Vaddukoddai | |
Native Name: | Tamil: வட்டுக்கோட்டை Sinhala; Sinhalese: වඩුකෝඩයි |
Settlement Type: | Town |
Pushpin Map: | Sri Lanka Northern Province#Sri Lanka |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Sri Lanka |
Subdivision Type2: | Province |
Subdivision Name2: | Northern |
Subdivision Type3: | District |
Subdivision Type4: | Divisional Secretariat |
Subdivision Type5: | Electoral District |
Subdivision Name5: | Jaffna Electoral District |
Subdivision Type6: | Polling Division |
Subdivision Name6: | Vaddukoddai Polling Division |
Coordinates: | 9.7333°N 79.95°W |
Vaddukoddai (Tamil: வட்டுக்கோட்டை|translit=Vaṭṭukkōṭṭai, Sinhala; Sinhalese: වඩුකෝඩයි) (also spelt Vatukotai, Vaddukkoddai) is small but important town in the minority Sri Lankan Tamil dominated Jaffna peninsula of Sri Lanka. This place famous to Cultural Dances & Hindu rituals.
It became prominent with the founding of Asia’s first modern university level collegiate known as Batticotta Seminary by the American Missionaries from New England in 1823.[1]
Most of the residents of the village are Sri Lankan Tamils, with the majority being Hindus and a few Christians. As of 2007, due to the effects of the Sri Lankan civil war the actual number of residents is unknown.
The village is home to the prominent Jaffna College that was founded as the Batticotta Seminary. Jaffna College is one of the most famous colleges in Jaffna, and is the only private mixed school. Students come from areas such as Batticaloa and Kandy, as well as Jaffna. Vaddukoddai is also home to the Vaddukoddai Hindu College it was founded by Ambalavana Navalar, The Only National School in there. Jaffna College Institute of Technology, a polytechnic that is used for various vocational training requirements. and one more important secondary institute of education, Vaddu Central College[1]
Category | School | Grades | Type | Roll | Address | Medium | Sex | Admin District | Zone | Div |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
National | 6-13 | 1AB | Sithankerny, Vaddukoddai | Tamil, English | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | ||
Provincial | Vaddu Central College | 1-13 | 1C | Vaddu South-West | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
Provincial | Vaddu Subramania Vidyasalai | 1-5 | 3 | Vaddu West | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
Provincial | Vaddu Karthikeya Vidyalayam | 1-5 | 3 | Vaddu South | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
Provincial | 1-5 | 3 | Vaddu West | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | ||
Provincial | Vaddu Thirunavukarasu Vidyalayam | 1-5 | 3 | Vaddu West | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
Provincial | Thavalai Saivaththamil Vidyalayam | 1-5 | 3 | Thavalai Road | Tamil | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
Private | Jaffna College | 1-13 | 1AB | Vaddukoddai | Tamil, English | Mixed | JAF | Valikamam | Chankanai | |
An Amman temple at Sangarathai, a Murugan temples at Adaikalam Thoddam and Panguru are three of the main Hindu temples found here.
The Church of South India has 21 administrative division throughout the world. It has only one of them known as a diocese in Sri Lanka. The Jaffna Diocese headquarters is in Vaddukoddai.[2]
The name of the village suggests that at some point in its history it had a fortress in its midst, possibly from the Aryacakravarti dynasty. But rule by various colonial powers since 1621 has erased all evidence of a fort. The village became prominent during the British colonial period in Sri Lanka as it was chosen as location for one of the nine protestant missions to be established within the small Jaffna peninsula (hardly 15 by 40 miles). The move by the seminary to study Saiva scriptures led to an important social transformation amongst the local Tamils because it began a process that led to a Saiva revivalism led by Arumuka Navalar. Eventually the seminary was renamed Jaffna college and became a secular institution in 1867. The village also played an important role in the recent Sri Lankan civil war as the place where the Tamil United Liberation Front party came up with the Vaddukoddai Resolution in 1976 that articulated the view that minority Sri Lankan Tamils needed separation from rest of Sri Lanka to resolve their political problems.[1] [3] [4]