Official name: Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Capital city: Colombo
Internet country code: .lk
Flag description: Yellow with two panels; the smaller hoist-side panel has two equal vertical bands of green (hoist side) and orange; the other panel is a large dark red rectangle with a yellow lion holding a sword, and there is a yellow bo leaf in each corner; the yellow field appears as a border around the entire flag and extends between the two panels
National anthem: “Sri Lanka Matha”
National flower: Blue Water Lily (Nymphaea stellata)
Geographical description: Southern Asia, island in the Indian Ocean, south of India
Total area: 25,332 sq. mi. (65,610 sq. km.)
Climate: Tropical monsoon; northeast monsoon (December to March); southwest monsoon (June to October)
Nationality: noun: Sri Lankan(s); adjective: Sri Lankan
Population: 20,926,315 (July 2007 CIA est.)
Ethnic groups: Sinhalese 74%, Tamil 18%, Burgher (descendants of Dutch and Portuguese colonist) and others 8%
Languages spoken: Sinhala (official and national language) 74%, Tamil (national language) 18%, other 8% (English is commonly used in government and is spoken competently by about 10% of the population)
Religions: Buddhist 69.1%, Muslim 7.6%, Hindu 7.1%, Christian 6.2%, unspecified 10%
| Christmas Day | Dec 25 |
| Day prior to Sinhala and Tamil New Year | Apr 13 |
| Good Friday | Apr 22, 2011; Apr 6, 2012; Mar 29, 2013; Apr 18, 2014; Apr 3, 2015; Mar 25, 2016; Apr 14, 2017; Mar 30, 2018; Apr 19, 2019; Apr 10, 2020; Apr 2, 2021; Apr 15, 2022; Apr 7, 2023 |
| May Day | May 1 |
| National Day | Feb 4 |
| Sinhala and Tamil New Year | Apr 14 |
(Ceylon until 1972), Republic of Sri Lanka, a state on the island of the same name in the Indian Ocean, lying off the southeastern coast of the Hindustan Peninsula. Member of the British Commonwealth of Nations. Area, 65,600 sq km. Population, 13.7 million (1976). The capital is the city of Colombo. For administrative purposes the country is divided into nine provinces, which in turn are subdivided into 22 districts.
Sri Lanka is a republic. The present constitution was adopted on May 22, 1972 (amendments were adopted in 1977). The head of state is the president, elected for a term of six years. He is also the chief executive and the commander in chief of the armed forces. He has the right to dissolve the parliament. He appoints the prime minister and other ministers and determines their functions. The highest legislative body, a unicameral parliament, is the National State Assembly, whose members are elected for a term of six years. All citizens over 18 years of age have the right to vote. The government—the Council of Ministers—is headed by the prime minister.
Each district is administered by a government official, appointed by the president from among the members of parliament. Town, urban, and municipal councils and village committees constitute the local bodies of authority.
The judiciary comprises the Supreme Court, which also exercises appellate jurisdiction, district and magistrates’ courts (for criminal cases), and rural courts, which exercise jurisdiction with respect to petty crimes and civil disputes. The judges are appointed by the Council of Ministers, while the members of the Supreme Court are appointed by the president.
The island’s coasts are primarily low-lying, with numerous lagoons. Rimmed by coral reefs, they are weakly indented, with isolated ingression-type gulfs.
Terrain. More than 80 percent of Sri Lanka is occupied by lowland plains, dotted with isolated rocky inselbergs. Located in the central and southern parts is a steed highland, with flattened surfaces and steep fault scarps; the upper stratum is formed by table surfaces and steep summits, including Mount Pidurutalagala, which rises to an elevation of 2,524 m, and Adam’s Peak.
Geological structure and mineral resources. Sri Lanka occupies part of the Hindustan Shield of the Indian Plate, the foundation of which is composed of gneisses, granite gneisses, charnockites, amphibolites, schists, quartzites, and marbles with intrusions of Upper Proterozoic granites (from approximately 1 billion years ago) and dikes of dolorites and pegmatites. Carbonatites also occur. Rocks of the foundation outcrop to the surface on nine-tenths of the territory of Sri Lanka; in the north the foundation is overlain by a mantle of Jurassic and Miocene sedimentary rocks, including sandstones, siltstones, argillites, limestones, sands, and clays. Coastal marine Quaternary deposits (pebbles, gravel, sand, and clay) are widespread on the Indian Ocean coast. Latérites are developed in the crystalline rocks.
The principal minerals are graphite (with total reserves of 20 million tons), precious and semiprecious stones (sapphire, ruby, aquamarine, topaz, moonstone, chrysoberyl, coastal-marine black sands containing ilmenite and rutile (2 million tons in the form of TiO2), zircon, and monazite. Other important minerals are kaolinite and other clays, as well as limestones, feldspars, and quartz sands.
Climate. The climate is the monsoon type; in the north and east it is subequatorial, and in the south and west, equatorial. The temperature is 26°–30°C on the plains, dropping to 15°–20°C in the mountains; it changes little in the course of the year. The greatest amount of precipitation (as much as 5,000 mm annually) falls on the southwestern slopes of the highland, primarily during the summer monsoon); in the foothills the annual precipitation reaches 2,000 mm. On the northeastern slopes of the highland and on the adjacent plains most of the precipitation, which amounts to 1,000–2,000 mm annually, falls during the winter monsoon; there is a dry season lasting eight to nine months. The least amount of precipitation, amounting to less than 1,000 mm a year, occurs on the northwestern and southwestern coasts. During the spring and autumn, many areas experience abundant convective afternoon showers.
Rivers and lakes. The river network is dense. Short, copious rivers, the largest of which is the Mahaweli Ganga, rise in the central highland and radiate out in all directions, forming waterfalls in the mountains. They are used for irrigation, primarily in the north and east; numerous reservoirs have been constructed.
Soil and flora. The soils are red earths and lateritic; there are bands of alluvial soils in the river valleys and on the coasts. Natural vegetation covers about three-fourths of the island. On the southwestern slopes of the mountains and in some parts of the foothills, humid equatorial forests have been preserved; with individual trees reaching 80 m in height, they are characterized by an enormous diversity of species. Trees include palms and dipter-ocarps; forests have’dense undergrowth and abundant mosses. The plains in the island’s northern and eastern parts and the adjacent highland slopes are covered with secondary deciduous forests, with trees of 9–12 m. The plateaus are occupied by savanna-type wasteland, consisting of high, coarse grasses and individual trees; elfin woodland occurs at elevations above 2,000 m. Thickets of prickly shrubs grow along the northwestern and southeastern shores; mangrove forests and coconut palms grow in certain areas near the coasts.
