Sri Lankan Sinhalese/Burgher Family Genealogy
Nilaperumal
aka Kalukapuge - Family #1001
Bandaranaike family tree
1001
According to Mahawansa
(Chapter LXXX1X) Rajawaliya and other historic works, Siri
Parakramabahu, or Parakramabahu
V1 ascended the throne of Lanka in the year 1958 of the
Buddhist era or according to some copies of the Mahawansa in
the Buddhist era 1953.ie between the years 1410 and 1415 AD.
Jayawardenapura, the
modern Kotte, was then the Capital of Lanka, which is 6 miles
from Colombo.
An inscription in the Maha Saman Dewala of
Sabaragamuwa says that a Brahamin in the name of Nilaperumal, a
grandson Arya-Kamadewa,
restored Saman
Dewala, which was in ruins on the orders of the great
monarch Parakramabahu. The inscription further goes on to say
that the dewala was opened for the public in the reign of
Kalikalasahitiya Sarvagna Pandita Parakramabahu,buddhist era
1796 or Christian era 1253. Jambudronipura or Dambadeniya was
then Lanka's capital. It was in the 39th year of the reign of
Parakramabahu,who
reigned in Kotte,that the Sabaragamuwa Dewala was restored
and the inscriptions were made. This was in the buddhist
era 1997 or christian era 1454 or 201 years after the reign of
Kalikalasahitiya Saravagna Pandita Parakramabahu. It appears
that the Brahamin Arya Kamadewa was a high priest of the
dewala, under the Sinhalese Monarchs, and the inscription
above referred to say that his Grandson Nilaperumal was
appointed to the same rank with the name of Bandaranayaka, in
the buddhist era 1992 and 1997 or christian era 1449 and 1454
by Sri Parakramabahu, and further commanded that the office of Basnayaka of the
Maha Saman Dewala of Sabaragamuwa be conferred on the
descendents of Nilaperumal. The above account is gleaned from
the inscription of the Maha Saman Dewala of Sabaragamuwa and
from the Maha Wansa and other Historical works by H Sri
Sumangala, High Priest of Siripada, Colombo November 1886.
Rama Chandra Brahamin
(b approx 1430) came to Ceylon from India, about the year A.D
1454 and landed in Mattota (may be present day Matara). He
married according to the existing customs from a noble kandyan
family. He was appointed by the King, Nayaka Pandaram
(Chief Record Keeper) of the Maha Saman Dewala in Senkadagala
Nuwara, according to an old Sinhalese Manuscript and had a daughter.
(3 writers have said
that Nayaka Pandaram in 1454 was chief record keeper.
With
usage Pandara Nayake, the "P" was substituted with "B",thus
Bandaranaike evolved. Pandarams of India are Brahmins, and
keepers of Court and family records.)
I
Daughter(b approx 1452)
,married to Chief King "Dappulasena" of Mattota in the city of
gods and had 2 children.
II
1 Navaratna Bandara
(No issue )
2 Sooriya
Bandara (b approx 1464) married the youngest daughter of
Chief of Mahaistawira of
Wisidahagama and had a son.
III
1 Son (b approx
1480)married a daughter of a King of Soliawansa, he had a son.
IV
1 Weediya Bandara (b
approx 1500),who had a son.
V
1 Sooriya Bandara (b
approx 1530), married and lived at Sitawaka.He had a son and a
daughter.
VI
1 Navaratna Bandara (b
approx 1550),who had 2 sons.
1 Daughter
VII
1 Tennakoon Mudiyanselage
(b approx 1565) ,Disawa of Matale, afterwards returned to
India.
2 Son who was married
and lived at Todugalla and had a son and a daughter.
VIII
1 Son (b approx 1580)
who was Maha Disawa of four Korales and married the Leuke
family and had 1 son.
2 Daughter
IX
1 Arya Kamadewa (b
approx 1595) ,married and had 1 son.
X
1 Son(b approx 1610),
who had 1 son.
XI
1 Nilaperumal (b
approx 1625) ,married and had 3 sons.
XII
1 Son (b approx 1637)
settled at Nickawella in Rattota,Matale as Bandaranayake
Mudiyanselage and the Nickawella grant of several
amunams was granted to him for distinguished services to the
King. The village was subsequently given by the British
Governtment to Dullewa, 2nd Adigar for openingup the Dambulla
Road.-Vide Nickawella Sannas.
2 Son, settled in the
sathara korale .A decendent of his was in 1844 Rate Mahatmaya
of the Southern Division of Matale. Vide Ceylon Almanac of
1844.Wegodapola Bandaranayaka Mudiyanselage was the Rate
Mahatmaya of Matale in the 1840's.
3 Son, settled at
Malwana, a village in Kurunegala District. According to
Dullewa Adigar,
with antiquarian associations ,connected to Bandaranayaka
family of the Western Province.
XIII
1 Son settled in
Matale.
2 Son settled in
Malwana a village in Kurunegala District.
3 Son had a child Nawagomuwa Bandaranayaka
Mudiyanselage Mohotti Appuhamy (b approx
1649). Governor Ryclof van Goens, writing on 22nd
December 1663 to Jacob Hustaart, his successor states that
Mohotti Appuhamy is of very highest family,and therefore very
learned . He had 2 sons.
XIV-XXI
2 Mohotti
Appuhami b:1649, (It may be assumed
that during the Dutch period (1658-1796), they would have
chosen to take Western Christian names and also changed their
religion from Buddhism to Christianity). Mohotti Appuhamy by
Sannas Ola of 11th Feb 1664, received 6 Amunas of
field in Nawagamuwa
from the Dissawe P Dupont.
3 (1) Son
who married and had 3 sons.(Corale)
3 (2)
Mohotti Mudiyanselage Domingo Dias Bandaranayaka (later became Mudaliyar), b:circa 1670
d:1733(Coraal of Hina Corale)Nawagomuwa + Dona Dominga,
d:1723 (5 children)
4 (1)
Don Balthazar Wijewickrema Dias Bandaranayaka bp:21/3/1707,
(Mudliyar of Atapattu in 1739) + Hettimullage Johanna Dias
of Galkissa, m:4 Mar 1731
5 David Balthazar Dias
Bandaranayaka, b:4/5/1738 + Dona Maria of Panadura on
M28/10/1753 and died in 1754
5 Philomela Dias Bandaranayaka
(Philomena?), b:8 Apr 1742 died April 1746
4 (2)
Goosman Appuhamy, settled in the
Kandyan territory.
4 (3) Dona Louisa Dias Bandaranayaka, bp:14/12/1704 +Marappuli Appuhamilage Don Simon de
Livera of
Madurawela,m:15/8/1716 at Yala (3109)(Don Simon
Aratchi)(father of Don Louis de Livera Samarasinghe
Seneviratne,Mohandiram.)(Yala of Kalutara District)
5 (1) Dona
Dominga de Livera
5 (2) Dona
Ignatia de Livera
5 (3) Don
Daniel de Livera
5 (4) Dona
Ana de Livera
5 (5) Dona
Florntina de Livera
5 (6) Dona
Dominga de Livera
5 (7) Don
Theodosio de Livera
5 (8) Don Marappuli
Appuhamilage Don Louis de Livera Wijewickreme Seneviratne
Tennakoon of Madurawela,Mudaliyaof
Atapattu,bp19/1/1725-d20/3/1790 +Johanna Dassenaike
6 (1)
Louisa de Livera b20/5/1753
+Paulis Samarakkody(m3/6/1770 (See Samarakkody family
tree)
6 (2) Don
Carolis de Livera Wijewickrema Tennekoon,b:
circa 1760, Mudliyar of Attapattu 1800, with honorary rank of
Maha Mudaliyar of the
Gate (he was a son of Louis de Livera Wijewikreme
Seneviratne Tennakoon mentioned above b1725) Fredrick North
Governor gave a medal to Don Carolis de Livera Wijewickrema
Tennekoon for long and faithful services, as Mudliyar of
Attapattu in .A.D.1804 + Louisa de Silva Seneviratne
(d/o Don Simon de Silva Jayathilake Seneviratne Maha
Mudaliyar,) m:11th Feb 1790.
7 David de Livera Wijewardena Tennakoon
Mudaliyar of the Governors Gate (Muhamdiram,
Hewagam Korale) and translator of Commissioner of Revenue
office bp: 7th Feb 1794 + Dona Louisa
Dias Abeysinghe, m:2hd July 1821.
8 [6]
Julias Earnest de Livera (Kachcherie Mohandiram
Colombo)+ [5] Jane Maria de Livera (children see below)(d of
Louis de Livera,Grand daughter of Carolis de Livera.)
8 [7] Franciscus de Livera, Mudliyar
Alukuru Korale + [8] Charlott Fredricka de Livera (d/o
Simon de Livera Mudaliyar of Hewagam Korale)
9 Dr Edwin de Livera b:25-May-1849, see
pic below (Member of British Medical Association), Educated at
Colombo Acadamy. In 1870 received Jijeebhoy scholarship
Calcutta. In 1873 went to Glasgow and obtained MBCM.1878 Asst
Colonial Surgeon Puttalam. 1900 Provincial Surgeon of NW
province and Sabaragamuwa. Resided in Kandy. Colonial Surgeon
+ Alexandra Eliza Speldewine (Maartensz) from Batticaloa.
b15/3/1868 (d of Dr JA Maartensz of Batticaloa.)
9 Walter
de
Livera, b:1863, (Royal College, Colombo), Police
Magistrate & Commissioner of Requests at Chilaw and
Marawila in 1898. Occupied similar positions since 1902 at
Gampola and Nawalapitiya. Served as Private Secretary,first to
Sir Harry Dias Bandaranaike and later to Sir Archibald Cambell
Laurie. Walter de Livera’s home was in Veyangoda, and he was
fond of Horticulture. Member of the Orient Club and Turf Club
and also of the Ceylon Agricultural Society. + Elizabeth Dias
Bandaranaike b
15/5/1867m:12/4/1898 (Sister of Soloman Dias Bandaranaike(Maha
Mudaliyar) (1001)(d of Christoffel DB and Anna Philepsz
Panditharatne.)
10
Manique
de Livera, b:1892
10 "Princess" de Livera (Joy), b:1900,
d approx 1921 + Reginold Felix
Dias Bandaranaike, b:1891, d:1951, m:28/8/1919
(1001)(Lawyer and Judge of the Supreme Court.)(After Princess
de Livera's death RFDB has a 2hd marriage to Freda Dias
Abeysinghe on 10/12/1924)(Son of Felix Reginold Dias
Bandaranaike)
11 Reginold Walter Michael Dias Bandaranaike
(Barrister QC) b3/3/ 1921-d17/11/2009 + Norah
Hunter Crabb
(Reginold Walter DB
was educated at Royal College and at Cambridge.While at
Cambridge,during the world war 2,served in the home
guard.After graduating,he joined the Royal Air Force.While at
the Royal Air Force,he completed his legal studies and was
called to the bar Inner Temple in 1944 and became a
Barrister.Queens Counsel in 2002.Was an author of legal
books.His wife Norah died in an air craft accident in 1980.)
12 Alison Dias Bandaranaike b1950 (Musicion) +
Wolfram Kock (Austria)
12 Julia Dias Bandaranaike(Cambridge)-QC +
Stuart Orford (UK)
13 James
Orford
13
Isabelle Orford
7 Louis de Livera Samaranaike Tennekoon, Attapattu
Mudaliyar
bp: 8th May 1796 (Thombu Index shows he had
properties in Kuda Buthgamuwa near Kollannawa Hendala and
Nagoda)(May have married a Miss de Saram.)
8 [5] Jane Maria de Livera + [6]
Julias Earnest de Livera (Mohandiram), (s/o Don
David de Livera Tennakoon, Translator Colombo Kachcheri and
Mudaliyar of the Governor's Gate, bp 7th Feb
1794)
9 Louis de Livera Wijewickrema Tennekoon (Mudaliyar
Siyane
Korale)
9 Julian Richard de Livera Wijewickrema
Tennekoon (Draughtsman)
9 Don Edwin de Livera Wijewickrema
Senewiratne Tennekoon, b approx 1878, Mohandiram Governor Gate,and Chief
translator of Colombo Kachcheri.1901 appointed as Shroff
Mudaliyar of Colombo Kachcheri. Educated at
Stc.Mtl(1894-1897). Born at Attapattu Walauwa, Barber Street
Colombo. Rescidence
Deweni Maha Walauwa Wolfendhal.(The historic
rescidence has been occupied by three successive Maha
Mudaliyars of the de Saram family,who were Edwin de Livera's
maternal ancesstors.)Administered his fathers properties, In
1897 he entered Govt Service and was appointed First Native
writer of Colombo Kachcheri(Marriage 1)
+ Venitia Nillie
Theodara Dassenaike. (b
approx 1880,M in9/11/ 1900,d1910)
(sister of Louis Arthur
Dassenaike, and d/o Henricus Louis Dassenaike -Mudaliyar)
(3148)
10 (1)Nellie Margret
Evelyn de Livera Tennekoon + John Elster Perera
11 John Ivon Perera + Ivy Amarasekera
12 Asita Perera (Stc)(1959-2013)(MP-1994)(Ambassador to Korea2006-2009,Ambassdor to Italy 2011)
+ Ishini Wickremasinghe (d of Shan Wickremasinghe)
13 Anika Perera
13
Akila Perera
13 Anya Perera
10 (2) Erin de Livera
Tennekoon
10 (3)
Merlyn de Livera Tennekoon +Arthur Lee
Dassenaike b1903 (Son of Arthur Louis Dassenaike b1869)
11 Irwin Lee
Dassenaike b 17/2/1930- d 5/2/2003 +Swanthri Dassenaike
12 Shantha Dassenaike
12 Lalith Dassenaike b1960(StcMtl)+ Deepika
Samarasinghe
12 Sujan Dassenaike
11 Merlyn
Dassenaike (Joy)(d2009)+ Lankasa de Alwis(d1997)
12 Ranjith de Alwis + Resha
13 Rhadeena de Alwis
13 Raneesha de Alwis
10 (4) William Vernon
de Livera Tennekoon b1905 d1970 +Sumana Uduwawela
11
Venetia de Livera Tennekoon b1950 + Sarath Weeratunga
12 Vorandi Weeratunga
+ Mindika Hettiarchchi
13 Vinara Hettiarachchi
13
Devin Hettiarachchi
12 Mithila Weeratunga
+ Sanjeewa
12 Sajith Weeratunga b1982
11
Edwin Vernon Palitha de Livera Tennekoon
(Canada)(Trinity)b1952 + Rasika Weerasinghe
12 Viraj de Livera Tennekoon b1991
12 Hemasha de Livera Tennekoon b1995
12 Tiara de Livera Tennekoon b2001
11 Edwin Ajantha
Sunil de Livera Tennekoon (Trinity)b1954+Devika de
Livera Tennekoon nee Imbuldeniya (Justice of the Appeal Court)
12 Vishva de Livera Tennekoon b1985 (Lawyer)Stc Mtl
12 Esala de Livera Tennekoon b1988 Stc Mtl
12 Sankha de Livera Tennekoon b1988 Stc Mtl
10 (5) Venitia Myrily
de Livera Tennekoon + Noel Egbert Dassenaike
11 Swanthri
Dassenaike + Irwin Lee Dassenaike 1930-2003 (Stc)
12 Shantha Dassenaike
12
Lalith Dassenaike (b1960)(Stc) + Deepika Samarasinghe
12 Sujan Dassenaike
11 Shamala
Dassenaike + Ajith Obeyesekere
9
Henry
Stuart de Livera.(Proctor)died in Colombo 19/11/1931.
9
Jane
de Livera
9
Annie
de Livera
9 Don
Edwin
de Livera Wijewickrema Senewiratne Tennekoon, b
approx
1878, Mohandiram Governor Gate,and Chief translator of
Colombo Kachcheri.1901 appointed as Shroff Mudaliyar of
Colombo Kachcheri. Educated at Stc.Mtl(1894-1897). Born at
Attapattu Walauwa, Barber Street Colombo. Rescidence Deweni
Maha Walauwa Wolfendhal.Administered his fathers properties,
In 1897 he entered Govt Service and was appointed First Native
writer of Colombo Kachcheri,Member of the Turf Club &
Poultry club (Marriage
2) + Grace
Tillekeratne M1915
10 Marjorie de Livera + Lyn Dassenaike
11 Marlene Dassenaike + Jungle Dassenaike
12 Lyn Dassenaike (jnr) Laddie +Indira Siritunga
10 Oscar de Livera
Tennekoon(approx)1920-1988, (STC Mt Lavinia,was in
Miller boarding in 1935) (Was High Commissioner to Pakistan
1985) (was in the army)+ Helen de Saram, b approx 1921 d2015), d/o Lionel
de Saram
Oscar de Livera contested for 1960
July General Election from Mahara from the UNP and obtained
8991 votes but was not successful.
11 Edwin Asela de
Livera (Royal)(Chairman Koolair Pvt Ltd)b1951 + Shama
Dassanaike
12
Ashan de Livera + Naushaly Wijemanne
13
Anithra
de Livera
13 Yaneth de Livera
12
Shanila de Livera + Sanjiv Alles
13 Rayaka Alles
13
Tejaka Alles
10 James de Livera Tennekoon (Kitty)+ Carmine
Perera
11 Ratamali de Livera + John Bartlett (UK)
12 Jade Bartlett
12 Mark Bartlett
7 Maria de Livera bp: 21st August
1791(d of Carolis de Livera) + Cornelis de Saram Mudaliyar.b1780(3126)
(Cornelis de
Saram d27/8/1814)
7 Petronella de Livera bp: 8th May,1796
+ Jehan Louis Perera, Kuruwe Mudaliyar,
b:1775, d:23/2/1850
8 John Abraham Wijesekera Gunerwardena Maha
Mudaliyar, m:19th Nov 1847, d:1879
8 Luke Perera, drowned in Raigam Korale 17th July
1849.
8 Caroline Perera, b:1808- d26/10/1873
+ Johan Godfrid Cornelis Peiris Samarawira
Siriwardhana Mohottiar. m:18/6/1834 (b16/3/1808-
d15/5/1887)
8 Gertrude
Charlotte Perera + Don Andris de Alwis
Amarasiriwardhana Gunathileke Mudaliyar of the
Gate.d21/9/1875
8 Eliza Perera + Johannes
Adrian Peter Peiris Samarasinhe Siriwardhana Mohandiram,
m:21/10/1847,b19/4/1811,d21/10/1877.
8 Catharine Perera + John
Abraham Perera Gunerwardena Mohandiram.
7 de Livera (3rd daughter of Carolis de Livera
b3/3/1794)
5 (9) Don
Balthazar de Livera Wijewickrema Seneviratne, Mudaliyar
Hewagam Korale. Atapattu Mudaliyar b 1739. Received medal from
Governor Fredrick North for good services in 1803, + Dona
Catherina Perera, m:1778
6 (1) Johanna
Petrenella de Livera b:1780 + Don Solomon Dias
Bandaranaike (Son of Daniel Dias Bandaranayaka)(Solomon's
1st marriage)(M17/6/1805)
6 (2) Christina
Louisa de Livera b:1782
6 (3) Justina
Monika de Livera b:1786 + Abraham Petrus Dias
Bandaranayaka (Son of Conrad Pieter Dias Bandaranayaka)m
19-Feb-1809
(Abraham was Mohotti
Mohandiram of the Gate.)
7 Don Thomas Dias Bandaranaike bp 3/8/1810.-d31/8/1878
+Johanna de Livera Seneviratne .M30/6/1845
8
Charlotte Johanna Dias Bandaranayake b1837 d feb1858 + Rev
Abraham Dias Abeysinghe of Galle.
8 Edmund Dias Bandaranyake,Proctor,died at 21 years
unmarried.(1838-1859)
8 Cornelia Matilda Dias Bandaranayaka died 1887
unmarried.
8 Agnes Dias Bandaranayaka .blind after an illness,died
27/9/1911 unmarried.
6 (4) Nicholas
Johannes de Livera b:1788
6 (5) [12]
Simon de Livera b:1779 +(M1) [13] Elizebeth Dias
Bandaranayaka (d/o Don Alexander Dias
Bandaranayaka), (Grand daughter of Don Francisco Dias
Bandaranayaka b:1720 Mudaliyar), (Francisco Bandaranayaka is
the great great great grand father of SWRD Bandaranaike)
7
[10] Cornelius de Livera (b:1808) + [11] Isabella
Petrenella Dias Bandaranayaka(b1825) (d of Bastian
Fransiscus Dias Bandaranayaka)
8 James de Livera
(lawyer)(b approx 1850) + Fredricka Dias Abeysinghe
9
Violet de Livera
9
Jane de Livera
9
Ella de Livera
9
Carita de Livera
9 Albert de Livera
9
Edmund de Livera, (wrote the St.Thomas’s College, College
Song)
9
Ronald de Livera
10
Ronnie de Livera + Chandrani Tillekeratne
11
Gehan de Livera(NZ) + Malkanthi
Samarakkody (two children) (3118)
11
Nelun de Livera + Edward Perera (2 children)
11
Shirani de Livera + Ananda Wettasinghe (2 children)
11
Ranil de Livera + Anusha Dickman
9
Percy de Livera
10
Michael de Livera
10
Fred de Livera.
10
Audrey de Livera.
10
Bertie de Livera.
10
Jim de Livera.
10
Norman de Livera.
10
Yvonne de Livera.
9
Godwin de Livera (1876-d1921)Revenue officer + Charlot
Samarakkody
(1880-1970)daughter of Mudaliyar LCDFT Samarakkody. (3118)
10
Zizka de Livera died 1974
10
Ivy de Livera.died 19710
10
Iole de Livera + Solomn Samarakkody (Lawyer) (3118)
11
Srikumar Samarakkody (STC Mt Lavinia) (Doctor)+ no children.
11
Srivanka Samarakkody(STC Mt Lavinia) + Welgedera two children.
11
Rajan Samarakkody(STC Mt Lavinia) + 3 children.
11
Indrajith Samarakkody (STC Mt Lavinia) + 2 children.
11
Rohini Samarakkody unmarried
11
Sriyani Samarakkody + Gamini Jayaweera one child
11
Malkanthi Samarakkody + Gehan de Livera, two children
11
Suvendrini Samarakkody
10
Vaughn de Livera.1917-2003 (STC Mt Lavinia) + Chandra Pieris
Deraniyagala.d2007
11
Gayan de Livera (STC Mt Lavinia) died unmarried
11
Yasmin de Livera + Ramesh Abeysekera
12
Jehan Abeysekera
12
Yohan Abeysekera
10
Louis Charles de Livera (Carl) (STC Mt Lavinia) Lawyer
(1919-1969) + Gertrude
Seneviratne
(Eng.Inst.Kel.Uni) b:1931 (3108)
11
Sunil de Livera (STC Mt Lavnia) Musicion died
unmarried(1956-2003)
11
Jagath Manjula de Livera (STC Mt Lavinia), b:1960, (Accountant/Deputy Chief Internal Auditor, Urban
Development Authority Sri Lanka, 1985-2005), migrated to
Melbourne Australia in 2006 +
Lakshmi
Aulanandam
(Lawyer) (5030)
12
Rahul de Livera b:1994 (Aus)
12
Shruti de Livera b:2001(Aus)
11
Lankika de Livera, Journalist b:1964-d2011 + Prasanna
Panditharatne.d2009
12
Kusan Panditharatne, b:1995 (STC Kollupitiya + Mt Lavinia)
11
2hd spouse of Lankika Erandathi de Livera + Sri Srikumar
(Accountant) STC Mt Lavinia
6 2nd spouse of Simon de Livera b:1779 (M2) + Dona Florentina
Abeysinghe
7
Fredrick de Livera, b:1813)
4 (4)
Dona Francina Dias Bandaranayaka bp:6/8/1710 +
(married at Malwana) to Don Alexander Abeykoon.Successively,Arachchi,Mohandiram,Mohottiar
and Mudliyar Siyane Korale, m:Apr 4, 1726
4
(5) Dona Dinesia Dias Bandaranayaka bp:17 Mar
1700 settled in Kandy (married).
3
Corale (eldest son 3
above.)
4 (1)
Theodoris bap 2 Mar 1714
4 (2)
Constantino + Ana Coere, m: 15 May 1728
5
Johanna bp:7 Apr 1731+M1765 Anthony de
CrastilinoWijesundera Dassenaike.
5
Adriana bp:4 Mar 1730, married at Kelaniya
5
Bearnado bp:17 Aug 1738 + Dona Phillipa of Wewela, m:2
Dec 1759 (no issue)
5
Simona
4 (3) Don Francisco Dias Wijetunga
Bandaranayaka, b:1720 Mudaliyar Hewagam Korale. He fled
to Kandy in 1760 to join the Singhalese,in the struggle
between the Dutch and the Kandyan King, and was rewarded with
Mudaliyar for four Pattus. + (1)Dona Maria
Perera, b:1722 (2)Dona
Catherina Tillekeratne.(d of Don Simon Tillekeratne of
Matara.)(10 children from 1st wife ,1 child from 2hd
wife)(Dominga,Madalena,Conrad Pieter,
Daniel,Alexander,Hendrick,Ana,Jacobus,
David and Cornelia.)
5 (1)
Dona Dominga Dias Bandaranayaka bp:8th Dec 1740
(m1)+ Pascol de Livera Wirekon of Kelaniya.
5 (1) 2nd
spouse of Dominga Dias Bandaranayaka bp:1740 + Samanakkody
Mudaliyar
6
so
6
son
6
daughter
5 (2)
Madalena bp:8 Dec 1740(m1) + Solomon de Livera
Wirekon of Kelaniya, m:15th Sep 1758
5 (2)
2nd spouse of Madalena bp:8 Dec 1740 + Paules
Perera Ekanayake (Mudliyar)
6 daughter
5 (3)
Johanna bp:23 Jan 1744 + Kohilawatte Hettimulle
Guneratne
Mudiyansalage Don Hendrick Appuhamy,
m:17 Sep 1766
6
Name Not Known
6
Name Not known
5 (4) Jacobus Dias Bandaranayaka, bap 25th
August 1758 (unmarried)
5 (5) Hendrick
Dias Bandaranayaka (Mohandiram Siyane Korale 5/6/1794) bp:1 Sep 1752 + Elizebeth Pieris
Siriwardena, bp:19/8/1763
(1005)(Who
was the daughter of the son of Welhelmus Pieris.)had 2
chidren.
6 Daughter
married Hendrick Perera Ekanayake
6
Son died without issue.
5 (6) Ana Dias
Bandaranayaka, bp:30 Aug 1754, died after May
3 1828 (m1)+ Don Simon Perera Ekanayake Mudaliyar
6
Hendrick Perera
5 (6) 2nd
spouse of Ana Dias Bandaranayaka b:1754 (m2)+ Don Balthazar de
Livera Wijewickreme Seneviratne, Mudliyar Hewagam Korale, (no issue)
5 (7)
Don David Dias Rajakaruna Seneviratne Bandaranayaka
b1760(Mohandiram of Atapattu appointed 10/10/1791 + Juliana Sophiya
De Saram Wanigasekera Ekanaike (3126)(sister of Christoffel de Saram 4th Maha
Mudaliyar)(d of Domingo de Saram)
6 Christina
Pietronella Dias Bandaranayaka, bp:29th Oct 1789 + Fonseka
Samarakkody Mudaliyar (3118)
7 Daughter (m 1800) + Samuel Amarasekera (3068)
8
Daughter + Adirian Dias
Bandaranayaka, Malwana (1001)
8
Daughter + Carolis Livera, Muhandiram Kalutara
8
Daughter + P Gunatilaka, Muhandiram Lockgate Colombo
9 Robert Gunatilaka, President Pasdum Korale
6 Carlo Dias Bandaranayaka
(Appage Singho?)
6
Miss Bandaranayaka + Carolis
Amarasekera, Muhandiram, Hapitigam
Korale-1810 (3068)
5
(8) Conrad Pieter Dias Wijewardena
Bandaranayaka (Maha Mudliyar) Hina Corale bp:26/7/1747,
Maha Mudliyar had received 3 Gold medals-(one for quelling a
rebellion, another for planting a Cinnamon Garden and another
for cutting a canal) (dutch medal received in 1792.from
Governor of Ceylon William Jacob van der Graaff)+ Louise Jeronimus
Atapattu (d of Phillip Jeronimus Atapattu + Louisa Atapattu
Ekanayake b:1753, (d/o Don Phillip Jeronymus Atapattu), m:4 Dec
1768 (9 children)(Cornelius,Jacobus,Abraham Petrus,Johannes
Franciscus,Katharina Maria,Isabella Susanha,Cornelia and
unmarried 2 daughters)
6 (1) Cornelius
Dias Bandaranayaka b18/2/1772, d:1869 + Adriana Gertruda
Henrietta Samarakoon (d/o Simon Samarakoon
Wikremanayaka Mudaliyar)m 22/2/1800 (4 children)
7 (1) Gertruda
Dias Bandaranayaka + (m:22/2/1850) Jhon Gerad Perera Mudaliyar
Salpita Korale (his 2nd wife)
7 (2) Don John Dias
Bandaranayaka d 25/3/1877 + (m28/6/1842)Gertruda Anganita
Philepsz Panditharatne.(d of Phillip Panditharatne)
8 John Dias Bandaranayaka (Thokka Singho)
8 Cornelia Dias Bandaranayaka + John
Cornelis(Martinus)Dias Bandaranayaka of Kelanimulla.
7 (3)
Conrad Peter Dias Bandaranayaka (Interpreter Mudaliyar) b1825
d 9/10/1891 (unmarried)
7 (4)
Robert Wilson Dias Bandaranayaka d12/5/1869 +
(m18/5/1861)Louisa de Alwis of Kalutara.
8 Alice Louisa Dias Bandaranayaka,b7/9/1863 + James
Perera of Molligoda Wadduwa.
6 (2) Jacabus
(Jacobus?) Dias Wijewardena Bandaranayaka, b:14/6/1773-d1865,
(Mudaliyar of Governor Gate & Translator of Supreme
Court), d:1866 + Liyanage Catherine Philipsz Panditharatne,
m:4/10/1806, (d/o of Phillip Philipsz Wijekoon
Panditharatne, Maha Mudaliyar and Chief interpreter,
& Dona Leonara)(10 children)(Jacobus is a son of
CPDB
b1747)(Samuel,Mary,John,Dorathea,Henrietta,Florence,Catherine,Anne,Sir
Henry and Nancy.)
7 (1) [8] Rev
Canon Samuel William Dias Bandaranayaka b26/8/1807-d8/4/1883
+ [9] Cornelia Susanna Elizabeth Dias Bandaranayaka(widow
of mudaliyar obeyesekere)m 29/9/1859.(4 children)
(Cornelia Susanna is a daughter of Don Solomon
Dias Bandaranaike)
(In 1827 he went to Calcutta and entered Bishop's
Collegeto study for the Ministry.Was made Deacon by Bishop
Wilson on 26th /1/1833.And on 21/11/1834 Ordained a Priest.Was
Chaplain for Galkissa and Moratuwa. He built the All Saints
Church,Hulsdorph for the Sinhalese,and worked there from
1/11/1865,later was made Canon of the Cathedral.
8 (1)
William Chapman Dias
Wijewardena Bandaranayaka, b:9/6/1860-d28/6/1915 (nephew of Sir Harry
Dias Bandaranaike and step brother of Sir James Peter
Obeyesekere), Born in 1860. Educated at St Thomas' College and
Royal College, Colombo.Qualified as a lawyer but took charge
of the estates and plantation management (had estates in
Veyangoda,Kadugannawa,Kalutara,Kurunegala and Matara.Lived at
Buona Vista Mutwal). + Rachel Asmadale, m:1896 (Niece
of T B Panabokke Rate Mahatmaya Gampola)
9
Samuel William Copleston.Dias
Bandaranayaka b3/7/1897 (Cambridge University)+ Iddamalgoda
Irene de Silva (M9/6/1927)(d of Gate Muhandiram George de
Silva.)
10
Shelly Lakshman
Dias Bandaranayaka b15/3/1928 -13/1/2016 (Dy Legal
Draftsman)+ Manthri
Amarasekere (3068)
11
Niranjan Indrajith Dias Bandaranayaka
10 George Randolph
Tissa Dias Bandaranayaka b 30/8/1932+ Johanna Tworeck
11
Janitha Karina Dias Bandaranayaka
11
Mahesha Dias Bandaranayaka
10
Leelawathie Merl Ranjanee Dias Bandaranayaka b 19/1/1939 +
Christopher E Pieris
9
Cornelia Rachel Rani Dias
Bandaranayaka b13/12/1893-d7/12/1906
[Ref:
20th Centuary Impression by Arnold Wright P525]
8 (2) [17]
Felix Reginold Dias Bandaranayaka, b:26-Jul-1861,
d:30-Jan-1947, educated at St Thomas' College & Royal
College (Colombo Academy), Went to England in 1882. Graduated
from Cambridge and obtained BA, LLB. Later received the
degrees of MA and LLM. Returned to Ceylon in 1888 and became
advocate of local bar. Later became Police Magistrate. In 1897
he became District Judge Colombo. + [16] Annie Lucy
(Florence) de Alwis, 1864-1920 (third daughter of James
de Alwis and Florence DB) m:14-Apr-1890 (4 chidren)
9 (1) Dr Reginald
Felix Dias Bandaranayaka,. b:17-Jan-1891,
d:26-Oct-1951MA,LLDPusine Judge + (1) “Princess”Joy
De Livera (d of Walter de Livera)
10 Reginald Walter Michael Dias Bandaranayaka
b3/3/1921 (Barrister at Law,BA,LLB of Cambridge + Norah
Hunter-Crabbe (UK)
11
Alison Dias Bandaranayaka + Wolfram Koch (Austria)
11
Julia Dias Bandaranayaka + Stuard Orford
12
Name Not Known
9 (1) 2nd
spouse of Reginald Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, Dr.
(Bunny) b:17-Jan-1891, d:26-Oct-1951 + Freda Muriel Dias
Abeysinghe (d of Nicholas Dias Abeysinghe of Galle.(M10/12/1924)
10
Christine Manel Dias Bandaranayaka b 22/2/1928-1967 +
David Blackler
10 Felix Reginald Dias Bandaranayaka,
b:5-Nov-1930, d:26-Jun-1985 (Minister of Public
Administration,Local Govt,Home Affairs& Justice 1970-77)
+ Muthulakshmi Jayasundera
11 Christine
Wickremanayake (adopted) + Avindra Rodrigo
12 Chalya Rodrigo
12 Jaana Rodrigo
obit: DIAS BANDARANAIKE, Lakshmi (née JAYASUNDARA).
wife of the late Felix Dias Bandaranaike, mother of Christine.
mother in law of Avindra Rodrigo, grandmother of Chalya and
Jaana.
Sister of late Manel de Alwis, Nissanka (Noj) Jayasundera,
Malkanthie Wikramanayaka,
and Indrani Hewitt, in Sri Lanka. (Daily News 26.8.2023)
9 (2) Annette
Lena Dias Bandaranayaka,b16/8/1894-1982 + J.Roland
William Ilangakoon, First Sinhalese Attorney General,
m:1914 (see pics below)(6 hildren)
10 (1) Hope
Ilangakoon + Quintus Tennekoon
11
Nirmalie Serena Tennekoon (died 198?)
