Menikkadawara fort

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Menikkadawara fort
Kegalle, Sri Lanka
Menikkadawara fort is located in Sri Lanka
Menikkadawara fort
Menikkadawara fort
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Type Defence fort
Site information
Condition Few remains beneath the sand
Site history
Built 1599
Built by Portuguese
File:AMH-4548-NA Maps of the entrenchments at Arandere, Tontotte, Ruanelle and Sitavaque.jpg
Map of Menikkadawara fort (bottom left corner), named as "Tontotte fort"

Menikkadawara fort (Sinhalese: මැනික්කඩවර බලකොටුව), was a small fort located at Menikkadawara, Kegalle.[1] The Portuguese called the place, Manicravaré or Manicavarê.

In January 1599 the Portuguese erected a tranqueira (a wooden stockade) on the site.[1]In 1603 the Portuguese were forced to withdraw from the area by the Kandyan forces. In 1626, under the supervision of the Portuguese Governor, Constantino de Sá de Noronha, the fort was upgraded and strengthened,[1] the rectangular fortification was known as the Forte Santa Fe or the Cidadela (Citadel) of Forte Cruz, it had four bastions on each corner, named Saõ Iago, Saõ Boa Ventura, Saõ Jorge and Saõ Pedro. The fort was not a major structure and its status as a fort is questionable given that it consists mainly of earth ramparts. It did however play an strategic important role against the Kandyan kingdom, as the main marshalling point for Portuguese forces in their ongoing fight against the Kingdom of Kandy.[1] It was recorded that approximately 400 Portuguese soldiers were garrisoned in the area.[2] In the 1630s the fort fell to Kandyan forces, as the result of ongoining rebellion against the Portuguese invasion of the Kingdom of Kandy.[3] The Portuguese however re-captured it. Following the defeat of the Portuguese in 1658, the area was re-occupied by the forces of the Kingdom of Kandy. The Menikkadawara fort lost its strategic role, once the Dutch secured control of Ceylon.[4]

Today the only remains of the fort that are visible are the earthern ramparts, which are overgrown with grass and weeds. The only other indication of the former fort is a sign erected on the site by the Department of Archaeology Department.[5]

References

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