Fauna. The fauna is of the Indo-Malaysian type, with some Madagascar species, for example, lemurs. Mammals include elephants, leopards, lynx, five species of monkeys, deer, wild boars, and civets. There are numerous birds (parrots, peacocks, flamingos, storks), lizards, snakes, and crocodiles. There are also many types of insects, including butterflies, ants, termites, and malarial mosquitoes.
Preserves. The flora and fauna are preserved in botanical gardens (the largest is Peradeniya, near the city of Kandy), national parks (Gal Oya, Yala, Vilpatthu), and preserves (Rittigalla, Wasgomuva, Hakgala).
IU. K. EFREMOV (physical geographical characteristics) and R. E. TKACHEVA (geological structure and minerals)
Seventy percent of the population are Sinhalese, and 20 percent, Tamils. The Sinhalese, who number 9.8 million (1975; here and below the population figures are estimated), inhabit the western, central, and southern parts of the country; they speak Sinhalese. The Tamils, who number 2.6 million, comprise two separate groups: the Sri Lankan Tamils, who live in the northern and eastern parts of the country, and the Indian Tamils, who live in the central part; they speak Tamil. Minority ethnic groups of mixed origin include the Ceylon Moors (854,000), the Burghers of Ceylon (44,000), and Malays (42,000). The Veddas are the descendants of the oldest population.
Sinhalese is the official language. About 67 percent of the population (Sinhalese) are Buddhists, more than 17.5 percent (Tamils) are Hindus, 7 percent (Moors and Malays) are Muslims, and another 7 percent (the Burghers, some Tamils, and others) are Christians, primarily Catholics.
The natural population increase (2.2 percent annually in the period 1970–74) is due to a high birthrate and a significant decline in the death rate. At the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, a major role in the population increase was played by emigration from India, for the most part, of Tamil agricultural workers. In 1965 a state policy of controlling the birthrate was announced. In 1971, 51.3 percent of the population were males. A large proportion of the population is young; 43 percent are under the age of 15.
In 1971, 40.6 percent of the economically active population were engaged in agriculture; these were, for the most part, peasants and plantation workers. The average population density is more than 200 persons per sq km. In 1971 the urban population constituted 22.4 percent of the total.
The most important cities are Colombo (607,000; 1976), Jaffna, Kandy, Galle, and Moratuwa.
Rise of early state formations (to the eighth century A.D.). The area now occupied by Sri Lanka was settled during the Paleolithic period. The most ancient inhabitants were hunting tribes, probably the ancestors of the modern Veddas. The island underwent several waves of migration, primarily from India. According to written sources, the first Indian settlers, under the leadership of Prince Vijaya, came to the island in the fifth century B.C., bringing with them the culture of growing rice. The indigenous population intermixed with the new arrivals, thus giving rise to the Sinhalese ethnic group, centered in the north and southeast. Sinhalese settlements were self-sufficient village communities.
The first major state formation arose under Devanampiya Tissa in the third century B.C., a period of history called the Anuradhapura period, after the name of the state’s capital. Agriculture attained considerable development (there was intensive construction of irrigation networks), as did handicraft production and trade. Close state and cultural contacts with India facilitated the penetration of Buddhism. The Buddhist clergy played an important role in economic and cultural life. In the fifth century, internecine strife led to the disintegration of the state, which enabled the Tamil conquerors, orginally from southern India, to seize considerable parts of the island. In the sixth century Anuradhapura once again became the capital of the state. In the sixth and seventh centuries, the struggle for the throne continued between the Sinhalese and Tamil rulers.
Development of feudal relations (eighth to late 18th centuries). In the eighth century, a Sinhalese dynasty became firmly entrenched in Anuradhapura. Large landholdings were concentrated in the hands of the chief of state. Feudal relations began developing. From the eighth through 13th centuries Polonnaruwa was the capital of a large Sinhalese state, whose rulers waged a struggle against the separatism of the big feudal lords and repelled incursions from the southern Indian states, such as Pandya. The wars inflicted enormous damage and led to the disintegration of the unified state. In the 13th century the inhabitants began settling the central and southwestern regions of the island. In the 15th century three large states were formed: the Sinhalese kingdoms of Kotte (in the west and southwest) and Kandy (in the central regions) and the Tamil kingdom of Jaffna (in the north).
The country’s political fragmentation and economic weakness facilitated European expansion. In 1517 the first trade agreement was concluded between the Portuguese, who threatened to use military force, and the rulers of Kotte. The Portuguese obtained the right to export spices and other goods from the island to Europe. They created a network of forts along the western coast, and the fort of Colombo became their stronghold. To consolidate their domination, the Portuguese sent Catholic missionaries to the island for the purpose of converting the indigenous population to Catholicism. The protracted wars waged by the Portuguese against the Kandy state ended in defeat.
In the mid-17th century, the rivalry between the Dutch and the Portuguese over the island intensified. In 1658 the Dutch expelled the Portuguese and seized up to one-fourth of the island. The Dutch monopolized trade in cinnamon and a number of other items. The specialization of many regions in the production of commodity crops led to the development of commodity-monetary relations. The Dutch colonialists harshly exploited the country’s population, which led to an uprising in 1723. In the mid-18th century the conflict between the English and the Dutch for possession of the island intensified. In 1795–96, the Dutch were expelled.
British colonial domination; development of capitalist relations andgrowth of the national liberation movement(to 1917). The areas seized by the British colonialists were made part of the Madras Presidency, administered by the British East India Company. The British introduced heavy taxes. At the end of 1796, a major anti-British uprising broke out; it was suppressed by the British authorities, who nevertheless were compelled to abolish some of the taxes and promulgate administrative reforms. In 1802, Ceylon became a separate British colony. In order to consolidate their domination, the British colonial authorities decided to eliminate the independent Kandyan state. Great Britain’s war against Kandy in 1803–05 ended in a British defeat, but in 1815 the British succeeded in annexing the Kandyan state, the last stronghold of Sinhalese independence. The seizure of the Kandyan state exacerbated relations between the Kandyan feudal lords and the British colonialists. In 1818 almost all of the area formerly occupied by the Kandyan state was engulfed by an anti-British uprising, headed by the Kandyan aristocracy and the Buddhist clergy. The uprising was harshly suppressed, and the Kandyan feudal aristocracy was deprived of many privileges. The former Kandyan state was divided into 11 districts and placed under the control of British officials. A standardized administrative and taxation system was introduced throughout the entire island. In 1833 an advisory body—the Legislative Council—was instituted under the governor’s jurisdiction, and the trade monopoly of the British East India Company was transferred to the colonial authorities. The colonialists increased the tax burden, which engendered anti-British uprisings among the peasants in the areas of Kandy, Mátale, and Kurunegala (1848) under the leadership of the Kandyan aristocracy and the Buddhist clergy. The uncoordinated peasant detachments were unable to offer substantial resistance to the British forces.
