Jan 09 2026.
views 6By Paul Topping
I’m sure most of us living in Sri Lanka have visited locations on the island that include a Fort. The most likely example is Galle Fort, our biggest Fort and a UNESCO location dating back to the sixteenth hundred. It’s my favourite Fort on the island, just walk the ramparts at sunset, mind-blowing. I had the opportunity at the last Galle Lit. Festival to visit the normally no-go area behind the police station, likely the oldest area of the fort. Years back, Jezzabel and I, in love with Galle, tried to buy a property facing the Galle ramparts, we were guzumpt by the local ’property mafia’ . There are said to have been thirty-six Colonial Forts on the island, but this excludes some in ruins , some knocked down or lost, and some built on pre Colonial sites.
I’ve tracked down and visited over twenty so far .
Most forts were built by the Portuguese and located on sea facing strategic locations . Then the Dutch arrived, extended and vastly improved most Forts , some circling a town . My second favourite Fort is likely one of the smallest , Hammenhiel, off Kayts island. It sits on a rock just off the coast , such a picturesque site . You can stay in one of the four air conditioned bedrooms with great service from the Navy staff .
In the same northern location of Delft island are the remains of a Fort , along with the island, it is a magical place to visit. Trincomalee Fort was locally built and extended by the Portuguese. There are other pre colonization Forts extended by the Portuguese and upgraded and extended by the Dutch. More towers in Sri Lanka can be seen, mostly on the waterfront . One is opposite the Scottish church in Galle Rd in Colombo. The Colombo Fort was the first colonial Fort on the island , built in 1518 . Still to be investigated, I hear it covers in part the Temple Trees , Delft gateway on Bristol Street, and the Battenburg Battery . Little to see and not too exciting. I’ve been to the Colombo Maritime Museum which was also in the Colombo Fort .
There is good news and bad news about many of the Forts in Sri Lanka . Most are open to the public , many are currently under renovation , but in most of them progress is immensely slow, like in Jaffna, stunningly set by the sea with impressive ramparts but internally lacking in refurbishment.
In Kalpitiya we found it a bit difficult to get into the Fort as the Navy were operating there . The British passport helped with the Navy team on duty, though getting my Indian buddy , Shanawaz was difficul. We had to tour with a Navy junior escort who spoke no English . We see the whale skeletons roasting on the ramparts.
A couple of Forts are still used as prisons like, Negombo , but are still worth visiting if you are in the area . You can’t go in !
So there are many Forts still to visit . I hope to cover them in another Sri Lanka Fort story . So , see you in some obscure Fort on the road less travelled.
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