On 28 October 1818, Keppetipola along with Pilimathalawe, another rebel leader were captured by
Captain O’Neil of the
British army, with the assistance of
Native Lieutenant Cader-Boyet of the
Ceylon Rifle Regiment. On 25 November 1818, Keppetipola and Madugalle, another rebel leader, were taken to the
Temple of the Tooth, where they performed their religious rituals. Here Keppetipola made his final wish as to be born in the
Himalayas on his next birth and attain
Nirvana. He offered a cloth he wore to the temple, and presented his
Dhammapada to his friend Simon Sawers. He requested Sawers to come to the execution grounds with him and witness his death but was refused as Sawers did not wish to see his friend's death. Keppetipola and Madugalle were taken to the execution grounds at Bogambara, where Keppetipola requested the executioner to behead him with a single stroke of the sword. Keppetipola tied up his hair over his head to avoid it falling onto his neck and bent to receive the sword stroke, uttering the supreme and great qualities of the
Buddha. However, the executioner failed to behead him with one stroke as requested and Keppetipola was killed on the second stroke. After his death, his skull was taken to Britain and placed in the
Phrenological Society of Edinburgh. When
Ceylon gained independence from the British in 1948, Keppetipola was declared a
national hero, because he'd fought against foreign rule. In 1954 at the request of the Government of Ceylon his skull was returned home, and entombed in the
Keppetipola Memorial in
Kandy. ==References==