In the 1830’s a plantation economy gradually developed on the lands taken from the peasants. By the 1850’s, vast tracts of land were occupied by coffee plantations. The expropriation of the rights of the peasants intensified. In the 1890’s tea became the chief export crop. The plantation crop production was dominated by British colonialists; Ceylonese landowners were also involved in plantation agriculture, but local capital was in a subordinate position.
The nascent Ceylonese bourgeoisie demanded political and economic rights. An indigenous intelligentsia began developing. The first national sociopolitical organization—the Ceylon League—was founded in 1864. Its members advocated increased Ceylonese participation in the country’s rule; in particular, they sought a Ceylonese majority in the Legislative Council. In the second half of the 19th century various educational and religious reforms were instituted. By the turn of the 20th century, the country’s transformation into an agrarian raw material adjunct of the home country was complete. Nevertheless, capitalist relations developed rapidly. A working class emerged, consisting primarily of plantation workers, mostly immigrants from India. Tenant farming became the predominant form of peasant land utilization. Criticism of the British colonial system by the indigenous bourgeoisie and other groupes of the population grew. The national liberation movement of the peoples of India exerted a considerable influence on the development of the anticolonialist struggle. At the beginning of the 20th century a number of bourgeois political organizations were formed that demanded the implementation of constitutional reforms. Leaders of the national liberation struggle included J. Peiris, P. Arunachalam, P. Rama-nathan, D. B. Jayatilaka, and E. W. Perera. The labor movement developed at the beginning of the 20th century, and one of the first major actions of the working class was a railroad strike (1912).
During World War I (1914–18), the colonial exploitation of Ceylon intensified. Traders and moneylenders took advantage of the colony’s dependence on the importation of foodstuffs and raised the prices on rice and other commodities. In 1915 spontaneous outbreaks occurred among the poorest groups of the urban and rural population against the Muslim traders. The British colonialists unleashed repressive actions against the participants in these outbreaks, as well as against the leaders of the national liberation movement. The terror imposed by the British colonial authorities impelled new groups of the Ceylonese people to join the liberation struggle.
Development of the struggle for national independence (1918–48). Led by the nationalist bourgeoisie, the anti-imperialist movement took on the form of a struggle for democratic reforms. In May, 1917, P. Arunachalam founded the Ceylon Reform League. In the period 1917–19, conferences of bourgeois representatives were convoked to revise the constitution. The Great October Socialist Revolution exerted an important influence on the development of the national liberation and labor movement on the island.
The first major political party—the Ceylon National Congress (CNC)—was founded in December 1919 by P. Arunachalam, P. Ramanathan, D. B. Jayatilaka, D. S. Senanayake, and F. R. Senanayake, among others. The CNC program included a demand for the creation of an elected Ceylonese majority in the Legislative Council, for implementation of the principle of territorial representation, and the formation of a responsible government. In 1922 the Ceylon Labor Union was formed.
Political and economic demonstrations by the working masses intensified during the worldwide economic crisis. Between 1929 and 1933 there were major strikes by dockworkers, streetcar operators, and printers. In 1931 a constitution was adopted, which provided for the creation of an elected parliament—the State Council. The introduction of universal suffrage was an important political victory for the democratic forces. In the 1931 and 1936 elections a majority of seats in the State Council were won by members of the CNC, representatives of the Sinhalese big bourgeoisie. At the beginning of the 1930’s, the first Marxist circles emerged, which established ties with the working class. The Suriya Mai aniticolonialist movement developed in the country (suriya mal is the name of the flower that was sold by the adherents of the movement to build up a fund to assist the workers); the movement attracted the broad masses to the anti-imperialist struggle. In 1935 the Socialist Equality Party (Lanka Sama Sa-maja Party; LSSP) was founded.
World War II (1939–45) brought enormous hardships to the people of Ceylon. There were severe food shortages, since Ceylon lost its traditional supplier of rice as a result of the Japanese occupation of Burma. The increase in prices on essential goods considerably surpassed the increase in wages. The export of the plantation products continued to bring in large profits to British firms and the big Ceylonese planters. In 1942 the CNC demanded the abolition of the colonial regime after the end of the war. A decisive struggle to consolidate the democratic forces and attain independence was led by the Communist Party of Ceylon (CPC), founded in July 1943. The growth of the anti-imperialist movement compelled the British government to appoint a commission to draft a new constitution for Ceylon. In 1945–46 the commission’s report and draft of a new constitution were made public. The refusal of the British imperialists to grant immediate independence provoked widespread protest. There were many large-scale demonstrations by the workers, including a general strike in May and June 1947. Under pressure from the national liberation movement of the peoples of Ceylon and the neighboring Asian countries, the British government on Feb. 4, 1948, granted dominion status to Ceylon.
After the achievement of political independence. After the achievement of independence, political power in the country was attained by the bourgeois United National Party (UNP; founded 1946), headed by D. S. Senanayake. According to the conditions of the Anglo-Ceylonese defense agreement (1947) the British were to retain troops and military bases on the island. The Sena-nayake government adopted a course that was not directed at the decisive abolition of the colonial heritage. The British monopolies continued to occupy the key positions in the export of plantation crops and to control the country’s economy. Persons of Indian origin were deprived of their citizenship and the right to vote. The policies of the UNP government were subjected to criticism by the working class and a number of national bourgeois groups. The policies of the UNP were opposed by a group of Tamil bourgeoisie, which in 1949 established the Federal Party (FP). In 1951 a national bourgeois group, led by Solomon Bandaranaike, split from the UNP and formed the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), whose program included demands for the abolition of the colonial heritage and the implementation of progressive socioeconomic reforms. The forces in opposition to the government rallied around the SLFP and created the People’s United Front (Mahajana Eksath Peramuna; MEP), which defeated the UNP in the 1956 parliamentary elections. The Bandar-anaike government embarked on a program reinforcing the country’s independence and promulgating progressive socioeconomic reforms. British military bases were closed down in 1957. Diplomatic relations were established with the USSR (1957) and other socialist countries (1957–58). In 1958 an agreement was signed with the USSR on economic and technical cooperation. Plans for economic development were worked out. The government’s progressive course provoked dissatisfaction among the reactionary elements, who organized a conspiracy; Solomon Bandaranaike was assassinated in September 1959.