11
Deepthi Christine Tennekoon + Palitha Senanayake
10 (2) Nannette
Christine Ilangakoon, d:Aug 5 2006 in Australia + Lyn (ECG)
Wickremasinghe (3103), was the GM of
Bank of Ceylon in the seventies, is a second cousin of Esmund
Wickremasinghe, father of Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP).
http://www.dailynews.lk/2001/pix/PrintPage.asp?REF=/2006/09/07/main_Obituaries.asp
WICKREMASINGHE -
NANETTE CHRISTINE (nee ILANGAKOON) widow of late ECG (Lyn)
Wickremasinghe, beloved mother of Git and Ravi, mother-in-law
of Una and Yasanthi, grandmother of Ramila, Charith and
Roshana, sister of Hope, late Neil, Anthea, Philip and Glen,
sister-in-law of Quintus and late Lynnette, Ine, Trissette,
Gertrude, late Lota (Evelyn) and Lou, passed away on 05th
August 2006. The funeral and thanksgiving service were held in
Australia on 14th August 2006. DN Sep 7 2006
11
Githendra
Wickremasinghe, b:1948 (Royal College, Colombo
1959-66) + Una
(UK)
12
Roshana Wickremasinghe
11
Ravi Wickremasinghe +
Yasanthi (Australia)
12
Ramila Wickremasinghe
12
Charith Wickremasinghe
10 (3) Neil Ilangakoon +
Lynnette de Livera
11
Sheami Ilangakoon +
DEW Perera
12
Name Not Known
12
Name Not Known
10 (4) Anthea Ilangakoon + Ine
10 (5) Philip Ilangakoon +
Trisetta
10 (6) Glendora Ilangakoon,
died 197? + Gertrude
9 (3)
Florence Rita Dias Bandaranayaka,b15/7/1897-d22/6/1898
9 (4) Samuel
James Felix Dias Bandaranayaka b22/11/1902,
Agricultural Department + Esther Mary Ramkeesoon
(Trinidad).M16/10/1928
10 (1) Gwendolyn
Esther Dias Bandaranayaka,b16/12/1929 (Teacher at STC
and later Principal Bishop's College)- died 2004 + Roland
Dias Abeysinghe
11
Yohann Dias
Abeyesinghe + Manjari Wickremasinghe Rajapakse
12
Chandhana Dias
Abeysinghe
12
Hasulie Dias
Abeysinghe
11
Kavinda Dias
Abeyesinghe + Shyamini Balasuriya
12
Nadhil Dias Abeysinghe
10 (2) Sonia
Rohini Dias Bandaranayaka b12/1/1932 + Dr. Digby William
Hall (UK)
11
William Hall
11
Mary Hall
11
James Hall
11
Emma Hall
10 (3) Yasmine
Malini Dias Bandaranayaka, b:22/12/1935, University
professor, literary critic, editor, bibliographer, novelist,
essayist, and poet. She received her education from Bishop's
college and went on to graduate from the University of Ceylon
in 1959. She also received a Ph. D in English Literature from
Cambridge University in 1962. Gooneratne became a resident of
Australia in 1972. In 1981 she was the first, and remains
until now, the only person to receive the higher doctoral
degree of Doctor of Letters ever awarded by Macquarie
University. She now holds a Personal Chair in English
Literature at Macquarie University, located in New South
Wales. From 1989-1993 she was the Foundation Director of her
University's Postcolonial Literatures and Languages Research
Center. In 1990 Gooneratne became an Officer of the Order of
Australia for distinguished service to literature and
education and in that same year she was also invited to become
the Patron of the Jane Austen Society of Australia. From
1994-95, she served on a committee appointed by the Federal
Government to review the Australian system of Honors and
Awards from 1994-1995. Since 1995, she has had positions on
both the Australia Abroad Council and the Visiting Committee
of the Faculty of Creative Arts at the University of
Wollongong. In 1998, she became a member of Asialink. She has
been a visiting professor or specialist at many different
places around the world including the following: Edith Cowan
University (Western Australia), University of Michigan (USA),
Jawarharlal Nehru University (India), and the University of
the South Pacific (Fiji). + Dr. Brendon Goneratne
(Australia)
11
Channa Gooneratne
11
Devika Gooneratne
10 (4) son
(deceased a few minutes after birth at Bandarawela)-30/11/1943
8 (3) Rosemond
Dias Bandaranayaka b 20/9/1862-15/12/1944+ John Henry
Illangakoon (Mudaliyar of Welgam korale Matara) (3169) m31/8/1881(b approx 1850)(8 children)
9 (1) Millicent Illangakoon +
Oswald C Tillekeratne
10
Romi Tillekeratne, d:Aug 2007 (see obit below) + C
J (Bucky) De Saram
(3126)
\
11
Mary Christine De Saram + J M G (Gamini) Perera
11
Christopher De Saram (ex University of Moratuwa)
11
Siromi De Saram (University of Colombo - 2007) + Rev Duleep
Fernando
12 Ruwan
Yahasith Fernando
12 Avanka Mahikanthi Fernando
https://www.dailynews.lk/2019/01/18/obituaries/174704/obituaries
DE SARAM - MRS. R.M.
(ROMI) nee TILLEKERATNE Daughter of the late O.C.
Tillekeratne and the late Millicent (nee Ilangakoon),
relict of C.J. (Bucky) de Saram, beloved mother of Christine,
Christopher (formerly of the University of Moratuwa),
and Siromi (University of Colombo), mother-in-law of
the late J.M.G. (Gamini) Perera and the Rev.
Duleep Fernando, loving grandmother of Ianthe, Rukshani,
Ruwan and Avanka, expired. Cortege leaves residence No.14,
Deal Place A, Colombo 3, on Wednesday 8th August 2007 at
4.00 p.m. for interment at General Cemetery Kanatte, Borella
(Anglican Section) at 5.00 p.m. DN Tue Aug 7 2007
https://www.dailynews.lk/2018/
DE SARAM - CHRISTOPHER JOHN (CHRIS) DE
SARAM - (Formerly University
of Moratuwa). Son of the late Romi and C.J. (Bucky) de
Saram, beloved brother of Christine and Siromi,
brother-in-law of the late John (Gamini) Perera and Rev.
Duleep Fernando, much loved uncle of Ianthe, Rukshani,
Ruwan and Minoli, Avanka and granduncle of Savistha and
Shanilka, expired. Cortege leaves residence 14,
Deal Place A, Colombo 03 on
Thursday 2nd August 2018 at 3 p.m. and cremation at 4 p.m. at
the New Crematorium, General Cemetery Kanatte, Borella.085778
9 (2) J
W Ronald Illangakoon + Annette Lena Dias Bandaranaike,
1894-1982 (d of Felix Reginold DB)(6 children)
10 (1) Hope Ilangakoon + Quintus
Tennekoon
11
Nirmalie Serena
Tennekoon (died 198?)
11
Deepthi Christine
Tennekoon + Palitha Senanayake
10 (2) Nannette Christine
Ilangakoon, d:Aug 5 2006 in Australia + Lyn (ECG)
Wickremasinghe (3103), was the GM of
Bank of Ceylon in the seventies, is a second cousin of Esmund
Wickremasinghe, father of Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP).
http://www.dailynews.lk/2001/pix/PrintPage.asp?REF=/2006/09/07/main_Obituaries.asp
WICKREMASINGHE -
NANETTE CHRISTINE (nee ILANGAKOON) widow of late ECG (Lyn)
Wickremasinghe, beloved mother of Git and Ravi, mother-in-law
of Una and Yasanthi, grandmother of Ramila, Charith and
Roshana, sister of Hope, late Neil, Anthea, Philip and Glen,
sister-in-law of Quintus and late Lynnette, Ine, Trissette,
Gertrude, late Lota (Evelyn) and Lou, passed away on 05th
August 2006. The funeral and thanksgiving service were held in
Australia on 14th August 2006. DN Sep 7 2006
11
Githendra Wickremasinghe, b:1948 (Royal College,
Colombo 1959-66) + Una (UK)
12
Roshana Wickremasinghe
11
Ravi Wickremasinghe + Yasanthi (Australia)
12
Ramila Wickremasinghe
12
Charith Wickremasinghe
10 (3) Neil
Ilangakoon + Lynnette de Livera
11
Sheami Ilangakoon + DEW Perera
12
Name Not Known
12
Name Not Known
10 (4) Anthea
Ilangakoon + Ine
10 (5) Philip
Ilangakoon + Trisetta
10 (6) Glendora
Ilangakoon, died 197? + Gertrude
9 (3) Don
Juan Samuel (Mike) Illangakoon + Florence Elapata
10 Michael Llewelyn Christopher Ilangakoon (former
warden Stc Mtl 1977-1982) + Pathma Elikewela
11 Anoma Ilangakoon + Indra
Obeyesekere
11 Cyraine Ilangakoon + Peru Laakso
11 Michael Ilangakoon (b1959)Stc + Shivanee
Wanniarachchi
12 Deshan Ilangakoon
12 Yasara Ilangakoon
10 Merril Ilangakoon + Gertrude Wickremasinghe
11 Gihan Ilangakoon + Devinka Fernando
12 Niran Illangakoon
12
Kiyan Illangakoon
11 Shiranthika Illangakoon + Jeyaram Radhakrishnan
12 Jehan Radhakrishnan
12 Shehan Radhakrishnan
11 Dushyanthi Illangakoon + Suresh Aponso
9 (4) Blanche Illangakoon
9 (5) Hilda Illangakoon
9 (6) Opatissa Illangakoon +
Yolande Obeyesekere
9 (7) William Illangakoon
(chin) Mudaliyar + Lillian Obeyesekere
10
Surangani Illangakoon
10
Pani Illangakoon + Effi Samarakkody (3118)
11
Pani Illangakoon (2)
10
Mahnil Lilette
Illangakoon + Roland Hugh Dias Abeysinghe(m2)
11
Ayunli Dias Abeysinghe
11
Jayanthi Dias
Abeysinghe +Ranjith Weerasinghe
12
Auchithya Weerasinghe
9 (8) Carl
Sepala Ilangakoon (Stc)(Planters
Association)(b1923-d25/6/2009) + Sunethra Seneviratne
10 Yevindra Sepala Ilangakoon b:1955 + Ymara
Dharmaratne
11 Yenushka Ilangakoon
11 Yovaan Ilangakoon
10 Riyanjani Ilangakoon + Dhamitha Perera
11 Shamitha Perera
11 Preshith Perera
11 Rishan Perera
8 (4) Amy Dias Badaranayaka
(b29/9/1865-d3/11/1944) + Walter Dias Bandaranaike
(Mudliyar) m:8/9/1892.(Walter is a son of Abraham Edward
DB)
9 (1) [21]
Amy Estelle Dias
Bandaranayaka b10/8/1893 + [22] James
Peter
Obeyesekere II, Maha Mudaliyar (3051)(M17/6/1914)
10
James Peter
Obeyesekere III(d 23/10/2007) (+ Sivagami Dassanaike
11
James Peter
Obeyesekere 1V Jr
11
Chantal Obeyesekere +
Dijen de Saram
9 (2) Stephen Walter Dias
Bandaranayaka b11/8/1895 Lieut.Cey.Light.Infantary+ Ethel
Mildred Dias Abeysinghe (d of Nicholas Dias
Abeysinghe,Proctor,Galle)M24/10/1918
Ethel
Dias Abeysinghe was a founder member of the Old Girls
Association of Ladies College in 1909.
10 Ethel Dias Bandaranayaka ,b24/11/1923. died the same
day.
10 Stephene Charmion Dias
Bandaranayaka,b28/2/1925-d9/9/1926
10 Crystal Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka,b7/10/1927
+(M1)leonard Dias Bandaranayaka b13/1/1922 (Son of Harry Peter
Dias Bandaranayaka)
11
Rev Suresh Dias Bandaranayaka (Anglican Pastor) + Daphne Hope
Ratnaike.
11 Roshanara Dias Bandaranayaka + Sunil Bandaranaike
(son of Kingsley de Saa Bandaranaike and Trixie Seneviratne.)
12
Rosunthi Dias Bandaranayake
10 Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka ,b7/10/1927 +(M2) Hugh
Rupesinghe
11 Harsha Rupesinghe
9 (3) Evelyn Muriel Dias
Bandaranayaka (b approx 1901)+ George R de Silva (
MP)Barrister at Law (M21/7/1927)
7 (2)Mary
Dias Bandaranaike b20/9/1808-d15/1/1900 (unmarried)
7 (3) John
Charles Dias Bandaranayaka b10/12/1810 -d 8/3/1877 Proctor
of the Supreme Court + Fanny de Saram (No issue)
7 (4)
Dorathea Dias Bandaranayaka b1814 + Hendrick de
Alwis,Mudaliyar Kandy Kachcherie in 1840.
7 (5) Henrietta Elizebeth Dias
Bandaranayaka b8/6/1816 d18/4/1883 (unmarried)
7 (6) Florence
Dias Bandaranayaka b 4/10/1820-d10/4/1907 + Hon James de
Alwis 1823-1878 (Member of the Legislative Council)(his 2hd marriage) m5/5/1855 (4
children)
8 (1) [16] Annie
Lucy (Florence) de Alwis, 1864-1920 + [17] Felix
Reginold Dias Bandaranayaka, m:Apr 1890,
b:26-Jul-1861, d:30-Jan-1947, educated at St Thomas'
College & Royal College (Colombo Academy), Went to England
in 1882. Graduated from Cambridge and obtained BA, LLB. Later
received the degrees of MA and LLM. Returned to Ceylon in 1888
and became advocate of local bar. Later became Police
Magistrate. In 1897 he became District Judge Colombo.
m:14-Apr-1890 (3 children)
9 (1)Reginald
Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, Dr. (Bunny)
b:17-Jan-1891, d:26-Oct-1951 +
(1) “Princess” De
Livera (3109)
10 Reginald
Walter Michael Dias Bandaranaike (Royal
College)(Barrister)3/3/1921-17/11/2009+ Norah Hunter-Crabbe
(UK)
11
Alison Dias Bandaranayaka + Wolfram Koch (Austria)
11
Julia Dias Bandaranayaka + Stuard Orford
12
Name Not Known
9 (1) 2nd
spouse of Reginald Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, Dr.
(Bunny) b:17-Jan-1891, d:26-Oct-1951 + Freda Dias
Abeysinghe
10
Christine Manel Dias Bandaranayaka 1928-1967 + David
Blackler
10 Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, b:5-Nov-1930,
d:26-Jun-1985 (Minister of Public Administration,Local
Govt,Home Affairs& Justice 1970-77) + Muthulakshmi
Jayasundera
11 Christine
Wickremanayake (adopted) + Avindra Rodrigo
12 Chalya Rodrigo
12 Jaana Rodrigo
obit: DIAS BANDARANAIKE, Lakshmi (née JAYASUNDARA).
wife of the late Felix Dias Bandaranaike, mother of Christine.
mother in law of Avindra Rodrigo, grandmother of Chalya and
Jaana.
Sister of late Manel de Alwis, Nissanka (Noj) Jayasundera,
Malkanthie Wikramanayaka,
and Indrani Hewitt, in Sri Lanka. (Daily News 26.8.2023)
9 (2) Annette
Lena Dias Bandaranayaka, 1894-1982 + Roland William
Ilangakoon, First Sinhalese Attorney General, m:1914
(see pics below)
10 (1) Hope
Ilangakoon + Quintus Tennekoon
11
Nirmalie Serena Tennekoon (died 198?)
11
Deepthi Christine Tennekoon + Palitha Senanayake
10 (2) Nannette
Christine Ilangakoon, d:Aug 5 2006 in Australia + Lyn (ECG)
Wickremasinghe (3103), was the GM of Bank of Ceylon in the
seventies, is a second cousin of Esmund Wickremasinghe,
father of Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP).
http://www.dailynews.lk/2001/pix/PrintPage.asp?REF=/2006/09/07/main_Obituaries.asp
WICKREMASINGHE -
NANETTE CHRISTINE (nee ILANGAKOON) widow of late ECG (Lyn)
Wickremasinghe, beloved mother of Git and Ravi, mother-in-law
of Una and Yasanthi, grandmother of Ramila, Charith and
Roshana, sister of Hope, late Neil, Anthea, Philip and Glen,
sister-in-law of Quintus and late Lynnette, Ine, Trissette,
Gertrude, late Lota (Evelyn) and Lou, passed away on 05th
August 2006. The funeral and thanksgiving service were held in
Australia on 14th August 2006. DN Sep 7 2006
11
Githendra Wickremasinghe b:1948 (Royal College,
Colombo, 1959-66) + Una (UK)
12
Roshana Wickremasinghe
11
Ravi Wickremasinghe + Yasanthi (Australia)
12
Ramila Wickremasinghe
12
Charith Wickremasinghe
10 (3) Ronald
Neil Ilangakoon + Lynnette de Alwis
11
Sheami Ilangakoon + DEW Perera
12
Karen Shanya Ilangakoon-Perera
12
Sheena Tiyani Ilangakoon-Perera
12
David Janik Ilangakoon-Perera
10 (4) Anthea
Ilangakoon + Ine
10 (5) Philip
Ilangakoon + Trisetta
10 (6) Glendora
Ilangakoon, died 197? + Gertrude
9 (3) Samuel
James Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, Agricultural
Department + Esther Ramkeesoon (Trinidad).
10 (1) Gwendolyn
Esther Dias Bandaranayaka,b16/12/1929 died 6/2/2004
(Principal Bishop's College)+ Roland Dias Abeysinghe
11
Yohann Dias Abeyesinghe + Manjari Wickremasinghe
Rajapakse
12
Chandhana Dias Abeysinghe
12
Hasulie Dias Abeysinghe
11
Kavinda Dias Abeyesinghe + Shyamini Balasuriya
12
Nadhil Dias Abeysinghe
10 (2) Sonia
Dias Bandaranayaka b12/1/1932 + Dr. Digby William
Hall (UK)
11
William Hall
11
Mary Hall
11
James Hall
11
Emma Hall
10 (3) Yasmine
Dias Bandaranayaka, b:22/12/1935, University professor,
+ Dr. Brendon Goneratne (Australia)
11
Channa Gooneratne
11
Devika Gooneratne
10 (4) son (born
and died on 30/11/1943 at Bandarawela)
8 (2) [18
Ezline Maria de Alwis + [19] Solomon Christoffell
Obeyesekere, MLC, b:12-Feb-1848,
d:13-Oct-1927, educated at The Colombo Academy (later Royal College)
and STC Mount Lavinia. m:1872 (4 children)
9 (1) [21]
Daisy Ezline Obeyesekere, m:1898 + [20] Sir Don Solomon Dias
Abeywickrema Jayatilleke Senewiratna Rajakumaruna Kadukeralu
Bandaranaike (Maha Mudaliyar) b:22-May-1862,
d:31-Jul-1946, Kt. Commander of the most distinguished order
of St. Michael and St. George, Horogolla Walauwwa, St Thomas'
College, Mohandiram 1882. Mudliyar Siyane Korale, After
returning from UK, Governor Arthur Havelock awarded Maha
Mudaliyar title and All Island JP. In 1897 went to UK as
official representative for diamond jubilee celebration and
received medal. In 1902 revisited UK. Received Coronation
Medal and KCMG, m:Apr-1898
10 (1) Solomon West
Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike
b:8-Jan 1899, d:26-Sep-1959, (Prime Minister of Sri Lanka
1956-59, Assassinated by a Buddhist Monk on September 25,
1959), St Thomas' College, educated as a lawyer in UK,
University of Oxford. Became Secretary of Oxford Union in
1923, called to the bar in 1925, Member of the State Council
in 1931, Formed the Sinhala Maha Sabha in 1937, Active in the
UNP 1945-51 and established the SLFP after 1951, Prime
Minister 1956-59, To solve the ethnic issue he signed the
Bandaranaike-Chelvanaygam pact, which was repudiated due to a
campaign led by the Buddhist Clergy. Made Sinhala the official
Language + Sirimavo
Ratwatta,
b:17/4/1916, d:10/10/2000, m:2-Oct-1940 (First woman Prime
Minister in the World, Prime Minister, 1960-65, 1970-77,
1994-2000) (3060) Wikipedia Account
of Sirimavo
11
Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike, b:27/7/1943 + Kumar
Rupasinghe (div)
11
2nd spouse of Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike + Udaya
Nanayakkara (div)
11
Chandrika Dias
Bandaranaike, b:29/6/1945,
Early education at St Bridgets Convent, Colombo, and graduated
in Political Science at Sorbonne University in Paris, Formed
the Peoples Alliance (PA) Party, President of Sri Lanka
1994-2005 + Vijaya Kumaratunga, Film Actor,
Assasinated 1988
12
Dr Yasodhara Kumaratunga + Dr Roger Walker, m:Jun 2007 in UK
(see wedding pics below)
12
Vimukthi Kumaratunga
11
Anura Dias Bandaranaike b: Feb-15-1949, Educated at
Royal College, Member of Parliament 1977 to 2007,
Minister Higher Education 1993, Foreign Minister 2005, Leader
of the opposition, Speaker of the House, Minister of
Tourism/Heritage 2007.(Unmarried)
10 (2) Anna
Florentina Dias Bandaranaike b20/7/1900 + Abraham de
Livera of Ampitigala,Kalutara District married on 23/6/1922.
11 SCO de Livera d 25/7/2011 (Lawyer) +Nimal Pieris
12 Shanaka de Livera b1959 (Lawyer)+Samanda Senaratne
13 Sajin de Livera
13 Shealan de Livera
12 Priyan de Livera(Lawyer)b1961
12 Asanthi de Livera + Oswin de Alwis
10 (3) Alexandra
Cornelia Bandaranaike b 26/8/1903, lived at
"Samudragiri" Walauwa in Mount Lavinia + Leo G. De
Alwis of Galkissa on 15/8/1923.(M)
11 (1) Shirlene
De Alwis + Earle Jayawardena
12 Amal Jayawardena +
Waruni
11 (2) Lankasa
De Alwis (tenor singer) + Joy Dassenaike (cousins)
12
Ranjith de Alwis
13
Raneesha de Alwis
13
Radeena de Alwis
11 (3) Rukie
(Rukmani) de Alwis b:26 Mar 1926-d20/3/2017 +
Percy Eheliyagoda (had two sets of twins)
12 Leo Eheliyagoda + Ramya Wijetunge
13
Rosanth Eheliyagoda
12
Shalimar Eheliyagoda + Uma Kumar Sharma
13
Shanika Sharma +Migara Alwis- m:2009
13 Aashiana Alwis- June 2011
13
Sandesh Sharma
12 (3) Charmaine
Eheliyagoda, Attorney-at-Law, a member of
the National
Police
Commission appointed
by H.E.The President of Sri Lanka +
Lakshman Madurasinghe, m:1979 held at All
Saints Church Hulftsdorp in Aug 1979 + Professor
Lakshman Madurasinghe, born in Galle, STC Prep School
Kollupitiya 1959-1960 (LKG/UKG), STC Mount
Lavinia 1961-72, Attorney at Law, Chartered
Fellow CIPD UK: University of Brighton, Sr.International
Governor AUGP USA and Chairman Medicina Alternativa.
13 Rosanth
Lakshan
Madurasinghe, a graduate
of the University of London (England). + Nishani
Fernando of Wennappuwa on July 7 2007;
14
Romaan
Madurasinghe
12 (4) Lankani
Eheliyagoda
12 (5) Devika
Eheliyagoda
see weblog at https://madure.net/
9 (2)
Ethel Mildred Obeyesekere + Dr William Christoffel
Pieris Siriwardene b1867- d1945, Dr William
Christoffel Pieris Siriwardena, b:1867, lived at
40,Silversmith Street Colombo. Educated at STC and later at
Marischal College Aberdeen. He became a Senior medalist in
Pathalogy and Bacteriology. He graduated in MBCM. He was a
visiting Physician of General Hospital. Lecturer in clinical
medicine at Medical College. District Medical Officer
Haputale.Later Judical Medical Officer (see pic below) + Ethel Obeyesekere, (b:1885, d:1930), m:1915 (3051)(daughter of S.C Obeyesekere of Talpe
Walauwa Galle.)
10 William
Ian Pieris b1905 + Anula Dias Abeysinghe
11 Susil
Pieris
11 Malkanthi Pieris + J.R Maurice Perera (former high
court judge)
12 Asoka Perera
12 Asanga
Perera
11 Priyanga
Pieris + Eranga (famous singing duo)
12 Dinuka
Pieris (son)
10 Iranganie
Pieris b1908
10 James
Pieris b1910
9 (3) Forester
Obeyesekere, (State Councillor) + Anna Isabel Sykes
10
Boykin Obeyesekere
10
Ezlynne Obeyesekere + Ralph St. L P Deraniyagala
11
Ralph Deraniyagala + Indrani Nugera
12
Arubind Deraniyagala
9 (4) Lillian
Augusta Obeyesekere + William
Illangakoon (3169)
10 (1)
Panini Illangakoon (1)+Effie
Samarakkody
11 Panini Illangakoon
(2)
10 (2)
Surangane Illangakoon
10 (3)
Mahnil Lilette Ilangakoon + Roland Hugh Dias Abeysinghe (his
2hd Marriage)
11 Ayunil Dias Abeysinghe
11 Jayanthi Dias Abeysinghe+ Ranjith Weerasinghe
12 Auchithya Weerasinghe
8 (3) Edwin
Robert de Alwis 1860-1920 + Cecilia Dias
Bandaranayaka b1864 (d of Conrad Peter Dias
Bandaranayaka)M1885
8 (4) Florence
Ellen de Alwis 1858-1917
+ Peter George de Saram (7 children)
9 (1)
Clarice + Valantine Gooneratne
9 (2)
Lionel Wellington (Duke) de Saram married Ethel Pieris
1885-1930
10 Helen de Saram b1910-d4/7/2015 + Oscar
de Livera Tennakoon(1905-1988)(Was high Commissioner to
Pakistan 1985)(Was in the Army)
11
Edwin Asela de Livera (Royal)(Chairman Koolair Pvt Ltd)b1951 +
Shama Dassanaike
12 Ashan de Livera + Naushaly Wijemanne
13 Anithra de Livera
13
Yaneth de Livera
12 Shanila de Livera + Sanjiv Alles
13 Rayaka Alles
13
Tejaka Alles
10
Philip de Saram
9 (3)
Beatrice + Arthur Dassenaike
9 (4) Helen de
Saram +Oscar de Livera
10
Asela de Livera
9 (5) Elsie
+ Guy Dassenaike
10
Naomi + Titus Abeysundera
11
Hiranthi Abeysundera
11
Shirin Abeysundera
10
Alastair Dassanaike + Erin Perera
10
Territt Dassenaike
10
Yvette + Upali Seneviratne
11
Aanjanee June Seneviratne
11
Upamalee Seneviratne
9 (6) Cyril
de Saram + Linda de Alwis
10
Cynthia + Bertie de Alwis
11
Christine de Alwis
10
Sheila + Basil de Alwis
11
Devinda de Alwis
11
Sharnelle de Alwis
11
Rohan de Alwis
11
Niloo de Alwis
10
Neliya
9 (7) Maud
(Girlie) + Cyril Tillakeratne
10
Patrick Tillakeratne
10
Patricia Tillakeratne + Eric de Livera
11
Priyanee de Livera
7 (7) Catherine
Cecilia Dias Bandaranayaka, b:28/7/1818, d1873
(Unmarried)
7 (8)
Anne Dias Bandaranayaka (unmarried)
7 (9) Henry
Dias Bandaranayaka (Sir Harry),
b22/8/1822-d24/6/1901, Barrister,Judge, Supreme Court. Member
of Legislative Council, died unmarried. Born:22-Aug-1822.
Education under Rev. Canon Dias, Royal Academy, Kings College
(London). First Sri Lankan Barrister at Law. Member LC
1861-1864. Represented Ceylon at the Diamond Jubilee of Queen
Victoria. Awarded Gold Medal. First Ceylonese to act for
C.J.Morgan 1879, 1888. Called to the Bar, Middle Temple, 1848.
First Sinhala Judge of the Supreme Court 1885-1892. Knighted
1893. Died:24-Jun-1901(unmarried).Actg Cheif Justice 1888.
(p76 SF, says Harry's new purchase
(H Dias)from Dr Misso,Siambalape Kurunduwatte for pounds 550
in 1857)
7 (10) Nancy
Dias Bandaranayaka, b:30/1/1824-d25/6/1893 + Don
Abraham Edward Dias Bandaranaike Proctor of Supreme
Court.Married 23/6/1852
6 (3) Abraham
Petrus Dias Bandaranayaka Mohandiram of Governor Gate
b1783+ Justina Monika de Livera Seneviratne, (d/o Balthazar de Livera), m:19/2/1809.
7 Don Thomas Dias Bandaranayaka Mohandiram of the Gate,
b March 1810 -d 31/8/1878 + Johanna de Livera Seneviratne
M30/6/1845.(4 children)
8 Charlotte Johanna Dias Bandaranayake b1837 d feb1858
+ Rev Abraham Dias Abeysinghe of Galle.
8 Edmund Dias Bandaranyake,Proctor,died at 21 years
unmarried.
8 Cornelia Matilda Dias Bandaranayaka died 1887
unmarried.
8 Agnes Dias Bandaranayaka .blind after a illness,died
27/9/1911 unmarried.
6 (4) Don
Johannes Fransiscus Dias Bandaranayake (Mudaliyar of
Governors Gate), b:13 Dec 1789-d:21 Jul 1862 + Frederica
Agenitta Catherina de Saram
(daughter of Louis de Saram, 2nd Maha
Mudaliyar & Leanora Phillipsz Mohandiram), b:1 Mar
1800, m:11-Jun-1815.
(3126)(7 children)(Abraham,Katharine
Cecilia,Johanna,David,Conrad Peter,Cornelia,Dr Abraham.)
7 (1) Don Abraham
Edward Dias Bandaranayaka b27/3/1816-d5/1/1901 Proctor
of Supreme Court. + Nancy Dias Bandaranayaka m23/6/1852.(10
children)
(Nancy,Louisa,Fredrick,Matilda,Walter,Harriet,Mary,Anne,Florence
and
Charles.)
8 (1)Nancy
Dias Bandaranayaka b 10/4/1853 d 27/2/1905 + Charles Dias
Bandaranayake of Kelanimulla,Planterof Siembalape Estate
(M8/12/1880)
8 (2)
Louisa Dias Bandaranayaka,b 26/5/1854-d 6/2/1935 + John Henry
Perera of Kuruwe Walauwwa. M16/11/1882.
9 John Henry Perera (b approx 1883)+Favorita Midred
Dias Bandaranayaka b1891 1880)(Proctor)M1911 (Kuruwe
Walauwa)(cousin of Evelyn DB)
10
Clarence
Perera
10 Terrance Perera+Lorinda Samarakkody(d2005)
11
Mahinda Perera (b1949-d2015)(migrated to Australia)+Nirmalee
Gooneratne
12 Milinda Perera+Ayesha Perera
13 Malaika Perera
12
Lakshini Perera
12 Emara Perera +Mishra Ramchander
13 Eloise Margret Ramchander
12 Sean Perera.
8 (3)
Fredrick Dias Bandaranayaka, b12/5/1856-d4/8/1910-Unmarried
8 (4)
Matilda Dias Bandaranayaka,b25/12/1858-died unmarried.
8 (5) Walter
Dias Bandaranayaka ,b12/5/1859-d6/8/1936,Gate Mudaliyar,+Amy
Dias Bandaranayaka 29/9/1865-3/11/1944,(d of Cannon Samuel
Bandaranayaka).M8/9/1892
(3
children)
9 (1) [21] Amy
Estelle Dias Bandaranayaka,b10/8/1893 (M17/6/1914) +
[22] James Peter
Obeyesekere II, Maha Mudaliyar (3051)
10
James Peter Obeyesekere III (Late MP Attanagalla,
Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and Senator 1960-65,
Royal College, Cambridge. Qualified as a pilot, Batadola Walauwwe Nittambuwa, Royal College,
Colombo 7, d:23
Oct 2007 + Sivagami Dassanaike (Siva
Obeyesekere-Minister of Health 1970) Founder of Laksala
OBEYESEKERE - DESHAMANYA JAMES PETER (Late
MP Attanagalla, Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and
Senator), Only son of late Sir James Peter Obeyesekere Maha
Mudaliyar and Lady Amy Estelle Obeyesekere, dearly loved
husband of Siva, father of Peter and Chantal, father-in-law of
Dijen de Saram, grandfather of Dhevan and Chiara. Remains will
lie at Batadola Walauwe, Nittambuwa from 12.00 noon on
Wednesday 24th to 12.00 noon on Thursday 25th October and in
Colombo from 2.00 p.m. on Thursday 25th to Saturday 27th
October. Cortege leaves "Maligawa", 19, Rajakeeya Mawatha,
Colombo 07 at 1.00 p.m. Saturday 27th. Cremation at
General Cemetery Kanatte at 2.00 p.m. DN Wed Oct 24 2007
11 James Peter Obeyesekere IV Jr.
12
C H Obeyesekere b:9 May 2005
11 Chantal Obeyesekere + Dijen de Saram (3126)
12
Devan de Saram
12
Chiara de Saram
9 (2) Stephen
Walter Dias Bandaranayaka b11/8/1895+ Ethel Dias
Abeysinghe (d of Nicholas Dias Abeysinghe of
Galle) M24/10/1918
10
Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka(b7/10/1927) +(M1) Leonard Dias
Bandaranayaka b1922(Son of Harry Peter DB)
11 Rev Suresh Dias Bandaranayaka + Daphne Hope
Ratnaike
11 Roshanara Dias Bandaranayaka + Sunil Bandaranaike
(Son of Kingsley de Saa Bandaranaike and Trixie
Seneviratne.)
12 Rosunthi Bandaranaike
10 Crystal Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka
(b7/10/1927)+(m2) Hugh F Rupasinghe
11 Harsha Rupasingha
9 (3) Evelyn
MurielDias Bandaranayaka b4/7/1904+ George R de Silva(
MP)(Barrister)(M21/7/1927)
8 (6)
Harriet Dias Bandaranayaka b31/1/1861-d17/11/1871
8 (7) Mary
Catharine Dias Bandaranayaka,b14/9/1862 unmarried.
8 (8) Anne
Lucy Dias Bandaranayaka,b14/9/1864-d30/3/1887 (unmarried)
8 (9) Florence
Cornelia Dias Bandaranayaka,b28/12/1867-Unmarried.
8 (10)
Charles Lorensz Henry Dias Bandaranayaka,b20/9/1869,Planter
& Superintendent, Maligatenna Estate Veyangoda- Unmarried.
7 (2) Katherine
Cecilia Dias Bandaranayaka b28/7/1818-d1/11/1873
M(1)Don David Jayatilleke Gooneratne (Mudliyar
Galle0(M2-1852)Andrass Tennakoon.
