Reference is made in the Ceylon Chronicles and in some of the Commentaries to a period of great distress in Ceylon, owing to the activities of a cora (? brigand) called Bráhmanatissa in the time of Vattagámaní-Abhaya (Pitirájá).
According to the Mahávamsa and the Mahávamsa Tíká (Mhv.xxxiii.37ff.; MT.613), Tissa was a brahmin youth of Rohana. One day he heard a brahmin soothsayer announce that if a brigand were to commence his activities under a certain combination of planets, he would conquer the whole of Ceylon. Tissa, acting on this idea, turned robber and sent word to the king that he should hand over his throne to him. At the same time seven Damilas, with their followers, arrived in Mahátittha with the same demand. The king thereupon sent word to Tissa that the kingdom would be his if he could defeat the Damilas. Tissa agreed to this and marched against them, but was taken captive in a battle near Sanketahála. The Páli Commentaries give further details. Tissa plundered the land for twelve long years; food became so scarce that, owing to starvation, people lost even their sexual desires, and the birth of a child was such a rare occurrence that all the land rejoiced over such a birth (SA.ii.83). Tissa's activities were at their height when Vattagámaní was in hiding. The stores of food in Cittalapabbata vihára and in Tissamaháráma were laid waste by enormous rats and the monks could obtain no food, Tissa having ravished the land. They therefore sent eight Theras to Sakka, begging him to rid the country of Tissa; but Sakka sent reply that he was powerless, and suggested that the monks should go over the seas. Some took his advice and sailed from Jambukola, but the leaders of the community - Samyuttabhánaka Cúlasíva, Isidatta and Mahásona - remained behind awaiting better times (see also Nágá Therí, whose story given in AA.ii.654f.; also MA.i.546). The Mahávihára at Anurádhapura was deserted; the Mahá Thúpa was overgrown with trees. The monks had to live on lotus stalks and fruit rinds thrown away by the people. When Bráhmanatissa died, Vattagámaní once more came to the throne (VibhA.445-51). v.l. Bráhmanatiya cora (from which the Ceylon Chronicles derive the form Báminitiyá). About the date of the Báminisáya (the brahmin famine as it was called in Sinhalese), see Cv. Trs. Introd. xvii., section 4.
See also Canndála Tissa (Candála Tiya) which evidently refers to this same "bhaya."