Sri
Lanka, officially the Democratic Socialist
Republic of Sri Lanka (Sinhalese: Tamil: known as Ceylon
before 1972) is an island nation in South Asia, located about
31 kilometres (19.3 mi) off the southern coast of
India. Popularly referred to as the Pearl of the Indian
Ocean,[2] it is home to around twenty million people.
Due to its location in the path of major
sea routes, Sri Lanka is a strategic naval link between West
Asia and South East Asia, and has been a center of Buddhist
religion and culture from ancient times. Today, the country
is a multi-religious and multi-ethnic nation, with nearly a
third of the population following faiths other than Buddhism,
notably Hinduism, Christianity and Islam. The Sinhalese community
forms the majority of the population, with Tamils, who are concentrated
in the north and east of the island, forming the largest ethnic
minority. Other communities include the Muslim Moors and Malays
and the Burghers.
Famous for the production and export of tea, coffee, rubber
and coconuts, Sri Lanka boasts a progressive and modern industrial
economy and the highest per capita income in South Asia. The
natural beauty of Sri Lanka's tropical forests, beaches and
landscape, as well as its rich cultural heritage, make it a
world famous tourist destination.
After over two thousand years of rule by local kingdoms, parts
of Sri Lanka were colonized by Portugal and the Netherlands
beginning in the 16th century, before the control of the entire
country was ceded to the British Empire in 1815. During World
War II, Sri Lanka served as an important base for Allied forces
in the fight against the Japanese Empire.[3] A nationalist political
movement arose in the country in the early 20th century with
the aim of obtaining political independence, which was eventually
granted by the British after peaceful negotiations in 1948.
Name
In ancient times, Sri Lanka was known by a variety of names:
ancient Greek geographers called it Taprobane[4] and Arabs referred
to it as Serendib (the origin of the word "serendipity").[5]
Ceilão was the name given to Sri Lanka by the Portuguese when
they arrived on the island in 1505,[6] which was transliterated
into English as Ceylon.[7] In 1972, the official name of the
country was changed to "Free, Sovereign and Independent
Republic of Sri Lanka" In 1978 it was changed to "Democratic
Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka".
The current name is derived from Sanskrit
word laṃkā, meaning "resplendent land",[9] which was
also the name of the island as described in the ancient Indian
epics Mahabharata and the Ramayana.
History
Paleolithic
human settlements have been discovered at excavations in several
cave sites in the Western Plains region and the South-western
face of the Central Hills region. Anthropologists believe that
some discovered burial rites and certain decorative artifacts
exhibit similarities between the first inhabitants of the island
and the early inhabitants of Southern India. Recent bioanthropological
studies have however dismissed these links, and have placed the
origin of the people to the northern parts of India. One of the
first written references to the island is found in the Indian
epic Ramayana, which described the emperor Ravana as monarch of
the powerful kingdom of Lanka, which was created by the divine
sculptor Vishwakarma for Kubera, the treasurer of the Gods.[10]
English historian James Emerson Tennent also theorized Galle,
a southern city in Sri Lanka, was the ancient seaport of Tarshish
from which King Solomon is said to have drawn ivory, peacocks
and other valuables. The main written accounts of the country's
history are the Buddhist chronicles of Mahavansa and Dipavamsa.
The earliest-known inhabitants
of the island now known as Sri Lanka were probably the ancestors
of the Wanniyala-Aetto people, also known as Veddahs and numbering
roughly 3,000. Linguistic analysis has found a correlation of
the Sinhalese language with the languages of the Sindh and Gujarat,
although most historians believe that the Sinhala community
emerged well after the assimilation of various ethnic groups.
From the ancient period date some remarkable archaeological
sites including the ruins of Sigiriya, the so-called "Fortress
in the Sky", and huge public works. Among the latter are
large "tanks" or reservoirs, important for conserving
water in a climate that alternates rainy seasons with dry times,
and elaborate aqueducts, some with a slope as finely calibrated
as one inch to the mile. Ancient Sri Lanka was also the first
in the world to have established a dedicated hospital in Mihintale
in the 4th century BCE. Ancient Sri Lanka was also the world's
leading exporter of cinnamon, which was exported to Egypt as
early as 1400 BCE. Sri Lanka was also the first Asian nation
to have a female ruler in Queen Anula (47–42 BC)
Since
ancient times Sri Lanka was ruled by monarchs, most notably of
the Sinha royal dynasty that lasted over 2000 years. The island
was also infrequently invaded by South Indian kingdoms and parts
of the island were ruled intermittently by the Chola dynasty,
the Pandya dynasty, the Chera dynasty and the Pallava dynasty.
The island was also invaded by the kingdoms of Kalinga (modern
Orissa) and those from the Malay Peninsula. Buddhism arrived from
India in the 3rd century BCE, brought by Bhikkhu Mahinda, who
is believed to have been the son of Mauryan emperor Ashoka. Mahinda's
mission won over the Sinhalese monarch Devanampiyatissa of Mihintale,
who embraced the faith and propagated it throughout the Sinhalese
population. The Buddhist kingdoms of Sri Lanka would maintain
a large number of Buddhist schools and monasteries, and support
the propagation of Buddhism into Southeast Asia.