8
Edmund Rowland Jayathilake Gooneratne,
b:6/5/1845, educated at STC Mt Lavinia, Translator, later in
1896 became Mudaliyar, Joined govt service in 1865 as
translator in Galle Kachcherie. Held the post of Asst.to AGA
Matara.Police Magistrate Balapitiya. Registrar of Lands
Galle.Retired in 1897 after 32 yrs of service. In 1883, in
recognition of his services he was appointed Mudaliyar. In
1897, participated in Jubilee Celebrations in England, and was
presented to Queen Victoria and the King. He owned several
plantations in Galle,Matara and Hambantota. Translator later
in 1883 became Mudaliyar + daughter of Mudaliyar J V
Illangakoon in 1873. (3169)
8 2nd spouse of E R J Gooneratne, b:1845,
educated at STC Mt Lavinia, Translator, later in 1896 became
Mudaliyar, + Ms Tillakaratne (3 sons and 2 daughters)
9
Dr Valantine David Goonaratne, b:1874 STC (Surgeon Galle
Hospital) + Clarice de Saram (d/o Peter de Saram
3126)
9 Miss
Gooneratne + Abraham Dias Abeysinghe, b:1850
7 (3) Johanna
Louisa Dias Bandaranayake b:12-Dec-1820-d2/9/1860 +
John Martinus
Paulus Pieris Siriwardena,b approx 1810 Mudaliyar, m:Nov-1851
(1005)
8 (1) Dr
William Christoffel Pieris Siriwardena, b:1867, lived at
40,Silversmith Street Colombo. Educated at STC and later at
Marischal College Aberdeen. He became a Senior medalist in
Pathalogy and Bacteriology. He graduated in MBCM. He was a
visiting Physician of General Hospital. Lecturer in clinical
medicine at Medical College. District Medical Officer
Haputale.Later Judical Medical Officer (see pic below) + Ethel Obeyesekere, (b:1885, d:1930), m:1915 (3051)(daughter of S.C Obeyesekere of Talpe
Walauwa Galle.)
9 William
Ian Pieris b1905 + Anula Dias Abeysinghe
10
Susil Pieris
10 Malkanthi Pieris + J.R Maurice Perera (former high
court judge)
11 Asoka Perera
11 Asanga Perera
10 Priyanga Pieris + Eranga (famous singing duo)
11 Dinuke Siriwardene Pieris (son)
9 Iranganie Pieris b1908
9 James Pieris b1910
8 (2) Rosalyn
Florence Pieris Siriwardena +John Gunerwardena M1890
8 (3) Susana Elizebeth
Pieris Siriwardena
+Harry Willisford Dias
Bandaranaike ,Mudliyar Siyane Korale b14/1/1861(Henry) m1893
-no issue.(Harry is a son of Conrad Peter Dias Bandaranayaka)
8 (4) Lydia
Augusta Pieris Siriwardena b 18/1/1863 (unmarried)
8 (5) Euginia Felicia
Pieris Siriwardena
+Edwin Vernon Gooneratne
m1898 Mudaliyar
8 (6) Harry
Pieris Siriwardena
8 (7) John Louis Pieris Siriwardena (see pic below) b
1852 (educated at Royal College, Colombo) + Florence Elisa
Bandaranaike born 22/9//1871-d16/8/1927, m:29/5/1895 (daughter of
Conrad Peter Dias Bandaranaike b:1827) (1001) (ref: 20th
Century impressions of Ceylon by Arnold Wright)(brother of Sir
Paul Pieris)
9 Louis Alexander
Pieris +Dulci Dias Bandaranaike.
10 (children-John,Louis,Conrad,Edward,Margret &
Gladys)
9 Conrad Peter Pieris (died in motor accident)
9 Arthur
William Pieris
9 Soloman
Franciscus Pieris + Brenda Gunasinghe
10
(children-Florence Rachel,Christine,Evon.)
9 Ethel
Aexander Pieris (1895-1930)+ Lionel Welliington de Saram (See de Saram family
tree)
9 Diana
Margret de Saram (m1940)+ Edmund de Livera
10
Hazel de Livera +Jeramyn Fernando
9 Ruth
Pieris
9 Rachel
Eliza Pieris b1903 + Charles Edward Hartnoll de Saram m1928
8 (8) [23]
Sir Paul E Pieris, b:16/2/1874-1955, educated at
STC Mt Lavinia, Writer of Sinhala books and Historian,
Barrister,Civil servant,Trinity Cambridge(He wrote the book
Sinhalese families which was published in 1911.) + [24]
Lady Hilda Obeyesekere
9
Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala 1900-1976 Director
Museum, (Scientist,Zoologist)Harvard Uni + Prini Molamure (3117),
m:28-Jun-1934
10
Paulus Arjun Mayadun Deraniyagala +Miriam
11 Yvani Deraniyagala
11 Chandrup Deraniyagala
10
Ranil Yudisthira Deraniyaga b16/12/1936-1978 Artist
10
Siran Upendra Deraniyagala b1942 (Director General
Archeology 1992-2001),STC,Trinity College Cambridge,Phd
Harvard.)
10
Isanth Deraniyagala
9
Justin Pieris Deraniyagala (Artist)
9
Ralph St Louis Pieris Deraniyagala + Ezlyn
Obeyesekere
10
Ralph Deraniyagala (Bando) + Indrani Nugara
11
Arubind Deraniyagala
9
Miriam Pieris Deraniyagala 1908-1999 + Robert de
Saram (s/o F R de
Saram) (3126)
10 (1) Skanda Ajith de Saram + Sharadha
Manorama Muthu Krishna (7010)
10 (2) Rohan
de Saram (Cello) + Rosemary de Saram
11
Sophia de Saram
11
Suren de Saram
10 (3) Druvi
de Saram (Piano) + Sharmini de Fonseka
11
Mandhira de Saram
11
Radhika de Saram
10 (4) Niloo
de Saram + Desmond Fernando
11
Jeevani Fernando
10 (4) 2nd
spouse of Niloo de Saram + Jehan Edwards
8 (9) David
George Pieris Deraniyagala b1868+ Enid Muriel de Saa
Bandaranaike (1001)
9
Sumana Pieris b1915 + Merril Amarasekera
9
Mallika Pieris b1931 +Earl Dassenaike
9
Indrani Pieris b1909 +Ronald Doyne Seneviratne(1/7/1906-2/11/2001)m1936
(Director Medical Research Institute)STC,(Son of Abraham
Isaac de Alwis Seneviratne,Mudliyar Wellaboda pattu Matara.)
10 Ranjith Seneviratne
10
Manil Seneviratne + Tennakoon
11 Anushia Tennakoon +Devaka Cooray
12 Devin Cooray
12 Janek Cooray
9
Merrick Pieris
9
[2] Chandra Pieris
Deraniyagala b1921-d2007 +
[1] Vaughn de Livera (3109) 1915-2003(STC Mt Lavinia)
10
[3] Gayan de Livera (STC Mt
Lavinia) died unmarried
10
[4] Yasmin de Livera + [5] Ramesh Abeysekera
(Sydney Aus)
11
[6] Jehan Abeysekera + Ishini Jayamaha
11
[7] Yohan Abeysekera
7 (4)Don
David Dias Bandaranayaka b14/9/1822-d16/1/1854 (unmarried)
7 (5) Conrad
(Peter) Petrus Dias Wijewardena Bandaranayaka (Maha
Mudliyar in 1857), b:24/2/1827-d14/7/1895.(Alukuru korale) Received
medal from Governor Sir Arthur Hamilton Gordon for the period
1883-1890 (for friendship and assistance rendered) + Eliza
Wijesekara De Saram
b14/8/1834 (d of Valentine de Saram (m8/7/1852)
(First owner of Pugoda Walauwwa)(13 children)(son of
Johannes DB)
(David,Edwin,Henry
Valentine,William,Henry
Willisford,Johannes Franciscus,Eliza
Cecilia,Anne,Venitia,Conrad Peter,Florence liza,Wilmot and
Louis Edmund.)
8 (1) David Dias
Bandaranayaka b20/3/1854-d 2/11/1864
8 (2) Edwin
Valentine Dias Bandaranayaka,Mudliyar Siyane
Korale,b1855-d4/11/1918,married on 1/5/1885,Matilda Magdalena
Dias Bandaranayaka,no issue.
8 (3) Henry
Valentine Dias Bandaranayaka ,b27/10/1857-d19/6/1860
8 (4) William Cecil
Dias Bandaranayake,b15/12/1859-d13/1/1925,(M1)Keppetipola
Kumarihamy,(M2)Dangamuwe Kumarihamy-(m25/6/1885.)(5
children)
9 (1) Valentine
Nilaperumal Dias Bandaranayaka b12/1/1894 +Elsie
Bandaranayake (d of Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka.(6
children)
10 Elsie Millicent Dias Bandaranayaka
10
Valentine Nilaperumal Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Silvia Venetia Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Hilbra Cecil Dias Bandaranayaka b &d 25/3/1944
10 Napier James Dias Bandaranayaka
9 (2) Luna
Chandrawathie Dias Bandaranayaka,b15/11/1896 +RH Eheliyagoda
(Registra) on 28/2/1928 M
9 (3) Indrani Dias
Bandaranayaka,b6/4/1900 +(m1)A Bertram Pieris of Kalaniya
-M1917,(m2)KB Halangoda
9 (4)
Conrad Rama Chandra Dias Bandaranayaka,b19/2/1902 + Muriel
Perera,d of John Harry Perera.
9 (5) Padmawathie Dias
Bandaranayaka,b18/11/1904,+KB Alahakoon,Korale of Marasena
Kandy on 6/6/1938.M.
8 (5) Henry Willisford Dias
Bandaranayaka, b14/1/1861,Mudliyar of Siyane Korale,+ Susannha
Elizebeth Pieris,(m30/6/1893) d of JMP Pieris.No issue.
8 (6) Johannes Franciscus Dias
Bandaranayaka, b: 28/12/1862, He was
educated at Royal College and St Thomas's College. He + M in
1902 Somawathi (daughter of Keppetipola Rate
Mahatmaya of Matale). He managed the estates. Ref:
20th Century impressions of Ceylon page 525 of Arnold Wright.
(9 children)
9 (1) Iris
Dias Bandaranayaka,b12/7/1903 +Aelia Goonerwardena of the
customs.
9 (2) Padmawathie Dias
Bandaranayaka ,b18/11/1904 + Victor Keppetipola.
9 (3)
Dulcie Dias Bandaranayake,b29/11/1905 + Louis A Pieris
(M26/7/1928)
9 (4)
Levania Dias Bandaranayaka,b25/12/1906 + Oswald Godwin Dias
Bandaranayaka on 15/10/1931 M.
9 (5)
Eliza Charmion Dias Bandaranayaka,b28/1/1909 + Albert Rienzie
de Livera ,Inspector of Police,(m7/2/1935)(died of car
accident in 1938)
10 Vivina de Livera (b
approx 1936)+ Derek Walter Samarasinghe, b:1927 (John Keels)
11 Dinesh Samarasinghe (Unmarried)
11 Suren Samarasinghe + Ruha Ratwatte b1960
12 Dharini Samarasinghe ( b1990)
12 Varunika Samarasinghe ( b1992)
11 Dr Ravindra Samarasinghe (1963-2007,) Leopard
Conservationist Died in a car accident
9 (6)
Chintamani Dias Bandaranayaka ,b18/3/1910 +(m1) Hellings H.W
Ellawala,Excise Inspector.,divorced.(m2)Cyril Dissanayake
,Forest Ranger(m1945)
9 (7) Somawathie Dias
Bandaranayaka,b26/5/1911 Unmarried.
9 (8)Johannes
Franciscus Dias
Bandaranayake,b26/6/1914-d24/6/1944-unmarried.Shot dead by
unknown person in Udunila Estate.
9 (9) Dardanus Charles
Laius Dias Bandaranayaka,b149/1916 unmarried.
8 (7)
Eliza Cecilia Dias
Bandaranayake,b16/10/1864-d21/5/1930,(M1)Robert Edwin de
Alwis-(1860-1920)(m18/12/1881),(M2)John Tillekeratne of Matara
(m24/11/1884,(M3)James Samaradiwakara of Pelahela,(m19/9/1896)
8 (8) Anne
Dias Bandaranayaka,b13/2/1866-d30/6/1886-unmarried.
8 (9)
Venetia Dias Bandaranayake ,bJan 1868-d1943,(M1) Peter Abraham
Dias Bandaranayaka,Mohandiram b10/11/1864,married 1889 (M2)James
de Alwis of Panadura.
(Children
of
Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka (Mohandiram)b1848
m1889)
9 Venetia
Rowena Dias Bandaranayaka b28/5/1890 -d28/3/1943, +Jayasundera
of Horana.
9 Favorita
Mildred Dias Bandaranayaka(b 16/7/1891) +John Henry Perera (b approx 1883)(Proctor)M 16/2/1911
(Kuruwe Walauwa)(cousin of Evelyn DB)
10 Clarence
Perera
10 Terrance
Perera+Lorinda Samarakkody(d2005)
11 Mahinda Perera -Engineer(b1949-d2015)(migrated to
Australia)+Nirmalee Gooneratne
12 Milinda Perera+Ayesha Perera
13 Malaika Perera
12 Lakshini Perera
12 Emara Perera +Mishra Ramchander
13 Eloise Margret Ramchander
12 Sean Perera.
9 Elsi
Dias Bandaranayaka + Valentine Nilaperuma D
Bandaranayaka.b12/1/1894
10 Elsie Millicent Dias Bandaranayaka
10
Valentine Nilaperumal Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Silvia Venetia Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Hilbra Cecil Dias Bandaranayaka b & d 25/3/1944
10 Napier James Dias Bandaranayaka
8 (10)
Conrad Peter Dias Bandaranayaka,b17/9/1869-d16/7/1926.Muhandiram of the Guard and
Siyane Korale,+ Orta Ekanayake of Matara on M 17/9/1909.(6
children)
9 (1)Conrad
Peter Dias Bandaranayaka ,b12/9/1910-1998 +Dhamma (d27/7/2002)
10 Dulari Manisha Dias Bandaranayaka
11 Danitha
11 Anusha
11 Nilusha
9 (2)
Eliza Hilda Dias Bandaranayaka,b
23/7/1912-d29/5/2011 + Donald Asoka Obeyesekere,Barrister at
Law,ASP,M22/10/1942
10 Stanley Obeyesekere + Nelun Dassenaike
11 Hasha Obeyesekere
11 Asoka Obeyesekere
11 Anouk Obeyesekere
9 (3)
Hector Dias Bandaranayaka,b 24/9/1913
9 (4) Anne
Dias Bandaranayaka,b19/8/1915
9 (5) Samuel Dias
Bandaranayaka,(MP)b1/12/1917-d3/6/2014+ Swarna Ekanayake
(d of Maha Mudaliyar Ekanayaka),Superintendent Land
Corps.(first elected to parliament in 1952)(Stc Mtl)(Madugas
Walauwwa Yakkala)
10 Subhas Bandaranayaka (China)
10 Dr Samala Bandaranayaka (daughter-UK)
10 Pandu Bandaranayaka b31/8/1962 Dy Minister
10 Bandaranayaka
9 (6)
Edwin Dias Bandaranayaka,b4/11/1918.-d22/6/2006 Yakkala
8
(11) [15] Florence Elisa Bandaranayaka,
b:22/9/1871-d16/8/1927 + [14] John Louis Pieris,
Shroff Mudaliyar.M1895,b:1852, brother of Sir Paul Pieris
John
Louis Pieris Siriwardena b 1852 (educated
at Royal College, Colombo) + Florence Elisa
Bandaranaike born 22/9//1871-d16/8/1927, m:29/5/1895 (daughter of
Conrad Peter Dias Bandaranaike b:1827) (1001) (ref: 20th
Century impressions of Ceylon by Arnold Wright)
9 Louis Alexander Pieris
+Dulci Dias Bandaranaike.
10 (children-John,Louis,Conrad,Edward,Margret
&
Gladys)
9 Conrad
Peter Pieris (died in motor accident)
9 Arthur
William Pieris
9 Soloman
Franciscus Pieris + Brenda Gunasinghe
10 (children-Florence
Rachel,Christine,Evon.)
9 Ethel
Aexander Pieris (1895-1930)+ Lionel Welliington de Saram (See de Saram family
tree)
9 Diana
Margret de Saram (m1940)+ Edmund de Livera
10 Hazel
de Livera +Jeramyn Fernando
9 Ruth
Pieris
9 Rachel
Eliza Pieris b1903 + Charles Edward Hartnoll de Saram m1928
8 (12) Wilmot Earnest Dias
Bandaranayake,b14/12/1872-d27/8/1908 + (m13/9/1900) Evangaline
Maud Dias Bandaranayaka,d of Dr Abraham William Dias
Bandaranayaka.
9 Evangaline Mabel Dias Bandaranayaka, b12/8/1901
(M1)Henry de Saram (M2) Prithie Wijesinghe on 27/8/1942
9 Rene Eliza Dias Bandaranayaka,b14/7/1906 + John
Clement Perera.
8 (13) Louis Edmund Dias
Bandaranayaka,b9/9/1874-d7/12/1893-unmarried
7 (6)
Cornelia Dias Bandaranayaka b25/4/1831-d30/12/1866 +(m8/7/1852)John Henricus
Perera.
7 (7) Dr Abraham
William Dias Bandaranayaka,MD,Stschool in
Colombo.Andrews,Edinburg,Colonial Surgeon
Colombo.b23/4/1837-d5/11/1911 (Henerathgoda) +(m28/12/1869) Elizebeth
Eugine Jayatilleke of Kurunegala. He is a son of
Don Johannes Franciscus DB 1789-1862 and Fredricka de Saram (7
children).(Eugine,William,Evangaline,Fredrick,Reginald,Henry
and Mabel.)(photo down below)
8 (1)
Eugine Amelia Dias Bandaranayaka b1/10/1870 (died at childbirth at fort Jaffna Ceylon
d7/3/1897,(supposed to be buried in Jaffna) + George William
Woodhouse (born
in Ramboda ,Gampola)(b29/11/1867-d1949)(died at 82 years at St
Heller Jersey,Channel Islands)(M.A,cantab,C.C.S married on
22/6/1896.(He was in the Ceylon Civil Service.)(Qualified from
Cambridge,Circuit Court Judge in Ceylon.Retired in 1927.)(As
the mother died at child birth, Eugine Amelia Woodhouse was
brought up by one of the family.Later George William Woodhouse
(m2) married Alice Jocelyn Benett in Ceylon,later emigrated to
Jersy UK where he had a family.(George William Woodhouse with
Alice Benett had 2 children namely ,Renee Beatrice Woodhouse
and Gerorge H Woodhouse.)(George William Woodhouse's father
was Edmund Woodhouse born in England in 1841,was a traveller
,Journalist and a tea planter.seems to have arrived in Ceylon
in 1865)
9 Eugenie Amelia
Woodhouse(b 7/3/1897) (As her mother had died at child
birth in 1897, she was cared by possibly by George William
WoodHouse and the Governess
from 1897 to 1905. From 1905 onwards,looked after by
her uncle Fredrick Hugh Dias Bandaranayake and his wife Maria
Frances Senanayake.By 1905 she would have been 7 years,and may
have been sent to Ladies College boarding school.(Maria
Frances Senanayake was the sister of DS Senanayake,1st Prime
Minister of Ceylon.)(Amelia lived many years in Melbourne but
died in Darwin on 11/10/1987) + Benjamin John Viirco
Trench PeterThiedeman(Surveyor) (b 15/11/1889)(married
12/9/1916 ,At St Michael's and All Angel's Church Colombo)(his
parents are John James Thiedman -Inspector of
Police-b1844-d1900 and Julia Argina Kelaart 1852-1921) (had 6 children)
10 (1)
William Benjamin Viirco (Bunny) Thiedeman
b10/9/1917-6/9/2004+Doreen Vivienne Claessen
31/12/1918-28/6/2013 (married 21/11/1942 at St Paul's church
Milagiriya)(d of Basil Norman Classen ,Surveyor)
11 Benjamin Norman Thiedeman b26/1/1946 + Christine
12 Teffany Thiedeman
12 James Thiedeman
12
Nicholas Thiedeman
11 William James Thiedeman + Judith
12 Scott Thiedeman
12 Tammy Thiedeman + Jhonson
12 Sean
Thiedeman
11 Amelia Doreen Thiedeman + John William Wilson(Canberra)
12 Keely Amelia Thiedeman Wilson
12 Zachary William Thiedeman Wilson
10 (2)
Noble Eila Amy Thiedeman (Girlie) b:16/11/1918- d
5/9/2013+(M9/10/1940)(M1) Ansel Dharmaratne.
11 Peter Dharmaratne (died in Australia)
11 Paul Dharmaratne (Melbourne)
10 (2)
Noble Eila Amy Thiedeman (Girlie) b 16/11/1918 (M2)+Mark
Hopman
10 (3)
Duke Orlando Trench Thiedeman b30/6/1920 (deceased)+ Rosemary
Kataleen Joyce Enright(b19/4/1929)(married in Nuwara
Eliya-1947)(children live in Victoria)
10 (4) Princesse
Eugene Thiedeman b12/9/1923-(m16/9/1943) died 23rd June
2019 at 95 years + Lt Colonol Anthony Vernon Arnolda
(b16/4/1916-d19/8/2009)(was in the army in SL)(Married
16/9/1943)(died at 93)(moved to Aus in 2003.
11 Jeanne Arnolda b4/8/1944 (Works at Embassy of Brazil
in Canberra Australia as at 2019)(lives in Canberra
Australia)+ Jose William Braulio Gomes b
23/5/1941--30/4/2006 (from Goa ,became a Brazilian National)
12 Antonio Dario Gomes b29/10/1968 + Deborah Jane Moore
13 Bianca Jasmine Gomes
13 Leila
Gomes
12
Marisa Jeannelle Gomes b28/4/1971 + Dimitri Dermatis
13 Anastasia Zara Dermatis
13 Alexia Jade Dermatis
13
Amelia
Dermatis
11 Barbara Joan Arnolda + Brian Frank Antony
(Australian)(lives in Geelong Vic)(Barbara was the 1st to come
to Australia after marrying Brian)
12 Amanda Antony + Doug Baulch (Geelong)
13 Lachlan Baulch
13 Annaliese Baulch
13 Oliver Baulch
12 Claudine Antony + Ben Anderson (Geelong)
13 Luke Chaffey Anderson + Georgia Ebzery
13 Harley Anderson
13
Brianna
Anderson
12 Kylie Antony + Paul Carson (Geelong)
13 Ace Carson
12 Simeon Antony + Ashleigh Ward (London)
11 Anthoney Cedric Darryl Arnolda (unmarried, lives in
Canberra)
10 (5)
John James Thiedeman b24/6/1928-d 13/8/2017
11 Son lives in Melbourne
10 (6) Estelle Maud
Thiedeman b19/3/1930 + Ashroff Cader (Melbourne)
11 Fazal Cader
11 Rukshana Cader + Hans Verzijl
12 Simeon Verzijl
12 Ben Verzijl
11 Atia Cader + Robert Burke
12 Yasmin Burke
12 Hannah Burke
12
Amelia Burke
8 (2)
William Clement Dias Bandaranayaka b 6/3/1872. Inspector of Police and a planter.+Nancy
Dagmar Dias Bandaranayaka (m 7th July 1906.)(4 Children)
9 (1)
William Dias Bandaranayaka,b4/4/1907,ASP +Dorathy Tagora Dias
Abeysinghe,(d of Abraham Dias Abeysinghe,Proctor of Galle)
M30/10/1929
10 Prof William Senaka Dias Bandaranayaka(Archeologist
lecturer Kelaniya University.),b23/4/1938-d2/3/2015 + Manel
Fonseka
10 Sri Thivanka Dias Bandaranayaka, b1/9/1942-d
10/5/1943.
9 (2)
Panini Dunstan Dias Bandaranayaka ,b2/11/1908,+Mallika
Abeykoon on 3/1/1942.
10 Chrisantha Dias Bandaranayaka ,b19/10/1942
10 Srikantha Dias Bandaranayaka, b2/1/1945
10 Manthri Diyasena Dias Bandaranayaka ,b26/1/1946
9 (3)
Stella Dias Bandaranayaka ,b22/12/1910,+Felix Tillekeratne
(Inspector of Police)M17/4/1931
9 (4)
Nancy Somawathie Dias Bandaranayaka,b16/1/1913.
8 (3) Evangaline
Maud Dias Bandaranayaka b2/2/1874 + Wilmot Earnest Dias
Bandaranyaka (M13/9/1900)(1872-1908)(Son of Conrad Peter DB
1827-1895)
9 Rene Dias Bandaranayaka +John Perera
9 Evangaline Dias Bandaranayaka
8 (4)
Fredrick Hugh Dias Bandaranayaka ,b14/11/1875-d3/11/1936 Planter Ambagahalanda Estate
Mirigama,+ Mary (Maria) Frances Senanayake, daughter of
Mudliyar Don Spater Senanayake.(M14/12/1905)(4
children)
9 (1)
Effie Manthri Dias Bandaranayaka ,b24/11/1906,+Hon,Mr John
Lionel Kotalawela (Minister of communication and
works)M8/8/1928,later
divorced.(Prime
Minister of Ceylon12/10/1953-12/04/1956)
9 (2)
Gwendoline Frances Anula Dias Bandaranayaka,b23/12/1907,+
Shirly de Alwis (Government Architect)
9 (3) Gladys Sitano
Dias Bandaranayake,b20/8/1912,(m1)John Francis
Seneviratne,divorced,(m2) Lt Jayawardena a school master.
9 (4)
Fredrick William Rama Chandra Dias Bandaranayaka (Theobroma Estate
Kotadeniyawa) b22/6/1914,+(m1)Constance Don Carolis-M28/3/1939
Divorced in 1945
10 Radika Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Chandi Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Manel Dias Bandaranayaka
10
Romesh Dias Bandaranayaka
9 (4) Fredrick
William Rama Chandra Dias Bandaranayaka (Theobroma
Estate Kotadeniyawa) b22/6/1914,(m2)+Miss Irene Muthukumaru(b
approx 1925) (d 1/9/2005) M1947 (Ambagahalanda Walauwa
Kotadeniyawa)
10 Dhammika (Chockey)Dias Bandaranayaka d10/9/2017
(Kotadeniyawa)+ Beverley
11 Manoja Dias Bandaranayaka + Capt Pujitha Jayakody
(SL Airlines)
12 Puji Jayakody
12 Tashya Jayakody
10 Anil Dias Bandaranayaka (USA)
10 Lalith Dias Bandaranayaka
10
Rohan C Dias
Bandaranayaka b1959 (Stc Mtl)
10 Arjuna Dias Bandaranayaka
8 (5) Reginald
Edward Dias Bandaranayake,b 4/3/1878 (STC)(Irrigation
dept)(Surveyor),+Flora Ethel Tennakoon Kumarihamy of
Kurunegala (M21/2/1906)(d
of CE Tennakoon Rate Mahatmaya.)(5 children)
9 (1)
Edward Reginald Dias Bandaranayaka,b11/11/1906 (Resides at
Wariyapola) +Merlyn (d21/9/2007)
10
Sarath Dias Bandaranayaka
10 Manohari Dias Bandaranayaka
9 (2)
Ethel Flora Leelawathie Dias Bandaranayake,b 6/2/1909,+Henry
Arthur Wijesinghe (M30/10/1940)
9 (3) Manthri Dias
Bandaranayaka, b15/3/1911-d30/7/1912.
9 (4)
Ethel Rupawathie Dias Bandaranayake ,b13/7/1913,+Edward
Neville Jayatilleke,(M-june 1944)
9 (5)
Indrawathie Dias Bandaranayaka,b May,1922,+ J Arthur
Amaratunga,M-Dec 1940.
8 (6) Henry Ernest
Dias Bandaranayaka ,b3/2/1880,Proctor of the Supreme
Court, and Assistant Commissioner of Excise,+Margret Clarice
Dias Bandaranayake (d of Ernest Cornelis Dias Bandaranayake
)(M18/11/1915)(3 children)
9 (1)
Irene Margret Dias Bandaranayaka,b3/1/1917,+Walter E
Samarasinghe,M-3/1/1942.
9 (2)
Mabel Helen Dias Bandaranayaka,b3/6/1918.
9 (3) Douglas Henry
Dias Bandaranayake,b21/3/1920.
8 (7) Mabel Florence
Dias Bandaranayaka,b31/12/1881 + John Dias Abeysinghe
6 (5) Dona Maria
Katherina Dias Bandaranayaka b1791 + Johannes Welhelmus Dias
Abeysinghe Mohottiar (See
Dias Abeysinghe family tree
3170
7 Johannes Nicholas Dias Abeysinghe b1800
7 Johannes Gustaaf
b1802
7 Simon Fredrick b1803
7 Dona Florentina Dias Abeysinghe b1790+m 29/11/1809 Marappulige Simon
de Livera (son of Balthazar de Livera) (his
2hd marriage)
8 Fredrick John de Livera,
bp:9/10/1813)(District Judge Matara,Tangalle)d1854 (Fredrick died
of cholera at age 44 in 1854.)(educated at Baptists of
Calcutta India.)
9 Fredrick de Livera (FJ de Livera district judge
Tangalle 1880 ?)(Fred)+Amelia de Saram.
10 Fredrick de Livera
10 Theta de Livera
10 Nellie
de Livera
10 Ethel de Livera
10
Christopher de Livera
10 Gerald de Livera (Barister)alive 1880+Miss Morgan
10 Elsi de Livera
10 Mari de Livera
8 Johanna Petronella
de Livera bp 6/3/1815 (daughter of Marappuli
appuhamilage Don Simon de Livera.)(5 children)+Conrad Peter
Dias Bandaranaike (Mohandiram)b 1830,M approx 1860 (Conrad Peter DB is
a son of Don Solomon Dias Bandaranaike.)
9 (1)
Annie Cornelia Dias Bandaranaike,b29/9/1861-18/4/1939,+ John
Davd Perera,Gate Mudaliyar and Mudaliyar,Siyane Korale
East,M22/8/1870
9 (2)
Matilda Magdalena Dias Bandaranaike,b8/9/1863-d6/5/1899,+
Edwin Valentine Dias Bandaranaike,Gate Mudaliyar,M 1/5/1885.
9 (3)
Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka
(Mohandiram),b10/11/1864-d11/1/1915 +Venitia Dias Bandaranaike
(d of CP Dias Bandaranayaka Maha Mudaliyar.M1889
10 Venetia Rowena Dias
Bandaranayaka b 28/5/1890
10 Favorita Mildred Dias Bandaranayaka(b 16/7/1891)
+John Henry Perera (b approx 1880)(Proctor)M 16/2/1911 (Kuruwe
Walauwa)(cousin of Evelyn DB)
11
Clarence Perera
11 Terrance Perera+Lorinda Samarakkody(d2005)
12 Mahinda Perera (Engineer) (b1949-d2015)(migrated to
Australia)+Nirmalee Gooneratne
13
Milinda Perera+Ayesha Perera
14 Malaika Perera
13 Lakshini Perera
13 Emara Perera +Mishra Ramchander
14
Eloise Margret Ramchander
13 Sean Perera.
10 Elsie Dias Bandaranaike + Valentine Nilaperuma Dias Bandaranayaka.
9 (4)
Martha Sisera Dias Bandaranayaka,b20/6/1865-d23/1/1904
9 (5)
James William Dias Bandaranayaka,b12/1/1872 ,died ,leaving no
issue.
8 Abraham Paulis
de Livera bp:3/10/1816
7
Florentina Dias Abeysinghe bp 15/10/1795 + Phillip Wijekoon
Panditharatne Mohandiram (3 children)
6 (6)
daughter (unmarried)
6 (7)
daughter (unmarried)
6 (8) Dona Isabella
Susanah Dias Bandaranayaka b1793 + Paules Perera
Ekanayake,Muhandiram of Hewagam Korale (Isabella is a daughter
of CPDB b1747)
6 (9) Corneliya
Bandaranayaka b1795.M1801 d4/1/1860.+ Jehan Godfred
Phillipsz Panditharatne (3rd Maha Mudaliyar)
7
Phillipz Gysbertus Panditharatne Mohandiram + Florentina
Dias Abeysinghe (d of JW Dias
Abeysinghe)
7
2nd spouse of Phillipz
Gysbertus Panditharatne Mohandiram + Angenitta Catherina
(d/o Perera Ekanayake Mudaliyar)
7 Gertruda Auganita Phillipsz + John Dias
Bandaranayaka Mohandiram(M28/6/1842, d25/3/1877)(Son of
Don Cornelis Dias Bandaranayaka)
7 John Leonard Wijekoon
Panditharatne Phillipsz Mudaliyar + Susana
Illangakoon (d of Don David
Illangakoon Maha Mudaliyar) (3169)
7 daughter Philipsz + Johannes
Jacaobus de Saram Wijesekera Mudaliyar
5 (9)
Don Daniel Dias Wijewardene Banaranayaka (Mohandiram Siyane
Korale) bap 16/2/1748 + Dona Clara
Amarasekere, m:Jan-13-1773
(3068)(d of Samuel Amarasekera,Mudliyar of Hapitagam Korale)
(6
children)(Solomon,William,Suwithan,Johanna,Florentina and
Justina.)
6 (1) Don Solomon
Dias Bandaranaike, Mudaliyar of Siyane Korale, 1st
Udagaha Mudaliyar,b:1774 d15/9/
1859.(6 chidren)(Christoffel,Conelia Susanha,Harriet,Conrad
Peter,Johanna and Elizebeth)
1st married (m:17/6/1805) Johanna Petrenella de
Livera bp6/9/1780 (d/o Balthazar de Livera Mudaliyar)
2nd
married in 1839 Corneliya de Saram b1820 (d/o Phiepsz
Panditharatne,Maha Mudaliyar)
d:Sep-15-1859, He assisted as
interpreter on 10th Feb 1815 when Sri Wickrema
Rajasinghe the last King of Kandy was taken to Colombo, and
then, who was later taken to India. He was present at the
signing of the Kandyan Convention with the British on 2hd
March 1815. Don Solomon Dias Bandaranaike was Mudaliyar for 2
Patthus of Siyane Korale East, near the Kandyan border. He
received a Gold Medal and land grants in 1803 for his
services. He marshaled labor through the Rajakariya System and
built the Colombo Kandy Road. He received a gold medal from
Governor Brownrigg in 1818. + Cornelia
Philipsz Panditharatne de Saram
b:1820, (grand-daughter of Susanna Scharff & Rev Henricus
Philipsz), m:1839 (1002,1006)
7 (1) Don
Christoffel Henricus Dias Abeywickrema Jayatilake
Seneviratne Bandaranaike, b:1826 (Mudaliyar, Governers
Gate, 2nd Udagaha Mudaliyar,Justice of the Peace)Siyane Korale
b:1826 -d1/2/1890+ Anna Florentina Philipsz
Panditharatne(6 children)(Cornelia
Henrietta,Alice,Sir Solomon,Amy,Eliza and Charlotte.)
