Galle Fort, in the Bay of Galle on the southwest coast of Sri Lanka, was built first in 1588 by the Portuguese, then extensively fortified by the Dutch during the 17th century from 1649 onwards. It is a historical, archaeological and architectural heritage monument, which even after more than 425 years maintains a polished appearance, due to extensive reconstruction work done by the Archaeological Department of Sri Lanka.
The
fort has a colorful history, and today has a multi-ethnic and multi-religious
population. The Sri Lankan
government and many Dutch people
who still own some of the properties inside the fort, are looking to make this
one of the modern wonders of the world. The
heritage value of the fort has been recognized by the UNESCO and the site has been inscribed
as a cultural heritage UNESCO World Heritage
Site under criteria iv, for its unique exposition of "an urban
ensemble which illustrates the interaction of European architecture and South
Asian traditions from the 16th to the 19th centuries."
The Galle Fort, also known as the Dutch Fort or the "Ramparts
of Galle", withstood the Boxing Day
Tsunami which damaged part of the
coastal area towns of the southern region. It has been since restored. The Galle Fort also houses the elite
mangalla resort hotel, located near the Dutch Reformed Church. It was
originally built in 1684 to house the Dutch Governor and his staff. It was then
converted into a hotel and named then as the New Oriental Hotel in 1865, which catered to the many European passengers traveling
between Europe and Galle Port in the 19th century.
There are many versions of the word ‘Galle’
that is suffixed to the fort. One version is that it is a derivative of
‘Gallus’ from the Dutch language,
meaning “chicken”. The other version is that it was a "galaa", in the Sinhalese language, meaning a
“cattle herd” or place where cattle was herded.
Galle's earliest historical existence
is traced to Ptolemy's world map of 125–150 AD when it was a busy port,
trading with Greece, Arab countries, China and others. Its mention as a
"port of call of the Levant' is made in the cosmography of the
"Cosmas Indicopleustes". This is the harbor where the Portuguese,
under the leadership of Lorenzo de Almeida, made their first landing in 1505 on
the island and caused a notable change in the history of the island with their
close friendship with Dharma Parakrama Bahu (1484–1514), the then king of
the country. Before the Portuguese came here, Ibn Batuta had touched base
at this port. This was the beginning of the fort’s history, which was built by
the Portuguese, along with a Franciscan chapel (now mostly in ruins) inside the
fort in 1541. The fort also, in later years, served as prison camp to
incarcerate Sinhalese natives who opposed the Portuguese.
The Portuguese later moved to Colombo from
Galle. In 1588, however, they were attacked by the Sinhalese King Raja Sinha I (1581–93)
of Sitawaka, which forced the Portuguese to go back to Galle. At Galle, they
initially built a small fort out of palm trees and mud. They called it the
Santa Cruz, and later extended it with a watch tower and three bastions and a
"fortalice" to guard the harbor.
In 1640, the events
took a turn with the Dutch entering the fray joining hands with King Rajasinha III to capture the Galle Fort.
The Dutch, with a force of some 2,500 men under Koster, captured the fort from
the Portuguese in 1640 itself. Although not an ideal situation for the
Sinhalese, they were instrumental in building the fort as seen in its present
form in the Dutch architectural style. Fortifications continued to be built
until the early 18th century. The establishment built consisted of public
administration buildings, warehouses and business houses and residential
quarters. A Protestant Church (planned by Abraham Anthonisz)
was also built in baroque style in 1775 to cater to the
colonists and the local people who were converted to Christianity.
The most prominent buildings in the fort complex were the Commandant's
residence, the arsenal and the gun house. Other buildings erected in the fort
catered to trade and defense requirements such as workshops for forgings,
carpentry, smithy, rope making and so forth. They also built an elaborate
system of sewers that were flooded at high tide, taking the sewage away to sea.
The British took over
the fort on 23 February 1796, one week after Colombo was captured. Sri Lanka
remained a British colony formally from 1815 till it became an independent
island nation in 1948. In
1865, part of the fort was converted into the New Oriental Hotel, becoming the Amangalla in
2005. The importance of Galle also declined after the British developed Colombo
as their capital and main port in the mid nineteenth century.
Galle Fort located within Galle, which is located at
the extreme southwest corner of the island, in the southeast coast of Sri
Lanka, where the shoreline turns east towards Matara and Tangalle. The fort, like
most of the forts in Sri Lanka, is built on a small rocky peninsula, belonging
to the sea as much as to the land. As it exists today, it covers an area of 52
hectares (130 acres).
