A Visit to the Gem Districts of Ceylon and Burma

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Frank D. Adams
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
34
File Size:
9755 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

The Island of Ceylon, which is one of the most beautiful possessions of the British Empire, has been an abode of man from the very earliest times. The Veddhas, a wild tribe of some 4500 people still living in the fastnesses of the jungle in east central portion of the island, are believed to represent a remnant of the oldest inhabitants of which we have any actual knowledge, but in the caves in which they live there are found the stone axes and other implements of Palaeolithic people who represent the first race of men who inhabited our globe, and of whom they may be, for all that is known, the direct descendants. About the fifth century before Christ there came the Aryan invaders, apparently from the north of India, who drove the Veddhas into the remote fastnesses of the jungle and developed the remarkable Singhalese civilization whose high character is demonstrated by the remarkable and very extensive system of irrigation works which they built up, and through which they made the island wonderfully productive. Great cities arose, some of which are believed to have had a population of over a million souls and whose temples and public buildings show that the people were accomplished architects and sculptors.
Citation

APA: Frank D. Adams  (1926)  A Visit to the Gem Districts of Ceylon and Burma

MLA: Frank D. Adams A Visit to the Gem Districts of Ceylon and Burma. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1926.

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