Abstract:
Portuguese established friendly relations with the king of Kotte around 1505-06 which
matured into a defense alliance with the construction of a fort in Colombo in 1518 and
later to the annexation of the kingdom through involvements in local politics.
Simultaneously, the introduction of Christianity under the padroada and an
unsympathetic approach to local religions and the wave of unethical conversions created
a separate local group marking a clear deviation of the existing relationships of state,
religion and society. The newly converted indigenous Catholics did not also pay the
same respect age-old traditions and customs. Then Sri Lanka coupled with Buddhist
ideals, had attenuated its fighting propensities. it was only the cruelties enforced on the
civilians and the willful destruction of religious institutions by the Portuguese that turned
them to become an unbending resistance and indulge in deeds of daring to the rule of
the Portuguese.
This resistance was not part of a concerted effort against the Portuguese, but remained
mostly an uncoordinated spontaneous rising of masses. From Vijayaba Kollaya upto the
death of Rajasinghe of Sitavaka and in the dynastic struggles for power there was no
royalty left in the littorals by the Portuguese. There was thus no royal leader who could
coordinate uprisings. A chief usually an army officer, who had become disgruntled with
Portuguese rule, often on personal reasons volunteered to lead and raise both the
fighting level and spirit. Only a very few of these uprisings lasted for more than a year.
Each ran its course until the terror and guile of the Portuguese overcame it, with either
the death of the leader or himself seeking political asylum in the Kandyan territories.
Subduing these main uprisings entailed much hard work on the Portuguese soldados
that were paid irregularly and ill fed, and who often looted and plundered the civilians.
The Generals it appeared were no better than the soldados brigands and one of their
chief preoccupations was to enrich themselves. They deliberately adopted a scorchedearth
policy as a means of terrorizing the inhabitants; into submission and according to
da Couto and de Queyroz they "committed conspicuous cruelties on the inhabitants of
the area and the rebels, as an example to the others. Portuguese, with death and
plunder and fire and fury, left not a stone upon stone nor tree or fruit of use". Some
villages suffered wholesale destruction and remained depopulated. Yet the will of the
people could not be effaced till the Portuguese were driven out of the lowlands through
the joint effort of Rajasinghe II and his Dutch supporters. The paper describes these
events using Sinhala and Portuguese sources.