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Sri Lanka History Page
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The Primary interest of the Dutch, as in the East
Indies and parts of Southeast Asia, was spices. They received a
promise of a monopoly over the island's spice trade in return for help
in driving out the Portuguese. But the Kandyan compact with the Dutch
proved as ill-fated as the earlier alliance with the Portuguese.
The Dutch recaptured the eastern ports for the
kandyans. But when they regained Galle and Negombo in 1641, they
decided to keep these ports for themselves. The Hollanders also seized
the Portuguese fort of Colombo in 1656 and drove the last of the
Iberians from Ceylon, as it was now known, in the year 1658 with the
capture of jaffna. In defiance of their pact with the kandyan rulers,
the Dutch held onto most of this captured terriory. Sri Lanka had
merely exchanged the rule of one European power for another. Through
it all, the kandyan kingdom stubbornly maintained its independence. In
the course of time, Kandy's survival as an independent Sinhalese
Kingdom led to the emergence of a dichotomy among the Sinhalese
themselves - a distinction between the low country coastal people and
the Kandyans of the interior.
Galle Harbor Painting in Dutch Times >>
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Famous Dutch
Governors |
William Corteser
(A.C.1640) |
Lawrence Heel
(A.C.1675-1678) |
Hendricks Baker
(A.C.1702-1706) |
Daniel Beak
(A.C.1739-1742) |
J.G. Mann Bic
(A.C.1785-1794) |
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