serves to show that the Mahometans in Ceylon have not
been uniformly Sonnees, and it may probably throw
light on a fact of much local interest connected with
Colombo. There formerly stood there, in the Mahometan
Cemetery, a stone with an ancient inscription in Cufic
characters, which no one could decipher, but which
was said to record the virtues of a man of singular
virtue, who had arrived in the island in the tenth
century. About the year 1787 A.D., one of the
Dutch officials removed the stone to the spot where
he was building, “and placed it where it now
stands, at one of the steps to his door.”
This is the account given by Sir Alexander Johnston,
who, in 1827, sent a copy of the inscription to the
Royal Asiatic Society of London. GILDEMEISTER
pronounces it to be written in Carmathic characters,
and to commemorate an Arab who died A.D. 848.
“Karmathacis quae dicuntur literis exarata viro
cuidam Arabo Mortuo, 948 A.D. posita,”
Script.
Arabi de Rebus Indicis, p. 59. A translation
of the inscription by Lee was published in
Trans,
Roy. Asiat. Soc., vol. i. p. 545, from
which it appears that the deceased, Khalid Ibn Abou
Bakaya, distinguished himself by obtaining “security
for religion, with other advantages, in the year 317
of the Hejira.” LEE was disposed to think
that this might be the tomb of the Imaum Abu Abd Allah;
who first taught the Mahometans the route by which
pilgrims might proceed from India to the sacred footstep
on Adam’s Peak. But besides the discrepancy
of the names, the Imaum died in the year A.D. 953,
and interred at Shiraz, where Ibn Batata made a visit
to his tomb. (
Travels, transl. DEFREMERY,
&c., tom. ii. p. 79.)
EDRISI, in his Geography writing in the twelfth century,
confirms the account of Abou-zeyd as to the toleration
of all sects in Ceylon, and illustrates it by the
fact, that of the sixteen officers who formed the
council of the king, four were Buddhists, four Mussulmans,
four Christians, and four Jews.—GILDEMEISTER,
Script. Arabi, &c., p. 53; EDRISI, 1 clim.
sec. 6.]
Ibn Wahab, his informant, appears to have looked back
with singular pleasure to the delightful voyages which
he had made through the remarkable still-water channels,
elsewhere described, which form so peculiar a feature
in the seaborde of Ceylon, and to which the Arabs
gave the obscure term of “gobbs."[1] Here months
were consumed by the mariners, amidst flowers and
overhanging woods, with the enjoyments of abundant
food and exhilarating draughts of arrack flavoured
with honey. The natives of the island were devoted
to pleasure, and their days were spent in cock-fighting
and games of chance, into which they entered with
so much eagerness as to wager the joints of their fingers
when all else was lost.
[Footnote 1: “Aghbah,” Arab.
For an account of those of Ceylon, see Vol. I.
Pt I. ch. i. p. 42. The idea entertained by the
Arabs of these Gobbs, will be found in a passage from
Albyrouni, given by REINAUD, Fragmens Arabes,
&c., 119, and Journ. Asiat. vol. xlv. p.
201. See also EDRISI, Geog., tom. i. p.
73.]