Highway
A2 provides road links to Galle from Colombo (a distance of 113 kilometres
(70 mi)) and the rest of the country along the west coast or from the east
along the south coast. Since 2012 an expressway has linked Galle to Colombo.
Rail links are also available to Colombo and Matara. Sea route is through the
Galle Port at the Galle Harbor.
The Galle City (population circa 120,000, over an area of 16.5 square kilometres (6.4 sq mi)
has developed around the Galle Fort area which covers around 52 hectares
(130 acres). The story of the fort is well illustrated by many signages
and plaques, which provide information about each monument. There are many Ceylon Moor (Muslim) families who live
inside this fort, who have been the main trading merchants in the region since
ancient times.
The fort, originally
built by the Portuguese in the 16th century to defend Galle, was an earthen
structure with pallisades covering the northern land side with rampart and
three bastions. They believed that the sea ward side was impregnable and hence
did not construct any fortifications on the sea side. The sea wall was an
addition made in 1729 to make the city planning for defense purposes complete
in all respects.
When the fort came
under the control of the Dutch, they considered the old fortifications built by
the Portuguese unsafe as they were made of earth and palisades. Hence, the
Dutch decided to fully encircle the entire peninsula by building impregnable
fortifications as defense against other colonial agencies in the region. They
built some 14 bastions with coral and granite stones over an area of (52
hectares (130 acres). Many of the fortification walls were built in 1663.
The city built within the fort was well planned with a grid layout with the
peripheral roads aligned parallel to fort's ramparts.
The fort has two
gates. The two towering gates to the fort are termed “Portcullised gates” and
the first gate of entry from the port is inscribed "ANNO MDCL XIX"
which has depiction of the Dutch Coat of Arms with the ubiquitous emblem
of cock and
an inset "VOC" inscribed in the center.
The Main Gate is in
the northern stretch of the fort on the land side and is heavily fortified. The
Portuguese had built a moat here which was widened during the Dutch rule by
breaking the fort wall in 1667 and building the Star, Moon and Sun bastions. Its
construction is also dated to the British period from 1897 to facilitate easy
flow of traffic to the old town. This gate was fortified with a draw
bridge surrounded by a moat; inscriptions here indicate 1669 as the year of
construction. Some of the other named bastions are: The Aurora Bastion, the
Tremon Bastion, the Kleipenberg Bastion and the Emaloon Bastion, adding an
element of grandeur to the fort as a whole.
Walking along the
fort wall in a clockwise direction leads to the Old Gate where the British Coat
of Arms is seen inscribed at the entrance at the top. In the inner part of the
gate there is the 1668 dated inscription of letters VOC, which is an
abbreviation of Verenigde Oostindindische Compagnie, meaning Dutch East India
Company with the insignia of a cock flanked by two lions. Further along
the fort wall is the Portuguese built oldest bastion, known as Zwart Bastion,
meaning Black Bastion. The eastern section of the fort terminates in the Point
Utrecht Bastion; the powder house is also seen here. An 18 metres (59 ft)
high light house was erected here in 1938. The succeeding stretch of the fort
wall is the location of Flag Rock Bastion, which was used as a signaling
station to warn the ships entering the port of the hazardous rocky stretches of
the bay. Ships were warned by firing musket shots from the Pigeon Island near
the Flag Rock. Further along the fort walls is the Trion Bastion where a
windmill drew water from the sea to sprinkle the dusty roads of the town; it is
also a view point to watch the sunset. Many more bastions are seen along the
fortifications from this location up to the Main Gate.
The Fort really
resembles a small laid out walled town, with a rectangular grid pattern of
streets full of the low houses with gables and verandas in the Dutch colonial
style. It has a well laid out road network and many buildings which are now
heritage monuments such as the Oriental Hotel, originally built in 1694 for the
exclusive use of the Dutch Governor and his staff, now converted into a
franchise of the Aman Resorts, named the AmanGalla. The fort area is
studded with churches, mosques, many old commercial and government buildings.
Some of the locals stroll along the walls of the fort in the evenings.
After the fort came
under the control of the British in 1796, it remained their southern
headquarters. They made many modifications to the fort such as closing of the
moat, building of houses, a lighthouse on the Utrecht Bastion, a gate between
the Moon Bastion and the Sun Bastion. A tower was particularly erected in 1883
to commemorate the jubilee of Queen Victoria. The Second World War saw many
more fortifications built to defend the fort. In spite of all the changes made
over the years, since it was first built between the 16th and the 19th century,
the Galle Fort still remains a unique monument complex said to be "the
best example of a fortified city with a fusion of European architecture and
South Asian traditions built by Europeans in South and Southeast Asia".
