Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Kankesanthurai

Coordinates:9°48′55″N80°02′40″E / 9.81528°N 80.04444°E /9.81528; 80.04444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromKankesanturai)
Town in Sri Lanka
Kankesanthurai
காங்கேசன்துறை
කන්කසන්තුරේ
Kankesanthurai is located in Northern Province
Kankesanthurai
Kankesanthurai
Show map of Northern Province
Kankesanthurai is located in Sri Lanka
Kankesanthurai
Kankesanthurai
Show map of Sri Lanka
Coordinates:9°48′55″N80°02′40″E / 9.81528°N 80.04444°E /9.81528; 80.04444
CountrySri Lanka
ProvinceNorthern
DistrictJaffna
DS DivisionValikamam North

Kankesanthurai (Tamil:காங்கேசன்துறை,Sinhala:කන්කසන්තුරේ, lit.Port Kankesan), colloquially known asKKS, is a port suburb, fishing division and resort hub of theJaffna District,Northern Province, Sri Lanka. Formerly anelectoral district, Kankesanthurai is home to the Kankesanthurai beach,KeerimalaiNaguleswaram temple (aPancha Ishwaram) and theMaviddapuram Kandaswamy Temple. The port's harbour has served as an arrival and departure point for pilgrims sinceclassical antiquity and is named after the Sri Lankan Tamil godMurukan. Kankesanthurai suburb has many fishing villages andGrama Niladhari (village officers) and is a northern part ofValikamam, one of the three regions of ancient habitation on theJaffna peninsula, located on the peninsula's northern coast, 12 miles fromJaffna city, 85 miles fromMannar and 155 miles fromTrincomalee.

A popular tourist destination for its temples, itssandy,palm tree filled coastal stretch ofbeach and theKeerimalai Springs, other prominentlandmarks in Kankesanthurai include the suburb'snatural harbour, itsfort andlighthouse.

Etymology

[edit]

During the 8th century renovation of theMaviddapuram Kandaswamy Temple by the Chola-Pandyan princess Mathurapuraveeravalli, the temple's statue of Kankesan (Murugan) was brought via the port of Gayathurai which was later renamed Kankesanthurai in his honour.[1][2] Thurai means "port" inTamil.

History

[edit]
The ancient main gopuram of the Keerimalai Naguleswaram Kovil, Kankesanthurai

During the civil war, the port at Kankesanturai was closed by the Sri Lankan Navy. Between 1983 and 1993, the northern part of theValikamam region were declared a High Security Zone (HSZ) by the armed forces, where 6000 acres of land was confiscated around Kankesanthurai and all the residents (25,000 Tamil families) expelled, without compensation or return.[3][4][5][6] The temples were inside the HSZ and as a result its priests were evicted by the military.[7][8] The temple's structures were bombed, most significantly Naguleswaram in 1990, and their contents looted.[7] Between 2002 and 2005,US military intelligence and military personnel visited the security zone, including Jaffna Airport and KKS harbour to review and inspect basing opportunities.[9] Following the end of thecivil war the military relaxed some restrictions on entering the HSZ, allowing priests and worshipers to return to the temples.[7] The Maviddapuram Kandaswamy temple's 108-footgopuram has been re-built but much of its 17th century structural renovations were destroyed during the civil war.[7]

Historical Sites

[edit]

Naguleswaram temple is a famousHindu temple of Kankesanthurai. One of the oldest shrines of the region, it is the northernmost shrine on the island of thePancha Ishwarams of LordSiva, venerated by Hindus across the world from classical antiquity.[10] Hindus believe its adjacentwater tank, the Keerimalai Springs, to have curative properties.[10] Maviddapuram Kandaswamy Temple is towards the south of the harbour.

Keerimalai springs, Kankesanthurai

Freshwater atKeerimalai Springs is sourced from underground. "Maasi Magam" and “Aadi Amaavaasai” festival days, the latter falling during theTamil month of “Aadi” (mid July-mid August) brings Hindu pilgrims to the town to carry out rituals for their forefathers and take a divine dip in thenatural springs. These rituals are usually carried out by men. Keerimalai is particularly famous for this festival.[10]

Kankesanthurai fort was a small fort, built by theDutch in the town. The fort was destroyed sometime after and there are no visible remains. Unlike other Dutch forts in Sri Lanka, there are no maps and little information remaining on the fort.[11]

Kankesanthurai Lighthouse,[12][13][14] built in 1893, is 22 metres (72 ft) tall and has an octagonal masonry tower with lantern and gallery.[12] Located deep inside the Sri Lankan military's Valikamam North High Security Zone and next to the naval base, the lighthouse was heavily damaged during the Sri Lankan Civil War and is inactive.[12]