Sri
Lanka had always been an important port and trading post in
the ancient world, and was increasingly frequented by merchant
ships from the Middle East, Persia, Burma, Thailand, Malaysia,
Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia. The islands were
known to the first European explorers of South Asia and settled
by many groups of Arab and Malay merchants. A Portuguese colonial
mission arrived on the island in 1505 headed by the Lourenço
de Almeida the son of Francisco de Almeida. At that point the
island consisted of three kingdoms, namely Kandy in the central
hills, Kotte at the Western coast, and Yarlpanam (Anglicised
Jaffna) in the north. The Dutch arrived in the 17th century.
Although much of the island came under the domain of European
powers, the interior, hilly region of the island remained independent,
with its capital in Kandy. The British East India Company established
control of the island in 1796, declaring it a crown colony in
1802, although the island would not be officially connected
with British India. The fall of the kingdom of Kandy in 1815
unified the island under British rule.
European
colonists established a series of tea, cinnamon, rubber, sugar,
coffee and indigo plantations. The British also brought a large
number of indentured workers from Tamil Nadu to work in the
plantation economy. The city of Colombo was established as the
administrative centre, and the British established modern schools,
colleges, roads and churches that brought Western-style education
and culture to the native people. Increasing grievances over
the denial of civil rights, mistreatment and abuse of natives
by colonial authorities gave rise to a struggle for independence
in the 1930s, when the Youth Leagues opposed the "Ministers'
Memorandum," which asked the colonial authority to increase
the powers of the board of ministers without granting popular
representation or civil freedoms. During World War II, the island
served as an important Allied military base. A large segment
of the British and American fleet were deployed on the island,
as were tens of thousands of soldiers committed to the war against
Japan in Southeast Asia.
Following the war, popular pressure for
independence intensified. On February 4, 1948 the country won
its independence as the Commonwealth of Ceylon. Don Stephen
Senanayake became the first Prime Minister of Sri Lanka. On
July 21, 1960 Sirimavo Bandaranaike took office as prime minister,
and became the first female head of government in post-colonial
Asia and the first female prime minister in the world. In 1972,
the country became a republic within the Commonwealth, and the
name was changed to Sri Lanka. The island enjoyed good relations
with the United Kingdom and had the British Royal Navy stationed
at Trincomalee.
Since 1983, there has been on-and-off
civil war, predominantly between the government and the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE, also known as the Tamil Tigers),
a separatist militant organization who fight to create an independent
state named Tamil Eelam in the North and East of the island.
Geography and climate
The
island of Sri Lanka lies in the Indian Ocean, to the southwest
of the Bay of Bengal and to the southeast of the Arabian Sea.
It is separated from the Indian subcontinent by the Gulf of
Mannar and the Palk Strait.[11] According to Hindu mythology,
a land bridge to the Indian mainland, known as Rama's Bridge,
was constructed during the time of Rama by the vanara architect
Nala. Often referred to as Adam's Bridge, it now amounts to
only a chain of limestone shoals remaining above sea level.[11]
According to colonial British reports, this is a natural causeway
which was formerly complete, but was breached by a violent storm
in 1480.[12] The width of the Palk Strait is small enough for
the coast of Sri Lanka to be visible from the furthest point
near the Indian town of Rameswaram.[citation needed] The tear
drop shaped island consists mostly of flat-to-rolling coastal
plains, with mountains rising only in the south-central part.
Amongst these are Sri Pada (Adams Peak) and the highest point
Pidurutalagala, at 2,524 meters (8,281 ft). The Mahaweli ganga
(Mahaweli river) and other major rivers provide fresh water
to the population.[13]
Sri
Lanka's climate can be described as tropical, and quite hot.
Its position between 5 and 10 north latitude endows the country
with a warm climate, moderated by ocean winds and considerable
moisture.[14] The mean temperature ranges from a low of 16 °C
(61 °F) in Nuwara Eliya in the Central Highlands (where frost
may occur for several days in the winter) to a high of 32 °C
(90 °F) in Trincomalee on the northeast coast (where temperatures
may reach 38 °C (100 °F)). The average yearly temperature for
the country as a whole ranges from 28° to 30 °C (82–86 °F).
Day and night temperatures may vary by 4 to 7 °C (7–13 °F).
In January, the coolest month, many people wear coats and sweaters
in the highlands and elsewhere. May, the hottest period, precedes
the summer monsoon rains. The rainfall pattern is influenced
by the monsoon winds of the Indian Ocean and Bay of Bengal,
which encounter the slopes of the Central Highlands, they unload
heavy rains on the mountain slopes and the southwestern sector
of the island. Some of the windward slopes receive up to 2,500
millimetres (98 in) of rain per month, but the leeward slopes
in the east and northeast receive little rain. Periodic squalls
occur and sometimes tropical cyclones bring overcast skies and
rains to the southwest, northeast, and eastern parts of the
island. Between December to March, monsoon winds come from the
northeast, bringing moisture from the Bay of Bengal. Humidity
is typically higher in the southwest and mountainous areas and
depends on the seasonal patterns of rainfall. At Colombo, for
example, daytime humidity stays above 70% all year, rising to
almost 90 percent during the monsoon season in June. Anuradhapura
experiences a daytime low of 60% during the monsoon month of
March, but a high of 79% during the November and December rains.
In the highlands, Kandy's daytime humidity usually ranges between
70 and 79%.