In the parliamentary elections held in March 1960, the UNP gained a victory, but the new government soon received a vote of no confidence. The SLFP emerged victorious in the 1960 parliamentary elections. The government was headed by the party’s new leader, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, the widow of Solomon Bandaranaike. It adopted a nonaligned course in foreign policy. The economic program sought to accelerate industrial development, restructure agriculture, and expand the state sector. The government nationalized three foreign oil companies (1963). With Soviet aid, it carried out the construction of enterprises. An agrarian reform was instituted in 1958 (the law on lands under rice), which sought to protect the rights of peasant tenant farmers and poor peasants. Important social and cultural reforms were also promulgated.
In the course of the struggle against the reactionaries, the left-wing forces gradually united; an expression of the growth of their solidarity was the creation in 1963 of the United Left Front (ULF), which included the CPC, the LSSP, and the MEP (the name adopted in 1960 by the Revolutionary Socialist Party of Ceylon, founded in 1951). In 1964 an SLFP-LSSP coalition government was formed. Because of the government’s attempts to further democratize the country, the right-wing members of the SLFP left the party. The opposition elements created a government crisis, and the coalition government was compelled to resign.
In the 1965 parliamentary elections, a relative majority of seats was won by the UNP. Dudley S. Senanayake, the UNP leader, assured himself of the support of the FP and a number of Sinhalese bourgeois parties and formed a government. The new government adopted a policy of encouraging the private sector and attracting foreign capital. The mass firing of workers and trade union leaders who had participated in the strike of Jan. 8, 1966, was carried out. Nevertheless, the workers continued their struggle to improve their economic position and political rights. A major strike under the leadership of the Joint Committee of Trade Union Actions took place at the end of 1967 and the beginning of 1968; there were many strikes in 1968 and 1969.
Cooperation between the UNP and the FP was conditional upon a number of concessions to the Tamil leaders. A great deal of pressure on the UNP government was also exerted by the Sinhalese nationalists. Increasing disagreements between the Sinhalese and Tamils led to the withdrawal of the FP from the government in 1968. In June 1968 a platform was worked out for joint actions by the SLFP, the CPC, and LSSP; the United Front (UF), whose platform was supported by the country’s progressive forces, was created. In the May 1970 parliamentary elections, the UF emerged victorious, having won 115 seats out of a total of 151. The UF government, which included members of the SLFP, LSSP, and CPC, was headed by Sirimavo Bandaranaike. It proclaimed a program of broad democratic reforms directed at eliminating the remnants of colonialism. In foreign policy the government sought to expand cooperation with peace-loving nations. State control over important economic spheres, primarily foreign trade, increased, and the activities of the state sector were strengthened. The UF government came under the attack of right-wing forces, who took advantage of objective economic and political difficulties to sabotage the government’s efforts. The reactionary elements succeeded in provoking an antigovernment revolt by left-wing extremist youth (April and May 1971).
On May 22, 1972, Ceylon was proclaimed the Republic of Sri Lanka. The new constitution abolished all forms of the country’s dependence on Great Britain. Of great importance for strengthening the Republic of Sri Lanka’s independence was the promulgation of a peace-loving foreign policy. Contacts with the USSR and other socialist countries continued to expand. Sri Lanka has taken part in all the conferences of the nonaligned countries. It made a great contribution to the organization of the Fifth Conference of the Heads of State or Government of Nonaligned Countries, held in Colombo in August 1976.
Agrarian reforms were developed further. A maximum was established for the amount of land that could be owned, and excessive amounts held by large foreign and indigenous landowners were confiscated. However, the government was unable to improve substantially the position of the working masses; it could not prevent price increases on essential goods, nor could it bring a stop to the growth of unemployment. Pressure from the right wing of the SLFP complicated relations within the ruling coalition. The exacerbation of disagreements between the LSSP and the other parties of the coalition supporting the UF platform led to the withdrawal from the government of the LSSP in September 1975 and the CPC in February 1977. In May 1977 the CPC, LSSP, and People’s Democratic Party (founded 1977) formed the United Left Front. That same year, the Tamil nationalist parties created the Tamil United Liberation Front. In the parliamentary elections of the July 1977, the UNP emerged victorious. Its leader, J. R. Jayewardene, became head of the government. In February 1978 he became president.
E. D. TALMUD
The United National Party (UNP), founded in 1946, expresses the interests of the middle and upper bourgeoisie. The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), founded in 1951, expresses the interests of various strata of the national bourgeoisie. The Lanka Sama Sa-maja Party (LSSP; Socialist Equality Party) was founded in 1935. The Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSR) was founded in 1943. The People’s Democratic Party was founded in 1977. The Federal Party (FP), founded in 1949, expresses the interests of Tamil bourgeois nationalist circles. The United Tamil Liberation Front (UTLF) is a bloc of the Tamil bourgeois parties that emerged from the United Tamil Front (UTF), founded in 1972.
The Ceylon Workers’ Congress, founded in 1936, unites plantation workers. The Sri Lanka Federation of Trade Unions (until 1965, the Ceylon Federation of Trade Unions) was founded in 1940. It is affiliated with the World Federation of Trade Unions. The Ceylon Federation of Labor was founded in 1939. The Democratic Workers’ Congress was founded in 1956.
General state of the economy. Sri Lanka’s economy is dominated by agriculture, which accounts for more than one-third of the gross national product (industry accounts for only about one-eighth). The plantation economy, which emerged during the colonial period, forms the basis of the country’s present economy, which continues to be heavily dependent on the foreign market. After the achievement of independence, a number of state development programs (the latest in the period 1972–76) and reforms have been carried out; they are directed at transforming agriculture to increase food production, expanding power production and industrial construction, and strengthening the state’s control over foreign capital.
The growth of the state sector has been a key factor in the strengthening of the country’s economic independence and the creation of a national industry; for example, in 1976 the state sector accounted for approximately one-third of the entire industrial output. Under state ownership are the railroads, the port facilities, the major industrial enterprises, the electric power plants, and the irrigation installations. A system of state-sponsored corporations has been established (in 1973 there were about 84 such corporations, of which 26 were in industry); the corporations are responsible for the management of many industrial enterprises (and the construction of new facilities), plantations, and trade institutions. One example is the state petroleum corporation, which has established a monopoly on the importation and domestic trade of petroleum products and which controls the supply of foreign vessels; another state corporation is the tea export corporation.
As a result of the nationalization of plantations (by a 1975 law) owned by foreign and domestic capital (under conditions whereby specified compensation was paid), more than 400 tea, rubber, and coconut plantations, with a total area of 160,000 hectares (ha), were transferred to state control. All plantations with an area of more than 20 ha were nationalized. By the mid-1970’s, the proportion of foreign, primarily British, capital decreased sharply, to a level of 26 percent in tea production and 12 percent in rubber production. The activities of foreign banks have been curtailed; all financial operations pertaining to the tea trade are handled by the Central Bank of Ceylon.