8 (1) [29] Cornelia Henrietta
Dias Bandaranayaka (missie)
b22/10/1855-d15/7/1935+ [30] James Peter Obeyesekere 1,
Proctor of Supreme Court,and Member of the Legislative
Council.Barrister,(son of Cornelia Sussana DB and DBF
Obeyesekere)(4children)
9 (1) [24]
Lady Hilda Obeyesekere + [23] Sir Paules Edward Pieris,
(Civil Servent, Historian), b:16/2/1874-d1955,
educated at STC Mt Lavinia, Writer of Sinhala books and
Historian, (He wrote the book Sinhalese families which was
published in 1911.)m1905, Barrister in 1895,Royal Asiatic
Society.
10
Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala 1906-1976 Director
Museum Ceylon, (Scientist,Zoologist) + Prini Molamure (3117),
m:28-Jun-1934 ,STC ,Harvard Uni.
(It is believed that around 1950, he sold 4 acres
of land to STC.and he had 4 acres balance in Mount Lavinia.)
11
Paulus Arjun Mayadun Deraniyagala + Miriam
12
Yvani Deraniyagala
12 Chanrudh Deraniyagala
11
Ranil Yudisthira Deraniyaga 1936-1978 Artist.
11
Siran Upendra Deraniyagala b1942,(Director General
Archeology 1992-2001,STC,Trinity College Cambridge,Phd
Harvard.)
11
Isanth
Deraniyagala
10
Justin Pieris Deraniyagala (Artist)
10
Ralph St Louis Pieris Deraniyagala + Ezlyn
Obeyesekere
11
Ralph Deraniyagala (Bando) + Indrani Nugara
12 Arubind Deraniyagala
10
Miriam Pieris Deraniyagala 1908-1999 + Robert de
Saram (s/o F R de
Saram) (3126)
11
Skanda Ajith de Saram + Sharadha
Manorama Muthu Krishna (7010)
11
Rohan de Saram (Cello) + Rosemary de Saram
12 Sophia de Saram
12
Suren de Saram
11
Druvi de Saram (Piano) + Sharmini de Fonseka
12 Mandhira de Saram
12
Radhika de Saram
11
Niloo de Saram + Desmond Fernando
12 Jeevani Fernando
11
2nd spouse of Niloo de Saram + Jehan Edwards
9 (2) ***[22] Sir
James Peter Obeyesekere II, Kt, M.A, Maha Mudaliyar
& Chief Interpreter to his Excellency the Governor of
Ceylon. Barrister at-Law, Advocate of the Supreme Court,
Justice of Peace, District Commissioner. 1879-1968, Educated
at STC Mt Lavinia + [21] Amy Estelle Dias
Bandaranaike
(1001)b10/8/1893, M17/6/1914 (d of Walter Dias
Bandaranayaka)
10
James Peter Obeyesekere III (Late MP Attanagalla,
Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and Senator 1960-65,
Royal College, Cambridge. Qualified as a pilot, Batadola Walauwwe Nittambuwa, Royal College,
Colombo 7, d:23
Oct 2007 + Sivagami Dassanaike (Siva
Obeyesekere-Minister of Health 1970) Founder of Laksala
OBEYESEKERE - DESHAMANYA JAMES PETER (Late
MP Attanagalla, Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and
Senator), Only son of late Sir James Peter Obeyesekere Maha
Mudaliyar and Lady Amy Estelle Obeyesekere, dearly loved
husband of Siva, father of Peter and Chantal, father-in-law of
Dijen de Saram, grandfather of Dhevan and Chiara. Remains will
lie at Batadola Walauwe, Nittambuwa from 12.00 noon on
Wednesday 24th to 12.00 noon on Thursday 25th October and in
Colombo from 2.00 p.m. on Thursday 25th to Saturday 27th
October. Cortege leaves "Maligawa", 19, Rajakeeya Mawatha,
Colombo 07 at 1.00 p.m. Saturday 27th. Cremation at
General Cemetery Kanatte at 2.00 p.m. DN Wed Oct 24 2007
11 James Peter Obeyesekere IV Jr.
12
C H Obeyesekere b:9 May 2005
11 Chantal Obeyesekere + Dijen de Saram (3126)
12
Devan de Saram
12
Chiara de Saram
9 (3) Donald
Obeyesekere (1888-1964)(Member of the State Council and
Legislative Council)(STC) Introduced Boxing.+ Johanna Ethel
Perera (6 children)
10 (1) [27]
Danton Obeyesekere(m19/5/1938) + [28] Ruby Grace
Dias Bandaranaike(d of Harry Peter DB)
b29/1/1919-18/12/2012 (sister of Alick Dias Bandaranaike,
d:Aug 1 2007, see obit below, & Bernard DB, aunt of Arun
DB)
11
Arjuna Obeyesekere (State Counsel)
11
Shireen Obeyesekere + Priya Amarasingha
11
Indra Obeyesekere + Anoma Illangakoon
11
Ajith Obeyesekere + Shamala Dassenaike (d of Noel Dassenaike)
10 (2) Corneliya
Obeyesekere + Henry Ashmore Pieris
11 Sita Cornelia Pieris d 13/4/2017+Cecil Perera
(son of Mudaliyar Eric Perera) Sita could play the Piano.
11 Wimala
Nalini Pieris (b 16/2/1938-d12/7/ 2018)+ Dr Chitranjan
Amarasinghe
(Wimala was a tennis player. Was
the games captain at Ladies College.Migrated to USA.died in
Washinton.)
12 Felix
Amarasinghe
12 Shalini Amarasinghe.
12 Nilanthi
Amarasinghe
11
Hemal Ashmore Pieris + Kanthi Weerasinghe
12 Asoka
Pieris
12 Duminda
Pieris
11 Henry Sri
Mevan Pieris b:1946 (Bsc,Msc,MBA,FPRI(uk)(cricketer
STC-1964/65 & Sri Lanka) + Dr Nirmala Gunathilake
12
Dilani Pieris (St
Bridgets) (AMW)+ Haren Yatawaka
13 Anithra Yatawaka
13 Kiyana Yatawaka
13 Jaanya Yatawaka
12 Nilanka Pieris (Stc cricket captain-1995)+ Dilushi
Wickremasinghe
13 Dineth Pieris
13 Nireka Pieris
10 (3) Asoka
Obeyesekere (Barrister &ASP)+ Eliza Hilda Dias
Bandaranayaka,b23/7/1912- d:28th May 2011 (d of Conrad Peter
DB)
OBEYSEKERE - ELIZA HILDA - Wife of the late Asoka, mother of
Stanley, mother-in-law of Nelun, grandmother of Hasha, Asoka
and Anouk, sister of Sam (SD) Bandaranayake and the late
Peter, Hector, Ann and Edwin Dias Bandaranayake, expired.
Cortege leaves residence11/5, Rajakeeya Mawatha, Colombo
7 at 4.15 p.m. on Tuesday 31st May, Cremation at
General Cemetery, Kanatte at 5.00 p.m. DN May 30
2011
11
Stanley Obeyesekere+Nelun Dassenaike
12 Harsha Obeyesekere
12 Asoka Obeyesekere
12 Anouk Obeyesekere
10 (4) Fredrick
Obeyesekere 1912-2001
10 (5) Amelia
Obeyesekere, 1915-2004 + Louis Pieris
11
Surani Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Ravindra Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Chrisanthi Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Rajini Pieris Deraniyagala + Neil Dias Bandaranayaka
12
Ayendra Dias Bandaranayaka
12 Priyanthi Dias Bandaranayaka
11
Savithri Pieris Deraniyagala
10 (6) Alexander
Obeyesekere + Mrs Marrs
9 (4) Stanly
Obeyesekere + Brenda de Saram (3126)
10
Nedra Obeyesekere + Colonel F C de
Saram (Derrick) (3126)
11
Tara de Saram (National Swimmer) + Ralph Bolling
12
Julian Bolling (National Swimmer)
12
David Bolling (National Swimmer)
12
Jeramy Bolling (National Swimmer)
11
Oosha de Saram (Swimming, Tennis) +
Dunkirk
Neilendran Chanmugam, Board of The
Maharajah Organization, s/o Edgar Jeyomanie
Chanmugam b:29 Jul 1894, d: 25
May 1963 & Constance Letitia
Mant (alias "Pansy",
Principal & Founder of Tiny Tots Pre School, d/o Henry Mant d:7 Dec 1980 & Lily Gracelyn d:11 Apr 1949)
12
Anouk Chanmugam (Golf) + George
Ajit Zal Chitty (SL Rifle Shooting Team at Olympics)
12
Dipika Rukshana
Chanmugam (Swimmer) + William
Appleton Jnr.
12
Devin Nijanthan
Chanmugam (Swimmer)
10
Yolande Obeyesekere + Oopatissa
Illangakoon (3169)
8 (2) Alice
Dias Bandaranaike b3/5/1860-1910 + John Louis Perera
,Proctor of Supreme Court.
8 (3) [20]
Sir Don Solomon Dias Abeywickrema Jayatilleke Senewiratna
Rajakumaruna Kadukeralu Bandaranaike, b 22/5/1862-d
31/7/1946 (Maha Mudaliyar)(K.C.M.G)(JP) b:22-May-1862,
d:31-Jul-1946, Kt. Commander of the most distinguished order
of St. Michael and St. George, Horogolla Walauwwa, St Thomas'
College, Mohandiram 1882. Mudliyar Siyane Korale, After
returning from UK, Governor Arthur Havelock awarded Maha
Mudaliyar title and All Island JP. In 1897 went to UK as
official representative for diamond jubilee celebration and
received medal. In 1902 revisited UK. Received Coronation
Medal and KCMG + [21] Lady Daisy Ezline
Obeyesekere (d/o S.Christoffel
& Lady Obeyesekere) m:Apr-1898
9
Solomon West
Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike
b:8-Jan 1899, d:26-Sep-1959, (Prime Minister of Sri Lanka
1956-59, Assassinated by a Buddhist Monk on September 25,
1959), St Thomas' College, educated as a lawyer in UK,
University of Oxford. Became Secretary of Oxford Union in
1923, called to the bar in 1925, Member of the State Council
in 1931, Formed the Sinhala Maha Sabha in 1937, Active in the
UNP 1945-51 and established the SLFP after 1951, Prime
Minister 1956-59, To solve the ethnic issue he signed the
Bandaranaike-Chelvanaygam pact, which was repudiated due to a
campaign led by the Buddhist Clergy. Made Sinhala the official
Language + Sirimavo
Ratwatta,
b:17/4/1916, d:10/10/2000, m:2-Oct-1940 (First woman Prime
Minister in the World, Prime Minister, 1960-65, 1970-77,
1994-2000) (3060) Wikipedia Account
of Sirimavo
10
Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike, b:27/7/1943 + Kumar
Rupasinghe (div)
10
2nd spouse of Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike + Udaya
Nanayakkara (div)
10
Chandrika Dias
Bandaranaike, b:29/6/1945,
Early education at St Bridgets Convent, Colombo, and graduated
in Political Science at Sorbonne University in Paris, Formed
the Peoples Alliance (PA) Party, President of Sri Lanka
1994-2005 + Vijaya Kumaratunga, Film Actor,
Assasinated 1988
11
Yasodhara Kumaratunga + Roger Walker (UK), m:Jun 2007
in UK (see wedding pics below)
11
Vimukthi Kumaratunga
10
Anura Dias Bandaranaike b: Feb-15-1949, d:Mar 15, 2008,
Educated at Royal College, Member of Parliament 1977 to
2007, Minister Higher Education 1993, Foreign Minister 2005,
Leader of the opposition, Speaker of the House, Minister of
Tourism/Heritage 2007
9
Alexandra Cornelia Dias Bandaranaike b26/8/1903, lived
at "Samudragiri" Walauwa in Mount Lavinia + Leo G. De
Alwis (M15/8/1923)
10
Shirlene De Alwis + Earle Jayawardena
11 Amal Jayawardena
10
Lankasa De Alwis (tenor singer) + Joy Dassenaike
(cousins)
11
Ranjith de Alwis
12
Raneesha de Alwis
12
Radeena de Alwis
10
Rukie (Rukmani)
de Alwis b:26
Mar 1926 -20/3/2017+ Percy Eheliyagoda
11 (1)
Leo Eheliyagoda + Ramya Wijetunge
12
Rosanth Eheliyagoda
11 (2) Shalimar
Eheliyagoda
+ Uma Kumar Sharma
12 Shanikar Sharma
12 Sandesh Sharma
11 (3) Charmaine
Eheliyagoda, Attorney-at-Law, a member of
the National
Police
Commission appointed
by H.E.The President of Sri Lanka +
Lakshman Madurasinghe, m:1979 held at All
Saints Church Hulftsdorp in Aug 1979 + Professor
Lakshman Madurasinghe, born in Galle, STC Prep School
Kollupitiya 1959-1960 (LKG/UKG), STC Mount
Lavinia 1961-72, Attorney at Law, Chartered
Fellow CIPD UK: University of Brighton, Sr.International
Governor AUGP USA and Chairman Medicina Alternativa.
12 Rosanth
Lakshan
Madurasinghe, a graduate
of the University of London (England). + Nishani
Fernando of Wennappuwa on July 7 2007;
13
Romaan Madurasinghe
11 (4) Lankani
Eheliyagoda
11 (5) Devika
Eheliyagoda
see weblog at https://madure.net/
9
Anna Florentina Dias Bandaranaike b 20/7/1900 + Abraham
de Livera of Ampitigala Kalutara District.(M23/6/1922)
10 S. Christopher.O de Livera, b approx 1923- d
25/7/2011+ Nimal Pieris
11
Shanaka de Livera b 1959 Lawyer + Samanda Senaratne
12
Sajin de Livera
12
Shealan de Livera
11
Priyan de Livera (Lawyer)
11
Asanthi de Livera + Oswin de Alwis
10
May de Livera
8 (4) Amy
Clara Dias Bandaranaike b17/12/1866-d16/5/1946+ Edwardo
Roversi, m:1891 in Italy.
9
Hilda Roversi
9
Elena Roversi
9
Neville Roversi
8 (5) Elizabeth
Mary Dias Bandaranaike b15/5/1867-d12/41898+ Walter de
Livera, CCS,Dy Fiscal Colombob:1863, (Royal College),
Police Magistrate in 1898), m:12/4/1898
9
"Princess" de Livera (Joy), b:1900 + Reginold Felix
Dias Bandaranaike, b:1891, d:1950,
m:1921 (1001)
10
Reginold Walter Dias Bandaranaike 3/3/1921-17/11/2009 +
Norah Hunter Crabb d1980
11
Alison Dias Bandaranaike + Wolfram Kock (Austria)
11
Julia Dias Bandaranaike + Stuart Orford (UK)
12
Name Not Known
9 Manique de Livera, b:1892
8 (6) Charlotte
Matilda Dias
Bandaranaike, b:18/11/1869-d29/4/1896 + Solomon
Seneviratne, (see pic below) b:1860, educated at Queen's College and The Colombo
Academy (later Royal College, (s/o Don Hermanis
Seneviratne, Mohandiram of Siyane Korale,later Atapattu
Mudaliyar, grandson of Don Carolis Seneviratne, Mudaliyar of
Kalutara, great grandson of Don Louis Seneviratne, Modaliyar
of the same place.), m:1885 (3108)
9
Stevan Senewiratne + Lilian de Alwis d1933
10
Terrance Senewiratne d2007
9
Eric Senewiratne + Ray Dassenaike
9
Noel Senewiratne + Violet Dias Bandaranaike
10 (1) Erin
Senewiratne
10 (2) Unis
Senewiratne
10 (3) Nissanka
Senewiratne.
10 (4) Daphne
Senewiratne + Olive Abeynaike
11
Ranil Abeynaike 1955-2012 (STC Cricket) + Roshika Tissera
11 Mohan
Abeynaike
11 Amitha
Abeynaike
11 Ajith
Abeynaike
10 (5) Lionel
Senewiratne + Surangani Senewiratne
9
Charlie Senewiratne + Roxina de Alwis
10
Eddie Senewiratne + Lorna de Saram (3126)
11
Anoja Senewiratne d1997+
Dr Guneratne
12
Guneratne
12
Guneratne
11
Anil Senewiratne
9
Phillip Senewiratne + Nannie Samarakkody (3118)
10
Dr Brian Senewiratne + Alagaratna
11 Dr Romesh
Senewiratne
11
Sherine Senewiratne
10
Phoebe Senewiratne + Nanda Yatawara
11
Kavan Yatawara
11
Lakshman Yatawara
11
Neliya Yatawara
9
Francis Senewiratne(M1) + Neeta Dias Bandaranaike
10
Sakuntala Senewiratne
10
Sieeva Senewiratne
10
Surangani Senewiratne + Lionel Senewiratne
9
2nd spouse of Francis Senewiratne + Grace
Tillakaratne d2011
10
Ranjith Senewiratned1968
10
Nimal Senewiratne d2014 + Geetha
11
Amanda Senewiratne
11
Eshan Senewiratne
10
Niranjala Senewiratne + Kalinda Doranagoda d2015
11
Shamila Doranagoda + Duminda Maligaspe
12
Dinuri Maligaspe
12 Tharuki
Maligaspe b2012
10
Priyani Senewiratne + Mohan Samarakkody
11
Sandeepani Samarakkody + Alutwala
11
Yasamali Samarakkody
7 (2) Corneliya
Susanna Dias Bandaranaike b22/9/1827 -d14/5/1896+ (First
Bed) Don Bastian Ferdinandus
Obeyesekere (3051) of talpe pattu
Galle (m1842)
8 (1) [19]
Sir Solomon
Christoffeild Obeyesekere, b:12 Feb 1848, d:13 Oct 1927), MLC,Royal &
STC Mt. Lavinia, Sinhalese representative in the Legislative
Council
,Knited in 1911+ [18] Lady Ezline Maria de Alwis (d of
James de Alwis and Florence DB)(4 children) (Town rescidence
hill castle Badulla)
9 (1) [21]
Daisy Ezline Obeyesekere, b:1898 + [20] Sir Don Solomon Dias
Abeywickrema Jayatilleke Senewiratna Rajakumaruna Kadukeralu
Bandaranaike (Maha Mudaliyar) b:22-May-1862,
d:31-Jul-1946, Kt. Commander of the most distinguished order
of St. Michael and St. George, Horogolla Walauwwa, St Thomas'
College, Mohandiram 1882. Mudliyar Siyane Korale, After
returning from UK, Governor Arthur Havelock awarded Maha
Mudaliyar title and All Island JP. In 1897 went to UK as
official representative for diamond jubilee celebration and
received medal. In 1902 revisited UK. Received Coronation
Medal and KCMG, m:Apr-1898
10
Solomon West
Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike
b:8-Jan 1899, d:26-Sep-1959, (Prime Minister of Sri Lanka
1956-59, Assassinated by a Buddhist Monk on September 25,
1959), St Thomas' College, educated as a lawyer in UK,
University of Oxford. Became Secretary of Oxford Union in
1923, called to the bar in 1925, Member of the State Council
in 1931, Formed the Sinhala Maha Sabha in 1937, Active in the
UNP 1945-51 and established the SLFP after 1951, Prime
Minister 1956-59, To solve the ethnic issue he signed the
Bandaranaike-Chelvanaygam pact, which was repudiated due to a
campaign led by the Buddhist Clergy. Made Sinhala the official
Language + Sirimavo
Ratwatta,
b:17/4/1916, d:10/10/2000, m:2-Oct-1940 (First woman Prime
Minister in the World, Prime Minister, 1960-65, 1970-77,
1994-2000) (3060) Wikipedia Account
of Sirimavo
11
Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike, b:1943 + Kumar
Rupasinghe (div)
11
2nd spouse of Sunethra Dias Bandaranaike + Udaya
Nanayakkara (div)
11
Chandrika Dias
Bandaranaike, b:29/6/1945,
Early education at St Bridgets Convent, Colombo, and graduated
in Political Science at Sorbonne University in Paris, Formed
the Peoples Alliance (PA) Party, President of Sri Lanka
1994-2005 + Vijaya Kumaratunga, Film Actor,
Assasinated 1988
12
Yasodhara Kumaratunga + Roger Walker, m:Jun 2007 in UK
(see wedding pics below)
12
Vimukthi Kumaratunga
11
Anura Dias Bandaranaike b: Feb-15-1949, d:Mar 15, 2008,
Educated at Royal College, Member of Parliament 1977 to
2007, Minister Higher Education 1993, Foreign Minister 2005,
Leader of the opposition, Speaker of the House, Minister of
Tourism/Heritage 2007
10
Alexandra Camelia Bandaranaike,b26/8/1903 lived at
"Samudragiri" Walauwa in Mount Lavinia + Leo G. De
Alwis (M1923)
11
Shirlene De Alwis + Earle Jayawardena
12 Amal Jayawardena +
Waruni
11
Lankasa De Alwis (tenor singer) + Joy
Dassenaike (cousins)
12
Ranjith de Alwis
13
Raneesha de Alwis
13
Radeena de Alwis
11
Rukie
(Rukmani) de Alwis b:26 Mar 1926-20/3/2017 +
Percy Eheliyagoda
12 Leo Eheliyagoda + Ramya Wijetunge
13
Rosanth Eheliyagoda
12
Shalimar Eheliyagoda + Uma Kumar Sharma
13
Shanikar Sharma +Migara Alwis- m:2009
13 Aashiana Alwis- June 2011
13
Sandesh Sharma
12 (3) Charmaine
Eheliyagoda, Attorney-at-Law, a member of
the National
Police
Commission appointed
by H.E.The President of Sri Lanka +
Lakshman Madurasinghe, m:1979 held at All
Saints Church Hulftsdorp in Aug 1979 + Professor
Lakshman Madurasinghe, born in Galle, STC Prep School
Kollupitiya 1959-1960 (LKG/UKG), STC Mount
Lavinia 1961-72, Attorney at Law, Chartered
Fellow CIPD UK: University of Brighton, Sr.International
Governor AUGP USA and Chairman Medicina Alternativa.
13 Rosanth
Lakshan
Madurasinghe, a graduate
of the University of London (England). + Nishani
Fernando of Wennappuwa on July 7 2007;
14
Romaan Madurasinghe
12 (4) Lankani
Eheliyagoda
12 (5) Devika
Eheliyagoda
see weblog at https://madure.net/
10
Anna Florentina Bandaranaike + Abraham de Livera
11 S.Christopher.O de Livera d25/7/2011 + Nimal
Pieris
12
Shanaka de Livera (Lawyer) b1959+ Samanda
13
Sajin de Livera
13
Shealan de Livera
12
Priyan de Livera ,(Lawyer)
12
Asanthi de Livera + Oswin de Alwis
11
May de Livera
9 (2) Ethel
Obeyesekere (b1885,d
1930,m1915 (d of SC Obeyesekere)+ Dr William
Christoffel Pieris Siriwardena, b:1867, lived at
40,Silversmith Street Colombo. Educated at STC and later at
Marischal College Aberdeen. He became a Senior medalist in
Pathalogy and Bacteriology. He graduated in MBCM. He was a
visiting Physician of General Hospital. Lecturer in clinical
medicine at Medical College. District Medical Officer
Haputale.Later Judical Medical Officer (see pic below)
10 William Ian Pieris b1905 + Anula Dias Abeysinghe
11 Susil Pieris
11 Malkanthi Pieris + J.R Maurice Perera (former high
court judge)
12 Asoka Perera
12
Asanga Perera
11 Priyanga Pieris + Eranga (famous singing duo)
12 Dinuke Siriwardene Pieris (son)
10 Iranganie Pieris b1908
10 James Pieris b1910
9 (3) Forester
Augustus Obeyesekere,7/8/1880-26/12/1961(Speaker) (State
Councillor)Captained Royal College Cricket team. + Isabel
Sykes
10
Boykin Obeyesekere
10
Ezlynne Obeyesekere + Ralph St. L P Deraniyagala
11 Dr Ralph
Deraniyagala d 26/1/2019 + Indrani Nugera
12
Arubind Deraniyagala
9 (4) Lillian
Obeyesekere + William
Illangakoon(Chin)Mudaliyar
(3169)
10
Surangani Illangakoon
10
Panini Illangakoon (MP)(M1)+ Effi
Samarakkody (3118)
11
Pani Illangakoon (2)
10
Panini Ilangakoon (MP forWeligama)(M2) +) Lily Goonasekere
11 Dr Gamini Ilangakoon + Deepthi
12 Sanka Ilangakoon
12 Sulakna Ilangakoon
10
Mahnil Lilette Illangakoon + Roland Hugh Dias Abeysinghe(his
2hd M)
11
Ayunli Dias Abeysinghe
11
Jayanthi Dias Abeysinghe
8 (2) [25]
James Peter Obeyesekere I + [26] Corneliya Henrietta Dias
Bandaranayaka b22/10/1855-d15/7/1935 (Missie)(d of Chrisstoffel Dias
Bandaranayaka)(4 children)(JPO 1 Premature deceased)
9 (1) [24]
Lady Hilda Obeyesekere + [23] Sir Paules Edward Pieris,
(Civil Servent, Historian), b:1853,
educated at STC Mt Lavinia, Writer of Sinhala books and
Historian, (He wrote the book Sinhalese families which was
published in 1911.)
10
Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala 1900-1976 Director
Museum, (Scientist,Zoologist) + Prini Molamure (3117),
m:28-Jun-1934
11
Paulus Arjun Mayadun Deraniyagala (Former Chairman
CEB)+Miriam
12 Yvani Deraniyagala
12 Chanrudh Deraniyagala
11
Ranil Yudisthira Deraniyaga 1936-1978 (Artist)
11
Siran Upendra Deraniyagala b1942 (Stc)(Director General of
Archeology)
11
Isanth
Deraniyagala
10
Justin Pieris Deraniyagala (Artist)
10
Ralph St Louis Pieris Deraniyagala + Ezlyn
Obeyesekere
11
Ralph Deraniyagala (Bando) + Indrani Nugara
12 Arubind Deraniyagala
10
Miriam Pieris Deraniyagala 1908-1999 + Robert de
Saram (s/o F R de
Saram) (3126)
11
Skanda Ajith de Saram + Sharadha
Manorama Muthu Krishna (7010)
11
Rohan de Saram (Cello) b1939 + Rosemary de Saram
12 Sophia de Saram
12
Suren de Saram
11
Druvi de Saram (Piano) + Sharmini de Fonseka
12 Mandhira de Saram
12
Radhika de Saram
11
Niloo de Saram + Desmond Fernando
12 Jeevani Fernando
11
2nd spouse of Niloo de Saram + Jehan Edwards
9 (2) ***[22]
Sir James Peter Obeyesekere II, Kt, M.A, Maha Mudaliyar
& Chief Interpreter to his Excellency the Governor of
Ceylon. Barrister at-Law, Advocate of the Supreme Court,
Justice of Peace, District Commissioner. 1879-1968, Educated
at STC Mt Lavina + [21] Amy Estelle Dias
Bandaranaike
(1001)
10
James Peter Obeyesekere III (Late MP Attanagalla,
Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and Senator 1960-65,
Royal College, Cambridge. Qualified as a pilot, Batadola Walauwwe Nittambuwa, Royal College,
Colombo 7, d:23
Oct 2007 + Sivagami Dassanaike (Siva
Obeyesekere-Minister of Health 1970) Founder of Laksala
OBEYESEKERE - DESHAMANYA JAMES PETER (Late
MP Attanagalla, Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and
Senator), Only son of late Sir James Peter Obeyesekere Maha
Mudaliyar and Lady Amy Estelle Obeyesekere, dearly loved
husband of Siva, father of Peter and Chantal, father-in-law of
Dijen de Saram, grandfather of Dhevan and Chiara. Remains will
lie at Batadola Walauwe, Nittambuwa from 12.00 noon on
Wednesday 24th to 12.00 noon on Thursday 25th October and in
Colombo from 2.00 p.m. on Thursday 25th to Saturday 27th
October. Cortege leaves "Maligawa", 19, Rajakeeya Mawatha,
Colombo 07 at 1.00 p.m. Saturday 27th. Cremation at
General Cemetery Kanatte at 2.00 p.m. DN Wed Oct 24 2007
11 James Peter Obeyesekere IV Jr.
12
C H Obeyesekere b:9 May 2005
11 Chantal Obeyesekere + Dijen de Saram (3126)
12
Dhevan de Saram
12
Chiara de Saram
9 (3) Donald
Obeyesekere (1888-1964)(Member of State Council and
Legislative Council)(STC)+ Johanna Ethel Perera
10 (1) [27]
Danton Obeyesekere(m19/5/1938)(1895-1974) + [28]
Ruby Grace Dias Bandaranayaka(d of Harry Peter DB)
29/1/1919-18/12/2012 (sister of Alick Dias Bandaranayaka,
d:Aug 1 2007, see obit below, & Bernard DB, aunt of Arun
DB)
11
Arjuna Obeyesekere (State Counsel)
11
Shirin Obeyesekere +Priya Amerasinghe
12 Shehan Amerasinghe
12 Rajive Amerasinghe
11
Indra Obeyesekere + Anoma Illangakoon
12
Gemunu Obeyesekere
11
Ajith Obeyesekere +Shamala Dassenaike (d of Noel Dassenaike)
10 (2) Corneliya
Obeyesekere + Henry Ashmore Pieris (b1903)(M1934)
11
Sita Pieris d13/4/2017
11
Wimala Pieris b16/2/1938-d12/7/2018
11
Hemal Pieris
11 Henry Sri Mevan
Pieris b:1946 (Bsc,Msc,MBA,FPRI(uk)(cricketer STC-1964/65
& Sri Lanka) + Dr Nirmala Gunathilake
12 Dilani Pieris
(St Bridgets) (AMW)+ Haren Yatawaka
13 Amithra Yatawaka
13 Kiyana Yatawaka
13 Jaanya Yatawaka
12 Nilanka Pieris (Stc cricket captain-1995)+ Dilushi
Wickremasinghe
13 Dineth Pieris
13 Nireka Pieris
10 (3) Asoka
Obeyesekere (Barrister &ASP)+ Eliza Hilda Dias
Bandaranaike,23/7/1912- d:May 2011 (d of Conrad Peter DB0
OBEYSEKERE - ELIZA HILDA - Wife of the late Asoka, mother of
Stanley, mother-in-law of Nelun, grandmother of Hasha, Asoka
and Anouk, sister of Sam (SD) Bandaranayake and the late
Peter, Hector, Ann and Edwin Dias Bandaranayake, expired.
Cortege leaves residence11/5, Rajakeeya Mawatha, Colombo
7 at 4.15 p.m. on Tuesday 31st May, Cremation at
General Cemetery, Kanatte at 5.00 p.m. DN May 30
2011
10 (4) Fredrick
Obeyesekere 1912-2001
10 (5) Amelia
Obeyesekere, 1915-2004 + Louis Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Surani Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Ravindra Pieris Deraniyagala
11
Chrisanthi Pieris Deraniyagala d 9/2/2016 (Former NIBM)
11
Rajini Pieris Deraniyagala + Neil Dias Bandaranayaka
12 Ayendra Dias Bandaranayaka
12 Priyanthi Dias Bandaranayaka
11
Savithri Pieris Deraniyagala
10 (6) Alexander
Obeyesekere (boxing) (1918-2002)+ Mrs Marrs
9 (4) Stanly
Obeyesekere + Brenda de Saram (3126)
10
Nedra Obeyesekere (Tennis)+ Colonel F C de
Saram (Derrick) (3126)
11
Tara de Saram (National Swimmer) + Ralph Bolling
12
Julian Bolling (National Swimmer)
12
David Bolling (National Swimmer)
12
Jeramy Bolling (National Swimmer)
11
Oosha de Saram (Swimming, Tennis) +
Dunkirk
Neilendran Chanmugam, Board of The
Maharajah Organization, s/o Edgar Jeyomanie
Chanmugam b:29 Jul 1894, d: 25
May 1963 & Constance Letitia
Mant (alias "Pansy",
Principal & Founder of Tiny Tots Pre School, d/o Henry Mant d:7 Dec 1980 & Lily Gracelyn d:11 Apr 1949)
12
Anouk Chanmugam (Golf) + George
Ajit Zal Chitty (SL Rifle Shooting Team at Olympics)
12
Dipika Rukshana
Chanmugam (Swimmer) + William
Appleton Jnr.
12
Devin Nijanthan
Chanmugam (Swimmer)
10
Yolande Obeyesekere(Tennis) + Oopatissa
Illangakoon (3169)
7 (2) 2nd
spouse of [9] Cornelia Susanna Elizabeth Dias Bandaranayake
1827-14/5/1896 + [8] Rev. Canon Samuel William Dias
Bandaranayaka (Colombo)(m29/9/1859)(4 children)
8 (1)
William
Chapman Dias Wijewardena Bandaranayaka b:9/6/1860 -28/6/1915
(nephew of Sir Harry Dias Bandaranaike and step brother
of Sir James Peter Obeyesekere), Born in 9/3/1860. Educated at
St Thomas' College and Royal College, Colombo. Took charge of
the estates and plantation management. + Rachel
Leelawathie Asmadale,
m:12/2/1896 (Niece of T B Panabokke)(2 children)
9
Samuel William Copleston.Dias Bandaranayaka, b:3/7/1897
+ Irene de Silva, m:9/6/1927 (d of Gate Mudaliyar
George de Silva)
10 (1) Shelly
Lakshman Dias Bandaranayaka (legal draftsman)(Barrister
at-law) b15/3/1928- d14/1/2016+ Manthri
Amarasekera (3068)(d of Johanna
Amarasekere and Don Johannes Dassenaike)
11
Niranjan Indrajith Dias Bandaranayaka
10 (2) Tissa
Dias Bandaranayaka (Supreme Court Judge) ,Ambassodor to
Indonesia,Played cricket for STC, b30/8/1932-d1/6/2001+
Johanna Tworeck
11
Janitha Karina Dias Bandaranayaka
11
Mahesha Dias Bandaranayaka
10 (3) Leela
Dias Bandaranayaka + Christopher E Pieris
9
Cornelia Rachel Rani Dias Bandaranayaka
b13/12/1893-d7/12/1906
[Ref:
20th Centuary Impression by Arnold Wright P525]
8 (2) Felix
Reginald Dias Bandaranayaka, b:26-Jul-1861,
d:30-Jan-1947, educated at Royal & St Thomas’ College),
Qualifications Cambridge BA,LLB degree. Became District Judge
Colombo in 1897, Legal profession + Annie Lucy (Florence)
D' Alwis (third daughter of James de Alwis) m:14
Apr-1890 (3 children)
9 (1) Reginald
Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, Dr. b:17-Jan-1891,
d:26-Oct-1951(Judge) + (1)
“Princess” Joy De
Livera (d of Walter de
Livera)(m28/8/1919)
10 Reginald Walter Michael Dias Bandaranayaka (Royal
College)(Barrister,at Camridge,home guard of the Royal Air
Force.)3/3/1921-17/11/2009+ Norah Hunter-Crabbe (UK)
11
Alison Dias Bandaranayaka + Wolfram Koch (Austria)
11
Julia Dias Bandaranayaka + Stuard Orford
12
Name Not Known
9
2nd spouse of Reginald Felix Dias Bandaranayaka,
Dr. b:17-Jan-1891, d:26-Oct-1951 +(2) Freda Muriel Dias
Abeyesinghe (d of Nicholas Dias Abeysinghe of
Galle)m10/10/1924
10
Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, b:5-Nov-1930, d:26-Jun-1985
(Minister of Public Administration,Local Govt,Home
Affairs& Justice 1970-77) + Muthulakshmi
Jayasundera
11 Christine
Wickremanayake (adopted) + Avindra Rodrigo
12 Chalya Rodrigo
12 Jaana Rodrigo
obit: DIAS BANDARANAIKE, Lakshmi (née JAYASUNDARA).
wife of the late Felix Dias Bandaranaike, mother of Christine.
mother in law of Avindra Rodrigo, grandmother of Chalya and
Jaana.
