Mahavamsa The chronicle states that the
Buddha, during his second visit to the island, pacified a dispute between two Naga Kings of Nagadeepa, Chulodara and Mahodara over the possession of a gem-studded throne. This throne was finally offered to the Buddha by the grateful Naga kings who left it in Nagadeepa under a Rajayathana tree (Kiri Palu) as an object of worship. Since then the place became one of the holiest shrines of Buddhists in the island for many centuries. The references to Nagadeepa in Mahawamsa as well as other
Pali writings, coupled with archaeological and epigraphical evidences, have established that Nagadeepa of the Mahawamsa is the present
Jaffna Peninsula. The chronicle further states that in the eighth year after the Enlightenment, the Buddha visited the island for the third time, on an invitation of Maniakkhita, the Naga king of Kalyani (Modern day
Kelaniya) who is the uncle of the Naga king of Nagadeepa.
Manimekalai In the
Tamil epic
Manimekalai, the heroine is miraculously transported to a small island called Manipallavam where there was a seat or foot stool associated to the Buddha. The seat in Manipallavam is said to have been used by the Buddha when he preached and reconciled the two kings of Naga land, and that it was placed in Manipallavam by the king of gods,
Indra. The legend speaks of the great Naga king
Valai Vanan and his queen
Vasamayilai who ruled over
Manipallavam in the
Jaffna Peninsula. Their daughter, the princess
Pilli Valai had a liaison at the islet with the early
Chola king
Killivalavan; out of this union was the prince
Tondai Eelam Thiraiyar born, who historians note was the early progenitor of the
Pallava Dynasty. He went on to rule
Tondai Nadu from
Kanchipuram. Nainativu was referred to as Manipallavam in ancient Tamil literature following this union. Royals of the Chola-Naga lineage would go on to rule other territory of the island,
Nagapattinam and Tondai Nadu of
Tamilakam. By the time Buddhism had reached Tamilakam, the twin epics of ancient Tamil Nadu
Silappatikaram (5–6th century CE) and
Manimekalai (6th century CE) were written, speaking of
Naga Nadu across the sea from
Kaveripoompuharpattinam. The island according to the Tamil epic was divided into two territory, Naga Nadu and Ilankaitheevam. Naga Nadu, or the whole island was also known as
Cherantheevu, derived from Tamil words
Cheran (meaning Naga) and
theevu (meaning island).
Identifying Manipallavam The similarity of the legend about the Buddha's seat given in the Mahavamsa to that in the Manimekalai has led certain scholars to identify the Manipallavam with Nagadeepa (currently
Nainativu), which has caused the history to be extracted out of the legend.
Cīttalai Cāttanār, the author of the
Manimekalai, reflected the perception at the time that Naga Nadu was an autonomous administrative entity, kingdom or
nadu stretching across coastal districts, distinguished from the rest of the island also ruled intermittently by Naga kings. The Naga king
Valai Vanan was stated in the Manimekalai to be the king of
Naga Nadu, one of the two territories in Sri Lanka, the other being Ilankaitheevam. Other scholars identify
Karaitivu as Manipallavam.
Senarath Paranavithana rejects the identification of Manipallavam with Nainativu and the
Jaffna Peninsula, because Manimekalai states the island to have been uninhabited, whereas the
Jaffna Peninsula have been inhabited centuries before the date of the epic. He also notes that Manimekalai does not mention that the two Naga kings had their abode in Manipallavam as stated in the Mahavamsa, nor did it mention that the holy seat was placed there by
Gautama Buddha, but by
Indra. Further states Canto IX, II. 13–22 that an earthquake destroyed a city in Gandhara which in turn affteced 100
yojanas of Naga Nadu, thus rejecting the identification of Naga Nadu with Jaffna Peninsula.
Ramayana In the Indian epic
Ramayana, the mythological island
Lanka has been often identified with
Sri Lanka. The inhabitants of
Lanka were mentioned as non-humans, mainly referring to the
Rakshasas and
Yakshas, but also mentioning the
Nagas.
Indrajit, the son of
Ravana was married to
Sulochana, a Naga princess.
Others Ptolemy in his 1st century map of Taprobane mentions
Nagadibois. ==Culture==