Kankesanthurai beach is acclaimed as one of the top two beaches of the Northern Province. A family-orientated sandy beach with palm trees and cool waters, the beach is non-crowded and natural from where views of the villagers'fisheries at the harbour, medieval architecture and the lighthouse are possible.[15]

Governance

[edit]

Kankesanthurai was anelectoral district ofSri Lanka betweenAugust 1947 andFebruary 1989. The district was named after the town. The1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka introduced theproportional representation electoral system forelectingmembers ofParliament. The existing 160 mainlysingle-member electoral districts were replaced with 22multi-memberelectoral districts.[16] Kankesanthurai electoral district was replaced by theJaffna multi-member electoral district at the1989 general elections, the first under the PR system, though Kankesanthurai continues to be a polling division of the multi-member electoral district. ProminentCeylon Tamil lawyer and politicianS. J. V. Chelvanayakam stood as theAll Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC) candidate for Kankesanthurai at the1947 parliamentary election. He won the election and enteredParliament.[17]

Economy and industry

[edit]

Kankesanturai was the site of fishing and manufacture industry in the 1900s, with the establishment of acement factory that served the country. The factory commenced operations in 1950 under the Department of Industries and was converted to a Public Corporation in 1956, being named theKankesan Cement Works. The factory closed its productions in 1991 due to the raging Northern war. In 2016, MPs from theNorthern Provincial Council have expressed interest in reviving the plant with a green cement factory concept, using environmentally friendly cement technologies, with Sri Lanka Cement Corporation, theUAE-based Ras Al Khaimah and theSouth Korean AFKO Group GMEX all linked to invest. Near the cement factory, theKoolair Power Station, a pollutant fuel oil-run thermal power station that was moved to Kankesanthurai following noise complaints elsewhere, was similarly decommissioned following artillery damage during the war.[18][19]

Banana production,milk production at theyoghurt factory,chilli andonion farming, market trade, hotel administration and boat journeys between Jaffna islets also generate income in the suburb but are all currently run as military businesses that have negatively impacted local enterprise through competitive pricing; TheSociety for Threatened Peoples notes that profit is returned to the MoD in Sri Lanka which pays soldiers' salaries in KKS.[20]

Underwatershipwrecks have also impeded ship movements within the port's harbour.[21] Under an agreement signed in 2011, India has assisted in dredging the Kankesanthurai harbour to deepen it, remove the wrecks and turn Kankesathurai harbour international.[22]

Maviddapuram Kandaswamy Temple, whose eighth centuryMurukan statue gave the port district its name

Geography and climate

[edit]

Kankesanthurai is on the north coast of theJaffna Peninsula, nearPoint Pedro, the northernmost point in Sri Lanka. Its port is to the north, facing theBay of Bengal in theIndian Ocean.

The climate of Jaffna peninsula is considered to be tropical monsoonal with a seasonal rhythm of rainfall. The temperature ranges from 26 C to 33 C. Annual precipitation ranges from 696 mm to 1125 mm. The north east monsoon rain (October to January) accounts for more than 90% of the annual rainfall.

Population

[edit]

A 2007 Department of Census and Statistics government report on population figures in the Jaffna district notes that Kankesanthurai Centre, Kankesanthurai West and Kankesanthurai South, as well as Naguleswaram and Maviddapuram are "High Security Zones" where there are no civilians.[23] By 2012, some return of internally displaced people and civilian life in the Valikamam North DS division was documented by theNorthern Provincial Council in their statistics report, detailing dry ration issues, mine injuries and welfare centres in Kankesanthurai.[24]

Transport

[edit]

Rail

[edit]

Kankesanthurai railway station is the terminus of theNorthern Line on theSri Lanka Railways network. Until 1990, Kankesanthurai was the terminus of theYal Devi service.[25] During the war, trains terminated atVavuniya, leaving Kankesanthurai isolated from the national railway network. Kankesanthurai railway station was re opened in early 2015 and is functioning at present.

