Myths, Legends and Folklore II & Citta the Enchantress
FROM THE PAGES OF HISTORY Myths, Legends and Folklore II In order to overcome this difficulty, it has been proposed to take Lata of the chronicles to be the same as Radha in Western Bengal, and to locate Sinhapura in the place known as Singur. But, if a band of immigrants started from a port in Bengal, it is very unlikely that they would have touched land at a place on the north-western seaboard of Ceylon, where Tambapanni was. And there was no need for them to have come to Supparaka or Barukachcha – ports on the western coast of India – before they arrived in Ceylon. On the other hand, if they started from Gujarat, Barukachcha and Supparaka were on their route to Ceylon. And, in Gujarat, there was in the olden days a place known as Sinhapura, now called Sihor. This uncertainty resulting from an examination of the traditional history has led scholars to compare the Sinhala language with the Aryan languages of India, in order to ascertain the region from which the ancient Sinhales