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Three of them proceeded to the city and served to the king Vijaya very closely.
Later, Sangathissa conspired and killed the king and crowned himself as the king.
He ruled Anuradhapura for four years.
Sangathissa was fond of eating Damba fruit and used to travel the eastern part
of the island often with his troops and this was hazardous to the peasants
there and they poisoned the fruit. The king Sangathissa died eating the poisoned
fruit on the spot.
Then the Prince Sangabo was crowned as the king. He was known as a virtuous
king and he was very kind to his subjects. When the criminals were captured
he exiled them to a remote part and the dead bodies secretly brought from
the cemeteries burned in the disguise of the criminals to show the people.
Once a devil called Rakthakshi (the one with red eyes) began to kill the people
and the king overpowered him by his virtues and promised him to accept offerings
from people instead of killing them.
Then the prince Gotabhaya conspired and entered the city with his troops in
order to get the kingdom from King Sangabo who was once his friend. The king
Sirisangabo didn't want to shed blood of the troops from the both parties and
left the city only with a piece of cloth to filter the water. Hereafter the king
lived a simple life in Aththanagalla as a hermit meditating most of the time.
The prince Gotabaya began searching for the ex-king and killed a number of people
suspecting it was the king. One day a passing by peasant offered the king a meal
unknowing it is the king and he revealed the king about the way the innocent
people are killed mistaken as the king. The king was worried and he was still
more worried to hear about the bounty on his head. Because of the bounty price,
people had begun to kill people and bring the heads to the palace to get the
money. Then the king revealed that he is the king and asked to cut his head
and to get the money. The peasant refused that and the king himself separated
the head and offered it to the peasant. (Mahawansa 58-97 verses)
This is the story behind the Aththanagalla and the place where the king had lived and
the pond he went for the water still can be seen. The place has later become a Buddhist
temple and a lot of people visit it today.
Sirisangabo story was translated from The Mahawansa by Deepal Sooriyarachchi
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