The Religious World of Kirti Sri: Buddhism, Art, and Politics in Late Medieval Sri Lanka, by Holt, John Clifford
Reviewed by Michael W. Charney
The Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol.118 No.1 Jan-March 1998 p.126
COPYRIGHT 1998 American Oriental Society
Efforts, especially of studies of precolonial "institutions," to determine religious "orthodoxy" in textually based belief systems such as Theravada Buddhism too frequently misconstrue emphases of earlier or later stages of the development of the religion as constants. Prevalent historiography on Burma (a Theravada Buddhist society), for example, frequently misconstrues Theravada Buddhism as a static set of beliefs, with a similarly undynamic symbolic representation of those beliefs in religious iconography, social institutions, and the notion of kingship. Fortunately, Holt, whose work focuses on Sri Lanka, studiously avoids this problem in The Religious World of Kirti Sri. Holt locks into a "moment" in Sinhalese Theravada Buddhism, the reign of Kirti Sri (r. 1751-82 C.E.) of the kingdom of Kandy in the central area of the island of Sri Lanka, in an attempt to determine what it meant to be a Theravada Buddhist during this particular reign and what the classic Sinhala Buddhist Weltanschauung was. Holt suggests that the chief motivation of Kirti Sri's religious program was an effort to deny his internal opponents, the Sinhalese Buddhist nobility, the opportunity to appeal to the popular masses, on the grounds of Theravada Buddhist orthodoxy, to overthrow him, as he was the successor to a foreign and Hindu dynastic line. To achieve this goal, Kirti Sri had "to express the fundamentals of a religious world view in a manner that was clearly accessible and intelligible to the masses of lay Buddhists, his most important constituency" (p. 42). As Holt explains, Kirti Sri generally attempted to portray himself in the religious art and symbolism of his reign in a manner consistent with the ideal image of Buddhist kingship. Fortunately, Holt does not leave the reader uninformed by simple references to "Theravada Buddhist orthodoxy" or other often undefined (and equally not understood) labels, and instead spends much of his book on an in-depth analysis indicating just how religious orthodoxy was revealed in the religious art, ritual, myth, and symbolism of Kirti Sri's reign. An important contribution of Holt's work is his careful examination of the chief elements of religious orthodoxy in the reign of Kirti Sri. Holt identifies, for example, five elements of Kirti Sri's political discourse: Asokan, the Sakran model of divine rule, Mahasammata Buddhist myth, Manu, and the bodhisatta ideal. Concerning the visual liturgy of Kirti Sri's religious art, Holt identifies six chief elements: solosmasthana (sixteen sacred places), sat sati (seven weeks of meditation after enlightenment), suvisi vivarana (the twenty-four Buddhas), the thousand Buddha motif, Buddhacarita (the life of the Buddha), and the Jataka tales. The targeted audience of this religious symbolism was the popular masses and, as Holt explains, the Jataka stories concerning the "bodhisatta-as-king" were the chief "eye-level elements of most visual liturgies in the temples that he restored" (p. 89). Kirti Sri, in a manner familiar to historians of precolonial mainland Southeast Asia, devoted most of his personal resources to support Buddhism and Buddhist institutions during his reign. Every study, however, has its weaknesses. Holt fails to examine directly, for example, the relationship between religion and ethnicity in this period in Sri Lankan history. Questions of ethnic identity seemingly plagued Kirti Sri's reign, as the successor to a Tamil Saivite dynasty which ruled the predominantly Buddhist and Sinhalese kingdom of Kandy from 1739. Holt provides a chapter on this subject, but chiefly for a discussion of how this problem manifests itself in modern Sri Lanka. More useful would have been a detailed discussion of how religious identity weighed as a construct of ethnic identity in Kirti Sri's Kandyan realm. When considered against this work's other contributions, however, this weakness does not weigh heavily. The Religious World of Kirti Sri is a well-conceived and carefully executed study of a program of religious legitimation of kingship in one reign. As such, Holt's work holds considerable comparative value for historians not only of precolonial Sri Lanka, but also of other early modern Theravada Buddhist societies, such as Burma, Rakhine, Cambodia, and Ayudhya. MICHAEL W. CHARNEY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN