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Sinhala


Sinhala (or Sinhalese) is the language spoken by the Sinhalese, the majority of the people living in Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon). It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages, with strong kinship to Bengali, Pali, Sanskrit and related languages. It has also absorbed many words from Tamil, a Dravidian language spoken in south India and the Tamil people of Sri Lanka. The Sinhala script has evolved from the Brahmi script of ancient north India. It is also interesting to note that while Sinhala borrowed many words from Tamil, the reverse does not hold true.

Sinhalese, which developed as an island language, has some unique features not found in other Indo-Aryan languages. This is due to its exposure to other language families of the South Asian region such as Dravidian and Austronesian (or aboriginal languages). The Tamil language, which belongs to the Dravidian group, has influenced the structure and vocabulary of Sinhalese to such an extent that some scholars were erroneously led to believe that Sinhalese belonged to the Dravidian group of languages.

The folkloric tale of Vijaya (a Bengali exile) and Kuveni (a Raksha princess) puts the origin of Sinhala into a mythic form very similar to that of the Greek myths. Stone inscriptions, as well as written texts (the Maha Wamsa, a history of the kings of Sri Lanka going back to almost the Buddha's time) suggest that Sinhala is a very old language. Shrines to Skanda, the Hindu god of war, associated with Sinhalese folk lore, can also be found in Sri Lanka.

The mythology states that a Bengali exile, popularly believed to be a prince, landed in Sri Lanka with 700 men. On the island, he met Kuveni, a Raksha princess who bore him two children. As the princely family had to marry into other royalty, most kings married into Indian royal families over time. The last few Kings of the up-country Sinhalese were even pure Tamils who had inherited the kingdom through blood lines.

Sinhalese has many literary works strongly influenced by Buddhism, and often followed the literary trends of Indiae.g. the sandesha poetry of India, the literary modes used by Kalidasa and similar Indian dramatic poets are all echoed in Sinhalese literature as attested in the literary debates known as kukavi vada. While Sri Lanka came under Portuguese, Dutch and British colonial rule in turn, it regained its independance in 1948. Nationalist movements in the first half of the 20th century saw the establishment of the helabasa movement, led by the grammarian Munidasa Kumaratunga, which gave new vigour to the language. A more important influence was the rise of an important newspaper culture (led by the Dinamina newspaper established by the Wijaywardena group). A celebrated writer, Martin Wickremasinghe, was one of the well known and influential editors of the Dinamina.

The script used in writing Sinhalese is evolved from the ancient Brahmi script used in most Aryan languages, which was introduced to the island in the 3rd century BC. Around the 6th century, certain characters were borrowed from the Dravidian writing system to replace a few existing symbols. At present the Sinhala alphabet has 56 characters.

Sinhala and Tamil were constitutionally recognised as the official languages of Sri Lanka in 1956.


Last updated: 05-03-2005 17:50:55