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Guardians of the Sigiriya Frescoes: A Legal Perspective on Cultural Heritage Management in Sri Lanka
Medha de Alwis
ASIAN-EUROPEAN MUSIC RESEARCH JOURNAL 16 (2025)
https://doi.org/10.30819/aemr.16-10 pp: 119-128 2025-12-08
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Stichworte/keywords: Sigiriya, cultural heritage, legal protection, conservation policy, cultural heritage law
Cite: APA BibTeX
Alwis, M.d. (2025). Guardians of the Sigiriya Frescoes: A Legal Perspective on Cultural Heritage Management in Sri Lanka. ASIAN-EUROPEAN MUSIC RESEARCH JOURNAL, 16 , 119-128. doi:10.30819/aemr.16-10
@article{Alwis_2025,
doi = {10.30819/aemr.16-10},
url = {https://doi.org/10.30819/aemr.16-10},
year = 2025,
publisher = {Logos Verlag Berlin},
volume = {16},
pages = {119-128},
author = {Medha de Alwis},
title = {Guardians of the Sigiriya Frescoes: A Legal Perspective on Cultural Heritage Management in Sri Lanka},
journal = {ASIAN-EUROPEAN MUSIC RESEARCH JOURNAL}
}
Abstract
The frescoes of Sigiriya, depicting the ethereal “Maidens of the Clouds,” represent a pinnacle of Sri Lanka's artistic
and cultural heritage. As integral components of the Sigiriya World Heritage Site, these fifth-century wall paintings
demand not only technical conservation but robust legal safeguarding within the framework of cultural heritage
management. This chapter critically examines the adequacy of existing legal mechanisms in Sri Lanka—particularly the Antiquities Ordinance, relevant provisions of the Central Cultural Fund Act, and UNESCO's World Heritage guidelines—as they pertain to the protection of the cultural heritage of Sigiriya. Through a doctrinal analysis
of statutory instruments and comparative insights from international conservation standards, the study identifies
significant gaps in both the substantive and procedural aspects of current legal protections. Issues such as vulnerability to environmental damage, insufficient emergency-response regulation, and the lack of site-specific conservation protocols highlight the urgent need for a more integrated and enforceable legal framework. The chapter
argues for a redefinition of Sigiriya's legal status within the broader category of cultural heritage and proposes
targeted legislative and administrative reforms to ensure their sustained preservation. In doing so, it contributes to
the evolving discourse on heritage law in Sri Lanka and the global conversation on legal instruments for the management of culturally significant sites, which are symbolic in terms of law regulations within the entire UNESCO’s
World Heritage System, including Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH).