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List of wars involving Sri Lanka

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Part ofa series on the
History of Sri Lanka
1686 Mallet map of Sri Lanka (Taprobane)
Chronicles
Periods
Prehistory (300,000 BP–543 BC)
    Stone Age
    Bronze Age
    Iron Age ~1000 BC–543 BC
Pre Anuradhapura (543–377 BC)
    Indo-Aryan settlement
Anuradhapura (377 BC–1017)
    Early Anuradhapura period437 BC–463 AD
    Middle Anuradhapura period463–691
    Late Anuradhapura period691–1017
Polonnaruwa (1017–1232)
    Chola conquest1017–1070
    High Polonnaruwa period1055–1196
    Late Polonnaruwa period1196–1232
Transitional (1232–1592)
    Dambadeniya period1232–1341
    Gampola period1341–1412
    Kotte period1412–1592
Kandy (1592–1815)
    Early Kandyan period1592–1707
    Middle Kandyan period1707–1760
    Late Kandyan period1760–1815
British Ceylon (1815–1948)
    Post-Kandyan period1815–1833
    Colebrooke–Cameron Reforms era1833–1850
    Plantation economy1850–1910
    Economic stagnation1910–1927
    Donoughmore Reforms era1927–1948
Sri Lanka (1948–present)
    Decolonisation 1948–1956
    Socialist experiment 1956–1977
    Free market economy 1977–1994
    Civil war 1994–2009
    Political instability 2009–2024
    Post–Aragalaya era 2024–present
By Topic

flagSri Lanka portal

.This is a list ofwars involving theDemocratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and its predecessor states.

Legend
  Victory
  Defeat
  Other result
  Ongoing conflict

Anuradhapura Kingdom

[edit]
ConflictSri Lanka and alliesOpponentsResultsSri Lankan commandersSri Lankan losses
KingGeneralSL
forces
Civilians
Battle of Vijithapura
(162/161 BCE)
Anuradhapura KingdomChola dynastyVictory
  • City of Vijithapura captured by Dutthagamani's army
UnknownUnknown
Anuradhapura invasion of Chola
(120)

Anuradhapura Kingdom

Chola Dynasty

VictoryUnknownUnknown
Anuradhapura invasion of Pandya
(862)
Anuradhapura KingdomPandya dynastyVictoryUnknownUnknown
Anuradhapura invasion of Pandya
(917)
Anuradhapura KingdomChola dynastyDefeat
  • Cholas defeated and slayed the Srilankan army[1]
UnknownUnknown

(946)
Anuradhapura KingdomPandya dynastyUnknownUnknown
Chola invasion of Anuradhapura kingdomAnuradhapura KingdomChola dynastyVictory
  • The whole Chola force with the generals retreated.
UnknownUnknown
Invasion of Anuradhapura by Rastrakuta empireAnuradhapura KingdomRashtrakuta dynastyVictory
  • Rashtrakuta forces were defeated in kayts
  • General sena and Rashtrakutas have an alliance after the defeat
UnknownUnknown
Chola conquest of Anuradhapura
(992–1017)

Anuradhapura Kingdom

Chola Empire

DefeatUnknownUnknown

Polonnaruwa kingdom

[edit]
ConflictSri Lanka and alliesOpponentsResultsSri Lankan commandersSri Lankan losses
KingGeneralSL
forces
Civilians
Polonnaruwa–Pagan War
(1165–1181)
Polonnaruwa kingdom
Angkorian Empire
Pagan Kingdom
Chola dynasty(inPegu)
Polonnaruwa victoryUnknownUnknown
Pandyan Civil War
(1169–1177)

Anuradhapura kingdomKingdom of Polonnaruwa
Pandya dynasty

Chola dynasty
Pandya dynasty

Defeat
  • Pandyan civil conflict ends. Rival kingdoms abandon military intervention
  • Sinhalese-Vira Pandya alliance lost the war against Cholas
  • Polonnaruwa kingdom and Vira Pandya III kingdom Alliance controlRameshwaram until 1182
  • Chola backed-faction occupies the majority of Pandya Nadu.
  • Pandya Nadu re-established
UnknownUnknown
1173 Polonnaruwa invasion of Chola
(1173)
Polonnaruwa kingdomPandya dynasty
Chola dynasty
Defeat
  • The Entire force from Ceylon had sustained defeat.[5]
UnknownUnknown

Transitional period

[edit]
ConflictSri Lanka and alliesOpponentsResultsSri Lankan commandersSri Lankan losses
KingGeneralSL
forces
Civilians
Ming–Kotte War
(1410 or 1411)
Kingdom of KotteMing ChinaMing victoryUnknownUnknown
Kotte conquest of the Jaffna kingdom
(1449–1454)
Kingdom of KotteKingdom of Kotte

Jaffna kingdom
Vanni chieftaincies (until 1450)
Supported by:
Vijayanagar Empire

Kotte's victoryUnknownUnknown
Kotte invasion of Vijayanagar
(1456)
Kingdom of KotteVijayanagar EmpireVictory
Various
Various
UnknownUnknown
Sinhalese–Portuguese War
(1518–1658)

Kingdom of Sitawaka
Kingdom of Kandy
Principality of Raigama
Kingdom of Jaffna
Denmark-Norway (1619-22)[6]
Supported by:
Zamorin of Calicut
Kingdom of Tanjore
Vanni chieftains

Portuguese Empire
Kingdom of Kotte


From 1638:
Dutch East India Company

Victory
Various
Various
UnknownUnknown
Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom
(1560–1619)

Jaffna kingdom

Portugal


Kandy

Portuguese victoryUnknownUnknown
First Kandyan–Dutch War
(1670–1675[a])

Kingdom of Kandy
France

Dutch Republic

Dutch VictoryUnknownUnknown
Second Kandyan–Dutch War
(1764–1766)

Kingdom of Kandy

Dutch Republic

Dutch victory[7]UnknownUnknown
Vanniyar Rebellion
(1782)
Vanni chieftaincies
Kingdom of Kandy
Dutch RepublicVictory
  • Vanni region liberated from Dutch rule
UnknownUnknown
Kandyan Wars
(1796–1818)

Kandy

Kingdom of Great Britain (1796–1800)
 United Kingdom (1800–1818)
Kandyan opposition

British victory
  • End of the Kandyan monarchy
Unknown
Unknown

British Ceylon

[edit]
ConflictBritish Ceylon and alliesOpponentsResultsGovernor(s)British Ceylon losses
British Ceylon
forces
Civilians
Matale Rebellion
(1848)

United Kingdom

Kandyan rebels

British victory
Second Boer War
(1899–1902)

South African Republic
Orange Free State


British victory
World War I
(1914–1918)
Allied Powers:

and others ...

Central Powers:

and others ...

Allied Powers victory(seeAftermath of World War I)
World War II
(1939–1945[e])
'AlliesAxisAllied victory
Easter Sunday Raid
(1942)
United KingdomUnited Kingdom

Empire of JapanJapan

Japanese victory
Cocos Islands mutiny
(1942)

United Kingdom

Ceylonese mutineersBritish victory

Dominion of Ceylon

[edit]
ConflictCeylon and alliesOpponentsResultsCeylon commandersCeylon losses
Head(s) of GovernmentDefence Minister(s)Ceylonese
forces
Civilians
1971 JVP insurrection
(1971)

Ceylon

Military intervention:

JVP
Supported by:

Diplomatic support:

Ceylonese government victory
  • Rebel leaders were captured and the remaining members surrendered
  • Ceylonese government re-established control of the entire island
  • Expulsion ofNorth Korean diplomats
  • The JVP controlled Ceylon'sSouthern Province andSabaragamuwa Province for several weeks
531,200

Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka

[edit]
ConflictSri Lanka and alliesOpponentsResultsSri Lankan commandersSri Lankan losses
Head(s) of GovernmentDefense Minister(s)SL
forces
Civilians
Sri Lankan Civil War
(1983–2009[17][18])

Sri LankaSri Lanka
IndiaIndia (1987–1990)

Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
Other Tamil militant groups

Sri Lankan government victory28,70860,000–100,000
1987–1989 JVP insurrection
(1987–1989)

Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna

Sri Lankan Government victory
  • Emergency conditions in South-western and Central provinces lifted
  • Insurgency declined following the fall of theEastern Bloc
Operation Prosperity Guardian
(2023–present)

 United States Navy[20]
 Royal Navy
 Australian Navy
 Bahraini Naval Force
 Canadian Navy
 Danish Navy
 Finnish Navy
 Hellenic Navy
 Dutch Navy
 New Zealand Navy[21]
 Norwegian Navy
 Singaporean Navy
Sri Lanka

