The Chronicle

Two thousand years,
still walking.

The Perahera is not an annual festival. It is a procession that has, in one form or another, been walked continuously for more than sixteen hundred years. What follows is our attempt to record, in measured English prose, the ceremony's history, its structure, and its people.

  1. 01

    Chapter I

    The Sacred Tooth Relic

    A fragment of bone, an emblem of kingship, and the still centre around which a ten-night procession turns. The history of the Dalada and its journey to Kandy.

    9 min readperahera.com

  2. 02

    Chapter II

    The Five Peraheras

    The ten nights of the Esala Perahera are not one procession but five, twice walked. A reading of the structure, and what distinguishes each night from the last.

    11 min readperahera.com

  3. 03

    Chapter III

    The Cast of the Procession

    Every Perahera is walked by roughly a thousand people and one hundred elephants. A guide to the figures in the procession, in the order in which they appear.

    12 min readperahera.com

  4. 04

    Chapter IV

    Diya Kepeema — the Water Cutting

    At dawn after the Maha Randoli, the Kapuralas wade into the Mahaweli and describe a circle in the water. This is how the Perahera ends.

    7 min readperahera.com

  5. 05

    Chapter V

    Origins & Dates

    How the Perahera became the Perahera — a history across five capitals, and the reason the ceremony still moves with the Esala moon.

    8 min readperahera.com