ravana-Ancient-Flying-Matchiens-III
     

    tdevinda

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    Nov 16, 2006
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    මේ පොත් සෙට් එක ලියල තියන කෙනා මාර ගේමක් දීල තියනව තාක්ෂණය ඉන්දියානු කියන්න.
     

    rehan1986

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    May 29, 2007
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    *** හෙලන්කාවෙ ***
    සුදාරක සහෝදරයගෙ මේ thread එක ගොඩක් හොඳයි.
    අමතක වූ සහ ඉන්දියානුවන් විසින් තමන්ගේ හෙලුව වසා ගැනීම සඳහා වෙනස් කරනු ලැබූ මේ සාඩම්බර අතීතය අප අනාගත පරපුර උදෙසා මෙලෙස දායාද කල ඔබට පිං!!!!

    අපි මූනු පොතෙත් මේ ගැන කතා කරනව...
    මෙන්න link...

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Ravana/19959903476?ref=ts&__a=1
    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Ravana/19959903476?ref=ts&__a=1#/group.php?gid=13442533465&ref=ts
     

    anjanausjp

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    Nov 27, 2007
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    SRILANKA
    මේක නියම Thread එකක්. මම දවස් 3 ක ඉදන් මේක කියවනවා.මෙකෙන් ල0කාවෙ අත්ත ඉතිහසය ගෑන නොදෑන හිටපු ගොඩක් දේවල් දනගත්තා.ඒකට ඔක්කොටම බොහොම ඉස්තුතීයී.

    සමහරු ඉන්ග්‍රසියෙන් ලියපුවා කියවන්න ටිකක් අමරුයී. මෙන්න මේ සයීට් එකෙන් ලෙසියෙන් සින්හලෙන් ලියන්න පුලුවන්.

    http://www.ucsc.cmb.ac.lk/ltrl/services/feconverter/t1.html
     

    kasun_gaja

    Junior member
  • Sep 22, 2008
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    මේක නියම Thread එකක්. මම දවස් 3 ක ඉදන් මේක කියවනවා.මෙකෙන් ල0කාවෙ අත්ත ඉතිහසය ගෑන නොදෑන හිටපු ගොඩක් දේවල් දනගත්තා.ඒකට ඔක්කොටම බොහොම ඉස්තුතීයී.

    සමහරු ඉන්ග්‍රසියෙන් ලියපුවා කියවන්න ටිකක් අමරුයී. මෙන්න මේ සයීට් එකෙන් ලෙසියෙන් සින්හලෙන් ලියන්න පුලුවන්.

    http://www.ucsc.cmb.ac.lk/ltrl/services/feconverter/t1.html

    ඇත්තටම ගොඩාක් සතුටුය් අහන්න ලැබීම. දිගටම මේකත් එක්ක ඉන්න.
     

    David Webb

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    Jan 17, 2009
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    මහ පොලොව උඩ
    Sri Lanka opens the Ramayana trail for Indians

    With a quarter-century of ethnic conflict and terrorism in Sri Lanka left behind, the island nation, known for its sun-kissed beaches and rolling tea gardens, is wooing Indian tourists like never before by developing a Ramayana trail to enable them to visit the Lanka of demon king Ravana.

    The Sri Lankan tourism department has identified about 50 sites that are said to be connected to the Ramayana that tells the tale of the Hindu god Rama, whose wife Sita was kidnapped by Ravana and taken to ‘sone ki Lanka’, or the golden kingdom of Lanka.

    “One just needs to talk to the local people, who would immediately tell which event in the Ramayana unfolded where,” said S. Kalaiselvam, director general of the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority.

    “We are developing the Ramayana trail and the sites that are easily accessible will be part of this trail. I am confident that tourists, particularly Indians, will find the visit along the Ramayana trail satisfying.”

    A 600-step climb, for instance, takes the visitor up to the cave in modern-day Ella in central Sri Lankawhere Ravana is supposed to have hidden Sita.

    Sri Lankan tourism officials say the cave is connected to tunnels proving “beyond doubt the architectural brilliance of King Ravana”.

    “A close look at these tunnels indicate that they are manmade and no natural formations,” said Wijae Manawadu, a tourist guide.

    Then there’s the spot in Divurumpola where Sita is said to have undergone the famous ‘agni pariksha, or fire test, to prove her virtuousness.

    “Disputes can be settled simply by taking oath in Sita’s name at the place where the fire test took place. It is actually legal tender,” a tourism official said.

    Rama is believed to have installed a shiva lingam, an icon of Lord Shiva, at Manawari Kovil in Chillaw, which is about 65 km from capital Colombo. It was a remedy to get rid of ‘Brahmahathi Dosham’ for having killed Ravana who was a Brahmin.

    Legend has it that during the battle with Ravana, Rama’s brother Lakshman was seriously injured. Hanuman was asked to fetch the life saving herb Sanjeevani from the Himalayas. He couldn’t locate it but brought the entire hill instead, five parts of which are said to have fallen in Sri Lanka.

    A hill at Dolukanda, about 100 km from the national capital, marks one of the five sites.