Sister of late Manel de Alwis, Nissanka (Noj) Jayasundera,
Malkanthie Wikramanayaka,
and Indrani Hewitt, in Sri Lanka. (Daily News 26.8.2023)
10 Christine Manel Dias Bandaranayaka, 1928-1967
+ David Blackler
9 (2) Annette
Lena Dias Bandaranayaka, 16/8/1894-1982 + Roland William
Ilangakoon LLB,Attorney
General of Ceylon,(3169)(m10/4/1914)
10
Hope Esther Ilangakoon + Quintus Tennekoon
11
Nirmalie Serena Tennekoon (died 198?)
11
Deepthi Christine Tennekoon + Palitha Senanayake
10
Nannette Christine Ilangakoon, d:Aug 5 2006 in
Australia + Lyn (ECG)
Wickremasinghe (3103), was the GM of Bank of Ceylon in the
seventies, is a second cousin of Esmund Wickremasinghe,
father of Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP)
http://www.dailynews.lk/2001/pix/PrintPage.asp?REF=/2006/09/07/main_Obituaries.asp
WICKREMASINGHE -
NANETTE CHRISTINE (nee ILANGAKOON) widow of late ECG (Lyn)
Wickremasinghe, beloved mother of Git and Ravi, mother-in-law
of Una and Yasanthi, grandmother of Ramila, Charith and
Roshana, sister of Hope, late Neil, Anthea, Philip and Glen,
sister-in-law of Quintus and late Lynnette, Ine, Trissette,
Gertrude, late Lota (Evelyn) and Lou, passed away on 05th
August 2006. The funeral and thanksgiving service were held in
Australia on 14th August 2006. DN Sep 7 2006
11
Dr Ranmohan Githendra Wickremasinghe + Una (UK)
12
Roshana Wickremasinghe
11
Ravindra Wickremasinghe + Yasanthi (family Name
Not Known) (Australia)
12
Ramila Wickremasinghe
12
Charith Wickremasinghe
10
Ronald Neil Ilangakoon + Lynnette de Alwis
11
Sheami Ilangakoon + DEW Perera
12
Karen Shanya Ilangakoon-Perera
12
Sheena Tiyani Ilangakoon-Perera
12
David Janik Ilangakoon-Perera
10
Glencora Anne Illangakoon (died 197?)
10
Philip Ralph Illangakoon + Trisetta
10
Anthea Veronica Illangakoon + Ine
9 (3) Samuel
(Sammy) James Felix Dias Bandaranayaka, 1902-1969,
Agricultural Department + Esther Ramkeesoon
(Trinidad).(3 children)
10 (1) Gwendolyn Esther Dias
Bandaranayaka,(Bishop's College Principal) b 16/12/1929 died
7/2/2004 + Roland
Dias Abeysinghe (Son of Abraham Dias Abeysinghe and Eva
Gooneratne)
11
Yohann Dias
Abeyesinghe + Manjari Wickremasinghe Rajapakse
12
Chandhana Dias
Abeysinghe
12
Hasulie Dias
Abeysinghe
11 Jayanthi Dias
Abeyesinghe + Ranjith Weerasinghe
12
Auchithya Weerasinghe
11
Kavinda Dias
Abeyesinghe + Shyamini Balasuriya
12
Nadhil Dias Abeysinghe
10 (2) Sonia
Dias Bandaranayaka b12/1/1932+ Dr. Digby William Hall
(UK)
11
William Gamini Hall
11
Mary Hall
11
James Hall
11
Emma Hal
10 (3) Yasmine
Dias Bandaranayaka, b:22/12/1935, University professor
Pacific (Fiji). + Dr. Brendon Goneratne
(Australia)
11
Channa Brendon Gooneratne
11
Esther Devika Gooneratne
10
son (deceased a few minutes after birth at Bandarawela)
9 (4) Florence Rita
Dias Bandaranayaka,b15/7/1897-d22/6/1898
8 (3) Rosamund
Dias Bandaranayaka b20/9/1862-d15/12/1944 + John Henry
Illangakoon (Mudaliyar Welgam Korale) (3169),b approx 1850,
M31/8/1881.(8 children)
9 (1) Millicent
Illangakoon + Oswald C Tillekeratne
10
Romi Tillekeratne, d:8/Aug 2007
(see obit below) + C J (Bucky) De
Saram (3126)
11
Mary Christine De Saram + J M G (Gamini) Perera
11
Christopher De Saram (ex University of
Moratuwa)
11 Siromi De Saram (University of Colombo - 2007)
+ Rev Duleep Fernando
12 Ruwan
Yahasith Fernando
12 Avanka Mahikanthi Fernando
https://www.dailynews.lk/2019/01/18/obituaries/174704/obituaries
DE SARAM - MRS. R.M.
(ROMI) nee TILLEKERATNE Daughter of the late O.C.
Tillekeratne and the late Millicent (nee Ilangakoon),
relict of C.J. (Bucky) de Saram, beloved mother of Christine,
Christopher (formerly of the University of Moratuwa),
and Siromi (University of Colombo), mother-in-law of
the late J.M.G. (Gamini) Perera and the Rev.
Duleep Fernando, loving grandmother of Ianthe, Rukshani,
Ruwan and Avanka, expired. Cortege leaves residence No.14,
Deal Place A, Colombo 3, on Wednesday 8th August 2007 at
4.00 p.m. for interment at General Cemetery Kanatte, Borella
(Anglican Section) at 5.00 p.m. DN Tue Aug 7 2007
https://www.dailynews.lk/2018/
DE SARAM - CHRISTOPHER JOHN (CHRIS) DE
SARAM - (Formerly University
of Moratuwa). Son of the late Romi and C.J. (Bucky) de
Saram, beloved brother of Christine and Siromi,
brother-in-law of the late John (Gamini) Perera and Rev.
Duleep Fernando, much loved uncle of Ianthe, Rukshani,
Ruwan and Minoli, Avanka and granduncle of Savistha and
Shanilka, expired. Cortege leaves residence 14,
Deal Place A, Colombo 03 on
Thursday 2nd August 2018 at 3 p.m. and cremation at 4 p.m. at
the New Crematorium, General Cemetery Kanatte, Borella.085778
9 (2) J Roland William
Ilangakoon (25th Attorney
General appointed in 1936),(3169)+Annette Lena Dias
Bandaranayaka 1894-1982(d of Felix Reginold DB)
10
Hope Esther Ilangakoon + Quintus Tennekoon
11
Nirmalie Serena Tennekoon (died 198?)
11
Deepthi Christine Tennekoon + Palitha Senanayake
10
Nannette Christine Ilangakoon, d:Aug 5 2006 in
Australia + Lyn (ECG)
Wickremasinghe (3103), was the GM of Bank of Ceylon in the
seventies, is a second cousin of Esmund Wickremasinghe,
father of Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP)
http://www.dailynews.lk/2001/pix/PrintPage.asp?REF=/2006/09/07/main_Obituaries.asp
WICKREMASINGHE -
NANETTE CHRISTINE (nee ILANGAKOON) widow of late ECG (Lyn)
Wickremasinghe, beloved mother of Git and Ravi, mother-in-law
of Una and Yasanthi, grandmother of Ramila, Charith and
Roshana, sister of Hope, late Neil, Anthea, Philip and Glen,
sister-in-law of Quintus and late Lynnette, Ine, Trissette,
Gertrude, late Lota (Evelyn) and Lou, passed away on 05th
August 2006. The funeral and thanksgiving service were held in
Australia on 14th August 2006. DN Sep 7 2006
11
Dr Ranmohan Githendra Wickremasinghe + Una (UK)
12
Roshana Wickremasinghe
11
Ravindra Wickremasinghe + Yasanthi (family Name
Not Known) (Australia)
12
Ramila Wickremasinghe
12
Charith Wickremasinghe
10
Ronald Neil Ilangakoon + Lynnette de Alwis
11
Sheami Ilangakoon + DEW Perera
12
Karen Shanya Ilangakoon-Perera
12
Sheena Tiyani Ilangakoon-Perera
12
David Janik Ilangakoon-Perera
10
Glencora Anne Illangakoon (died 197?)
10
Philip Ralph Illangakoon + Trisetta
10
Anthea Veronica Illangakoon + Ine
9 (3) Don
Juan Samuel (Mike) Illangakoon + Florence Elapata
10
Lyn Illangakoon (ex-Warden STC) + Pathma Elikewela
11
Anoma Illangakoon + Indra Obeyesekere
11
Cyraine Illangakoon + Pertu Laakso
11
Michael Illangakoon + Shivani Wanniarachchi
12
Deshan Ilangakoon
12
Yasara Ilangakoon
10
Merril Ilangakoon + Gertrude
11
Gihan Ilangakoon
9 (4) Carl
Sepala Ilangakoon (Planters Association) STC (1923-2009) +
Sunethra Senevratne
10
Yevindra Ilangakoon + Ymara Dharmaratne
11
Yenushka Ilangakoon
11
Yovan Ilangakoon
10
Riyanjani Ilangakoon+Dhamitha Perera
11
Shamitha Perera
11
Preshith Perera
11
Rishan Perera
9 (5) Blanche
Illangakoon
9 (6) Hilda
Illangakoon
9 (7) Opatissa
Illangakoon + Yolande Obeyesekere
9 (8) S. William
Illangakoon (chin) Mudaliyar + Lillian Obeyesekere
10
Surangani Illangakoon
10
Panini Illangakoon b26/11/1919 MP for Weligama (m1)+ Effi Samarakkody (3118)
11
Pani Illangakoon (2)
10 Panini Ilangakoon (MP forWeligama)(m2) + (2) Lily Goonasekere
11 Dr Gamini Ilangakoon + Deepthi
12
Sanka Ilangakoon
12
Sulakna Ilangakoon
10
Mahnil Lilette Illangakoon + Roland Hugh Dias Abeysinghe
11
Ayunli Dias Abeysinghe
11
Jayanthi Dias Abeysinghe
8 (4) Amy
Dias Badaranayaka (29/9/1865-3/11/1944) + Walter Dias
Bandaranayaka (Gate Mudliyar), m:8/9/1892 (3 children)
9
[21] Amy Estelle Dias Bandaranayaka,b10/8/1893
(M17/6/1914) + [22] James Peter
Obeyesekere II, Maha Mudaliyar (3051)1879-1968
10
James Peter Obeyesekere III (Late MP Attanagalla,
Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and Senator 1960-65,
Royal College, Cambridge. Qualified as a pilot, Batadola Walauwwe Nittambuwa, Royal College,
Colombo 7, d:23
Oct 2007 + Sivagami Dassanaike (Siva
Obeyesekere-Minister of Health 1970) Founder of Laksala
OBEYESEKERE - DESHAMANYA JAMES PETER (Late
MP Attanagalla, Deputy Minister of Health and Finance and
Senator), Only son of late Sir James Peter Obeyesekere Maha
Mudaliyar and Lady Amy Estelle Obeyesekere, dearly loved
husband of Siva, father of Peter and Chantal, father-in-law of
Dijen de Saram, grandfather of Dhevan and Chiara. Remains will
lie at Batadola Walauwe, Nittambuwa from 12.00 noon on
Wednesday 24th to 12.00 noon on Thursday 25th October and in
Colombo from 2.00 p.m. on Thursday 25th to Saturday 27th
October. Cortege leaves "Maligawa", 19, Rajakeeya Mawatha,
Colombo 07 at 1.00 p.m. Saturday 27th. Cremation at
General Cemetery Kanatte at 2.00 p.m. DN Wed Oct 24 2007
11 James Peter Obeyesekere IV Jr.
12
C H Obeyesekere b:9 May 2005
11 Chantal Obeyesekere + Dijen de Saram (3126)
12
Devan de Saram
12
Chiara de Saram
9
Evelyn Muriel Dias Bandaranayaka b4/7/1904+ George R de
Silva (MP)(Barrister)(M21/7/1927)
9
Stephen Walter Dias Bandaranayaka b11/8/1895+ Ethel Dias
Abeysinghe (Ladies College) (d of Nicholas Dias
Abeysinghe of Galle) M24/10/1918 (3 children)
10 (1)
Ethel Dias Bandaranayaka b 24/11/1923 (died the same day)
10 (2)
Stephene Charmion Dias Bandaranayaka b 28/2/1925-d9/9/1926
10 (3)
Crystal Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka b7/10/1927+(M1) Leonard Dias
Bandaranayaka(Son of Harry Peter DB)
11 Rev Suresh Dias Bandaranayaka (Anglican Pastor) +
Daphne Hope Ratnaike
11 Roshanara Dias Bandaranayaka + Sunil Bandaranayaka
(Son of Kingsley de Saa Bandaranayaka and Trixie Seneviratne)
12 Rosunthi Bandaranayake
10 (3)
Crystal Etinne Dias Bandaranayaka b7/10/1927 +(m2) Hugh F
Rupasinghe
11
Harsha Rupasingha
[Ref:
20th Centuary Impression by Arnold Wright
P525]
7 (3) Harriet
Dias Bandaranaike + Samaradiwakera
7 (4) Conrad
Peter Dias Bandaranaike (Mohandiram) b approx 1830,M approx
1860+Johanna Petronela de Livera (daughter of Marappuli
appuhamilage Don Simon de Livera.)(5
children)(Annie,Matilda,Peter Abraham,Martha and James.)
8 (1)
Annie Cornelia Dias Bandaranaike,b29/9/1861-18/4/1939,+ John
Davd Perera,Gate Mudaliyar and Mudaliyar,Siyane Korale
East,M22/8/1870
8 (2)
Matilda Magdalena Dias Bandaranaike,b8/9/1863-d6/5/1899,+
Edwin Valentine Dias Bandaranaike,Gate Mudaliyar,M 1/5/1885.
8 (3)
Peter Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka (Mohandiram),b10/11/1864-d11/1/1915 +Venitia Dias
Bandaranaike (d of CP Dias Bandaranayaka Maha Mudaliyar.M1889
9 Venetia Rowena Dias
Bandaranayaka b 28/5/1890
9 Favorita Mildred Dias Bandaranayaka(b 16/7/1891)
+John Henry Perera (b approx 1880)(Proctor)M 16/2/1911 (Kuruwe
Walauwa)(cousin of Evelyn DB)
10 Clarence Perera
10
Terrance Perera+Lorinda Samarakkody(d2005)
11 Mahinda Perera (Engineer) (b1949-d2015)(migrated to
Australia in 1990)+Nirmalee Gooneratne
12 Milinda Perera+Ayesha Perera
13
Malaika
Perera
12 Lakshini Perera
12 Emara Perera +Mishra Ramchander
13 Eloise Margret Ramchander
12 Sean Perera.
9 Elsie Dias Bandaranaike + Valentine Nilaperuma Dias Bandaranayaka.
8 (4)
Martha Sisera Dias Bandaranaike,b 20/6/1865-d23/1/1904,+John
Harry Perera,(Son of Maha Mudliyar J Perera.)
8 (5)
James William Dias Bandaranaike,b 12/1/1872,died leaving no
issue.
7 (5)
Johanna Dias Bandaranaike (b approx 1832)+ Seneviratne
7 (6) Elizabeth Dias
Bandaranaike + J M Paulus Pieris Siriwardena (See Pieris
Deraniyagala family tree)
6 (2) Don
William Adrian Dias Bandaranaike b:1776, (Interpreter
to the British when King Sri Wickrema Rajasinghe was captured
in 1815)(Mohandiram of the Governor's Gate)+Johanna Elizebeth
Amarasekera
7
Adrian Dias Bandaranaike, b:1800
8
Johanna Dias Bandaranaike, b:1830 + J J de Silva Gravet
(Mohandiram)
9
James Alexander de Silva b:1867
7 Don Johannes
Peter Dias Bandaranayaka
b approx 1820,d25/9/1901+ daughter of Revd Dias of
Hanwella.
8 Cornelia
Dias Bandaranayaka b approx 1840,+ Simon Corea (Mudliyar)
9 Charles
Corea
9 George
Corea
9 Simon
Corea
9 Limeaux
Corea
9 Henry
Corea
9 Adriana Corea
9 Christine
Corea
8 James Solomon Dias Bandaranayaka ,(M1)Miss Silva,
(M2)Miss Amarasekara,and was residing at Walpitamulla near
NaiwalaVeyangoda and had 9 children.
9 Christoffel
Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Agnes
Juline Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Edward
John Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Albert Valentine
Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Eliza
Leonara Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Solomon
Henry Dias Bandaranayake
9 Dagmar
Grace Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Joseph
Edwin Dias Bandaranayaka
9 Regina
Adeline Dias Bandaranayaka
8 Alfred Dias Bandaranayaka,died leaving no issue.
7 Thomas
Dias Bandaranayaka + Miss Herat (no issue)
6 (3)
Lieutenant Suwithan Dias Bandaranaike (Commanding officer of
the Sinhalese Regiment (unmarried)
6 (4) Dona
Johanna Dias Bandaranaike
6 (5)
Dona Florentina Dias Bandaranaike +Don Hendrick de Alwis,Mudaliyar
of Kandy Kachcherie (b approx 1772),M 30/6/1811
7 Sieckbertus Daniel de Alwis,bp 7/8/1814 + Depanchy de
Saram (sister of Leonard de Saram b1814)
8 Helena Eliza de Alwis(b approx 1834)+ Abraham de
Alwis Wijesinghe Siriwardene
9 Jane Rejo de Alwis(b approx 1854)+Thomas Leonard
Seneviratne(3 Children)
10 Edwin Seneviratne(b approx 1885) +Eugine de Saram (3
chidren)b1896-1980
11 Gertrude de Livera b 1931+ Louis Charles de Livera
(3 children)
12 Manjula de Livera b1960(Accountant) +Lakshmi
Arulanandam
13 Rahul de Livera (Engineer)b1994
13 Shruti de Livera
9 Daniel Albert de Alwis b approx 1840-d30/8/1903+Grace
Rosalin Bandaranayaka b 4/10/1876-d21/2/1923
10 (1)
Lilian de Alwis b1895- d 1933+ Stephen Senewiratne
11 Terrance Senewiratne 1926-2007
10 (2)
Henry de Alwis d1907
10 (3)
Leonard de Alwis + Alexandra Dias Bandaranayake
b26/8/1903(M15/8/1923(3 children)(d of Sir Solomon Dias
Bandaranaike)lived at Samudragiri walauwwa
11
Shirlene De Alwis + Earle Jayawardena
12 Amal Jayawardena +
Waruni
11
Lankasa De Alwis (tenor singer) + Joy
Dassenaike (cousins)
12
Ranjith de Alwis
13
Raneesha de Alwis
13
Radeena de Alwis
11
Rukie
(Rukmani) de Alwis b:26 Mar 1926-20/3/2017 +
Percy Eheliyagoda
12 Leo Eheliyagoda + Ramya Wijetunge
13
Rosanth Eheliyagoda
12
Shalimar Eheliyagoda + Uma Kumar Sharma
13
Shanikar Sharma +Migara Alwis- m:2009
13 Aashiana Alwis- June 2011
13
Sandesh Sharma
12 (3) Charmaine Eheliyagoda, Attorney-at-Law, a member of
the National
Police
Commission appointed
by H.E.The President of Sri Lanka +
Lakshman Madurasinghe, m:1979 held at All
Saints Church Hulftsdorp in Aug 1979 + Professor
Lakshman Madurasinghe, born in Galle, STC Prep School
Kollupitiya 1959-1960 (LKG/UKG), STC Mount
Lavinia 1961-72, Attorney at Law, Chartered
Fellow CIPD UK: University of Brighton, Sr.International
Governor AUGP USA and Chairman Medicina Alternativa.
13 Rosanth
Lakshan
Madurasinghe, a graduate
of the University of London (England). + Nishani
Fernando of Wennappuwa on July 7 2007;
14
Romaan Madurasinghe
12 (4) Lankani
Eheliyagoda
12 (5) Devika
Eheliyagoda
see weblog at https://madure.net/
6 (6) Dona
Justina Dias Bandaranaike
6
Louisa Dias Bandaranaike b:30/1/1785 + Johannes
de Livera, (son of Marappuli
Appuhamilage Hendrick de Livera), m:21-Jun-1812 (3109)
7
Solomon de Livera, b:24/9/1814
5 (10)
Don Alexander Dias Bandaranayaka, bp:6 Sep 1751+Anganita
Pieris (d of Welhelmus PierisSamarawira
Siriwardene,Mohandiram of the Guard.)(2 children)
6 (1) Elizebeth
Dias Bandaranaike,(b approx 1785) m:1st Nov
1807, (d/o Don Alexander Dias Bandaranaike), (Grand
daughter of Don Francisco Dias Bandaranaike b:1720 Mudaliyar),
(Francisco Bandaranaike is the great great great grand father
of SWRD Bandaranaike) + Marappulige Don Simon de Livera Samaranayake
Senewiratne
Mudaliyar, bp: 4th May 1779, Mudaliyar Hewagam
Korale, 3rd Attapattu Mudliyar,
(Elizebeth de Livera
nee Bandaranaike may have died around 1808 or 1809,after
the birth of Cornelius de Livera bp1808. As a result Simon de
Livera has a 2hd marriage on 29/11/1809.)
By
the year 1808,Balthasar de Livera had his 2hd marriage to Ana
Dias Bandaranaike.Ana de Livera nee Bandaranaike adopts,Simon
de Livera's son Cornelius de Livera.By Ana de Livera nee
Bandaranaike,will dated 3/5/1828 she gives lot of property to
Cornelius de Livera.)
7 [8] Charlotte Fredricka de Livera + [7]
Franciscus
de Livera, Mudliyar Alukuru Korale
8 Dr Edwin Simon Ernest de Livera b:25-May-1849,
see pic below (Member of British Medical Association),
Educated at Colombo Acadamy. In 1870 received Jijeebhoy
scholarship Calcutta. In 1873 went to Glasgow and obtained
MBCM in 1877.And in 1894 he was senior medical officer in
EP, Ceylon. 1900 Provincial Surgeon of NW province and
Sabaragamuwa. Resided in Kandy. Colonial Surgeon + Alexandra
Eliza Speldewine (Maartensz)
from Batticaloa. b15/7/1863.(Eliza Maartinsz in her
1st marriage with Francis Speldewine
(b31/3/1849-d30/5/1887) had by him 6 children.)
8 Walter de Livera, b:1863, (Royal College,
Colombo), Police Magistrate & Commissioner of Requests at
Chilaw and Marawila in 1898. Occupied similar positions since
1902 at Gampola and Nawalapitiya. Served as Private
Secretary,first to Sir Harry Dias Bandaranaike and later to
Sir Archibald Cambell Laurie. Walter de Livera’s home was in
Veyangoda, and he was fond of Horticulture. Member of the
Orient Club and Turf Club and also of the Ceylon Agricultural
Society. + Elizabeth Mary
Dias Bandaranaike b:15/5/1867,
m:12/4/1898 (Sister of Sir Soloman Dias Bandaranaike(Maha
Mudaliyar) (1001)
9 Manique de Livera, b:1892
9 "Princess" de Livera (Joy),
b:1900 + Reginold Felix
Dias Bandaranaike, (Bunny) b:1891, d:1951, m:1921
(1001)RFDB was a lawyer and a Judge.Was educated at Royal and
Cambridge.
10 Reginold Walter Michael Dias
Bandaranaike (Barrister QC) b3/3/ 1921-d17/11/2009
+ Norah Hunter Crabb
(Reginold Walter DB
was educated at Royal College and at Cambridge.While at
Cambridge,during the world war 2,served in the home
guard.After graduating,he joined the Royal Air Force.While at
the Royal Air Force,he completed his legal studies and was
called to the bar Inner Temple in 1944 and became a
Barrister.Queens Counsel in 2002.Was an author of legal
books.His wife Norah died in an air craft accident in 1980.)
11 Alison Dias Bandaranaike (Musicion)+
Wolfram Kock (Austria)
11 Julia Dias Bandaranaike (QC)+ Stuart
Orford (UK)
12
James Orford
12 Isabelle
Orford
7 Cornelius
de Livera (bp:27/11/1808)(Mudaliyar Pasdum Korale)
+ Isabella
Petronella Dias Bandaranayaka (1001)b1825-d24/2/1894
(Cornelius
de Livera,received from the will of Ana Dias Bandaranaike,wife
of Balthasar de Livera,a Walauwa at Wolfendhal, land at
Hendala and Hanwella.Will date-3/5/1828)(Isabella DB is a
daughter of Don Bastian Franciscus Dias Bandaranayaka)
8 James de
Livera (lawyer)b approx 1850 + Fredricka Dias
Abeyasinghe (Sister of Rev Abraham Dias Abeysinghe)(d of
Abraham Dias Abeysinghe Wijewardene Mudaliyar b1820-Guard
Mudaliyar)
(see Dias Abeysinghe
family tree 3170)
9 (1) Violet
de Livera (adopted Mona)
10
Mona + Manickam Saravanamuttu (High Commissioner Malaysia)
11
Dr Manorani Saravanamuttu,(Sergeon) d:2004 + Lucian de Zoysa.
12
*****Richard de Zoysa (Journalist/Actor),1958-1990 STC Mt
Lavinia (assasinated)
9 (2) Jane
de Livera
9 (3) Ella
de Livera
9 (4)
Albert Dunstan Egbert de Livera (District Engineer Puttalam)b approx 1870+(Married in
Mutwal 10/2/1902)Louisa Alexandra Seneviratne b approx 1882-d
11/9/1964 (d of Alexander de Alwis Seneviratne
b1849-STC,member of legislative council,District Judge and
Louisa Jayatilleke m 1881,Louisa Alexandra his 1st marriage
child )(Albert.D.E de Livera M approx 1900)
10 Albert Rienzi de
Livera, (b
approx 1905)d:1939, Inspector of
Police(Mt Lavinia)died of car accident + Elizebeth Charmion
Dias Bandaranaike 28/1/1909-1987
(1001)(M7/2/1935)(d of Johannes Franciscus Dias
Bandaranayaka.)
11 Vivina de Livera (b approx 1936)+
Derek Walter Samarasinghe, b:1927 (Diretor John Keels)
12
Dinesh Samarasinghe
12
Suren Samarasinghe + Ruha Ratwatte b1960
13 Dharini
Samarasinghe ( b1990)
13 Varunika
Samarasinghe (
b1992)
12
Dr Ravindra Samarasinghe*** (1963-2007, see below for
appreciation) Leopard Conservationist Died in a car
accident.
10 Eustace de Livera
b approx 1907-d1935 approx
10
Louisa Inyce de
Livera b approx 1910 +Fritz Lorenz Drieberg b19/11/1907
(m 25/4/1929)
10 baby boy still born.
10 Louisa Inyce de
Livera had Oosha from (Thamyrajah)Sabdharatnajyoti
Saravanamuttu.1898-1957 (cricketer,military officer,criminal
lawyer,politician)
11 Oosha de
Livera b1931-d 24/6/2019 in Bombay (ballet
dancer)(studied at Bishops College Colombo) + (M1)Sepala
Goonetilleke M1949.Kala Suri Award 2005.
12
Rohan Goonetilleke
13 boy
13 girl
11 Oosha
de Livera + (M2) Dr Bhaskaran Saravanamuttu M1956
12
Kumudini Saravanamuttu
b1957 (Bishops College)(Asst Governor Central Bank SL)
12 Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu b1958 (Centre for
Policy Alternatives)
11 Oosha de Livera + (M3 )S Ganeshan
11 Oosha de Livera + (M4) Dr Bhaskaran Saravanamuttu
11 Oosha de Livera + (b1931-d24/6/2019)(M5) Mohan
Wijesinghe b1934-d24/6/2019
10 Louisa Inyce
de Livera met Lewellyn John Thorne (Jack)around 1941/42
during world war 2. Jack was a Petty officer in the British
air craft carrier HMS Hermes, which was bombed by the Japenese
in Trincomalee on 9/4/1942.Jack survived the disaster.(307
were killed and 70 survived) Louisa had Gillian from Thorne.
11 Jennifer Gillian Thorne b18/11/1942 in
Bombay.(studied at Ladies College Colombo) (She participated
in a beauty pageant and was crowned Miss Ceylon in 1960,but was
eliminated on a technical issue - parents from two
races-Biracial)(Later did modelling,and migrated to UK)
11 Jennifer Gillian Thorne + (M1 around 1962)
Andrew Granville Douglas Gordon b13/8/1942 (Son of Lord Douglas
Claude Alexander Gordon with connections to the Scotish Royal
Family.)
12 Andrew David Gordon
b1/3/1963
13 Carlota Gordon b1994
13 Cosmo Gordon b1996
13
child (name not known)
12 James Bruce Gordon b5/10/1965 + Mary Lou Hartman
11 Jennifer
Gillian Gordon +(M2-after
1969) Philip Brian Barker b11/9/1938
12 Nigel Mark Barker b 29/4/1972 (Photographer)+
Cristen Chin (M1999)
13 Jack Barker b2005
13 Jasmine Barker b2008
12 Mary Anne Barker b14/7/1976- d 4/6/2015 (M2007) +
Samantha Jayasinghe
11 Jennifer Gillian Barker +(M3-2012)Leslie
Cameron (UK) died 6th Sept 2019
10 Louisa
Inyce de Livera met Middleton an officer in the army in Bombay around
1943,and Crystal was born.
11 Crystal Middleton b 13/9/1944- d2005 approx
9 (5) ****Edmund
de Livera, (wrote the St.Thomas’s College, college song
in 1916)(b approx 1870 d approx 1935)(Lawyer,Journalist,Editor
Times of Ceylon)
9 (6)Ronald de
Livera + Nellie (Nellie de Livera president pass
pupils association St Bridgets Convent.1935/1936)
10 James
Ronald V.de Livera (Ronnie), 1934-1980 +
Chandrani Tillekaratne, 1931-2004 (d of Edmund Tillekeratne)
11
[1] Gehan de Livera, Royal,(Planter) + [2] Malkanthi
Samarakkody (d of Solomon Samarakkody & Iole de Livera)
12
[3] Jeevaka de Livera + Myra Fernandes
13 Rehan
de Livera
13 Shanik
de Livera
12
[4] Ronald de Livera + Chantelle Chipman (NZ)
13 Cooper Adrian de Livera
13 Bianca de Livera
11
Nelun de Livera + Edward Perera
11
Nihal Perera
11
Samantha Perera + Rosewarne
11
Shirani de Livera + Ananda Wethasinghe (NZ)
12
Himali Wethasinghe
12
James Wethasinghe + Cherisse
11
James Ranil de Livera, Royal College (Chief Engineer -OSM) +
Anusha Dickman
9 (7) Percy
Walter Fredrick de Livera + Daisy Ione Tillekaratne
10 (1)
Michael de Livera, STC Mount Lavinia (Served in
World War 2 in Singapore)+ Margie Irugalbandara.
11
Mario Kshani de Livera, St. Benedict's College, Kotahena
11
Dinesh de Livera, St. Benedict's College, Kotahena + Priyani
de Zoysa
12
Druvindra de Livera, St. Peter's College, Colombo 4, Sri Lanka
(Ceylon), McKinnon Secondary/University of
Melbourne/Deloitte Aus.
12
Erange de Livera, St. Peter's College, Colombo 4, Sri Lanka
(Ceylon), McKinnon Secondary/University of Melbourne
10 (2) Fred de
Livera (Stc
Mtl)(b approx 1917)+ Ivy Anna Jayaweera
11 Shulangani
de
Livera + Alex Fernando
12 Shirantha
Fernando +Dammi Samarasinghe
13 Shiwantha Fernando
13 Shihanth
Fernando
12 Shehan
Fernando +Kumudu Panditharatna
13 Shehani Fernando
13 Chrishan Fernando
12 Shiromani Anna Fernando +Tyronne Perera
13 Hashini
Perera
13 Jehan
Perera
11
Amal
de Livera +Shanthi Tissera
11 Desmond
Chrishantha de Livera b25/9/1946-d1993(2hd
Lieut in 1972.became major in SL Army)(Chief of Security at
Airport Aviation)(Saved his son and relative from drowning in
the Negambo Sea, but suffered a heart attack and died soon
after.) +
Suwineetha Nanayakkara
12 Marino
Sugandika de Livera
12 Dr
Ruwanaka de Livera + Dr Lakmini Gunarathna (M2018)
12 Mario
Supundika de Livera
11
Margantha
de Livera + Anton Saparamadu
12 Manoj
Saparamadu + Champika Divelgama
12 Anushka Saparamadu +
Prasanjith Wijayatilleke
10 (3) Audrey
de Livera + Vernon Abeysinghe
11 Dharshani Abeysinghe + Dr
Janaka Goonetilleke
12
Dr Prasanna Goonetilleke
12
Ranil Goonetilleke
10 (4) Douglas
Ivan de Livera b1916 d1979 (Lieutenant Commander
Royal Ceylon Navy-Participated in World war 2-Burma
Campaign,ship-MFV185-The retake of Arakan and Rangoon in
1945.)(He was also the commanding officer of the Sri Lanka
Navy’s 1st gun boat the “Parakrama”)(Migrated
to Melbourne Australia in the 1970's) + Carmen Inez Van
Cuylenburg (3109)
11 Daphne
de Livera
11 Jennifer
de
Livera + Dominic Boffa
11 Cheryl
de
Livera
11 Kevin
de
Livera b1962 (Aus)
12 Luke
de
Livera
12 Merryn
de
Livera
11 Christopher
de
Livera
10 (5) Bertie de
Livera.+ Antoinette
11 Roger
de
Livera (Sydney Australia)
10 (6) James
Henry(Jim) de Livera.(24/3/1912-19/10/1985) + Sumana
Obeyesekere (1/1/1916-28/6/2000)(d of Hope Obeyesekere + Edith
Ganegoda)
11 Daisy
de Livera + Quintas Perera
12 Palitha Perera + Deborah
12 Vasanthi Perera + Manoj Fernandez
11 Sita de Livera + Sebastián Wickremasekere
12 Shehan Wickremasekere
11 Ratna
de Livera
11 Juanita
de Livera
11 Rukmani
de Livera + Tilak Wijesinghe
11 Erin de Livera + Maxwell
Fernando
12 Stephani Fernando
12 Shehan
Fernando
10 (7)
Norman de Livera, Served in the Royal Army for 2hd
World War
10 (8)
Yvonne de Livera + Mervyn Metthananda
10 (9) Oswald Christopher
Tillekeratne de Livera (Ossie)+ Doreen Virginia Christine
Fernando
11 Maniraj
de Livera (Mani)(Trinity)(Australia)+ Sonali Tillekeratne
12 Sohan
de Livera
12 Melan
de Livera
9 (8) Flora
de Livera + Thomas Fredrick de Saa Bandaranaike
10 (1) Clive
Bandaranaike + Dottie Samarakkody
11
Sripali Bandaranaike
10 (2) Roy
Bandaranaike + Grace
11
Neil Bandaranaike + Rajini Pieris Deraniyagala
12
Ayendra Bandaranaike
12
Priyanthi Bandaranaike
11
Shirani Bandaranaike
11
Dawn Bandaranaike
11
Nissanka Bandaranaike, d:10/9/10 + Girlie
12
Rasika Bandaranaike
11
Hiran Bandaranaike
10 (3)
Kingsley de Saa Bandaranaike + Trixie Seneviratne (d of
Abraham Isaac Seneviratne and Alice de Saram)
11 Nihal Bandaranaike + Geraldine Nicholas
12 Dushyanthi Bandaranaike
11 Marcel Bandaranaike +
12 Oshani Bandaranaike
12
Ovin Bandaranaike
11 Sunil Bandaranaike + Roshanara Bandaranaike (d of
Leanard Bandaranaike and Ettine Bandaranaike.)
