Ä€maṇá¸agÄmanÄ« Abhaya
Son of MahÄá¸Äthika and King of Sri Lanka for nine years and eight months. His younger brother, by whom he was ultimately slain, was KanirajÄnu-Tissa, and he had two children, a son CūḷÄbhaya and a daughter SÄ«valÄ«. IḷanÄga was his nephew.
Ä€maṇá¸agÄmani heightened the cone of the MahÄ ThÅ«pa and made additions to the LohapÄsÄda and the ThÅ«pÄrÄma. He also built the Rajatalena VihÄra and the MahÄgÄmeṇá¸i reservoir to the south of AnurÄdhapura, which latter he gave for the use of the DakkhiṇavihÄra.
He enacted an order that there should be no slaughter of animals in Sri Lanka and had gourds planted everywhere. To the whole brotherhood of monks in the island he once gave robes and alms-bowls filled with kumbhandaka fruits (pumpkins) and thereafter he was known by the name of Ä€maṇá¸agÄmanÄ« (Ä€maṇá¸a is evidently a synonym of Kumbhaṇá¸aka).
His brother KanirajÄnu-Tissa, having killed him, succeeded to the throne (Mhv.xxxv.1-10; MT.640). Ä€maṇá¸agÄmaṇī is also referred to as Ä€maṇá¸a and Amaṇá¸iya.
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