Galle Fort

Galle Fort The Galle Fort - a UNESCO world heritage site situated on the stunning south Sri Lanka coast line. It seems that they preferred Colombo at first.

Galle provides an outstanding example of an urban ensemble which illustrates the interaction of European architecture and South Asian traditions from the 16th to the 19th centuries. The most salient feature is the use of European models adapted by local manpower to the geological, climatic, historical, and cultural conditions of Sri Lanka. In the structure of the ramparts, coral is frequently used

along with granite. In the ground layout all the measures of length, width and height conform with the regional metrology. The wide streets, planted with grass and shaded by suriyas, are lined with houses, each with its own garden and an open veranda supported by columns, another sign of the acculturation of an architecture which is European only in its basic design. The bay of Galle lies off the south-west coast of Sri Lanka, sheltered by a rocky peninsula. Mentioned as early as 545 in the cosmography of Cosmas Indicopleustes, it is one of the most ancient 'ports of call of the Levant'. When Ibn Batuta landed there in 1344, it was the principal port of Ceylon. Portuguese navigators settled there in 1505, two years before settling in Colombo. In 1588, they decided to withdraw to Galle and they hastily constructed a rampart and three bastions to defend the peninsula on the northern landside. The seaward side was considered invulnerable and was not fortified. Few vestiges subsist from a Franciscan chapel that was built in 1543. When the fortified town fell into the hands of the Dutch in 1640, they decided to replace the precarious Portuguese defences constituted partially of palisades and earth banks. They encircled the whole of the peninsula with a bastioned stone wall so as to render it impregnable against the English, French, Danish, Spanish and Portuguese fleets vying with Holland for the supremacy of the sea. This fortified city, built by the Dutch, exists still, but with few changes. It has an area of 52 ha inside the walls defended by 14 bastions. The majority of the curtain walls were built in 1663. The northern fortified gate, protected by a drawbridge and a ditch, bears the date 1669. Much of the city, laid out on a regular grid pattern adapted to the configuration of the terrain (north-south peripheral streets are parallel to the ramparts and not to the central traffic axes), dates from this period. During the 18th century, protected by a sea wall finished in 1729, the city reached full development. It housed 500 families, and a large number of public administrations, trade establishments and warehouses were located there. A Protestant, Baroque-style church, the oldest in Sri Lanka, was constructed in 1775 for the European colonists and a few Christian converts from plans drawn up by Abraham Anthonisz. However, Galle remained essentially a stronghold. In the layout of the city the Commandant's residence, the arsenal and the powder house were prominent features. The forge, carpentry and rope-making workshops, the naval guardhouse, and barracks rounded out a system that closely linked prosperous trade to military security. The fort of Galle was handed over to the English only on 23 February 1796, one week after the surrender of Colombo. As a British protectorate, Galle remained the administrative centre of the south of Ceylon. A number of unfortunate modifications were then made: ditches filled in, new blockhouses added, a gate put in between the Moon bastion and the Sun bastion, a lighthouse installed on the Utrecht bastion, and a tower erected for the jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1883. Other work was undertaken during the Second World War in order to restore the defensive function of the fortifications. Taken together these alterations, few in number, as can be seen from the above, have not seriously modified the original city plan. Galle remains the best example of a fortified city built by Europeans in South and South-East Asia. Source: UNESCO/CLT/WH

23/05/2018
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05/09/2017

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An Investigation by LT PRO, on the wellbeing of Sri Lanka's Elephants

12/06/2017

The UNESCO World Heritage Site is a living, breathing museum

Thinking of everyone in the country today. Stay strong everyone - sending love and hope to all. 🇱🇰❤️       - To all frie...
28/05/2017

Thinking of everyone in the country today. Stay strong everyone - sending love and hope to all. 🇱🇰❤️ - To all friends out there Oxfam is currently supporting Sri Lanka through the current emergency situation (The flooding is believed to be the worst since May 2003 when a similarly powerful south-west monsoon destroyed 10,000 homes and killed 250 people.) so if you feel like donating please follow the link - http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what-we-do/countries-we-work-in/sri-lanka

Thinking of everyone in the country over the following few weeks. Stay strong everyone - sending love and hope to all. 🇱🇰❤️ - To all friends out there Oxfam is currently supporting Sri Lanka through the current emergency situation (The flooding is believed to be the worst since May 2003 when a similarly powerful south-west monsoon destroyed 10,000 homes and killed 250 people.) so if you feel like donating please follow the link - http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what-we-do/countries-we-work-in/sri-lanka

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10/05/2017

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Happy Vesak everyone! big shout to the office team at HQ - Udeshika Gayathri and Shasika Gamage - for creating these beautiful lanterns ❤️ 📷: Ben Balfour

https://roar.life/travel/101-things-to-do-in-sri-lanka/
01/04/2017

https://roar.life/travel/101-things-to-do-in-sri-lanka/

For a compact island, there are infinite things to do here. To start, we’ve put together a list of 101 experiences that most people in Sri Lanka have either tried, thought about trying, or should try after reading this. 1. Take the train Up the hills. Down the coast. Through the Kelani Valley.

07/02/2017

It's only a few nights till the BIG NIGHT to get together with love in our hearts!
Let's meet at sunset...

Can't miss these little slices of heaven whilst in Colombo - https://goo.gl/aEJvC7
31/01/2017

Can't miss these little slices of heaven whilst in Colombo - https://goo.gl/aEJvC7

If you’re in Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, there’s only one place to start – Galle Face Green. The largest urban park in this jumbly city, it’s actually a cross between a park and a beach, the huge space also serving as an area for rallies, parties and, back in the old days, horse races.

Address

Lighthouse Street
Galle
80000

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