12 Rosunthi Bandaranaike
10 (4) Enid
Muriel de Saa Bandaranaike + David George Pieris Deraniyagala
b1868
11 Sumana Pieris b1915 +Meril Amarasekara
11 Mallika Pieris b1931 + JLT Earl Dassenaike
11 Indrani Pieris b1909+ Ronald Doyne Seneviratne
1906-2001
12 Ranjith Seneviratne
12 Manil Seneviratne + Tennekoon
13
Anushia Tennekoon + Devaka Cooray
14 Devin Cooray
14 Janek Cooray
11 Merrick Pieris
11
Chandra Pieris b1921-d2008 + Vaughn de Livera b1915-d2003
12 Gayan de Livera (died unmarried)
12 Yasmin de Livera + Ramesh Abayasekara
13
Jehan Abayasekara
13 Yohan Abayasekara
10 (5) Pearl
Bandaranaike
10 (6)
Beatrice Bandaranaike
10 (7) Queenie
Bandaranaike
9 (9) Godwin
de Livera (1876-1921), Revenue Officer, (Polonnaruwa District). (Thamankaduwa,
Polonnaruwa was the capital from 846AD-1277AD and there
after abandoned,and re-discovered in 1820AD.From 1870
onwards lot of archaeological research and development had
taken place.) Was later promoted to Asst Govt Agent, but died
of pneumonia aged 45 years. He had a good knowledge of
wild elephants in the area(see sportsman diary in internet)
(also refered as Muhandiram in some records in
1908) + Charlotte
Samarakkody (1880-1970),
daughter of Louis Charles de Fonseka Samarakkody Mudaliyar
under Governor's Gate 1883. Mohandiram Alukuru Korale
(3118)
10 (1) Carita
de Livera.died unmarried
10 (2) Zizka
de Livera died 1974 (Approx), unmarried
10 (3) Ivy
de Livera.died 1980(Approx), unmarried
10 (4) Iole
de Livera b approx 1914 (d21/3/1966)+ Solomon
Samarakkody (Lawyer)(1910-1981)
11 (1) Dr
Srikumar Samarakkody (STC Mt Lavinia)(b31/5/1940-d21/12/1987)+
Nanda Jayasinghe (no children)
11 (2)
Srivanka Samarakkody(STC Mt Lavinia) + Chitra Welagedera
12
Lalinda Yohan Samarakkody(Stc Mtl)+Anuradha Sumanapala
12
Dulanga Samarakkody (Stc Mtl)+Oshini Jayasinghe
11 (3) Rajan
Samarakkody(STC Mt Lavinia)b1942 + Irani Alahakoonb1942 m1967
12
Dilukshan Samarakkody + Janaki Perera
13 Dinali Samarakkody
13 Minali Samarakkody
12
Dinesh Niranjan Samarakkody + Kamai Gunerwardena
13 Deelaka Samarakkody
13 Thenuk Samarakkody
12
Shanaka Samarakkody + Shakila Perera
13
Senethi Samarakkody
11 (4) Sriyani
Samarakkody + Gamini Jayaweera d2001
12
Dushantha Jayaweera (Pilot)+ Nimanthi
13
Nimashi Jayaweera
11 (5)
Rohini Samarakkody unmarried
11 (6) [2]
Malkanthi Samarakkody + [1] Gehan de Livera, Royal, (NZ)
12
[3] Jeevaka de Livera +Myra Fernandes
13 Rehan
de
Livera
13 Shanik
de
Livera
12
[4] Ronald de Livera + Chantelle Chipman
13 Cooper
Adrian de Livera
13 Bianca
de Livera
11 (7)
Indrajith Samarakkody (STC Mt Lavinia) + Jayanthi
12
Arinda Samarakkody
12
Navodya Samarakkody
11 (8) Suvendrini
Samarakkody + Nihal Gunatilleke
10 (5) James
Godwin Vaughn de Livera.1915-2003 (STC Mt
Lavinia), (Communication officer civil aviation.Served in
2hd World War in England.)
+ Chandra Pieris
Deraniyagala. (1005)(1921-d2008)
11
Anil Guanendra (Gayan) de Livera (STC Mt Lavinia) died
unmarried(1954-1982)(Civil Aviation Dept)
11
Yasmin de Livera (Bishops College)+ Ramesh Abayasekara
(STC)(Sydney Aus)
12
Jehan Abayasekara + Ishini Jayamaha, Sydney Australia
13 Abayasekara
12
Yohan Abayasekara, Australia
10 (6) Louis
Charles de Livera (Carl) (STC Mt Lavinia) Lawyer
(b6/5/1919-d19/7/1969), had a large legal practice related
to real estate and land matters.Lawyer for 25 years.(Had a law
office in hulftsdorf Colombo and Homagama).Able to sing and
play the piano accordian.(M26/12/1955)
+ Gertrude
Hemawathi Seneviratne (Senior
English Instructor Kelaniya University 1971-1992) b:12/4/1931
(3108)Degree from Peradeniya University.
11
Sunil de Livera (STC Mt Lavnia) Musicion,(piano &drums)
died unmarried (13/9/1956-d 2003)
11
Manjula de Livera (STC Mt Lavinia), b:1960, (Accountant/Deputy Chief Internal
Auditor Urban Development Authority Sri Lanka, 1985-2005),
migrated to Melbourne Australia in 2006 + Lakshmi
Arulanandam (Lawyer), b:1965 from
Batticaloa, md:12/5/1993 (5030)
12
Rahul de Livera
b:1994 Monash University(Aus) Civil Engineer
12
Shruti de Livera
b2001 Rowville Secondary College (Aus)
11
**Lankika Erandathi de Livera, Journalist b:18/2/1964,
d:9/4/2011 (Bishops College)(was able to sing and play the
piano.) (M1990)+ Prasanna Panditharatne (STC/Royal
College)d2009
12
Kusan Panditharatne, b:1995 (STC Kollupitiya& Mt Lavinia)
11
2hd spouse of Lankika Erandathi de Livera + Srikumar
(Accountant, STC Mt Lavinia)(M2003)
6 (2)
Don Bastian Franciscus Dias Bandaranayake b approx 1786 ,M(1)+
Miss Dassenaike ,M(2) Perera Ekanayake (7
Children)(Johanna,Isabella,John,William,Engalitina,Charles and
Levergina.)
7 (1)
Johanna Dias Bandaranayaka +Don Louis Dassanayake
7 (2)
Isabella Petronella Dias Bandaranayake b1825-d24/2/1894 +Cornelius de Livera,Mudliyar
Hewagam Korale (Son of Simon de Livera)
8 James de
Livera + Fredricka Dias Abeysinghe (12 children)
9 Godwin
de Livera (6 children)+Charlotte Samarakkody (6 children)
10 Louis
Charles de Livera 6/5/1919-19/7/1969 (Carl)Proctor +Gertrude
Seneviratne b1931
11 Sunil
de Livera 1956-2003
11 Mr
Manjula de Livera b1960, Accountant + Lakshmi Arulanandam
(M1993)
12 Rahul
de Livera
12 Shruti
de Livera
11 Lankika
de Livera 1964-2011
7 (3)
John Cornelius (Martinus)Dias Bandaranayake b1828-d16/7/1896 +
Cornelia Dias Bandaranayake (d of Don John Dias
Bandaranayake)(6 Children)
8 (1) Ernest
Cornelius Dias Bandaranayaka,b29th August,head cleark
Galle Kachcherie,+ Agnes Tillekeratne (sister of C
Tillekeratne.)had 9 children.
9 (1)
Dionysious Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka,b 10/6/1893. + Johanna
May Perera on 30/10/1919.
10
Abraham Christopher Dias Bandaranayaka,b2/10/1920.
9 (2)
Margaret Clarice Dias Bandaranayaka, b16/10/1894-d27/2/1922 +
Henry Ernest Dias Bandaranayaka,Asst Commissioner of Excise on
18/11/1915.
9 (3) Nellie Dias
Bandaranayake ,b14/8/1896
9 (4)
Violet Erin Dias Bandaranayaka, b25/5/1898 +George on
28/12/1922
9 (5)
Edward Wilfred Dias Bandaranayaka,b29/6/1899 +Zelda Dassenaike
on 22/6/1927.(m)
10 Florence Viola Hope Dias Bandaranayaka, b30/10/1929.
9 (6) Oswald Godwin
Dias Bandaranayaka, b15/10/1900 + Lavana Dias
Bandaranayaka (d of Johannes Franciscus Dias Bandaranayaka)
M15/10/1931.
10 Beatrice Constance Dias Bandaranayaka, b4/8/1932.
10 Lalitha Malkanthi Dias Bandaranayaka ,b9/6/1942
9 (7)
Grace Esther Dias Bandaranayaka, b8/5/1904 -d8/5/1940 + John
Rupert Perera on 26/9/1923. (by 2hd marraige 3 sons & 2
daughters)
9 (8)
Dottie Dias Bandaranayaka.
9 (9)
Daniel Dias Bandaranayaka,School master ,B.A London.
8 (2)
Robert Christoffel Dias Bandaranayaka,b 8/1/1869 -dMay 1941
+Miss Samarasinghe -no issue.
8 (3)
Vincent Clement Dias Bandaranayaka,b16/9/1871 -unmarried.
8 (4)
James Richard Dias Bandaranayake, b16/11/1873 unmarried.
8 (5)
Nellie Matilda Clara Dias Bandaranayaka,b
13/3/1877-d20/9/1923,+Eugine Dassenaike (Proctor)
8 (6)
Caroline Edith Dias Bandaranayaka, b2/10/1879 -unmarried.
7 (4)
William Alexander Dias Bandaranayake +Miss Grace Seneviratne of Malwana.(6
children)
8 (1)
Alexander Solomon William Dias
Bandaranayake,b4/4/1873-d12/11/1921 Muhandiram of Siyane
Korale (unmarried)
8 (2)
Agnes Harriet Dias Bandaranayaka ,b 28/10/1874 + John H.P
Dassenaike of Bellana,Pasdum Korale
8 (3)
Grace Rosalind Dias Bandaranayaka,b4/10/1876-d21/2/1922 +
Daniel Albert de Alwis of Galkissa.b1840-d 30/8/1903
9 Lilian de Alwis b1895- d 1933+ Stephen Senewiratne
10 Terrance Senewiratne 1926-2007
9 Henry De Alwis d1907
9
Leonard
de Alwis (Leo) b approx 1880 + Alexandra Camelia
Bandaranaike b26/8/1903-(M1923)(sister of SWRD), lived
at "Samudragiri" Walauwa in Mount
Lavinia.
10
Shirlene De Alwis + Earle Jayawardena
11 Amal Jayawardena +
Waruni
10
Lankasa De Alwis (tenor singer) + Joy
Dassenaike (cousins)
11
Ranjith de Alwis
12
Raneesha de Alwis
12
Radeena de Alwis
10
Rukie
(Rukmani) de Alwis b:26 Mar 1926-20/3/2017 +
Percy Eheliyagoda
11 Leo Eheliyagoda + Ramya Wijetunge
12 Rosanth Eheliyagoda
11
Shalimar Eheliyagoda + Uma Kumar Sharma
12
Shanikar Sharma +Migara Alwis- m:2009
12 Aashiana Alwis- June 2011
12
Sandesh Sharma
11 (3) Charmaine
Eheliyagoda, Attorney-at-Law, a member of
the National
Police
Commission appointed
by H.E.The President of Sri Lanka +
Lakshman Madurasinghe, m:1979 held at All
Saints Church Hulftsdorp in Aug 1979 + Professor
Lakshman Madurasinghe, born in Galle, STC Prep School
Kollupitiya 1959-1960 (LKG/UKG), STC Mount
Lavinia 1961-72, Attorney at Law, Chartered
Fellow CIPD UK: University of Brighton, Sr.International
Governor AUGP USA and Chairman Medicina Alternativa.
12 Rosanth
Lakshan
Madurasinghe, a graduate
of the University of London (England). + Nishani
Fernando of Wennappuwa on July 7 2007;
13
Romaan Madurasinghe
11 (4) Lankani
Eheliyagoda
11 (5) Devika
Eheliyagoda
see weblog at https://madure.net/
8 (4)
George Abraham Dias Bandaranayaka ,b1/11/1877-d19/11/1922-
Unmarried.Mudliyar Hewagam Korale.
8 (5)
Harry Peter Dias Bandaranayaka,b15/2/1881 + Rene May Dassenaike (d of Edmund
Dassenaike.)(m1916)
9 Edmund
Henry Alexander Dias Bandaranayaka,b11/10/1917 -d1/8/2007 ,+Delicia Goonetilleke
10 Arun
Dias Bandaranayaka (TV Presenter,Sports Commentator) +Julian
de Saram.
9 Ruby Grace Dias Bandaranayaka,b 29/1/1919- d
18/12/2012,+Danton Gamunu Obeyesekere,Barrister at Law,Trinity
College Cambridge,Assesor Income tax dept (m19/5/1938)
10
Arjuna Obeyesekere
10
Shireen Obeyesekere +Priya Amarasinghe
11 Shehan Amarasinghe
11 Rajive Amarasinghe
10
Indra Obeyesekere + Anoma Illangakoon
11 Gemunu Obeyesekere
10
Ajith Obeyesekere +Shamala Dassenaike
9 Arthur Leonard Dias
Bandaranayaka,b 13/1/1922-d20/4/2002
+ Etienne Dias
Bandaranayaka, d:14 Feb 2004 (grand daughter of Walter Dias
Bandaranayaka)
10 Rev
Suresh Dias Bandaranayaka (Anglican Pastor) + Daphne Hope
Ratnaike.
10 Rosanara
Dias Bandaranayaka b1953 + Sunil Dias Bandaranayaka (Son
of Kingsley de Saa Bandaranaike and Trixie Seneviratne)
11 Rosunthi
Dias Bandaranayaka
8 (6) Reginald
Edward Dias Bandaranayaka b1886-d 31/12/1941 +
(M2/1/1931)Vimala Rambukpotha (d of Rambukpotha Rate
Mahatmaya.)
9 Kavantissa Dias Bandaranayaka
7 (5) Engaltina Dias
Bandaranayake +Don Simon Samaradiwakara of Pelahela.
7 (6) Charles Dias
Bandaranayake d18/2/1902 + Nancy Dias Bandaranayaka( d
of Abraham Edward Dias Bandaranayake)m 8/12/1880 (7
children)
8 (1) Nancy Dagmar
Dias Bandaranayaka,b19/11/1881 +William Clement Dias
Bandaranayaka on 7/7/1906.
8 (2)
Charles Edward Dunstan Dias Bandaranayaka,b 21/1/1883 Post
Master GPO (unmarried)
8 (3)
Reginald Felton Dias Bandaranayaka,b1/7/1884,Planter Puswelbokke Estate,Bentota+Letitia
Tillekeratne (Sister of Edmund Tillekeratne of Bentota)(4
children)
9 (1)
Reginald Felton Dias Bandaranayaka,b 27/10/1911-d7/6/1924
9 (2) Sydney Charles
Dias Bandaranayaka,b 9/11/1914
9 (3)
Leita Ione Dias Bandaranayaka,b28/5/1917-d 12/8/2011,+Clarence
Perera,Excise Inspector.(M8/7/1943)
10 Capt Nihal Perera
10
Chrisantha Perera
10 Capt Edward Perera
9 (4)
Needra Dias Bandaranayaka,b 10/4/1920-d1/8/2016 + Douglas
Samarakkody
10 Dudley Samarakkody
10
Chrisantha Samarakkody
10 Niranjani Samarakkody + Chrisantha Obeyesekere
8 (4)
Roland L Bandaranayaka,b21/1/1886, Muhandiram Siyane Korale,(died approx 1950)
unmarried.(He wrote a Bandaranayake Geneology book around
1948)
8 (5)
Stella Bandaranayaka ,b20/6/1887
8 (6)
Edgar Bandaranayaka,b 14/5/1890,B.A Cantab,Secretary,to judge
of Supreme Court.
8 (7)Violet
Melasina Dias Bandaranayaka,b3/8/1891-d7/2/1913 Unmarried.
7 (7)
Levergina Dias Bandaranayake (unmarried)
4 2nd spouse of Don
Francisco Dias Wijetunga Bandaranayaka, b:1720
Mudaliyar Hewagam Korale + Dona Catherine Thilakaratne
Abeysiriwardena (daughter of Don Simon Tillekeratne
Abeysiriwardena, Mudaliyar of Kandaboda Pattuwa, Matara)
from Galkissa
Translation of a sinhala paragraph
from page 32 in Paul Pieris's book goes as follows:-
"Dona Catharina from
Galkissa, was the 2nd wife of Don Fransiscus Dias
Bandaranayaka. They had a daughter named Dona
Corneliya. baptised on 3/12/1775, Don Davith was
the son of Liendran de Saram Karunaratne and Johanna
Maria Perera. On 24th October 1790 Dona Corneliya
married Davith de Saram Karunaratne. On 12th November
1790 Dona Corneliya had died of an illness."
5 (11) Dona Corneliya
Bandaranayaka, b:1775, bp:3 Dec 1775, d:12 Nov 1790
after suffering an illness + Davith de Saram
Karunaratne
b1771-d1792,M24/10/1790(s/o Liendran de Saram Karunaratne and Johanna
Maria Perera), m:24 Oct 1790 (3126)(Cornelia is a daughter of
Francisco Dias Wijetunga Bandaranayaka,b1720)
Also noted:
a) Charles
Fredrick Bandaranaike-alive 1862,Mudaliyar Matara.
b) Carolis
Andrias Bandaranaike
c) 1.Wilfred
Dias Bandaranaike d1975 (Kirikongahena Estate Gampaha)+Zelda
2. Hope Dias Bandaranaike (d 3/9/2015.)
d) Catherine
Ceciliya Dias Bandaranaike 2nd marriage to Dionysius Andreas
Tennekoon Appuhamy on 8/7/1852
e) Charles
Fredrick de Saa Bandaranaike Mohandiram Md Dona Maria
Florentina Tennekoon Hamine
f) Cornelia
Dias Bandaranayaka + Carolis Seneviratne Mudaliyar (m approx
1750)
References-Sinhalese families by PE
Pieris (published 1911)
Internet
Chieftains
of Ceylon-1936
20th Centuary impressions of Ceylon by Arnold
Wright.published 1907
"Relative
Merits" by Yasmine Gooneratne-published 1986
Data updated and submitted by
Manjula De Livera
References-1-Sinhalese families by
PE Peiris (published 1911)
2-
Internet
3-Chieftains
of Ceylon.-1936
4-
20th Centuary impressions of Ceylon by Arnold
Wright.-published 1907
5-Relative
Merits
by Yasmine Gooneratne published 1986
6- Geneolgy of Dias Bandaranayaka by Roland L Dias
Bandaranayaka Published approx 1948.
Mr Manjula de Livera
Email-manjulafamily@yahoo.com.au
Sept 24th ,2019
References-Sinhalese families
by PE Pieris (published 1911)
Internet
Chieftains
of Ceylon
20th Centuary impressions of Ceylon by Arnold
Wright.
"Relative
Merits" by Yasmine Gooneratne
Data updated and submitted by
Manjula De Livera
References-Sinhalese families
by PE Peiris (published 1911)
Internet
Chieftains
of Ceylon.
20th Centuary impressions of Ceylon by Arnold
Wright.
Relative
Merits by Yasmine Gooneratne
Manjula de
Livera.
Email-manjulafamily@yahoo.com.au
Mar24 2011
Kandyan
Convention
The Kandyan convention was signed with the British on
2hd March 1815. Don Solomon Dias Bandaranaike Mudaliyar,
Adrian Jayawardena Tombi Mdaliyar, Abraham de Saram Mudaliyar
were present, with others.
obituary: DN Wed Aug
8 2007
DIAS BANDARANAIKE - ALICK Brother of late
Leonard, expired August first. Burial took place on August
2nd. He is survived by his wife Delicia (Dela) and son Arun
and sister Ruby Obeyesekere. Friends and relatives, please
accept this intimation. 49, Kelanimulla, Angoda
Obituary: DN Aug 7 2007
DE SARAM - ROMI (MRS
R.M.) nee Tillekeratne Daughter of
the late O.C. Tillekeratne and the late Millicent
(nee Ilangakoon), relict of C.J. (Bucky) de Saram,
beloved mother of Christine, Christopher (formerly of
the University of Moratuwa), and Siromi (University of
Colombo), mother-in-law of the late J.M.G. (Gamini) Perera and
the Rev. Duleep Fernando, loving grandmother of Ianthe,
Rukshani, Ruwan and Avanka, expired. Cortege leaves residence
No.14, Deal Place A, Colombo 3, on Wednesday 8th August
2007 at 4.00 p.m. for interment at General Cemetery Kanatte,
Borella (Anglican section) at 5.00 p.m.
Obit: Fri Sep 21 2007
DIAS BANDARANAYAKE - MERLYN Beloved wife of late Edward
Reginald, loving mother of Sarath (Seylan Bank),
Manohari (U.K), mother-in-law of Nirmala, Leonard, grandmother
of Shihara, Dilup, passed away. Funeral at 4.30 p.m. on
Saturday 22nd Sep. 2007 at St. Judes Church Cemetery,
Indigolla. 74/06/E, Indigolla, Gampaha.
The
Bandaranaikes from the House of Nilaperumal
by James
T.Rutnam with Additional Notes - 18 July 2002
SWRD Bandaranaike
& Sirimavo Ratwatte-Bandaranaike,
Chandrika Dias
Bandaranaike-Kumaratunga,
Sunethra Dias
Bandaranaike,
Anura
Family
Anura &
Chandrika
Chandrika
Sirimavo
Sir Solomon Felix Dias B
CBK with kids
CBK with Presidents
George W Bush Snr & Bill
Clinton,
CBK with Chinese
PM,
CBK
with Mahinda
CBK
with Indian PM
Vajpayee,
Sri
Lanka Cabinet Cabinet 2002
CBK & Vijaya
Statue of SWRD at Galle
Gace
CBK
at SAARC 2004
Anura as
Speaker of the House
The Kandyan convention was signed with the
British on 2hd March 1815.
Don Solomon Dias Bandaranaike
Mudaliyar, Adrian Jayawardena Tombi Mdaliyar,
Abraham de Saram Mudaliyar
were present, with others.
Anura Dias
Bandaranaike 1949-2008
Wedding
Pictures of Yasodhara Kumaratunge in the UK - June 2007
Rohan
de Saram (Cello)
A genealogical research paper
authored by James Thevathasan Rutnam (1905-1988) on the
origins of Bandaranaike clan in the colonial Ceylon. James
Rutnam’s paper originally appeared in the Colombo Tribune
weekly of July 19, 1957. When the paper appeared in print,
SWRD Bandaranaike (1899-1959) was the prime minister of
Ceylon.
Our former prime minister's
(S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike's, 1956-58) direct male ancestor, of
whose connection some members of his family used to take pride
(see Twentieth Century Impressions of Ceylon edited by Arnold
Wright, (1907) p. 525) was Nilaperumal
aka Kalukapuge,
a Tamil from south India who arrived in Ceylon in the late
fifteenth or early sixteenth century. He was described as a `high priest' of a temple in Ceylon. He was
the first Kapurala in his family of the Nawagomuwe dewale,
with the fortunes of which the Bandaranayakes were long
associated. Kalukapuge was a name which the family
used to affect in the past. It is the Sinhalese version of Nilaperumalage,
the ge name of the Bandaranayakes.
Don Francisco (Franciscus?)
Dias Wijetunga Bandaranayake, Mudaliyar of the
Hewagam korale, who was born about 1720, was a direct
descendant in the male line of Nilaperumal. He was one of
those who supplanted the `original Mudaliyars,'' when the
latter `fled to Kandy' in 1760 to join the Sinhalese in the
struggle between the Dutch and the Kandyan King. The reward
for this defection was the office of Mudaliyar of the four
Pattus.
Francisco first married Dona Maria Perera.
They had six sons and four daughters. Their fourth son was Coenrad
Pieter Dias Bandaranayake Snr, Maha Mudaliyar, who was
the grandfather of another Maha Mudaliyar of the same name
(except for Pieter being spelled Peter), who served under the
British. Francisco's fifth son was Daniel Bandaranayake,
Mohandiram of Siyane korale. He was baptised on February 16,
1748 and married on January 13, 1773. He was the father of Don
Solomon Dias Bandaranayake, Mudaliyar of Siyane Korale.
Don Solomon married a grand-daughter of Susanna
Scharff, who died on June 15, 1781 and was buried in the
Dutch (formerly Portuguese) church in the Fort at the site of
the present Gordon Gardens, but whose tombstone now lies in
the Wolfendhal Dutch Reformed Church, Colombo. The coat of
arms of the Scharff family is engraved on this tombstone, the
distinguishing mark of which is a `right arm holding a sabre.'
This is part of the heraldic arms of the Bandaranayakes.
Susanna Scharff was a daughter of a lieutenant, Jan
Christoffel Scharff, who served under the Dutch East
India Company.
The names of the Scharff family are
given in the journal of the Dutch Burgher Union, Volume VIII,
(p. 6.). J.C. Scharff hailed from Sangerhausen, Upper
Saxony, Thuringia, in Germany. He married, at Colombo on March
21, 1734, a lady by the name of Elizabeth de Saram.
Susanna was baptised at Colombo on December 1743 8, and
married, in Colombo on November 4, 1759, the Reverend
Henricus Philipsz (1733-1790), a Sinhalese Christian
minister of the Dutch Reformed Church in Ceylon. An account of
this minister appears in De Bruyn's History Of The Reformed
Church In The Dutch East Indies, written in Dutch. He died on
May 19, 1790. His tombstone now lies in the Wolfendhal Dutch
Reformed church, but not beside his wife Susanna 's tombstone,
by whom, evidently, it was originally erected at the church in
Fort, Colombo.
Rev. H. Philipsz, who had his education in Holland, was a learned
and outstanding Christian scholar. He was a son of a Maha
Mudaliyar under the Dutch, and a grandson of a schoolmaster of
Cotta by the name of D. Philippe. Rev. Philipsz's brother
Abraham Philipsz too was a Maha Mudaliyar under the
Dutch. It was Abraham's son Johannes Gottfried Philipsz,
one of Chief Justice Sir Alexander Johnston's proteges and
interpreters, who was appointed the first Sinhalese member of
the first legislative council of Ceylon in 1743. He died on
July 1800. I have a long and somewhat obsequious letter
written by Johannes Gottfried Philipsz to Sir Alexander
Johnston whom he addresses as `my lord and protector.' I
discovered it among the collection of the Johnston papers
which I obtained in England in 1954.
It is interesting to note that Philipsz's
colleague, A. Coomaraswamy, a Tamil interpreter under
the British who became the first Tamil member of the same
legislative council, was a son of Arumugapillai, an
immigrant from South India who came to Gurudavil in the Jaffna
peninsula. A. Coomaraswamy was the father of Sir
Muttu Coomaraswamy and of Sellatchi, the mother
of the Ponnambalam brothers, Coomaraswamy, Ramanathan
and Arunachalam.
It has been said that Governor Maitland `feared'
the Mudaliyars. But the word `fear' in this context, has
apparently been used in a special sense. For the evidence of
contemporary records shows that there was no class of people
in Ceylon so addicted to fawning, flattering and
sycophantising (sic) in its relationship with its masters as
that of the Mudaliyars. It must of course be borne in mind
that the times in which they lived were different from ours.
There was no middle class. There were the exploiters and the
exploited, the foreign masters and their native subjects, the
rulers and the oppressed. Into this pattern of political and
economic society entered the Mudaliyar, using all the craft
and cunning, the art and artifice of the adventurer and social
climber, with his stock-in-trade of jealousy-ridden
hypocritical flattery and sneaky ways. Little wonder then that
we find most of the Mudaliyars `professing Christians,'
because no one was qualified to hold office unless he was a
Christian. And little wonder too if the authorities saw
through this hypocrisy, and `feared' the machinations of the
enemy within their gates.
In this connection, in Hugh Cleghron's `minute'
or memorandum on the administration of justice and of revenue
in Ceylon under the Dutch government (1799) written at a
critical period of our history, at the very time when Dutch
rule had ended and British rule begun, is worthy of note.
Cleghron observed: "If the poverty and indolence of the
natives of this country were to be traced to their true cause,
these would be found to originate in the insecurity of their
little property, which is at the mercy of the Moodeliar,
(sic). That few or no appeals have been made against his
decisions is to me a stronger proof of the dread of his
oppression, than of respect for his justice."
Governor North too has left for posterity his
observations on the Mudaliyars in his letter to Marquis
Wellesley dated October 27, 1798, the original of which is
among the Wellesley manuscript in the additional manuscripts
section of the British museum in London. Governor North
stated, "the Maha Moodliar is always resident near the person
of the governor. He never sits down in my presence, nor
appears before me in shoes, but is in fact the grand vizier of
Ceylon. Every order I give him is immediately executed, and
whatever takes place on the island is communicated by him to
me. The only pecuniary reward which he and the inferior
Moodliars look to from the government are small
`accomodessans.' Their great object is to gain marks of
distinction, such as sabres, gold chains, medals, etc., of
which they are highly vain and by which the Dutch governors
well knew how to secure their attachment." (Journal of the
Ceylon branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, New Series, Volume
3 (1953), p. 143 n. 20).
The above is a faithful contemporary description
of things as they were. Although these medal-collecting
Mudaliyars went without shoes and bowed times without number
before their governors, the Mudaliyars too in turn exacted,
without any compunction or human consideration whatsoever, a
cringing servility from the inarticulate masses of the people,
between whom and the rulers they placed themselves as
permanent barriers. Indeed they would seem to have donned
jackboots when they went out and trampled on the rights of the
dumb masses.
The people were forced to approach these recently
exalted brown slave-drivers, using the most self-degrading and
abject terms of address. A relic of this barbarism can still
be detected in certain households, happily fast disappearing,
the members of which delude themselves into believing that
they had sprung from a highborn, low-country Sinhalese
aristocracy which we now know was neither high-born nor
Sinhalese.
Some of these misguided souls still insist on
being addressed as "hamu" by their servants. Handsomely are
these servants paid for this performance. Unfortunately the
nouveaux riche and members of other rival social groups and
castes (which the earlier hamus despised) too appear to have
entered into this competitive trade of self-laudatory
hamu--making, with disastrous results to all contestants.
Hence the slow disappearance of the hamu in the present social
set-up.
As in other feudal societies, the Ceylonese
masses of the time had no rights. Generally they were led,
like dumb-driven cattle. When the Madrasi Dubashes made
themselves obnoxious during the brief period when the East
India Company administered Ceylon from Madras, the displaced
local mudaliyars seized the opportunity to whip up a feeling
among the people that, after all, the known devil was better
than the unknown.
There were, however, Mudaliyars and Mudaliyars..
The Philipsze's had a tradition of learning inherited
from their humble, nonetheless much esteemed, pedagogic
origins, and a consequential understanding of true human
values. They were also fortified by genuinely religious
Christian convictions, unlike most of their fellows who were
bogus Christians who sold their conscience for messes of
pottage. With these qualities ingrained in their character,
the Philipsze's contributed not a little to raise the tone of
the small coterie of courtiers that danced attendance, albeit
barefoot, round the gubernatorial throne.
It is this tradition of public service, which was
born apparently of the best in east and west and which
distinguished the Philipszes, that has enriched the
blood and lent lustre to the lineage of our prime minister, Solomon West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike.
The Reverend Henricus Philipsz and Susanna
Scharff were the parents of some eight children, the
eldest of whom was also a Christian minister by the name of Reverend
Gerardus Philipsz. There is a reference to him in
Cordiner's Ceylon, Volume 1 page 88. He married Johanna
Adriana, the eleventh child of Petrus van Dort,
son of Cornelius van Dort and his wife Johanna
Paulus. Some of the sketches done by J.L.K. van Dort
were recently published by Lady Hilda Pieris, wife of
Sir Paul E. Pieris.
The sixth child of Susanna Scharff and Rev.
Henricus Philipsz, Johanna Elizabeth Philipsz,
was born in 1772 and married on September 15 1799, Diederich
Wilhelm Spittel, the father of Gerardus Adrian
Spittel, whose son Frederick George Spittel was the
father of our well-known surgeon and author, Richard Lionel Spittel.
Diederich Wilhelm Spittel's father, John Lourens Spittel
also came, like the Scharffs, from Germany, from Weimar in
Saxony.
Another daughter of Susanna Scharff, her third
child, being the name of Cornelia Honrica (Henrietta?)
married firstly at Colombo on the July 27 1789, Adolf
Martin Heyman, an ensign in the Dutch service, a native
of Leuwenstein. A silver tobacco box belonging to this lady,
with the name `Heyman' inscribed on it, was in the possession
of Sir Paul E. Pieris. This lady lost her husband sometime
afterward and married secondly, Christoffel de Saram,
fourth Maha Mudaliyar, the holder of a new office then created
by the British to exalt their interpreter who worked in the
office of the commissioner of revenue. A son of this union was
Johannes Henricus de Saram who at the age of fourteen
was taken by Governor Maitland to England in 1811 to study for
the Christian ministry.
Christoffel de Saram and son Rev Johannes
Henricus de Saram
He was described in a letter written by his
companion Balthazar de Saram, a member of a different
family of Sarams, one attuned by family upbringing to western
ways and habits, "having been from his infancy reared up in
his own family whose only deviation from the manners, language
and costume of the Dutch was his father's native dress." I
have seen this correspondence in the original at the public
record office in London. Cornelia Henrica (Henrietta) de
Saram, nee Philipsz, who died on April 9 1824,
is also commemorated by a tombstone at the Dutch Reformed
church at Wolfendhal.