Supported by:
 Seychelles Coast Guard

YemenSupreme Political Council

Ongoing

Sri Lankan peacekeeping

[edit]
ConflictSri Lanka and alliesCountryResultsSri Lankan commandersSri Lankan losses
Head(s) of GovernmentDefense Minister(s)
United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon
(1978–present)
Sri LankaLebanonOngoing
Various
United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti
(2004–present)
Sri LankaHaitiOngoing
Various
United Nations Mission in the Central African Republic and Chad
(2007–2010)
Sri LankaCentral African Republic
Chad
Ended
United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali
(2013–present)
Sri LankaMaliOngoing
Various
3[26][27]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^U can also say it started in 1665 because that what the Dutch started invading but 1670 is when it was officially war and the first major offensive by the Kandyans took place.
  2. ^BeforeFederation in 1901, Australian involvement in the war consisted of forces from the following separate colonies:
  3. ^Larger numbers of volunteers came from theNetherlands,Germany andSweden-Norway. Smaller forces came fromIreland,Italy,Congress Poland,France,Australia,Belgium,Russia, theUnited States,Denmark,Austria-Hungary, andGreece.
  4. ^The Russian Empire during 1914–1917, theRussian Republic during 1917. TheBolsheviks signedan armistice followed bya separate peace shortly after theirarmed seizure of power.
  5. ^Whilevarious other dates have been proposed as the date on which World War II began or ended, this is the period most frequently cited.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Nilakanda Sastry,The Colas,1955, pg.122
  2. ^Spencer 1976, p. 411
  3. ^The Jungle Tide:“Collapse” in Early Mediaeval Sri Lanka STRICKLAND, KEIR ,MAGALIE (2011) The Jungle Tide: “Collapse” in Early Mediaeval Sri Lanka. Doctoral thesis, Durham University. P.331http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/893/
  4. ^Sastri 2000, p. 199-200. sfn error: no target: CITEREFSastri2000 (help)
  5. ^Nilakanda Sastry,The Colas,1955 p.368
  6. ^Rindom, Jan (1995).OSTINDISK KOMPAGNI 1616-50(PDF) (in Danish). DET KONGELIGE BIBLIOTEK. p. 24.
  7. ^Emmer, Pieter C;Gommans, Jos J.L (2020).The Dutch Overseas Empire, 1600-1800 (Hardcover ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 294.ISBN 9781108428378.
  8. ^Grattan, Robert (2009). "The Entente in World War I: a case study in strategy formulation in an alliance".Journal of Management History.15 (2):147–158.doi:10.1108/17511340910943796.
  9. ^Haydon, A.P. (1964). "South Australia's first war".Australian Historical Studies.11 (42).
  10. ^"The story of a North Korea-backed rebellion in Sri Lanka – North Korea News".NKNews. 2017.
  11. ^Farrel, Tom (12 March 2014)."North Korea's role in Sri Lanka's bloody insurgencies".NKNews.
  12. ^Commission on the Organization of the Government. USA. 1975.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^Iqbal 1972, p. 9.[verification needed] sfn error: no target: CITEREFIqbal1972 (help)
  14. ^History of the JVP, 1965–1994 (1st ed.). Niyamuwa Publications. November 2014.ISBN 978-955-8696-39-2. .[page needed]
  15. ^Sri Lanka the years of Terror. p. 59
  16. ^Gunaratna 1990, p. 8. sfn error: no target: CITEREFGunaratna1990 (help)
  17. ^"LTTE defeated; Sri Lanka liberated from terror".Ministry of Defence. 18 May 2009. Archived fromthe original on 21 May 2009. Retrieved18 May 2009.
  18. ^"Sri Lankan president declares war 'victory'".CNN. Archived fromthe original on 12 November 2021. Retrieved2022-02-28.
  19. ^Recolonisation:Foreign Funded NGOs in Sri Lanka. p. 233
  20. ^"Statement from Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III on Ensuring Freedom of Navigation in the Red Sea".U.S. Department of Defense.Archived from the original on 18 December 2023. Retrieved18 December 2023.
  21. ^"NZ to deploy six NZDF staff to Red Sea, PM announces".1 News. 23 January 2024. Retrieved25 January 2024.
  22. ^Mallawarachi, Bharatha (9 January 2024)."Sri Lanka to join US-led naval operations against Houthi rebels in Red Sea".ABC News.Archived from the original on 10 January 2024. Retrieved10 January 2024.
  23. ^"Red Sea crisis: Navy OPV heads home after maiden patrol".The Morning. 24 February 2024. Retrieved25 February 2024.
  24. ^"SLNS Gajabahu returns from Red Sea".Ceylon Today. 28 February 2024. Retrieved5 March 2024.
  25. ^"Red Sea crisis: SLN prepped to continue patrols".The Morning. 3 March 2024. Retrieved5 March 2024.
  26. ^"Three Sri Lankan soldiers die in Mali attack | Daily FT".
  27. ^"Sri Lanka's first combat deaths since 2009: Families mourn fallen UN peacekeepers".www.sundayobserver.lk. 2019-02-03.
Domestic
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Peacekeeping
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