In the fort area,
many buildings are of Dutch vintage with street names also in Dutch. The
sewerage system built in the fort area ensured that the city sewerage was
flushed into the sea during the tidal cycle. The Dutch exploited the musk rats
in the sewers by exporting them to extract musk oil.
Some of the important heritage
monuments in the fort are the Dutch Reformed Church; the old Dutch government
house; the National Maritime Museum near the Old Gate, residence of the
Commander; Great Warehouse built around 1669 to store spices, ship equipment
and so forth; the Meera Maqam Mosque built in 1904; Buddhist temple built at
the site of Portuguese Roman Catholic church; the All Saints Anglican Church
built in 1871; and the Clock Tower dated 1707 and cast in 1709, which rang
every hour.
The Dutch Reformed
Church is near the Amangalla Hotel. The church was built in 1640. However, it
was re-modelled between 1752 and 1755. The church is paved with grave stones
from the old Dutch cemetery. There is an old organ of 1760 vintage in the
church where services are held and a pulpit made of calamander wood from
Malaysia is used.
Some of the street
names, a legacy from the colonial period, are the Pedlar Street or ‘Moorse
Kramerstraat’, the Moorish pedlar (or peddler) street, named after the Ceylon
Moors, who were retailers along with chettis; the Lighthouse
Street ‘‘Zeeburgstraat’ ‘Middelpuntstraat’ named after the lighthouse which was
destroyed in a fire in 1936; the Hospital Street, the location of the Dutch
Hospital, the house of the Surgeon and the Medical Garden; Leyenbahnstraat, the
Old Rope-Walk Street where coir rope was made; the Church Street, named after a
church which was demolished in the 7th century; the Parawa Street, named after
the Parawa migrants from South India who were fishermen and traders; and
the Chando Street named after the toddy tappers and Dutch Burghers who
owned coconut gardens and small ark distilleries.
Breadfruit Tree
The breadfruit tree
was introduced in Galle first by the Dutch; one of the oldest breadfruit trees
in Sri Lanka is stated to be in Galle Fort. It is believed that the Dutch
introduced breadfruit which is of ‘heaty’ nature hoping that would either kill
them or make them sick. However, the Sri Lankans found a neutralizer to
this in the coconut tree. They mixed breadfruit with coconut and evolved a
delicacy, which became popular, as it was found tasty and nourishing. This tree
is now grown across Sri Lanka.
The fort area is
occupied by mostly artists, writers, photographers, designers and poets of
foreign origin and is now a mixed bag of boutiques, hotels and restaurants.
Following the disaster
caused by the Asian Tsunami of 2004 when
many buildings were damaged, the Ministry of Cultural Affairs launched a
project for renovation and reconstruction, but paying attention to the former
architecture to retain a historical feel.
The
Galle Fort has both Portuguese and Dutch era buildings, reflecting the bygone
era of the colonial domination of the city. These buildings needed attention as
many changes had taken place over the centuries. The Government of Sri Lanka,
through its Galle Heritage Foundation under the Ministry of Cultural Affairs
and National Heritage has taken the initiative of restoring some of the
heritage buildings to their old glory. The restoration work has been
financially supported by the Government of The Netherlands. The renovation work
conforms to guidelines set by the Archeological Department of Sri Lanka.
Technical guidance was provided by the Architectural Wing of the University of
Moratuwa.[ Very many of the old town houses have
been bought up by expatriates and rich Sri Lankans and Indians and renovated as
holiday homes.
The
National Maritime Museum in Galle Fort area, near the Old gate, was established
in 1997 as an exclusive Maritime Archaeology Centre with active involvement of
the Government of the Netherlands in the project in view of the findings that
the Galle Harbor consisted of over 21 historical shipwreck sites and associated
artifacts.
The Way it used to be
[to be updated, a street by street description of the people, places, events, and businesses that thrived along the streets of Galle Fort over the years. awaiting input from several people who lived in the Fort in the bygone years]
[to be updated, a street by street description of the people, places, events, and businesses that thrived along the streets of Galle Fort over the years. awaiting input from several people who lived in the Fort in the bygone years]
1 comment:
Gorgeous!
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