Along with the growth of the state sector, the role of the private capitalist sector has been maintained and strengthened. The number of mixed state-private companies has increased. The restructuring of Sri Lanka’s economy has been financed by both domestic and foreign (albeit with certain limitations) capital investments and loans. The USSR and other socialist countries have granted substantial financial and technical aid to Sri Lanka, and a majority of the most important industrial enterprises of the state sector have been built with the aid of socialist countries.
Agriculture. The 1972 agrarian reform, which placed limits on large-scale landownership (a maximum of 20 ha), succeeded in somewhat curtailing landownership by the big landlords (by the beginning of 1975 more than 200,000 ha had been taken away from landlords). However, the nature of landownership and land tenure essentially remains unchanged. A considerable portion of the land is still concentrated in the hands of the relatively large-scale landowners, temples, and monasteries. Much of the peasantry lacks land or has too little. Rent payments for the use of the lands have been somewhat curtailed. The following two types of farms predominate: capitalistic, primarily plantation, farms, which make extensive use of hired labor; and small, truck-garden or seminatural peasant farms (with average plots of about 0.3 ha), managed by tenant farmers or the owners themselves. The renting of land is widespread. In accordance with the present state plan for developing new lands, every peasant may buy 1.5–2 ha of irrigated land on credit and several ha of unirrigated land. The formation of farm cooperatives is an important feature of the agrarian changes.
About 37 percent of the country’s land area is used for agriculture (2.4 million ha in 1974), primarily in the Wet Zone; 895,000 ha are occupied by arable lands, 1.084 million ha by perennial plantation crops, and 439,000 ha by pastures and meadows. As of 1974, 430,000 ha were being irrigated. More than 40 percent (2.9 million ha) of the country is forested. During the years of independence there has been a 45-percent increase in the amount of land cultivated as a result of assimilation of state-owned lands in the Dry Zone (the northern and eastern parts of the island) and the expansion of irrigation construction. In 1970 complex hydraulic-engineering contruction was begun on the Mahaweli Ganga, a project developed by a group of UN experts under the direction of a Soviet engineer.
Plantation farming, concentrated in the central and southwestern parts of the island, specializes in the production of export crops—namely, tea, rubber, and coconut products. In 1976, Sri Lanka’s tea harvest accounted for nearly one-eighth of the world production; Sri Lanka ranks behind only India and China in tea production. The coconut harvest is considerable, one of the highest in the world; in the production of copra and export of coconut oil, Sri Lanka also ranks high on the world market. Sri Lanka is a major producer of natural rubber, ranking fourth in the world, after Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand.
Food crops for domestic needs are grown primarily by the peasant farms. The principal food crop is rice, which is harvested twice a year. During the years of independence, the harvest of unmilled rice (paddy) has increased considerably, primarily owing to the state policy of subsidizing and granting credits to rice-growing farms and the achievement of somewhat higher harvest yields. However, the country’s rice production meets only 65–75 percent of the country’s needs. Other food crops include millet, corn, legumes, sweet potatoes, manioc, green vegetables, and spices—cinnamon, black pepper, and cardamon. Industrial crops include fiber and oil crops; among fruits grown are bananas and pineapples. (See Table 1 for the production of farm crops.)
Stock raising is poorly developed; cattle are primarily used as draft animals. In order to improve this branch of agriculture, state stock-raising farms are being established, and ways are being sought to expand the fodder base. As of 1975, there were 2.5 million head of cattle (including 700,000 buffalo) and 550,000 goats. Elephants are also used as work animals.
The fish catch amounted to 129,000 tons in 1975. There is also a pearl-fishing industry.
Industry. Sri Lanka’s industry is still characterized by the predominance of many small-scale enterprises, including cottage-type handicraft enterprises; individual large-scale enterprises have been constructed, for the most part, in the state sector.
The island is poor in mineral fuel, and consequently fuel is imported. Sri Lanka supplies the foreign market with high-grade graphite (the Bógala and Ragedara mines; 7,800 tons mined in 1975); small amounts of ilmenite, rutile, zircon, salt, and precious stones (rubies, sapphires, and aquamarines) are also mined. The principal source for expanding the energy base is waterpower. Construction is under way on state hydroelectric power plants on the Kehelgomu, Maskeliya, and other rivers.
Traditional branches of the processing industry are the processing of tea and rubber and the production of copra and coconut oil. The enterprises of these branches are located primarily in regions with large plantations. There are rice-cleaning enterprises, sugar refineries (output of raw sugar amounted to 28,000 tons in 1975), and other enterprises of the food industry, as well as textile enterprises (one of the largest textile enterprises in southern Asia was built in cooperation with the German Democratic Republic) and enterprises of the footwear and certain other branches of light industry.
Heavy industry is still in its infancy. In Oruvella, near Colombo,
| Table 1. Principal agricultural crops | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area (ha) | Harvest (tons) | |||||
| 1961–651 | 1974 | 1975 | 1961–651 | 1974 | 1975 | |
| 1Yearly average | ||||||
| 21976 | ||||||
| 3Output | ||||||
| Rice ............... | 505,000 | 638,000 | 597,000 | 967,000 | 1,875,000 | 1,154,000 |
| Tea ............... | 239,000 | 240,000 | 242,000 | 217,000 | 201,000 | — |
| Rubber ............... | — | — | — | 107,000 | 145,000 | 150,0002 |
| Coconuts ............... | — | — | — | 2,040,000 | 1,350,000 | 1,650,000 |
| Copra3 ............... | — | — | — | 284,000 | 109,000 | 170,000 |
the first metallurgical plant, with a capacity of 50,000 tons of rolled steel per year, was built in 1967 (with the cooperation of the USSR). Machine-building and metalworking enterprises include mainly assembly plants, which supply equipment for light industry, transportation equipment, and agricultural equipment. Certain branches of industry are being expanded, such as the production of fertilizers, the oil-refining and rubber industries (a tire plant was built in Kelani, a suburb of Colombo, in 1967 with the cooperation of the USSR), the wood-products industry (a large plant has been built with the cooperation of Poland), and the production of construction materials (a plant has been built near Colombo with aid from the USSR). The principal industrial center is the city of Colombo and it environs.
The old-fashioned, traditional crafts are widespread, for example, blacksmithing, pottery-making, cloth weaving, basketry, the plaiting of bags, hats, and ropes, rug weaving, carving in wood, antler, ivory, and tortoiseshell, metal stamping, and the production of gold and silver ornaments with precious stones.
Transportation. The leading form of transportation is automotive transport, and the length of roads exceeds 21,500 km. There are about 1,500 km (1976) of railroads. Most of the overseas merchant marine is owned by British companies; Sri Lanka is also establishing its own fleet, which by mid-1976 totaled 36 vessels. About 5 million tons of cargo are handled by the ports, including Colombo, which handles up to 90 percent of Sri Lanka’s imports and more than one-half of its exports, Galle, and Trincomalee. Colombo has an international airport—Katunayaka Airport— located north of the capital.
Foreign trade. More than 90 percent of the total value of exports is provided by tea (40–60 percent of the monetary revenues), natural rubber, and coconut products. The principal imports are foodstuffs, which account for one-third to one-half of the total value of imports (707,000 tons of rice in 1975–76); other important imports are industrial goods, raw materials, and fuel. The chief foreign trading partners are China, Great Britain, Saudi Arabia, Australia, the USA, Pakistan, Japan, and India. The USSR and the socialist countries of Europe account for 5.2 percent (1975) of the value of foreign trade turnover.
The monetary unit is the Sri Lanka rupee. In May 1978, at the exchange rate of Gosbank of the USSR, 100 rupees equaled 4 rubles and 50 kopeks.
L. I. BONIFATEVA
The armed forces comprise an army, air force, and navy. The supreme commander in chief is the president; direct leadership is exercised by the minister of defense. The armed forces, which consist of paid volunteers, number (1976) about 14,000 persons.
The army, with about 9,000 men, comprises one brigade, intelligence and artillery regiments, and military supply and service units. The weapons are of foreign make. The air force, which numbers about 2,300 men, has five combat and six transport airplanes, a communications squadron, about 20 trainers, and 15 helicopters. The navy, which numbers 2,400 men, has one frigate, five gunboats, and 23 patrol boats.
Medicine and public health. According to data of the World Health Organization (1972), the birthrate is 29.5 births per 1,000 population, and the death rate, 7.7; the infant mortality rate is 45.1 per 1,000 live births. Infectious and parasitic diseases predominate. Malaria and tuberculosis are widespread, as are gastrointestinal infections, which constitute the principal cause of death.
In 1973, Sri Lanka had 456 hospitals, with 39,700 beds (approximately three beds per 1,000 inhabitants). Outpatient care is provided by 334 polyclinics attached to hospitals, 546 dispensaries, and 1,300 maternity and child-welfare centers. In 1972 there were 3,200 physicians in Sri Lanka (one physician per 4,000 inhabitants), 280 stomatologists, and more than 11,000 other medical personnel, as well as more than 10,000 practitioners of traditional folk medicine—the Ayurvedas. Physicians are trained at two medical faculties at the universities.
In 1970–71 expenditures on health care made up 3.5 percent of the state budget.
Veterinary services. Foot-and-mouth disease, pasteurellosis, fowl pox, coccidiosis, and mastitis are widespread in Sri Lanka. Also registered have been leptospirosis of cattle (in regions where buffalo are bred), anthrax among cattle (rare), Newcastle’s disease, hoof rot, blackleg, salmonellosis, brucellosis, avian leukosis, rabies among dogs, cattle, and wild animals, anaplasmosis, babesiasis, theileriasis, fascioliasis, and mange.
As of 1976 there were 284 veterinarians in Sri Lanka; they are trained in the faculty of agriculture and veterinary science of the University of Sri Lanka and in India and other countries. There is a research center for veterinary science.
M. G. TARSHIS
Sri Lanka has a high literacy rate; more than 80 percent (1974) of the adult population is literate. In 1972, on the initiative of the United Front government, an educational reform was instituted in the country, in accordance with which an 11-year school replaced the previous 12-year general-educational school: a primary school (five years), a junior (incomplete) secondary school (four years), and a senior (complete) secondary school (two years). Nine years of instruction—five in primary and four in the junior secondary school—are compulsory for children ranging in age from six to 14. During the 1974–75 school year, there were 1.370 million pupils in grades 1–5 and 1.064 million students in grades 6–11. Instruction is free and conducted in Sinhalese or Tamil; English is taught in the secondary schools. Teachers for the general-education schools are trained at two-year teacher-training colleges, based on the complete secondary school. In the 1973–74 academic year, there were 28 teacher-training colleges, with an enrollment of 9,300 students.
Teachers for the secondary schools are trained at the universities. Vocational and technical training is conducted after completing the nine-year school in two-year schools or the four-year technical institutes. The University of Sri Lanka (established 1972 through a merger of previously existing universities) has campuses in Peradeniya, Colombo, Vidyalankara, Vidyodaya, Katubedde, and Jaffna (opened in 1974). During the 1975–76 academic year, the university had an enrollment of more than 15,600 students.
The largest libraries are the Public Library in Colombo (with more than 132,000 volumes in 1975), the National Museum Library in Colombo (more than 500,000 volumes), and the university library in Peradeniya (400,000 volumes). Museums include the National Museums of Sri Lanka, which comprise the national museums in Colombo, Kandy, and Ratnapura and the folk museum in Anuradhapura.
V. Z. KLEPIKOV
Scientific research is coordinated by the National Science Council (founded 1968) under the Ministry of Industries and Scientific Affairs. The state finances projects related to the country’s economic development. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development provides funds for the Ceylon Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research (1955). Scientific personnel are primarily trained abroad. The leading scientific center is the University of Sri Lanka, where research in the natural sciences, history, sociology, and linguistics is conducted. Applied research is conducted at the Central Agricultural Research Institute (1965) and the institutes of the departments of the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, such as the Tea Research Institute of Ceylon in Talawakele (founded 1925). The Ceylon Medical Research Institute (1900) works on the study and treatment of tropical diseases. Archaeological and ethnographic studies are concentrated at the Colombo National Museum.
The most important scientific societies are the Sri Lanka Association for the Advancement of Science (1944) and the Royal Asiatic Society (1845), a branch of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain. With the aid of the USSR research is being conducted in hydraulic-engineering construction, industry, and agriculture. In collaboration with foreign scholars, including scholars from the USSR, the multivolume Buddhist Encyclopedia is being published.
E. D. TALMUD
In 1976 more than 30 periodicals were being published (in Sinhalese, Tamil, and English).
The most widespread newspapers, all published in Colombo, are the Sinhalese-language Lankadipa (since 1947; circulation, 67,000), Dinamina (1909; circulation, more than 129,000), and Dinakara (1977), the Tamil-language Virakesari (1930; circulation, 32,000), and the English-language Ceylon Daily News (1918; circulation, 65,000), and Ceylon Observer (1834; circulation, 5,000). The Communist Party of Sri Lanka publishes the following newspapers: the Sinhalese-language Aththa (1964; circulation, 17,500), the Tamil-language Desabhimani (1946; circulation, 10,000), and the English-language Forward (1950; circulation, 9,000). The Press Trust of Ceylon, a national cooperative news agency, was founded in 1951. The national information agency Lanka Tuvat was founded in 1978.