    At Seetha Eliya, on the hilly Nuwara Eliya-Welimada road about 195 km from Colombo, is where Sita is believed to have bathed. A temple has come up at the spot, and there is also a huge footprint imprinted in stone that legend says belongs to the monkey god Hanuman.

    The red earth of Ussangoda in coastal Sri Lanka is considered suitable evidence by the tourism officials to state that this was the place Hanuman took on Ravana.

    “In the event that unfolded, Hanuman’s tail was set on fire by the demons and he in turn went on to torch some parts of Ravana’s empire. Ussangoda is one of the places that was torched,” said a tourist guide.

    Sri Lankahas a host of other Ramayana sites of considerable interest to all believers.

    According to historian Neil Kiriella, there is historical evidence to prove that the epic took place in Sri Lanka.

    “There are 87 rock edicts that refer to Ravana and Sita. Several incidents in the Ramayana took place here,” he said.

    With the mapping of the Ramayana trail, Sri Lanka, which banks on tourism as a mainstay of its economy, is targeting an increase in tourist arrivals from India.

    Said Indrajith De Silva, assistant director in the Sri Lanka tourism promotion bureau: “With Tamil Tigers gone, there has been an increase of Indians coming to Sri Lanka.”

    Up to June 30 this year, he said, 30,902 Indians had come visiting. “In June 2009, 6,124 Indians came here while in June 2008, the figure stood at 5,664,” De Silva said.

    IANS


    Source:http://adaderana.lk/news.php?nid=4473
     

    kasun_gaja

    Junior member
  • Sep 22, 2008
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    Matara
    With a quarter-century of ethnic conflict and terrorism in Sri Lanka left behind, the island nation, known for its sun-kissed beaches and rolling tea gardens, is wooing Indian tourists like never before by developing a Ramayana trail to enable them to visit the Lanka of demon king Ravana.

    The Sri Lankan tourism department has identified about 50 sites that are said to be connected to the Ramayana that tells the tale of the Hindu god Rama, whose wife Sita was kidnapped by Ravana and taken to ‘sone ki Lanka’, or the golden kingdom of Lanka.

    “One just needs to talk to the local people, who would immediately tell which event in the Ramayana unfolded where,” said S. Kalaiselvam, director general of the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority.

    “We are developing the Ramayana trail and the sites that are easily accessible will be part of this trail. I am confident that tourists, particularly Indians, will find the visit along the Ramayana trail satisfying.”

    A 600-step climb, for instance, takes the visitor up to the cave in modern-day Ella in central Sri Lankawhere Ravana is supposed to have hidden Sita.

    Sri Lankan tourism officials say the cave is connected to tunnels proving “beyond doubt the architectural brilliance of King Ravana”.

    “A close look at these tunnels indicate that they are manmade and no natural formations,” said Wijae Manawadu, a tourist guide.

    Then there’s the spot in Divurumpola where Sita is said to have undergone the famous ‘agni pariksha, or fire test, to prove her virtuousness.

    “Disputes can be settled simply by taking oath in Sita’s name at the place where the fire test took place. It is actually legal tender,” a tourism official said.

    Rama is believed to have installed a shiva lingam, an icon of Lord Shiva, at Manawari Kovil in Chillaw, which is about 65 km from capital Colombo. It was a remedy to get rid of ‘Brahmahathi Dosham’ for having killed Ravana who was a Brahmin.

    Legend has it that during the battle with Ravana, Rama’s brother Lakshman was seriously injured. Hanuman was asked to fetch the life saving herb Sanjeevani from the Himalayas. He couldn’t locate it but brought the entire hill instead, five parts of which are said to have fallen in Sri Lanka.

    A hill at Dolukanda, about 100 km from the national capital, marks one of the five sites.

    At Seetha Eliya, on the hilly Nuwara Eliya-Welimada road about 195 km from Colombo, is where Sita is believed to have bathed. A temple has come up at the spot, and there is also a huge footprint imprinted in stone that legend says belongs to the monkey god Hanuman.

    The red earth of Ussangoda in coastal Sri Lanka is considered suitable evidence by the tourism officials to state that this was the place Hanuman took on Ravana.

    “In the event that unfolded, Hanuman’s tail was set on fire by the demons and he in turn went on to torch some parts of Ravana’s empire. Ussangoda is one of the places that was torched,” said a tourist guide.

    Sri Lankahas a host of other Ramayana sites of considerable interest to all believers.

    According to historian Neil Kiriella, there is historical evidence to prove that the epic took place in Sri Lanka.

    “There are 87 rock edicts that refer to Ravana and Sita. Several incidents in the Ramayana took place here,” he said.

    With the mapping of the Ramayana trail, Sri Lanka, which banks on tourism as a mainstay of its economy, is targeting an increase in tourist arrivals from India.

    Said Indrajith De Silva, assistant director in the Sri Lanka tourism promotion bureau: “With Tamil Tigers gone, there has been an increase of Indians coming to Sri Lanka.”

    Up to June 30 this year, he said, 30,902 Indians had come visiting. “In June 2009, 6,124 Indians came here while in June 2008, the figure stood at 5,664,” De Silva said.

    IANS


    Source:http://adaderana.lk/news.php?nid=4473
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