Kotalawala Walawwa Explained

Kotalawala Walawwa
Native Name:කොතලාවල වලව්ව
Native Name Lang:si
Alternate Names:Piya Niwasa
Building Type:Walawwa
Address:78 K Hindagoda
Location City:Badulla
Location Country:Sri Lanka
Coordinates:6.9834°N 81.0663°W
Designations:Archaeological protected monument (22 November 2002)

Kotalawala Walawwa is a historic Walawwa building situated in Hindagoda, Badulla, Sri Lanka. The building is located on the Badulla - Passara main road (A5), approximately 1km (01miles) away from the Badulla town. It was the residence of former Muhandiram Don Carolis Kotalawala. The Walawwa has been formally recognised by the Government as an archaeological protected monument in Sri Lanka.[1] The designation was declared on 22 November 2002 under the government Gazette number 1264.[2]

History

Since 1818 uprising against the British colonial government, Uva area was suffering from the ravages of British military actions. It is said that British rulers had almost neglected Uva's economic, transport and educational development.[3] Therefore some part of Badulla area was also in rural and forested state without proper development. Meanwhile a youth named Don Carolis Kotalawala, born in 1847 from Undugoda, Raigam Korale area decided to migrate to Badulla and began his career as a good transporter. He first introduced a fleet of double bullock carts to transport goods through the jungle maze and personally supervised the transport network which was stalked by bandits and robbers. The success of his career led him into well known merchant and land proprietor in the area. Being a notable person in the region he was conferred the title Muhandiram and married to Sudu Menika Wijekoon, a lady of a high class family from the area. A stately house put up at Hindagoda off Badulla became their family residence and which was later known as Kotalawala Walawwa.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Protected Monument List 2012-12-12. 12 December 2012. Department of Archaeology. 1 July 2017. 2018-11-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20181123073223/http://www.archaeology.gov.lk/web/images/pdf/protected%20monument%20list%202012-12-12.pdf. dead.
  2. Gazette. 22 November 2002. The Gazette of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka. 1264.
  3. Web site: The saga of the Kotelawala family. 12 December 2012. rootsweb.ancestry.com. Padma. Edirisinghe. 1 July 2017.