Radio broadcasting is directed by the state-sponsored Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation (founded 1967). It is conducted in four languages—Sinhalese, Tamil, English, and Hindi.
E. D. TALMUD
Literature has developed primarily in Sinhalese, although literature in Tamil and English is also of some importance. The first literary works—the Dipavamsa chronicle (fourth century) and Mahavamsa chronicle (fifth century)—were written in the Pali language. In addition to historical facts, the Mahavamsa includes myths and legends. During the fourth and fifth centuries, various commentaries on the basic tenets of Buddhism were recorded. Circa the fifth century, jatakas, borrowed from India, were written in Pali. Literature in Pali formed the basis of Sinhalese literature. Works in Sanskrit also became widespread.
The first works in Sinhalese appeared in the sixth century. Verse and prose excerpts have been preserved, along with cave and rock inscriptions; later works contain references to the poets of the period. Medieval Sinhalese literature borrowed the genres of the chronicle and the epic poem from ancient Indian literature.
Medieval authors considered religious preaching to be the principal goal of creative art. The epic poem The Crest-Gem of Poetry by the Sinhalese king Parakrama Bahu II (1236–70) includes sections that, to a certain extent, reflected Parakrama’s own epoch. Beginning in the 13th century, prose acquired increasing importance, since its simpler language made it easier to expound the ideas of Buddhism (for example, The Flood of Nectar, 13th century, by Gurulugomi). Important prose works of the 13th century were Vidyachakravarti’s The Refuge of Buddha and Mayurapadathera’s The History of Offerings, a collection of sermons in which the hard lot of the peasants was first depicted in Sinhalese literature. A Garland of Jewels of the Good Doctrine, by the Buddhist monk Dharmasena, depicts the life of the peasants, along with their language and customs. In The Ornament of the Good Law (14th century), Dharmakirti wrote about the famine that had devastated the country and about peasant life and its many deprivations.
In the 14th century the translation of the jatakas into Sinhalese was completed. In the 15th century poetry once again acquired importance. Epistolary narrative poems provided a detailed description of Sri Lanka’s cities, villages, and monasteries. Sri Ránula wrote The Dove’s Message, The Starling’s Message, and The Diadem of Poetry. In Guttilaya, Vcettœve Thera expressed opposition to the king’s court. In the narrative poem The Ornament of the Buddha’s Virtues, Vidagama expressed displeasure with the greed and injustice of the powers that be. The last major representative of medieval poetry—Alagiyavanna Mohottala (late 16th and early 17th centuries)—in his narrative poem The Great War depicted the struggle of the Sinhalese King Rajasinha II against the Portuguese colonialists.
Colonization impeded the development of Sinhalese literature, but as early as the second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, there was a noticeable increase in national self-awareness and a striving to retain originality and a national culture. The first Sinhalese novels were published in the first decade of the 20th century. S. de Silva spoke out in defense of national customs and Buddhism, and P. Sirisena (1875–1946) expressed similar ideas in the novel Jayatissa and Rosalind, or The Happy Marriage (1906). W. A. Silva (1892–1957), in such historical novels as Sunetra, or The Dark Age (1936), described the struggle of the people against the Portuguese; in the novel The Puppet Chieftain (1939), he satirized the wealthy landowners. Elements of realism are evident in his short stories.
The establishment of realism and the subsequent development of the Sinhalese literary language are linked with the writer and literary scholar M. Wickramasinghe (1891–1976), whose trilogy Changing Village (1944), The Last Century (1947), and The End of an Age (1949) depicted class stratification in the village, the rise of a new merchant class, and the emergence of a working class.
During the 1940’s the short-story genre gained importance; the leading short-story writers include H. Munidas (1903–57) and G. B. Senanayake (born 1903). The achievement of political independence (1948) and the ensuing democratic changes, as well as the adoption of Sinhalese as the official state language, gave new life to literature. During the 1950’s and 1960’s reality became the principal object of depiction. Humanity and sympathy for the simple working man characterize the works of E. Sarathchandra (born 1914) and K. Jayatilaka (born 1926), as well as the works of Gunadasa Amarasekara (born 1929), author of the novels Prisoners of Destiny (1955) and The Legless Ones (1961) and of short stories and poems depicting the life of the people. The plots of some of his short stories echo the works of N. V. Gogol and A. P. Chekhov. The heroes of Jayatilaka’s novels Those Who Have Suffered Defeat (1960) and Three Characters (1963) and his short stories are helpless in the face of life. The themes of disillusionment and confusion are at the center of Sarathchandra’s novels A Tired Man Sees Not the Path (1962) and A Day of Remembrance for the Dead (1965). Sarathchandra’s The Sinhalese Novel (1950) presents an analysis of the national literature from the mid-19th century to the 1950’s. A comparison of the urban and rural ways of life is the theme of Madawala Ratnayake’s novel Five Acres (1959). The novellas of L. Gunasekara depict village life.
At the end of the 1960’s and the beginning of the 1970’s, criticism of social relations increased. Kumara Karunaratna’s novella Colombo 7 (1972) and Gunadasa Liyanage’s novels Dona Kamalawathie (1971) and I Will Come Back, Mama (1973) expose the hypocrisy and corruption of the bourgeois politicians. The hero of contemporary prose joins the struggle for a better life, for example, in Heyiyammaruva (1971) by A. V. Suravira. The themes of poetry (S. Mahinda, Munidas Kumaranatunga, Sagara Palansuriya, G. H. Perera, Alwis Perera, Vilmalaratna, Kumaragama, Chandraratna Manavasimha) include the beauties of nature, the hard lot of the working masses, and the awakening of civic and national feelings. Sarathchandra’s plays Maname and Sinhabahu are based on ancient legends. The life of the people of Sri Lanka and social changes constitute the themes of works by Amaradasa Samaravira and Henri Jayasena.
In 1969 the progressive writers of Sri Lanka formed the organization called the “People’s Writers Front”, which since 1973 has published the literary newspaper Jana ruchiya. The journals Sahityaya, Sanskruti, and Kala puvat publish materials dealing with literary history and criticism.