Before he left England, the young Christian
minister Rev. Johannes Henricus de Saram, married an
European lady, Frances Treherne. The marriage was
solemnized in London in the church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
on June 9, 1820.
It was this young man's sister Cornelia,
a grand-daughter of Susanna Scharff, who married Don
Solomon Dias Bandaranayake, Mudaliyar of Siyane korale.
Change of
spelling
Don Solomon's branch of the family of
Bandaranayakes from now onwards appear to spell its name as
Bandaranaike. Don Solomon lived to a ripe old age. It should
be recorded here that he was a great servant of the British
crown. It was this Solomon Dias Bandaranaike who received a
government grant of one hundred and eighty acres of land. He
was also the recipient of a medal from Governor Brownrigg with
the citation "as a reward for eminent service during the
Kandyan rebellion, AD 1818. Don Solomon's photograph appeared
in volume two of Tennent's Ceylon. He died on September 15,
1859.
Don Solomon's son, Don Christoffel Henricus
Dias Bandaranaike, who was born in 1826, succeeded his
father. He married a Kingswoman, Anna Florentina Philipsz,
daughter of Philipsz Gysbertus Panditaratne and
granddaughter of Johannes Gottfried Philipsz, whose
family had by then adopted for general use the cognomen
Panditaratne. To this couple was born an only son, who later
became famous in the service of successive British governors.
He has recorded an account of his intimate associations with
kings, princes, dukes and governors and men and women
distinguished in various orders of chivalry, in his
autobiography Remembered Yesterdays. But unfortunately his
book does not make us any the wiser about his own family
story.
With remarkable extravagance of language he
styled himself Sir Don Solomon Dias Abeywickrema
Jayatilleke Senewiratna Rajakumaruna Kadukeralu Bandaranaike,
knight commander of the most distinguished order of St.
Michael and St. George. He was born on 22 May 1862 and married
Daisy Eslin Obeyesekere (d/o Christoffel & Lady
Obeyesekere) in April-1898. He passed away on 31
July 1946.
To this Christian Knight of St. George, a scion
of the house of Nilaperumal (aka Kalukapuge) and a
cadet of the families of Phillipsz and Scharff, was born, Solomon
West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike, on Jan 8 1899, who went
on to become the prime minister of Ceylon in 1956, and who
determined for himself a new course in Ceylon history. It is
said that the first known ancestor, Nilaperumal. having
divested himself on the habits and habiliments and religion of
his own immediate forebears. arrived from South India in the
late fifteenth or early sixteenth century. He was also the
High Priest of a Temple in Ceylon. Was the first Kapurala
in his family of the Nawagomuwe Dewale. The family is
also known by the Singhalese name of Kalukapuge. The
family later adopted a variation f the name "Bandara" &
"Nayake", which was the title of an office held by the Devale
Chiefs.
Sir Don Solomon Dias
Bandaranaike, was a heavy hitting civil servant whose
ancestral home was in the south of the island in Horagolla,
Veyangoda. He was also the advisor to a succession of British
Governors and was closely involved in organizing the visit, to
Sri Lanka, of the Duke & Duchess of York, who went on to
become King George V and Queen Mary.
In his day, he was a keen aficionado of
thoroughbred racing and regularly attended meetings at the
Colombo Turf Club, where on his death in 1946, the Sir Solomon
Dias Bandaranaike cup became an annual feature. The
Bandaranaike family had long been a part of the upper echelons
of Ceylonese society. The family continued to farm vast tracts
of land in Attanagalla and Balangoda, that had been passed
down through their generations over hundreds of years.
His son, Solomon West Ridgeway Dias
Bandaranaike, who in later years and even today is
referred to by his initials, "SWRD", was born of two
intellectual parents. Young, SWRD, was always expected to
become something and did not disappoint. His early formal
education was at St Thomas' College in Colombo, where the
future Prime Minister achieved outstanding results. His
parents and teachers believed that he possessed the right
attributes to pursue a career in medicine or law. Sir Solomon
hoped that his son may follow him into the Diplomatic Corps.
Eventually SWRD went on to become a product of the elite
Oxford University in the UK. He was a close associate of
Anthony Eden, who later went on to become the Prime Minister
of Great Britain. He was also Union Secretary and later Junior
Treasurer, of the prestigious Oxford Union and acclaimed as a
highly vocal and respected orator and was later given the
nickname "Golden Tongue".
On SWRDS's return to Ceylon, in 1925, he
took to the bar and began practicing law while pursuing
hobbies such as horse riding, archery and devouring upwards of
ten books each week, "my father simply absorbed books",
recalls his daughter Chandrika, later became a Member of the
State Council and wrote his own first-hand account of his days
at Oxford, later published in the Ceylon Causerie. He first
joined the United National Party (UNP), the largest political
party in Ceylon at that time, which had emerged as an umbrella
nationalist party during the final decades of the Colonial
era. It was similar, in some respects, to the Indian national
Congress and was referred to humorously as the "Uncle-Nephew
Party" because of the kinship ties within its hierarchy. SWRD
and Don Stephen (DS) Senanayake, both went on to serve
Sri Lanka as Prime Minister in later years. Senanayake
(DS) was born on Oct 20 1884 in the Hapitigama Korale of
the Western District of Negombo and was some fifteen senior to
SWRD. Although the pair may have been a generation
apart in years but they formed an ideological partnership that
modern observers have compared to the Blair-Brown axis in
Britain today (2006). Although fissures did appear in this
relationship in later years, yet, during Ceylon's passage
towards independence in the 1920's and the 1930's, this Senanayake-Bandaranaike
partnership was a very significant and powerful political
force.
The political period in Ceylon, from 1931 until
the end of the Second World War, represented a significant
step towards self governance for the emerging nation. The
State Council consisted of 50 elected representatives with a
further three British Officers and Seven Lankan Ministers,
forming a Cabinet. Even though the British appointees retained
control of the key portfolios for Defence, External Affaires,
Finance & Legal Affairs, the State Council now functioned
in both an Executive and Legislative capacity. This defining
time also saw new political parties begin to emerge, including
several left leaning groups, such as the Labor Party, founded
in 1931 by A E Gunasinha, and the short lived Ceylon Equal
Society Party, the Bolshevik Leninist Party, and the Communist
Party of Sri Lanka.
The different communities and sects were, for the
first time, able to form their own representative parties,
including The Burgher Political Association in 1938, The
Ceylon Indian Congress in 1939, and The All Ceylon Tamil
Congress in 1944. From the outset, the latter party pressed
the case for a Tamil Kingdom as the only acceptable form of
constitutional reform in Ceylon. Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam,
founder of The Tamil League, stated, "... the Tamil League
consider that our aims should be to keep alive and propagate
the Tamil ideals, which have through ages past made the Tamils
what they are. We should ... promote the solidarity of what we
have been proud to call - Tamil Eelam (the name of the
proposed Tamil State in the North and the East of the
Country)".
On the other side of the ideological divide
amongst the Sinhalese majority a form of broad nationalism
arose centering around Buddhism and its core values. The
strongest association was the Greatest Council of the
Sinhalese or Sinhala Maha Sabha (SMS), founded by SWRD
in 1937, and as the party's founder he was immediately thrust
center-stage. Some historians have condemned this party as
being somewhat radically Buddhist, but its leader never wrote
or spoke a word that was anything less than conciliatory
towards he many communities that were present in Ceylon. A
typical example of his approach came in a speech delivered by
SWRD to the annual party congress staged in Veyangoda
on Sep 5 1942 during which he stated that the SMS's purpose
was twofold, viz, to unite the Sinhalese and to work in
cooperation with other communities.
SWRD was speaking during a time of international
crisis and creeping change that would transform Ceylon
forever. WWII raged on. Singapore had fallen to the Japanese
in Feb 1942 and after this disaster for the allies, Sri Lanka
became HQ for British Operations in South East Asia.
Trincomalee Port, so often a Portuguese, Dutch, and British
prize in Colonial times, was now of strategic importance for
the defense of the Indian Ocean and the entire region.
Ceylon's strategic placement meant that it was also a
high-level Japanese target. The British fought several
desperate air battles over Colombo and Trincomalee, but Ceylon
was never seriously threatened.
In 1944, after a period of discussion within the
Board of Ministers in Ceylon, Bandaranaike introduced into the
State Council the Constitution Bill, more commonly known as
"The Sri Lankan Bill". Predictably, State Council Members
representing SMS supported a bill that was kind to a Sinhalese
majority, but SWRD and his allies were consensus builders,
and, support in the State Council was broad ranging and drawn
from all communities. Other party blocks supporting the bill
were the Muslim League and the Ceylon National Congress, while
one member of the Ceylon Tamil Congress also supported this
effort. The bill was passed by a large majority but was
torpedoed by the British. SWRD's SMS Executive Committee
protested to London but the British had their own plans for
Ceylonese independence and local complainst held little sway
in London.
As the cessation of WWII hostilities approached,
the Constitution was amended to incorporate a provision that
gave Ceylon dominion status within the British Empire. A
British model became central to the Ceylonese Bill,
implementing a parliamentary system with a bi-camarel
legislature. This created a House of Representatives directly
elected by popular vote that would, with British input,
nominate the members of an Upper House. Britan's Soverign
would then appoint The Governor General on the advise of the
powerful person in the Ceylonese Government - The Prime
Minister.
The Second World War had ultimately been
beneficial for Ceylon. The rich ground of her plantations had
been utilized for rubber production, which enabled the country
to save a surplus in hard currency and speculate on future
revenues from this ready-made industry. Elsewhere on the
island, the British had spent millions building hospitals and
modern amenities. These were originally intended for Britain's
own Colonial and Military use, but when the Japanese
eventually surrendered, these facilities became surplus to
requirements and were bequeathed to the country. This
inherited infrastructure went a long way to improving the
standard of living in post-war Ceylon.
Ceylon was now prime for independence and the
movement towards a new political system was inescapable. SWRD
was now one of the most distinguished democratic leaders in
the island, was preparing to take his place in history as a
fundamental part of that process.
Johanna Louisa Dias
Bandaranayake, a direct descendant of Nilaperumal and
Scharff, was married to John Martinus Pieris.
Of this union was born the well-known historian and author of
several books on `Sinhalese Families,' Sir Paul E. Pieris. Sir
Paul's grandfather Johan Louis Pieris was the
mace-bearer at the supreme court, when it was presided over by
the great chief justice, Sir Alexander Johnston. Johan
Louis Pieris was the son of Wilhelmus Pieris, who died
on August 24, 1816. Wilhelmus Pieris' father was Louis
Pieris, a proponent in the Dutch Reformed Church. Louis
Pieris had a brother, Dernigellege Pauloe Pieris
Samarasinghe. Louis Pieris's father (Manuel?) hailed
from Attidiya near Colombo. He as a member of the Lascarins
(Sinhalese foot-soldiers) under the Dutch, and was the
recipient of several paraveni lands as a reward for his
services. He (Manuel) has a brother by the name of Deringellege
Joan (John?) Fernando, whose grandson Abraham Pieris
was also a proponent in the Dutch Reformed Church.
Post-script by Sachi Sri Kantha
One of S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike’s nieces
and academics, Yasmine
Gooneratne nee Bandaranaike, wrote a readable book,
Relative Merits: A Personal Memoir of the Bandaranaike Family
of Sri Lanka (C.Hurst & Co, London, 1986). I quote the
following two paragraphs from its foreword, entitled,
‘Ancestors’.
“…an Indian officer ‘of high standing’ who, serving under the
Kings of Kandy and bearing the name Neela Perumal, was made
high priest of the Temple of the God Saman, and commanded to
take the name of Nayaka Pandaram (Chief Record Keeper) in
1454. If this tradition has truth in, we may surmise that the
Indian name of Nayaka Pandaram came in time to adopt the form
of Pandara Nayaka. By the time it had turned into the
Sinhalese Bandaranaike, the Hinduism of its bearers had been
replaced by Buddhism; just as we know, from written
genealogical records dating back to the early seventeenth
century, that Buddhism was itself replaced in the family by
Christianity in its Catholic and later in its Protestant
forms. However, the occupations of scribe seems to have
descended in the family down the centuries, together with a
tradition of service to the Court.
The pandaram of India are a Brahman sub-caste of genealogists
and keepers of Court and family records, and the retinues of
Indian princesses who came to the island in early times, to be
married to a King or Prince in Kandy, must have included many
such among the ‘nobles as well as commoners duly absorbed in
the vast statecraft of the Kingdom and in the hierarchy of the
Court and palace personnel’. From very early times Mantai, or
Mantota, had been the port of entrance to arrivals in Sri
Lanka from South India…” (pages 3-4)
Yasmine Gooneratne had cited the original research of James
Rutnam in her bibliography. But unlike Rutnam, she has
presented a soothing positive spin on the mind set of her
ancestor Mudaliyars who served the colonial Dutch and British
masters by converting to Christianity to grab lands from the
Sinhalese commoners. I also find her job description of her
ancestral Sinhalese Mudaliyar class in the 17th to 19th
centuries as far from accurate. In one ornamental paragraph of
the same foreword on her ancestors, Yasmine Gooneratne has
written:
“The title of Mudaliyar seems to have distinguished leaders of
groups of fighting men from a particular district who shared
common bonds of caste. Such leaders, by virtue of their place
in the social structure of their time and country, were
necessarily influential in their ancestral villages. They were
able soldiers and resourceful diplomats, accustomed to be
first among equals, and would probably have had a long and
well-known tradition of family loyalty to their sovereign. The
military duties traditionally carried out by them were
continued during the intermittent warfare that marked the
period of Portuguese rule in the island. At the close of that
period, the role of the Mudaliyars was still military in
character, but the confidence of their superior officers and
the experience they had gained in participating in the
administration of what had been, in fact, a military regime,
together with their new interests as landlords and cultivators
of large tracts of property, are all factors likely to have
made them ready for administrative responsibility.” (page 6)
One should note that Yasmine Gooneratne has not identified the
caste name in the first sentence of the above paragraph.
Politically correct indeed. Paying obeisance to one’s
ancestors is a time-honored practice among the Orientals. But,
exaggerating and embellishing the roles played by one’s
ancestors is hardly acceptable in academic research. The
Sinhalese Mudaliyar class was no “able soldiers and
resourceful diplomats”. Rather, they were cowardly
weather-vanes, political turn-coats and servile fart-catchers
to the colonial masters of Ceylon. It is also a puzzle for me,
how come the descendants of Nilaperumal, a pandaram Brahman
sub-caste, demoted themselves to ‘fighting men’ of military
caste (?) in a few centuries.
If I’m not wrong, Yasmine Gooneratne is a specialist in
English literature and not in Tamil literature. In the
glossary she has provided at the end of her book, she has
described the term ‘Mudaliyar, Modeliar’ as a Sinhalese word
referring to Sinhalese official of high rank. The origin of
the now commonly used Sinhalese terms Mudaliyar and Mudalaali
lies in the Tamil root word, Mudal, which means capital in
terms of ‘property wealth’ and not ‘the seat of government’.
Thus, the word Mudaliyar refers to a person endowed with
capital wealth, and Mudalaali (Mudal = capital; Aali = ruler)
refers to a person who rules the capital wealth. ‘Number One’
person is another variant of the Tamil root Mudal. Thus, it
could have meant ‘Number One’ fart catcher of the ‘sovereign’,
and not reflected any of the military merits attributed to the
Mudaliyar class by Yasmine Gooneratne.
http://www.tamilnation.org/forum/sachisrikantha/bandaranaikes.htm
Yasmine Gooneratne
As we made our way back to Colombo through
deserted and littered streets with the Hensmans, their two
children, and their hurriedly packed suitcases in the car, we
learned that Menike, a Sinhalese friend, had warned them that
their house was to be attacked that night. The attackers? The
Sinhalese neighbours with whom they had been living until the
rioting began - in such seeming amity. Ordinarily a man of
peace, Dick Hensman had decided to greet any uninvited
visitors with petrol bombs rather than abandon his home or see
his family hurt and humiliated. It appeared that Daddy - of
all people! - had managed to convince him that no good would
come of this attitude.
The Hensman family stayed with us at Maha Nuge
Gardens for the duration of the riots. Life during that period
had its problems for us all. Dick, for instance, had to
simplify his political and philosophical ideas so that my
parents could follow them, and Daddy had to tone down his
communal jokes. But it was, all in all, a remarkable
experience, and the only time in my life that I have seen my
father get the better of his own readiness to march, all guns
blazing, into the thick of the fiercest battle.
"Walk in, gentlemen, pray walk in," cries Charles
Surface, opening his picture gallery to the auctioneers in
Sheridan's play The School For Scandal; "here they are, the
family of the Surfaces, up to the Conquest!" "And, in my
opinion, a goodly collection," replies his uncle Sir Oliver
Surface, unrecognisable in his disguise; "Ah! we shall never
see such figures of men again." To which Charles replies: "I
hope not." Reviewing the public faces and the private lives of
some of the best-known members of my family in this and the
preceding chapter, I wish I had my father's capacity for
ancestor-worship. Like Sir Oliver Surface, Daddy had
unshakeable faith in the virtue and moral probity of his
forebears. While I was growing up and receiving my opinions
almost ready-made from my parents, our kinsmen seemed to me to
be much larger than life, their intentions more honourable,
their achievements more important, their merest condescensions
more generous than those of others, mere mortals, of the same
generation. For Daddy there would have been something very
like sacrilege in the mere idea of drawing aside the heavy
curtains of their shrines, and letting the daylight in.
"What parchment have we here?" continues the
unrepentant Charles Surface. "Richard heir to Thomas. Oh, our
genealogy in full. Here, Careless - you shall have no common
bit of mahogany, here's the family tree for you, you rogue, -
this shall be your hammer, and now you may knock down my
ancestors with their own pedigree." To which the scandalized
Sir Oliver responds, aside: "What an unnatural rogue! - an ex
post facto parricide!" Daddy would certainly have agreed with
Sir Oliver. And how pleasant it would be to have somehow
retained, despite one's maturing, those delightfully
uncomplicated early attitudes.
But the members of our clan resemble not at all
the "stiff and awkward" portraits in the Surface picture
gallery, who were, according to Charles, "like nothing in
human nature." On the contrary, the Bandaranaikes seem to me
to be - as Sir Solomon once wrote affectionately of his
wayward sister Amy - strong and extraordinary personalities,
always intensely human. One can only regard them in their
private and their public lives, in peace or in the midst of
bitter controversy, in their virtues, faults, and
contradictions of character, in life and in death, as Cox
Sproule wrote humorously of Grandpapa in a mock-epitaph:
Here lies the last of genial Reginald Felix
Who has gone aloft to explain his mundane delicts
Let"s hope the High Court Judge will show no bias
When rendering judgment in re Dias.
Whether one agrees with their views or not (and
it isn't possible for me to sympathize with Great-Grandpapa
James's views on women's education, the prejudices about race
and caste into which my lovable father sank in his later
years, or my mother's inclination to value wealth and property
above personal relationships), they have the courage of their
convictions. Some among them, James especially, have the right
approach to literature. "O Poets! the victory gained through
your own wisdom is much more to be desired than the victory
which comes to those who have captured a four-fold army," he
wrote, in his "Verses on Criticism." And again, "It is not
proper to compare a poetaster with a poet: can a firefly shine
in the eye of the sun?" The idea that poetry and virtue always
go together, Dr Johnson once wrote, "is an opinion so pleasing
that I can forgive him who resolves to think it true." I must
hope to be forgiven for "thinking it true" of James D'Alwis,
that fiery little man who locked up his daughters to preserve
their ignorance, yet thought like a patriot and wrote like an
erudite angel.
Lucky James: he died as he had lived, his pen in
his hand. I could wish that Death, when it came to my father,
had found him as he had been during most of his life, in
fighting form. But he was taken by surprise in the end,
trapped and ambushed in a way that he could do nothing about.
On the morning after Daddy died, Gwen went to the
General Hospital to formally identify his body and take charge
of it for burial. She had expected, I think, to find him laid
out on a bed in a private ward. But since his fatal heart
attack had occurred before he could be admitted to the
Intensive Care section, while in fact he was still being
wheeled towards it, his body had been kept overnight in the
hospital mortuary. She went there, accompanied by an
attendant.
When I met my sister later that day, she was
still shaking a little. The atmosphere of the non-paying wards
in the General Hospitals of Colombo and Kandy is one I know
well from the time Brendon was a medical officer walking the
corridors. The overpowering odours of disease and
disinfectant, and the sensation of helplessness before a grim
anonymity that are the ordinary lot of those who enter the
non-paying wards for treatment were unfamiliar to Gwen, and
were encountered by my father only at his death: and he was by
then in no condition to shoot them down or to write letters of
complaint in triplicate to the department concerned. The
attendant, lounging beside my sister in the off-hand way of
hospital workers, had casually twitched a grimy sheet aside,
and swung our father into view for her identification. Wrapped
in a creased checked sarong that wasn't his own, a torn vest
covering part of his chest, his untidy grey hair falling
forward over the slack, dead face, Gwen had found Daddy almost
impossible to recognize.
"He looked", she told me, her voice trembling in
unbelief, "just like an ordinary person."
When Prini Molamure married my uncle Paul
Deraniyagala in the early 1930s and the couple made their
wedding visits to the homes of his relations, she was treated
at Rajagiriya Walauwa to a rendering of "The Ash Grove" by a
daughter of the house, my Aunt Amelia Obeyesekere (later Mrs
Louis Pieris). In the 1950s, when my sisters and I were taken
calling by our parents, the Victorians were still popular, and
we heard the son of the house give forth a vigorous delivery
of Laurence Hope's "Temple Bells". The singer on this second
occasion was Lankasa de Alwis, the son of Auntie Alex and
Uncle Leo, and every soulful throb of his tenor voice rocked
his mother"s drawing-room at Samudragiri with simulated
passion:
The temple bells are ringing,
And the young green corn is springing,
And the marriage month is drawing very near.
I lie hidden in the grass,
And I count the moments pass,
For the month of marriages is very near . . .
No doubt the fact that young Lankasa was himself
to be married in a very few months to his cousin Joy
Dassenaike lent his performance additional brio. Nothing so
explicit had ever sullied the chaste ears of an earlier
generation, who hadn't been encouraged to listen to, much less
sing, anything that might have damaged the fine, fresh bloom
of female ignorance. Though the clan's more gifted sons were
sent to British universities, its daughters were kept at home,
where they were carefully guarded from intellectual
contamination of any kind and were taught, at the merest
mention of men or of marriage, to drop their gaze modestly to
the floor. Most of my elders, the womenfolk as well as the
men, would have agreed quite seriously with Jane Austen's
ironic maxim that a woman who has the misfortune of knowing
anything at all should conceal it as well as she can.
Marriage within the clan was, of course, the
wished-for consummation of every young woman's desire. It was
the goal to which all her accomplishments - her music, her
embroidery and lace-making, her considerable training in the
domestic arts - led in the end, all that was necessary to make
her a happy (or, at any rate, a married) woman. And as we grew
up we were surrounded by ladies, young matrons, mothers of
large families, dowagers by the dozen, who had achieved that
goal and were living, to all appearances, comfortably ever
after. Not every one achieved it, however: and this through no
fault of their own, for most of my mother's contemporaries in
the clan were perfectly conventional in outlook.
Devoted to the works of Tennyson and Florence
Barclay, irreproachably docile by temperament and upbringing,
they would have made ideal wives for a Bandaranaike, an
Obeyesekere or a Pieris. And yet there were spinsters in
plenty in the clan families I encountered after 1946, coveys
of unmarried aunts who seemed to be rapidly losing their
youthful charm. Some of these aunts were sweet-voiced and
gentle. They would reach up at parties to peck us
affectionately on the cheek or fondle our chins, and twitter
wonderingly, "Goodness, this is Sammy's daughter - my, how
this child has grown!"
Looking down into their large, soft brown eyes
you would never discover the least resentment at having been
cheated by fate of a home of their own, of a husband and of
children. It seemed that there was enough in their quiet
lives, which were spent in the homes of aged parents or
married brothers and sisters, to occupy all their time and
guarantee their happiness.
But there were others who were not, most
definitely not, content. One of my father's cousins brooded,
like some dangerous, sharp-beaked hawk, among the dowdy grey
doves in those comfortable drawing rooms. She created a
restless, angry atmosphere about her that was quite different
from the ripples of tranquil ease that seemed to flow from the
others. She attended Sunday services at Church dramatically
draped in a black lace veil through which an angular profile
and a pair of flashing dark eyes could be clearly seen,
fascinating any small child who had nothing to do during the
celebration of Communion but stare cautiously at her across
the aisle.
She lived quite alone, in one of Colombo's
pleasantest suburbs, waited on by family retainers. Without
anyone actually having to tell us, we gathered that it was
wise to be on our best behavior in her presence, an impression
assisted by her appearance: for her black veil connected her
in my imagination with the Wicked Witch in Disney's Snow
White, who used to haunt my childish dreams. As I grew into
adolescence, I recognized in my terrifying aunt the presence
of a style and self-assurance unusual among the shy, retiring
women in our family, as well as the remains of what must once
have been considerable and striking beauty.
My Aunt was the only daughter of a very wealthy
branch of Daddy's family. Beautiful though she was, and
well-educated (to an extent quite unusual in her branch of the
clan), she had accepted the idea planted in her mind by her
relations that her only attraction lay, and had always lain,
in her wealth.
I often watched my aunt in conversation with my
mother and with other relations, and I thought she had one of
the most delightful smiles I had ever seen, and a lively,
self-deprecating sense of humor. That was when the shadow that
lay over her life lifted a little. In middle age she adopted
as her own, from a village near Colombo, a child of about my
own age. The tragedy of my aunt's experience, however, in
being conditioned to undervalue her own personality and
talents has been repeated more than once since then among the
heiresses of my nieces' generation.
In our clan love was a subject about which we
were supposed to know and inquire nothing until marriage
brought enlightenment to us in the nicest, and indeed the
only, possible way. It seems a little strange now, considering
that there are only four years between my sister Sonia and
myself, that we didn't share our speculations on the subject.
For everywhere about us, as children, were the evidences of
love. There were, for instance, the family of eight
blunt-nosed, blinded puppies that Juno (the happy young
pedigree Alsatian that was Sonia's especial pet) produced
quite without warning: or so it seemed to me. None of them
resembled Juno in the least. There were the eggs Sonia found
in a sparrow's nest built in a clay pot that the servants had
fixed on the outer wall of the kitchen: we took turns climbing
a ladder, to peep in at the small, spotted ovals. There were,
too, those other eggs that my father sometimes took me along
to see in his laboratory at the Agricultural Department
office. He would pull out the drawer of an incubator, and I
would look down on a dozen bedraggled little chicks,
staggering unsteadily about in a battle-field of broken
egg-shells. The process by which eggs came to be laid and
puppies born was a closed book to me. No one explained, not
even my sisters (if, indeed, they knew). As for human babies,
the process of their creation was an impenetrable mystery
which even school lessons did nothing to resolve.
I had spent a rather unhappy term boarding at
Bishop's at the age of nine, during a short illness of my
mother's. Although my sisters were boarders too, they were in
the Middle and Senior schools respectively, and their status
as monitors and prefects made them seem as remote from me as
if we had been on different planets. I was glad to return home
when my mother's health improved, and to my great relief I
never had to repeat the experience of boarding-school life.
Miss Marguerite Cockburn taught Hygiene and Physiology to the
Fourth Form at Bishop's College. She was middle-sized, with
short-cropped smooth black hair, and very thick lenses to her
spectacles through which her eyes gleamed in what we thought
was a very sinister way. On my first day in her Physiology
class, I found on my desk two pieces of sticking plaster, each
three inches long. There were similar pieces of sticking
plaster on every other desk in the classroom.
"Take out your Hygiene and Physiology books,
girls," said Miss Cockburn from her perch on the high dais,
"and turn to Chapter Twenty One."
Our Hygiene and Physiology textbook had very
small print. You could see there was a lot of information
there. Chapter Twenty One, which was the last in the book,
turned out to be very long, with diagrams on nearly every
page, and was titled "The Reproductive Organs of the Human
Male."
"This chapter will not be part of our syllabus
for this year, girls," said Miss Cockburn. "We are therefore
not to read or study it. So you will take those strips of
sticking plaster you see on your desks, and in two separate
places exactly four inches apart you will stick page one of
Chapter Twenty One to the end-paper that is just inside the
back cover of the book." She stepped off the dais and walked
up and down between the rows of desks, looking over our
shoulders to make sure that her instructions were being
carried out. And so we learned in the Fourth Form to lock the
reproductive organs of the human male safely out of sight,
where they could not be studied and could therefore do us no
harm.
When two of my classmates took me aside during
the drink-interval at school one day, and confided amid
giggles their discoveries about something men and women did
together that caused babies to be born, I didn't believe them.
I tried to imagine taking place between my parents, or between
my uncles and aunts, the very odd behavior that had been
described to me, but I found it impossible, especially where
my mother was concerned. If the subject of sex ever arose in
our house (as it occasionally did, brought in usually on the
wings of some family scandal), and if our insistence seemed
likely to coax an explanation out of Daddy, he was invariably
stopped before he'd got very far by a look from the other end
of the table. I knew that look well. It was a look of glacial
disgust that closely resembled Miss Cockburn's habitual
expression when she was teaching us Physiology.
It reflected, as I afterwards realized, an
attitude to sex that was common among women of the clan who
were very much older than my mother - late Victorians, in
fact. When my Aunt Miriam de Saram delighted us all by having
twins, we heard from her own lips of her mother's reaction to
the news. "Really, Miriam, it's disgraceful. At your age!"
stately Lady Hilda Pieris had said. Miriam sat up in bed
looking superbly arrogant as she mimicked her straight-backed
mamma, then dissolved into peals of laughter over the remark.
I admired the tiny babies asleep in their cots, and pretended
I wasn't listening. Miriam had just turned forty. I waited for
my mother's answering laughter: it came, but it didn't ring
true. You could see she thought Auntie Hilda had been quite
right. But why was it disgraceful to have babies after one was
forty? Did one have any say in the matter at all? No one ever
explained.
Where do you come from, Baby dear?
Out of the Everywhere, into the Here!
began one book coyly, that I had found on my
parents' bookshelves. Not much help there. Every Woman"s Home
Doctor, an immense crimson covered volume to which my mother
referred in all medical emergencies, was filled with
photographs of Englishwomen with bobbed hair, smiling
radiantly as they leaped about in gym slips doing exercises in
the sunshine. This book also provided photographs of an ideal
sick-room, and of the equipment need for bathing a baby, but
about the arrival of the baby itself there was no information
that I could find.
Some babies, it seemed, arrived too early. This,
too, was Disgraceful. Or so an anonymous letter-writer said,
sending to every family in the clan over the signature of
"Careful Observer" all relevant details when a
recently-married cousin had her first baby some weeks before
it would normally have been expected. Others didn't arrive at
all: and when this occurred, my mother and my aunts would look
meaningfully at one another, and pityingly at the young wife
concerned, and ask each other the all-important question,
"Whose fault is it?" My own baby brother had arrived early.
This wasn't Disgraceful, but Sad, since he had only lived a
quarter of an hour after he drew his first breath; and I
remember very well the wreath of blue hydrangeas Daddy gave me
to place on the coffin, no bigger than a dressing-table
drawer, that we followed to the churchyard at Bandarawela.
Most of these arrivals and non-arrivals (my
brother's excepted) were, as far as Daddy was concerned,
neither Disgraceful nor Sad but Comic. On several occasions he
greeted the news with huge delight, and promptly celebrated
the event with ribald verses . . .
Kanangra Station,
Badagini, Western Australia
26 JANUARY 1887
I have recently discovered that I am not the
first person from my part of the world to visit this place,
the name of which, when I heard it for the first time,
awakened immediately my interest & indeed (I must confess
it) my amusement.
"What's the joke, Ed?" asked my fellow stockman
on this property, Joe Sammon.
"Badagini means hunger, " said I. "Literally,
fire in the belly."
When Joe told me of the circumstances in which
such a name had been assigned to the district, that it
memorialized a group of Sinhalese workers who had found
themselves alone & without food in this dry and desolate
place some 30 yrs ago, my amusement was quickly at an end.
The tale Joe told me is a bitter one, and I set
it down here more to relieve the burden it placed upon my mind
and heart when I heard it than for any pleasure I hope to
derive from ever viewing these pages again at some future
time.
My poor countrymen who lived here for a while and
died (for indeed, only 11 from a party of 32 survived the
misery of that time) had been brought to this district from
Queensland by the rumor of employment on a cattle property
here. Some of them had experience of the care of livestock in
their homeland, others (no doubt like Davith's father in
Bundaberg) had run cattle on their small properties in
Queensland, & many had added to their store of knowledge
through converse with the native stockmen of these parts who
have, it is said, an affinity to the land that their tribes
roamed freely in times past which is so great as to be beyond
ordinary comprehension, & who are said to be especially
skilled in the management of horses.
All would have been well had it not been for a
very great drought at that time which turned the district for
hundreds of miles around into something resembling a desert.
Water dried up in the creeks, & where there had in good
times been lakes of fresh water alive with fish, there was now
but cracked earth.
The Sinhalese had no skills which could help them
survive in these unnatural conditions. Cattle & men alike,
Joe tells me, dropped in their tracks, such was the terrible
heat of the sun; & landowners & their stockmen
together walked off their holdings. Those among the workers
who could still stand upright struggled, after a time, with
difficulty from their camp to the roadside, where they lay
down in the dust; & as the pony carts passed by, carrying
settlers and their families out of the area into towns where
they could at least find water and, if they were fortunate,
payment for day labor, these poor folk stretched out their
hands to the passing carts and cried out in their own tongue,
"Badagini! Badagini! O help us, who will help us?"
I, who have sometimes heard that cry in the
poorest quarters of the towns of Matara & Galle, could
not, I fear, hide my tears when I heard this terrible tale.
How did it happen that they were not assisted? I
asked Joe, in whose father's time these events had taken
place. He shrugged, & lit his pipe. "No-one asked them to
come out here in the first place, mate," he replied. "When the
bad weather struck, it was a case of each man for himself. Has
to be, in country like this. It was a terrible time for the
animals in the district, but a sad time for the humans, too, I
reckon, when a man or a woman don't stretch out a hand to help
a fellow creature fallen in the dust."
All that night, as I lay in the dark, watching
the moon rise behind the barns & sheds, it seemed to me I
heard that terrible cry rising into a hot wind in an alien
& hostile land - Badagini! Badagini!
30 JANUARY 1887
Reflecting on the years I have spent in this
country, & in particular on the difference between my poor
compatriots' experience & my own, I feel I must revise a
statement made some time earlier as to the scarcity here of
good company, for I have met with good fortune & great
kindness in many places, & especially from my friend Joe.
Despite the differences in our background & education (and
I should also say in view of the comforts that await me at
home, our respective hopes of future prosperity) we have been
good companions.
For two days past, water from swollen creeks in
this region has inundated many properties including this which
yields me my present employment. In moving panic-stricken
livestock, cattle as well as horses, to high ground where they
will, it is to be hoped, be safe from the rising flood waters,
I have discovered in myself courage I never knew that I
possessed, & skills which I would formerly have sought
elsewhere than in my own two hands.
