Anuradhapura Guided Tour
The sacred city of Anuradhapura, now in picturesque ruins, was once a major center of Sri Lankan civilization. The fascinating ancient ruins include huge bell-shaped stupas built of small sun-dried bricks, temples, sculptures, palaces, and ancient drinking-water reservoirs. Although people may have lived in this area since as early as the 10th century BC, Anuradhapura became a great city after the arrival of a sapling from the sacred Bodhi Tree from India('tree of enlightenment'), The sacred branch was brought to Sri Lanka by Bhikkhu Sanghamitta, the founder of an order of Buddhist nuns. Anuradhapura went on to become Sri Lankas political and religious capital in the 4th century BC and flourished for 1,300 years. In its prime, Anuradhapura ranked alongside Nineveh and Babylon in its colossal proportions—its four walls, each 16 miles (26 km) long, enclosing an area of 256 square miles (663 km²)—in the number of its inhabitants, and the splendour of its shrines and public buildings.