A. A. BEL’KOVICH
In the course of many centuries the Tamil-language literature of Sri Lanka developed as part of India’s Tamil literature and thus lacked an independent, national character. With the upsurge in the national liberation movement at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries and with the growth of national self-awareness among the Tamils of Sri Lanka, Tamil literature assumed increasingly more original traits. The greatest development in the 20th century was attained by poetry and by prose, specifically, the novella and the one-act play. The Tamil writers have addressed social themes. Their heroes are the toilers of the city and the village—petty clerks, workers, peasants, and fishermen—voicing their protest against exploitation and social injustices. Popular prose writers and poets include S. P. Amara-singam, Varathar, J. Vijaytunga, C. V. Velupillai, S. Ganeshalingam, K. Daniel, D. D. Jiva, Ilangayarkone, V. A. Rajaratnam, Kanaga Senthinathan, Nirvai Ponnaiyan (born 1930), Sargunar Ponnuthuram, Premji, and Sokkalingam. The emergence of Tamil dramaturgy has been facilitated by the festivals in Colombo organized every year by the division of Tamil drama of the Cultural Council of Sri Lanka.
English-language literature originated in the 19th century and developed under the influence not only of the European but also of Sinhalese and Tamil literatures of Sri Lanka. R. L. Spittel published novellas, narrative poems, and stories, including Vanished Trails, or The Last of the Veddas (1950), Where the White Sambhur Roams, and Wild White Boy (1958). Popular writers include J. Vijayatunge, author of the short-story collections Grass for My Feet (1935) and Girl From the Rodiya Caste and Other Stories (1960); G. Virasuriya, author of the realistic novel Harijan in Trousers, drawn from the life of petty clerks; J. Gunawarhana (or Goonawardine), author of novellas in English and Sinhalese; R. Proctor, author of the novella The Fisherman’s Daughter and short stories; and Anna Ranasinghe (poems, 1971, 1975).
Children’s short stories and tales based on Sinhalese and Tamil folklore are also published.
IU. N. MASLOV
The ancient period of the art of Sri Lanka (third century B.C. to eighth century A.D.), which owes much to the art of India, is represented by Buddhist monuments, concentrated, for the most part, in Anuradhapura.
During the early medieval period (eighth to 13th centuries), construction was carried out primarily in the new capital—Polon-naruwa—where Hindu temples were also erected. The monumentality and grandeur of the early stupas gave way to harmonic restraint in proportions, while retaining the former moderation (in comparison with India) in the interior and exterior sculptural decoration. Particularly characteristic for the medieval plastic arts of Sri Lanka are statues of Buddha, including huge rock statues, characterized by a sense of balance and clarity of strongly stylized forms. Also preserved are numerous examples of secular stone sculptures, metal statuettes of deities, and the well-known rock paintings of Sigiriya.
Under the colonial regime (beginning in the 16th century), the art of Sri Lanka, which on the whole had entered a period of decline, was developed only by village masters of temple paintings, artistic metalworking (utensils and weapons), wood carving (carved architectural details, furniture, tools, small boxes), carving in ivory (statuettes, panels, boxes, chalices, door stops, and combs), lacquer work, and work in stone and clay. Jewelry was also made, as well as artistic fabrics, mats, embroidered items, and wooden masks.
Professional easel art in Sri Lanka originated at the end of the 19th century under the influence of the official art of the British Academy of Arts. The first art association was the Ceylon Society of Arts (founded 1887; A. Amarasekere, J. D. A. Perera, T. Rajapaksha, and others). During the first half of the 20th century, a school of painting emerged in connection with the development of the liberation movement that combined national traditions with elements of the new European trends; this school included members of the 43 group (beginning in 1943; J. Dara-niyagala, G. Keyt, H. Peiris, and others) and the Society of Folk Arts, which included primarily nonprofessional masters working in the gouache technique (beginning in 1950; V. L. A. Mendis and others).
After the achievement of independence, the time was ripe for the formation of a national school of architecture; urban and rural complexes were erected that combined elements of national medieval and contemporary European architecture.
S. I. TIULIAEV
Sri Lanka’s theatrical art is rooted in the folk games, rituals, and dances of the various tribes that had settled the island in antiquity. Religious holidays were accompanied by songs and dances, and various spectacles were arranged in honor of the gods and legendary heroes. The chronicle-poem Mahavamsa (fifth century) attests to the ancient origin of the theater; it contains passing mention of dance spectacles and descriptions of the mandaran, a stage area where dancers and musicians performed. With the spread of Buddhism, the mystery-like drama appeared in the monasteries, propagandizing religious and philosophical doctrines. There also existed various forms of folk theater, some of which have been preserved, including the kolam, a masked dance and mime presentation whose origin was linked with magical religious rituals (it was widespread in the vicinity of Ambalangoda and Bentara), and the sokari (”threshing-floor” theater), a humorous theatrical production. A newer theatrical form, based on folk music and dance, arose—the nadagama, a unique musical spectacle with singing, dancing, and pantomime that became popular in the early 19th century (it is not staged in the 20th century, and only the songs have been preserved).
The emergence of the modern theater is closely linked with the growth of national self-awareness and the national liberation struggle of the peoples of Sri Lanka. At the end of the 19th century, plays clearly divided into acts appeared, the curtain was introduced, and women began performing on the stage. A new type of play, the nurtiya, while retaining the music and dance form of the nadagama, included dialogue. Among such plays were Romlin (1866) and Rolina (1879) by C. Don Bastian, an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (1885), and J. de Suva’s Siri Sangabo (1903), Vihara Maha Devi (1916), and other plays, constructed in accordance with the rules of Sanskrit drama. De Suva’s plays were staged by the professional companies Arya Subodha Natya Sabha and Vijaya Ranga Sabha. During the 1920’s and 1930’s, plays dealing with social issues appeared, such as B. Jayamanna’s Iranama and Hadisi Viniscaya, which are about urban workers.
The establishment of Sri Lanka’s independence (1948) facilitated the revival and development of national traditions. New theatrical forms emerged, including the ballet, which synthesized traditional and folkdance arts. In 1944 a ballet school and troupe were formed (known since 1955 as the Chitrasena Dance Company), under the direction of Chitrasena, Sri Lanka’s first professional dancer and choreographer. The company’s repertoire includes the ballets The Triumph of Peace, which depicts the struggle for peace, Kardiya (Salt Water), which deals with the life of fishermen, and Nala and Damayanti, which is based on the ancient Indian epic Mahabharata. (In 1960 and 1963 the troupe toured the USSR.) The state Folk Dance Ensemble of Sri Lanka was founded in 1973 under the direction of Pani Bharata (it toured the USSR in 1974).
There are many amateur theatrical groups in Sri Lanka. A group at the university in Colombo is well known; its repertoire includes the plays by the contemporary Sinhalese playwright E. Sarathchandra Maname and Sinhabahu, as well as plays by A. P. Chekhov, O. Wilde, and other writers.
M. P. KOTOVSKAIA