Port

[edit]

The Port at Kankesanturai was closed during the war. In 2011, India and Sri Lanka signed an agreement to revive the port by clearing sunken ships and deepening the harbour. This should significantly lower the transit time of goods to and from the east coast ofIndia,Bangladesh, andMyanmar, and propel economic activity in the north.[21] In October 2023 ferry service between the Kankesanturai Port andNagapattinam,Tamil Nadu, began. TheHSC Cheriyapani carries up to 150 passengers between India and Sri Lanka, making one round trip per day.[26]

Air

[edit]

Jaffna International Airport (IATA:JAF,ICAO:VCCJ) is anair force base andinternational airport inPalaly in northernSri Lanka near Kankesanthurai.[27][28] Located approximately 16 km (9.9 miles) north of the city ofJaffna, the airport is also known as Palaly Airport and SLAF Palaly. Originally built by theRoyal Air Force duringWorld War II, it served as the country's secondinternational airport before being taken over by theSri Lanka Air Force.Jaffna International Airport is the 3rd international airport inSri Lanka afterBandaranaike International Airport inColombo andMattala Rajapaksa International Airport inHambantota.

Education

[edit]
  • Kankesanthurai Nadeswara College

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Yatawara, Dhaneshi (1 September 2013)."Surge of devotion reverberates the North".Sunday Observer (Sri Lanka).Archived from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved14 January 2017.
  2. ^"Maviddapuram Kandaswamy Kovil".Time Out.
  3. ^Brady, Brendan (30 August 2013)."Soldiers at Your Service".Slate.
  4. ^Jeyaraj, D. B. S. (18 January 2003)."High-stakes zones".Frontline.20 (2).
  5. ^"Asia Report No. 220 - Sri Lanka's North II: Rebuilding under the Military"(PDF).International Crisis Group. 16 March 2012. p. 21. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 14 August 2013.
  6. ^Lonely Planet, Ryan Ver Berkmoes, Stuart Butler, Iain Stewart (2014).Lonely Planet Sri Lanka. Lonely Planet.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^abcdKarafin, Amy (15 March 2013)."Sri Lanka, as It Heals From War".The New York Times.
  8. ^Jansz, Frederica (5 January 2003)."HSZs rock peace process".The Sunday Leader.
  9. ^"Palaly: revamping a lifeline".Tamil Guardian. 5 August 2005.
  10. ^abc"Naguleswaram Temple".Time Out. 3 March 2015.
  11. ^Nelson, W. A.; De Silva, R. K. (2004).The Dutch Forts of Sri Lanka – The Military Monuments of Ceylon. Sri Lanka Netherlands Association. p. 105.
  12. ^abcRowlett, Russ (13 February 2006)."Lighthouses of Sri Lanka".The Lighthouse Directory.University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  13. ^"Kankesanturaï Light".Amateur Radio Lighthouse Society.
  14. ^"Lighthouse Explorer: Kankesanturai Light".Lighthouse Digest.
  15. ^"KKS Beach Jaffna".Time Out. 9 Jan 2017.
  16. ^"The Electoral System".Parliament of Sri Lanka. Archived fromthe original on 2010-11-27.
  17. ^"Result of Parliamentary General Election 1947"(PDF). Election Commission of Sri Lanka.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^"Power drama in Jaffna peninsula: Dispute over insurance claim affects electricity supplies".The Sunday Times. 3 February 2002. Retrieved8 November 2015.
  19. ^"Electricity shortage in Jaffna".TamilNet. 15 November 2007. Retrieved8 November 2015.
  20. ^"Under the Military's Shadow-Local Communities and Militirization on the Jaffna Peninsula"(PDF).Society for Threatened Peoples. October 2016. Retrieved29 January 2017.
  21. ^abR.K. Radhakrishnan (2011-07-21)."India, Sri Lanka MoU to re-build port".THE HINDU. Retrieved2011-07-27.
  22. ^Patrick Peebles (2015).Historical Dictionary of Sri Lanka. Rowman and Littlefield. p. 199.
  23. ^"Basic Population Information on Jaffna District - 2007"(PDF). Department of Census and Statistics. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2018-11-23. Retrieved2017-01-21.
  24. ^R. Wijialudchumi."Statistical Information -2012 Provincial Planning Secretariat Northern Province"(PDF). Department of Census and Statistics.
  25. ^"Dailynews".President requests patriotic citizens: Join us in building Northern rail track. 2009-03-24. Archived fromthe original on 2012-10-21.
  26. ^"Commencement of passenger ferry service between India and Sri Lanka- A new landmark in regional connectivity".Ministry of External Affairs. Government of India. 14 October 2023. Retrieved21 February 2024.
  27. ^"VCCJ KANKESANTURAI / Jaffna". Aeronautical Information Services of Sri Lanka, Airport & Aviation Services. Archived fromthe original on 2013-12-14. Retrieved2017-01-14.
  28. ^"JAF - Airport". Great Circle Mapper.
West Coast
South Coast
East Coast
North Coast
Ancient ports
Under construction
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kankesanthurai&oldid=1281537651"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp