Kayts Fort

The Kayts Island Fort (Kayits Dupath Balakotuwa) was built by the Portuguese in 1629 and was abandoned in 1651. In the late 1600s, Dutch controlled the fort when they took over the Kayts island. During the Dutch rule, it was not normal to undergo restoration like the former forts of Portugal

The horseshoe shaped fort with four circular bastions was built to protect Jaffna Peninsula like other Portuguese forts in the peninsula. There was one of the primary commercial ports called “Urundai” beside the fort. Therefore, the fort was known as “Urundai Fort”. The Tamil word “Urundai” literally means sphere or round-shape

Known as Urathota (Uruthota) in the ancient times, Kayts was a major port in ancient Sri Lanka. According to the Nagadeepa Tamil inscription, during the reign of King Parakramabahu I (1153-1186), Urathota was a special port for Indian merchant ships and the king had paid special attention to ships carrying horses and elephants at this port.

Urathota got its name Kayts from the Portuguese. It’s a name derived from “Caes dos Elefantes“. The term means “elephant’s mouth”. The Portuguese came to call this port “Caes dos Elefantes” because Sri Lankan elephants were exported to India through this port. The name “Caes dos Elefantes” was simplified to “Cais“. After the expulsion of the Portuguese and the arrival of the Dutch in Jaffna, the name was further evolved in to “Kays” and later to “Kayts“.

The fort at Kayts was built by the Portuguese. Antonio Bocarro, who served as chronicler-general of the Portuguese State of India has made a note of the fort in 1635. He has called this fort “Fort at the Elephants Quay“. It is said that this fort is as big as the Mannar Fort but better shaped. It has two bastions on the land side and a breastwork on the seaside which is 35 meters long and 5.5 meters wide. It is not filled up, but raised on beams and the open gallery below cannot be protected in any manner because rain water pours in through the openings in the ground for the movement of the artillery. There are twelve open embrasures above at the height, from the ground level, of 2.5 meters and from the parapet of the embrasures upwards is 1.8 meters. The fort was equipped with 8 artillery pieces, three 8 pounders, three 6 pounders and two 5 pounders. There has been enough space for ample ammunition, the captain and 40 soldiers inside this fort.

Baldaeus, a Dutch pastor, writes in his 1672 memoir, states that the Dutch sent a message of surrender to the Portuguese commander in charge of Fort Kayts during the Dutch invasion of Jaffna in 1658. However he does not mention any details of this fort. After taking control of Jaffna, the Dutch did not attempt to rebuild Kayts Fort. This may have been due to the existence of nearby Hammenhiel Fort.

The next information on this fort come from a author using a pen name “PENN”. Penn writing to the Colombo Journal in 1832 reports that the fort was already in ruins when he visited it. At the time, it was known as “Erie Fort“. A study of the ruins revealed that it was a fort 130 feet long with four cylindrical walls and thick walls. It is mentioned that there were two gates on the east and west and part of the outer slope of the fort facing the sea on the north.

According to an article published in 1926 by a British author named J Pearson, the fort, mentioned by PENN at the time, had been largely destroyed. But Pearson has methodically studied these ruins and states that this fort was not square but horseshoe-shaped. Two bastians faced the sea with the convexity facing landwards to the south

The length of the fort is 274 feet to the northern wall joining the bastions. The extreme width is 206 feet. The outer wall

Om Jaffna-distriktet

Jaffna är huvudstad i den norra provinsen på Sri Lanka. 85 % av befolkningen i distrikten Jaffna och Kilinochchi är hinduer. Hinduerna följer den saivitiska traditionen. Resten är till stor del romersk-katoliker eller protestanter, av vilka några är ättlingar till koloniala bosättare, så kallade burgare. Tamilerna är uppdelade längs kastlinjer, där bondekasten Vellalar utgör majoriteten. Fisk- och skaldjursprodukter, rödlök och tobak är de viktigaste produkterna i Jaffna.

Jaffna är hem för vackra hinduiska tempel. Ett gammalt holländskt fort står fortfarande välbevarat, inuti vilket finns en gammal kyrka. Ett annat exempel på holländsk arkitektur är Kungens hus. Inget besök i Jaffna är komplett utan att smaka på den utsökta Jaffna-mangon, känd för sin sötma. Cirka 3 km bort ligger det majestätiska Nallur Kandaswamy-templet, hem för den största religiösa festivalen i Jaffna. Kayts hamn är en gammal dockningsplats för fartyg i Jaffna-regionen.

Om Norra provinsen

Norra provinsen är en av Sri Lankas 9 provinser. Provinserna har funnits sedan 1800-talet men de hade ingen juridisk status förrän 1987 då det 13:e tillägget till Sri Lankas konstitution från 1978 inrättade provinsråd. Mellan 1988 och 2006 slogs provinsen tillfälligt samman med Östra provinsen för att bilda Nordöstra provinsen. Provinsens huvudstad är Jaffna.

Norra provinsen ligger i norra Sri Lanka och bara 35 km från Indien. Provinsen är omgiven av Mannarviken och Palkbukten i väster, Palksundet i norr, Bengalbukten i öster och de östra, norra centrala och nordvästra provinserna i söder. Provinsen har ett antal laguner, varav de största är Jaffna-lagunen, Nanthi Kadal, Chundikkulam-lagunen, Vadamarachchi-lagunen, Uppu Aru-lagunen, Kokkilai-lagunen, Nai Aru-lagunen och Chalai-lagunen. De flesta öarna runt Sri Lanka finns väster om norra provinsen. De största öarna är: Kayts, Neduntivu, Karaitivu, Pungudutivu och Mandativu.

Den norra provinsens befolkning var 1 311 776 år 2007. Majoriteten av befolkningen är srilankanska tamiler, med en minoritetsbefolkning av srilankanska morer och singaleser. Srilankanska tamil är det huvudsakliga språket som talas i provinsen av den stora majoriteten av befolkningen. Det andra språket som talas är singalesiska av 1 procent av befolkningen. Engelska talas och förstås i stor utsträckning i städerna.