Joe has taught me much, not only concerning the
beasts he loves & governs with such skill, but of human
nature. It is not possible that we shd correspond, despite
which I trust he will think of me often with his customary
good-hearted kindness. But I have seen enough, & learned
enough of myself too, to understand that a life lived here is
not for me.
The crude cooking of raw, unseasoned meat over
burning coals (which passes generally for the culinary art in
these isolated places) is, for example, something I would find
hard to bear during a longer sojourn than I intend to make.
The result is often charred, & where not so, it is
generally raw, the blood still running from it. The smell of
it, not to put too fine a point on the matter, is vile.
While I was resident on Mr Nott-Herring's sugar
cane property in Queensland, Davith employed a portion of the
curry leaves, spices & pepper he had brought with him in
the dray to render my meat palatable. But here, alas, there is
no Davith, only poor Joe & his companions, whose habit it
is to fall upon their rough victuals with every sign of
enjoyment, & to wonder much at my own reluctance to keep
them company at table.
Indeed, there are many things about me which I
perceive perplex my friend Joe. It was but last night that he,
guessing my Journal to be a logbook of some kind since I write
something in it every night, looked into it over my shoulder
out of curiosity. He found what I was writing opaque and
incomprehensible, but here & there upon the page he
recognized his own name.
"So you're writing about me, eh? J.O.E. Joe. I
know. That's me. What have you said about me, eh?"
"That I shall think of you often when I leave
this place. That you have been kind to me. A good friend," I
said. "A mate. And that I hope you will think of me in the
same way."
"What's this other stuff you've got down here?
Don't look like English to me."
I looked at the page to which he had turned, open
on the kitchen table in our shack.
"That's Greek; and that, over there, is written
in English letters, but it's Latin, a language men spoke long
ago in Italy."
"Italy, eh? Didn't tell me you was a bloody
dago."
"I'm not. But the man who wrote that was."
"What's he say, then?"
I read the passage aloud to Joe.
"No, no, no. What's he say in bloody English?"
" 'He who crosses the ocean may change the skies
above him, but not the color of his soul.' "
Macquarie University
YASMINE
GOONERATNE
nee Bandaranaike
http://www.english.emory.edu/Bahri/Gooneratne.html
Biography
Novelist, Poet, and critic Yasmine Gooneratne, a
graduate of Bishop's college, went on to graduate from the
University of Ceylon in 1959 and also received a PhD in
English Literature from Cambridge University in 1962.
Gooneratne became a resident of Australia in 1972. In
1981 she was the first, and remains until now, the only person
to receive the higher doctoral degree of Doctor of Letters
ever awarded by Macquarie University. She now holds a
Personal Chair in English Literature at Macquarie University,
which is located in New South Wales. From 1989-1993 she
was the Foundation Director of her Universityís Postcolonial
Literatures and Languages Research Center. In 1990
Gooneratne became an Officer of the Order of Australia for
distinguished service to literature and education and in that
same year she was also invited to become the Patron of the
Jane Austen Society of Australia. Gooneratne also had a
place on a committee appointed by the Federal Government to
review the Australian system of Honors and Awards from
1994-1995. Since 1995, she has had positions on both the
Australia Abroad Council and the Visiting Committee of the
Faculty of Creative Arts at the University of
Wollongong. In 1998, she became a member of
Asialink. She has been a visiting professor or
specialist at many different places around the world including
the following: Edith Cowan University (Western Australia),
University of Michigan (USA), Jawarharlal Nehru University
(India), and the University of the South Pacific (Fiji).
Yasmine Gooneratne is married to Dr. Brendan
Gooneratne who is a physician, environmentalist, and
historian. They married in 1962 and now have two children, a
son and a daughter, and currently live in Sydney, Australia.
Achievements and Awards
Gooneratne has 16 published books that include
critical studies of Jane Austen, Alexander Pope, and
contemporary novelist and screen writer Ruth Prawer
Jhabvala. She has also written volumes of literary
essays as well as poems, short stories, a family memoir, and
two novels. In 1991, she was awarded a Writer's
Fellowship at Varuna Writerís Center where she edited the
final draft of one of her novels, A Change of Skies.
This novel later won the Marjorie Barnard Literary Award for
Fiction in 1992 and was shortlisted for the 1991 Commonwealth
Writers Prize. Her second novel, Pleasures of
Conquest, was shortlisted for the 1996 Commonwealth
Writers Prize. She has also contributed various
articles, poetry, short stories, and other writings to many
different anthologies and journals. Many of her works
have been presented on television, radio, and at public
readings around Australia and many other parts of the
world. Her achievements are recorded in Who's Who of
Australia 1997 and in The Oxford Companion to
Australian Literature.
Themes
Gooneratne encompasses various themes in her
writing. One theme that continually appears in her works
is a reflection upon how the past affects the future.
She relays many of her own experiences to make her points more
personal and more real to the reader. An example of this
is Relative Merits, which is a personal memoir that is
based on interviews with her family members and on her own
memories of her family's life. She takes her family's
past and ties in how her well-known family has affected Sri
Lanka's history. Another theme includes aspects of
immigration and adjustment to new lands. This theme is
exemplified in A Change of Skies, which deals with a
Sri Lanka family moving to Australia. This novel focuses
on the experiences of Asian immigrants and how they adjust to
living in the new environment of Australia. Changes in
history are also themes of her works. Gooneratne's second
novel, The Pleasures of Conquest, deals with
relationships between Europe and Asia as Ceylon undergoes a
transformation from a British colony to an independent Sri
Lanka.
Gooneratne's poetry also has many different
themes. One major theme of her poetry is poetry
itself. She refers to different parts of poetry, like
verses and lines, in many of her poems. She makes the
words seem powerful and alive. "The Scribble" describes
how a young girl sees that as she gets older "that words grow
sedate, / long may she find/ verse in the wind, / rhyme run in
the rivers, / words hum and quiver." "6,000 Ft. Death Dive"
explains how a woman dies and at the same time compares the
power and freedom of death to writing. As Gooneratne
writes, "from poetry to plummet till we splash/ down in a
terse, laconic paragraph." In "The Cave," she writes,
"Build on, poets, / out of ourselves, our pain/ and our
delight, / we build our own support." In this poem she is
encouraging poets to express themselves and know that someday
they will "tremble on/ the blazing summit of our own
creation." Another important theme is the different
aspects of immigration that are also continually mentioned in
her poems. In "Newsletter," she mentions Australia and
"the island-shaped wastes common to immigrant hearts,"
indicating the love the immigrants have for their new land.
She explores both perspectives of foreigners in other
lands. In "Business People," she describes how tourists
love the beauty of the land, but do not care to know the
terrors of its past. She writes, "They scan the
catalogue, write out a cheque and for the price fixed-thirty
dollars-/buy my poor country." As "bits and pieces" of
her land are carried away by the newcomers she says "our
children/ have become a nation of beggars."
Email Quotations From
Gooneratne
"Each book or article I have written engages with
a particular idea or set of ideas that gripped my imagination
at the time that I was writing it. A few examples
include the following: Relative Merits (1986) seeks
to preserve for posterity my memories of my family, and to
give the reader some sense of that family's special qualities
and its place in Sri Lanka's cultural history; A Change of
Skies (1991) focuses on the experiences of Asian
visitors/immigrants in Australia; and The Pleasures of
Conquest (1995) is centered on historical and
contemporary relationships between East and West. If I
were to ask myself whether there has been some single idea I
(must have) wanted to convey to an audience through these
different works, I would say that it is a belief in the worth
of human beings as individuals, irrespective of all attempts
to stereotype or categorize them in terms of class, race,
caste, color, intellectual ability, gender, or religious
belief."
"The biggest influence on my writing as regards
to subject matter has inevitably been the fact that I had the
good fortune to have been born in Sri Lanka, and to grow up
and be educated there at a "golden" period in the island's
cultural life. The biggest influence on my writing
regarding style is probably a lifelong admiration for the
writings of certain English authors of the 18th and 19th
centuries, including Alexander Pope, Dr. Samuel Johnson, and
Jane Austen."
"There are several authors I deeply admire.
Among them are V.S. Naipaul, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, R.K.
Narayan, and the authors I have previously mentioned. My
favorite author is Jane Austen, partly because her ideas about
love and life (as expressed in her novels and letters) have
shaped my own, and partly because her disciplined and ironic
style provides an exemplary model for any writer who feels (as
she did) deeply about the conditions under which life must be
lived."
"My favorite among my own books is Relative
Merits. Why? Partly because I am most myself
in it; and partly because recreating in it my memories and
impressions of family members whom I knew well opened the way
for me to create fictional characters of my own later on in
novels and stories."
"Biggest accomplishment: My teaching.
At the age of 15, I had the good fortune to attract the
interest and friendship of two wonderful teachers: Pauline
Swan and her husband C.R. Hensman. Without their
interest and encouragement I would probably not have gone into
academic life. I would like to believe that I, too, have
been in influence for good in the intellectual lives of
students in Sri Lanka (where I taught for 11 years) and in
Australia (where I have taught for 26 years). I hope,
above all, that I have been successful (like the Hensmans) in
passing on to students and readers my own love of literature
and my commitment to it."
Selected Bibliography
Works By Gooneratne
--The Pleasures of
Conquest. Milsons Point: Vintage, 1996.
--"In the East My
Pleasure: A Postcolonial Love Story." SPAN 34-35
(1992-1993): 269-279.
--"Navaranjini Takes
Note of Signs and Visions." Wilder Shores: Womenís
Travel Stories of Australia and Beyond. Ed. Robin Lucas
and Clare Foster. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press,
1992. 36-41.
--A Change of
Skies. Chippendale, NSW: Picador, 1991.
--Relative Merits:
A personal memoir of the Bandaranaike family of Sri Lanka.
1986-1987.
--Word, Bird,
Motif: Poems. (1970)
--The Lizard's Cry
and Other Poems (1972)
--New Ceylon
Writing (1973)
--Stories from Sri
Lanka (1979)
--Poems from
India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, & Singapore (1979)
--6,000 Ft. Death
Dive. Colombo (1981)
Selected
Criticism
and Autobiography by Gooneratne
--Relative Merits:
A Personal Memoir of the Bandaranaike Family of Sri Lanka.
London: C. Hurst, 1986.
--"Asian Culture and
Asian Identity." Hecate 22.2 (1996): 49-55.
--"Why I Write." Kunapipi
16.1 (1994): 166-167.
--"Flowering, Finally
in Alien Soil." Weekend Australian Magazine 22-23
October 1988: 9.
--"Constructing the
Characters of Women in A Change of Skies." Australian
Womenís Book Review 4.3 (1992): 13-15.
Her unassuming ways made her
stand tall among her peers - Sunday Times Feb 4 2007
~ Nanette Ilangakoon
Wickremasinghe
“Much will be required of
those to whom much is given” This scriptural injunction is, I
believe, applicable to Nanette my best and dearest friend with
whom I shared a lifelong relationship of affection,
understanding and trust.
Meeting as teenagers in the
common room at College House on the first day of term so many
years ago, it was a rare case of instant bonding between three
young people from three different backgrounds – even ethnicity
– the only common denominator being their faith. It did not
strike us then, but in hindsight, I realize that shared
values, identity of purpose in the pursuit of our studies, and
a shared perspective on how to shape our lives, helped to
establish this friendship which was to last a lifetime.
It was on the strength of
this association that I feel obliged to narrate the story of
Nanette’s life and the manner in which she fulfilled all that
was required of her as one exceptionally endowed – not merely
in the matter of her distinguished lineage, but also inherent
superior intellect and what’s more her extraordinary gifts of
compassionate love and concern for others.
Given these endowments it was
expected that she would be enmeshed in an aura of exclusivity
but I could vouch for the fact that she was, in all instances
unassuming and simple to the core. Precisely for this reason
she stood tall among her peers and won for herself both
respect and admiration.
It is meaningful to review
her life (and ours) from those early days. Those were exciting
times. University life had its challenges. Ragging was not
unknown, but except in rare instances, carried out in
gentlemanly fashion. The motive was to tease and not to hurt.
And so the appellation we got The Unholy Three did not bother
us much (Greenhorns that we were at the time we did not
recognize the innuendo).
Our initiation into the Arts
and Sciences was in the regular curriculum, but what mattered
most was the transition from our adolescence, nurtured within
the narrow confines of the convent schools in which we were
tutored, into adulthood in the milieu of a free and open co-ed
institution. We were subconsciously faced with the realization
that we were solely responsible for our lives and that all our
actions were subject to the closest scrutiny. Needless to say
these prescriptions prepared us for the long and arduous
journey of life.
After four years of study and
the concomitant widening of our horizons we stepped out from
the somewhat rarefied atmosphere of the University into the
world of everyday existence. Choices had to be made and
careers undertaken. Marriage with its total commitment was a
necessity. Although Nanette had many admirers it was the
unobtrusive Lyn who, deservedly won the prize. They had a
happy life together and started to raise a family.
Life as we all know is never
easy. Childhood illnesses, problems of psychological
adjustments and the like, took its toll on Nanette’s health
for a time, but she bravely overcame all these disruptions and
her life became one of service not only to her own husband and
children, but also to her mother and to the families of her
dear siblings.
In times of illness and
anxiety she cared for them as though they were her very own. I
still remember the daily bulletins she sent me regarding the
progress and regress of the terminal illness of one in her
extended family and when the inevitable came to pass she was
as distraught as the mother of the girl who could not be
saved.
This same compassion she
extended to friends who had insurmountable family problems,
offering the shelter and comfort of her own home till the
crises blew over. To me and Blossom the third member of the
unholy triad, she was an unfailing source of inspiration,
always accepting and upholding each other in all our strengths
and weaknesses. For this is what friendship is all about – the
caring and sharing in all the joys and sorrows of life.
As for herself she lived life
to the full — ably supporting and guiding her two children in
the educational sphere, and her husband in his daily
endeavours. When Lyn reached the zenith of his career she rose
to the occasion by carrying out the relevant social
responsibilities with grace and charm.
But life inexorably draws to
a close. When Lyn passed away she was very lonely and unable
to cope. Ravi came to her rescue and persuaded her to come and
live with his family in the land of their adoption. With her
indomitable spirit she acceded, and began to lead a new life
Down Under. What gave her true happiness was to teach and
nurture her two grandchildren as only a person of her
scholarship and competence could do. Suffice it that she could
achieve this objective in the space of a few fruitful years.
She was, in fact, fulfilling all the obligations required of
one so richly endowed and she could now rest from her labours
in peace and comfort. It was at this time an undreamt of
illness struck bringing with it relentless anxiety and
distress to her and her family. Jit and Ravi supported her
with due filial love and devotion.
Our faith does not promise
the absence of pain and suffering to even the best of men and
women, and this pain she had to endure. This she did with
courage and resignation.
Nanette had now begun her
journey homewards — to the Promised Land — and so it was
goodbye. You are sorely missed by all those whose lives you
touched.
You have inspired us all.
http://notices.smh.com.au/death/20047/notice.aspx
Family
Pictures of the Bandaranaike Families
l-r: Annette Dias Bandaranaike in London circa
1900, Annette Dias Bandaranaike & Ronald Illangakoon,
first Sinhalese AG, at their marriage 1914, Old Nuga Tree in
the Oberoi Hotel compound is seen, standing tall, at the
back
l-r: The
Wickremasinghe family, Wellawatte, Christmas 1953. My (Git
Wickremasinghe) father is seated at right. I am the kid on
the ground, A gathering of Wickremasinghes and
Bandaranaikes. 3rd from left standing is Dr
Sumitra Wickremasinghe, now a top surgeon in Melbourne,
Australia
Self (Git
Wickremasinghe) with rabbit, ca 1954, The Martensteyn family
of Bandarawela - a very distinguished Burgher clan in Ceylon
self (Git
Wickremasinghe) enjoying he sands of the Mt Lavinia beach,
ca 1954
Pics sent by Dr. Git
Wickremasinghe in UK
Dr R.
Gitendra Wickremasinghe
Senior
Lecturer,
Department
of Haematology,
Royal Free
and University College Medical School,
Rowland Hill
Street,
London NW3
2PF,
UK.
r.wickremasinghe@medsch.ucl.ac.uk
Glimpse of History from ANCL
Archives : Sunday Observer Mar 4 2007
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SIRIMAVO R. D. BANDARANAIKE (Born April 17, 1916)
was the world's first elected woman Prime Minister, and a
founder leader of the Non Aligned Movement (NAM).
Apart from becoming the Prime Minister of Sri
Lanka three times, she was also an illustrious stateswoman who
had not only signed the historic Sirima-Shasthri pact to find
a political solution to the problem of Tamils of Indian origin
but also effectively intervened to solve the Sino-Indian
dispute. She represented Sri Lanka at various international
fora including the United Nations Organisations and the
Non-Aligned Movement.
She also brought a resolution before the UN
asking that the Indian Ocean be made a Peace Zone. She had the
rare distinction of rubbing shoulders with outstanding world
leaders like Indira Gandhi of India, Anwar Sadat of Egypt and
Marshall Tito of Yugoslavia.
Before becoming the Prime Minister in 1994 she
took her oaths as the Minister without Portfolio on August 19,
1994, and donated her salary to the Treasury. She worked as an
advisor to the Cabinet of Ministers of her daughter's
government.
Indian Prime Ministers Jawaharlal Nehru and
Indira Gandhi had very close family connections with the
Bandaranaike family and as a result the Indo-Sri Lanka
relations during her rule was unique.
Her friendly and cordial approach helped to find
solutions to festering problems. Such as the Sirima-Shasthri
agreement between Mrs. Bandaranaike and Lal Bahadur Shasthri
which helped to sign an accord with India. It was solely due
to her efforts that an amicable settlement favourable to Sri
Lanka was reached on the question of Kachchativu, a tiny
island between the South Coast of India and Sri Lanka's North
Coast . Now the island belongs to Sri Lanka.
Once when border issues between India and China
showed signs of corruption, Mrs. Bandaranaike separately met
the leaders and brought pacification.
She ruled the country from July 1960 to March
1965 and then from 1970 to 1977. For nearly 12 years Mrs.
Bandaranaike ruled the country. During the height of terror in
1988 she polled 2,289,868 votes (44.9 per cent) as the
presidential candidate at the elections held on December 19,
1988. Former President Ranasinghe Premadasa who won the
election polled only 50.4 per cent. Mr. Ossie Abeyagoonasekera
received 4.5 per cent votes.
As the daughter of Barnes Ratwatte Dissawwa and
Ratwatte Kumarihamy, she received her education at St
Bridget's Convent, Colombo.
In 1940, she married Mr. S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike
the then Minister of Local Government and Health, who later
became Prime Minister of the country in 1956 and continued
till September 1959, when he was assassinated.
Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike was appointed Prime
Minister (as a member of the Senate) and contested her first
seat in Parliament in March 1965 from the electorate of
Attanagalle - and was returned by a majority of votes and
later became the Leader of the Opposition.
She had given leadership to the Sri Lanka Freedom
Party (SLFP), the party founded by her late husband both in
good times and bad times.
For
more
than forty years, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, held centre stage in
Sri Lankan politics. Catapulted into the limelight in1959
following the shock assassination of her brilliant politician
husband Prime Minister S.W.R.D Bandaranaike, the diffident
housewife from Horagolla, disparagingly called the 'weeping
widow' by her critics, soon proved her mettle.
Sirimavo Bandaranaike put little Sri Lanka on the
international map when in 1960 at the age of 44, she became
the world's first woman prime minister. She held office from
1960-65, then again from 1970-77 presiding over the country's
change into a Republic and finally became prime minister for
the third time in 1994, this time with her daughter Chandrika
Kumaratunga as the country's executive president. Ill-health
however, dogged her last years and in August this year, she
relinquished public office.
In the 1960s, Mrs.Bandaranaike wowed the world
with her presence as the only female leader amongst an
international stage dominated by a galaxy of prominent men,
especially from the Non-Aligned Movement among whom were
India's Jawaharlal Nehru, Egypt's Gamal Abdul
Nasser,Yugoslavia's Josip Broz Tito and Indonesia's
Gen.Sukharno. She maintained excellent ties with neighbouring
countries and shared a close personal friendship with Indian
premier Indira Gandhi. She was also close to the Chinese
leaders Mao Tse Tung and Chou-en-lai. In 1976, she hosted the
Non-Aligned Summit in Colombo and this was considered the
pinnacle of her career in international affairs.
During the Bangladesh war in 1971,she permitted
Pakistani flights to re-fuel at Colombo and yet kept the
confidence of Mrs.Gandhi. Another notable achievement was when
she obtained for Sri Lanka sovereignty over the barren but
disputed island of Kachchativu situated between India and Sri
Lanka.
Whilst she shone on the international stage, at
home, though her career was chequered.
She faced a military coup in 1962 and swiftly
quelled the JVP insurgency in 1971.
Her takeover of Lake House and closure of the
Independent Newspapers Group were, however, blots on her
record. On the economic front, propelled by her Marxist
allies, she implemented unpopular left-oriented economic and
social policies which brought about an era of shortages and
queues.
In 1975,she removed the Marxists from her
coalition and began pushing right-wing policies but it was too
late and the opposition UNP swept to a landslide victory in
1977.
In what was possibly the darkest hour of her
political life, the UNP under President J.R. Jayewardene
cruelly stripped her of her civic rights, forcing her out of
politics for what was loosely called "abuse of power" in 1980.
Five years later, the grand old lady once again
led the SLFP to power and was sworn in as Prime Minister by
her daughter Chandrika.
Her death marks the end of a remarkable career of
a woman who emerged from her husband's shadow to write her
name in this country's history as a stateswoman of courage and
integrity.
"I attended the wedding of 'Young Banda' to Miss
Ratwatte (daughter of Disawa Barnes Ratwatte and niece of the
late Sir Cudah) at Balangoda and a week later, their
ceremonial homecoming to Sir Solomon Bandaranaike's residence
near Veyangoda. This marriage is of great sociological and political importance.
Whatever opinion one may hold of young Bandaranaike as
Minister for Local Administration, or as founder and leader of
the Sinhala Maha Sabha or as a pervert for political purposes
from Christianity to Buddhism or as a master of nationalist
rhetoric, one is bound to admit that he has taken to himself a
wife who appears thoroughly nice, placid and sensible and that
this union between a first-rank family of the lowlands with a
first-rank family of the Kandyan highlands represents an
accretion of considerable political influence to the Sinhala
Maha Sabha."
Extract from 'Things
Ceylonese': twelfth periodical report by Sir Andrew Caldecott
for CO (Colonial Office) from British Documents on the End of
Empire edited by K.M de Silva.
Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike had....
achieved distinction on her own account by becoming the
world's first woman Prime Minister. But rather more important
than the accident by which she preceded Mrs Indira Gandhi, Mrs
Golda Meir and Mrs Margaret Thatcher to a winning post set up
by keepers of world records is the fact, undisputed I should
imagine by those who follow Lankan politics, that she is the
most formidable and charismatic leader the country has ever
seen. A woman of unusually strong will and possessed of a sturdy
resolution that her later career has given her frequent
opportunity to display, she did not allow public criticism to
deter her from what she doubtless saw as her duty both to her
children and to her husband's memory.
The French newspapers in Lausanne where I found
myself in 1960 carried pictures of Sirimavo, her face pale,
her eyes rimmed with dark shadows, campaigning from public
platforms for the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. They
used the terms volupteuse and seducteuse to describe the
placid lady I had last seen at Horagolla Walauwa acknowledging
with conventionally folded hands the greetings of her
husband's supporters and later quietly but efficiently
organising the midday meal that fed hundreds of rejoicing SLFP
partisans gathered to celebrate uncle Solomon's 'famous
victory'.
Most conservative members of our clan, ...reacted
with deep misgivings .......when on the death of her husband,
Sirimavo was persuaded by senior members of his party to enter
politics. Even uncle Paul Deraniyagala who
had been Solomon's best man when he married Sirimavo shook his
head gravely over the idea of his cousin's widow in national
politics..
"She can't achieve anything by it," said Uncle
Paulie. "What does she know of politics. In Solla's time,
Sirima presided over nothing fiercer than the kitchen fire.
And think what Ceylon's like-would people ever tolerate a
woman at the top? She'll end up by spoiling her personal
reputation and ruining the family name."
Early
in
her political life, Mrs Bandaranaike spearheaded the
Non-Aligned Movement and in this speech to the Non-Aligned
Conference in Belgrade in 1961 she addressed the assembly
appealing for peace not just as leader, but as a woman and
mother. Extracts:
I consider it a great honour to represent my
country at this Conference which could prove to be of historic
significance in the cause of world peace. I am happy to attend
this great assembly not only as a representative of my country
but also as a woman and a mother who can understand the
thoughts and feelings of those millions of women, the mothers
of this world, who are deeply concerned with the preservation
of the human race.
I am also happy that we have chosen to hold the
Conference in this beautiful city of Belgrade not only because
of the warmth and hospitality of the Yugoslav people of which
there is so much evidence but also because in holding it in a
European city we have demonstrated to the world that the
ideals and hopes which we all share are not confined to a
continent or region but reflect an awareness on the part of human beings,
wherever they may be, of the urgent need for international
peace and security.
We in Ceylon count ourselves fortunate that the
people of our land were spared the horrors of two World Wars
and that we were able to throw off the shackles of colonial
power without strife or bloodshed. But it was not until eight
years after the attainment of independence, when my late
husband was elected Prime Minister, that the foreign bases
were taken over and a definite and positive policy of
non-alignment with power blocs adopted in foreign affairs.
This Conference at Belgrade has not been
convened, however, for the consideration of specific problems
peculiar to individual nations; we are gathered here in the
firm belief that the positive policy of non-alignment with
power blocs followed by each of our several countries and that
our common dedication to the cause of peace and peaceful
co-existence gives us the right to raise our voices in common
decisions and declarations in a world divided into power blocs
and moving rapidly towards the brink of a nuclear war.
Many of the Heads of States and Heads of
Governments who addressed this Conference in plenary session
have emphasized the point that our group of nations do not
propose to become a third bloc or a third force. None of us
can really disagree with that view, for that would be
inconsistent with the very idea of non-alignment. But it is
important to remember that in our anxiety to avoid becoming a
third force we must not allow our spirit of unity and purpose
which has been so evident at this Conference to disintegrate
and fall apart.
We believe that the ideals which have drawn us
together will continue to inspire our thinking on
international problems. We must recognise, however, that
national policy is seldom divorced from national interest and
that it is in the nature of international politics that
competitive interests should arise. It would be unreal for us
to believe that such conflicts of interest can be resolved by
any appeal to principle alone. It would be equally unreal, and
indeed positively dangerous, to allow these conflicts to
remain unresolved. It is in this spirit that I would like to
express our thoughts on some of the problems which confront
us.
None of the countries of the world, big or small,
rich or poor, can afford to look with indifference at the
increasing international tension and at the steady
deterioration in mutual trust and understanding among the
committed nations of the world, particularly the Big Powers.
The present crisis in Berlin must be reviewed not as a
separate question but as part of the larger problem of a
divided Germany and against the background of the failure of
the Great Powers to agree on a firm peace settlement for that
country.
The tensions which have grown in various parts of
the world in recent years can be traced to the clash of
interest between the two power blocs. The fact remains that
the German problem is one of the legacies of the last war, and
the earlier this question is resolved of uniting the two
sections, the better it will be for peace and understanding
among nations.
Disarmament is a crucial question of our times.
An early settlement of this question will be of paramount
importance in building confidence among nations and in
decreasing the dangers of war. It would also be an important
milestone in the improvement of relations between nations and
would mark the end of two-power blocs with all this portends
for the future peace and security of the world. Vast sums of
money that are expended in manufacturing these weapons of
destruction could usefully be spent on economic and social
development in various countries of the world.
As countries having a vested interest in peace we
should make an immediate appeal to the big powers to resume
negotiations with a view to the achievement of complete and
general disarmament. In my view, it would help these
negotiations if a certain number of the non-aligned countries
are also included in the Disarmament Commission.
This Conference of non-aligned states does not in
any way act contrary to the aims and objectives for which the
United Nations stands. On the contrary, this Conference
supports and supplements the work of the United Nations. The
United Nations stands for the maintenance of international
peace and security and it is in the interest of all concerned,
particularly the small countries, to maintain and strengthen
this organisation.
We would prefer basic changes in the UN Charter
in order to strengthen this organisation, but disagreement
among the big powers makes this difficult. The failure to seat
the representative of the People's Republic of China has
contributed to this impasse. It is our earnest hope that wise
counsels will prevail and that China will take her legitimate
seat in the United Nations.
The composition of the Security Council and the
other institutions of the United Nations does not adequately
reflect the present membership of the United Nations. When a
satisfactory solution is reached as regards the representation
of the People's Republic of China we feel a reallocation of
seats could be made in those bodies so that greater
representation might be given to the Asian-African Group.
Before I conclude I should like to express my
firm conviction that there is no single country in the world
at this moment that looks forward to the prospects of war
without dismay. I do not for one moment believe that there is
a single mother in the world who could bear to contemplate the
possible danger of her children being exposed to atomic
radiation and slow and lingering death, if not swift
annihilation.
The statesmen of the great powers, who have been
placed in positions of trust and authority by millions of
ordinary people who do not want war, have no right to assume
that they have a mandate to precipitate a nuclear war and
immense destructive power either to defend a way of life or to
extend a political ideology.
If I may attempt to assess the contribution that
the non-aligned countries can make at this time, I would say
that our endeavour should be to influence world opinion to
such an extent that governments, however powerful, cannot
regard warfare as an alternative to negotiation. Too much is
at stake today to allow us the luxury of considerations of
prestige and honour. When human life is involved all else is
secondary. Let us in our deliberations make this clear in no
uncertain terms
The
eyes,
they say are the most precious gifts for a human. Then the
eyes of the world's first lady premier, and mother of the
nation as she is considered by many Sri Lankans, would be
priceless gifts.
According to a wish she had expressed some time
ago, the late Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike's corneas were
donated to two eye patients who were awaiting corneal grafting
at the Eye Hospital, Colombo. "Despite her age the eyes were
in good condition", said the Director of Eye Hospital Dr.
Sarath Abeysinghe.
Both corneas were removed and one transplanted on
the very day Mrs. Bandaranaike passed away, and the other the
next morning, by two consultant eye surgeons of the Eye
Hospital.
"Luckily there were two patients awaiting corneal
grafting at the Eye Hospital. Otherwise the eyes would have
been sent abroad," said Dr. Abeysinghe. -UG
The
death
of Sirima Bandaranaike on Tuesday came as quite a shock to
most persons of Sri Lankan origin living here.
A stereotypical Western idea in former times was
that Asian or Oriental women were virtual chattels and that
their place was in the kitchen unlike their Occidental
counterparts who played a prominent role in society and
politics.
When Mrs Bandaranaike became Prime Minister in
1960 the mould that perpetuated such thinking was broken.Yet
Western media and academics had a way of belittling that
achievement. They argued that Mrs Bandaranaike became Prime
Minister only because of the assassination of her
husband.
But once she was thrust into the forefront of
politics, she learned it fast and actually took to it quite
professionally.
If Mrs Bandaranaike's entry into politics, as the
world's first woman Prime Minister did not entirely rebut the
argument, that Oriental women were still behind their Western
counterparts in liberating themselves of their traditional
role as housewives, it did focus much more academic and media
attention on the status and role of Asian and African women in
society.
Much to the amazement of Western people they
began to discover that there were many women in our
universities and other tertiary institutions such as the Law
College and, that in some disciplines, women outnumbered the
men.
I remember an occasion in 1971 when Betty Friedan
(if my memory has not deserted me for a moment) a guru of
America's women's lib came to the University of Hawaii to talk
of her favourite subject-women's liberation. She talked of her
interesting meeting with Indira Gandhi whom she referred to as
the world's first woman Prime Minister much to the joy of the
Indian students gathered.
When she did stop to take a breath, I managed to
intervene and point out to her that Indira Gandhi was not the
world's first woman prime minister. She hesitated for a couple
of minutes and then went on as though ignorance was indeed
bliss.
If an American women's lib leader did not know
Mrs Bandaranaike by reputation, certainly lowly immigration
officials in the former German Democratic Republic, commonly
called East Germany, did.
Rex de Silva, formerly the Editor of the Sun
newspaper and now editing the Borneo Bulletin in Brunei, and I
had just crossed Checkpoint Charlie in West Berlin and were
trying to enter the eastern sector, as the Americans called
it.
This was in 1966 and both of us were attending a
journalism institute, which was located a hundred yards away
from the notorious Berlin Wall and opposite Checkpoint
Charlie.
After handing over our passports to the East
German officials, we were waiting for clearance when Rex and I
were greeted very warmly by one of them who said "Aah Ceylon..
Frau Bandaranaike.... The (tea)" and immediately cleared us.
The point I'm trying to make is that Mrs Bandaranaike was well
known in the socialist bloc and the developing world.
If Mr Bandaranaike made foreign policy a key
plank during his unfortunately short term as Prime Minister,
Sirima Bandaranaike continued that interest and gave serious
thought and much time to foreign policy and to build a
professional diplomatic service.
Another trait in her was that she was always
helpful to journalists, if she could be so, without divulging
sensitive information. I've often had occasion to interview
her at the airport either when she was leaving or arriving.
I remember one occasion when she was leaving for
India from the Ratmalana airport. She was heading for the
plane accompanied by Governor General William Gopallawa and
Maithripala Senanayake. I walked across the tarmac much to
surprise of the security officials and other journalists and
interviewed her right there.
Thank heaven there was no overpowering security
presence then. Thank heaven for journalism that Mrs
Bandaranaike considered this was part of the job and how I got
my interview was my business.
Even when I used to come home from Hong Kong for
a short holiday, she would never refused to give me an
appointment if I telephoned asking for one.
And even in those physically fragile years, her
mind was still acute. Once when I called on her a few months
before Hong Kong returned to China, she was very interested to
know what could happen, whether Hong Kong would continue to be
like what it was then.
In
an interview with The Sunday Times on her 79th birthday on
April 16, 1995, Mrs Bandaranaike, then Prime Minister for the
third time, spoke to Roshan Pieris on the events that shaped
her life. Extracts:
On her
wedding:
"Just like any young girl, I was excited about
it. There were elaborate preparations made as my husband was
then a politician of stature and the Ratwatte family (she was
a Miss Ratwatte) was keeping to all the traditions we were
heir to."
On her
husband's death:
"Poignant and harsh memories still remain when I
recollect that distant day, of the way in which my husband was
shot in his own home and the manner of his death. And there
were my three children Anura the youngest, only around eleven
and my daughters teenagers."
On the
difficult times in her political life:
"I guided the country
through a coup planned to topple my government when I first
took over. In 1962, many a UNP politician's unseen hand and
that of many a man in the Forces was ranged against me. But I
overcame it all. But what I am most proud of looking back, is
that during one of the most trying periods in recent history I
guided our country.
The JVP uprising was the first terrorist
insurrection in this country directly attacking the
government. It was an outstandingly difficult time. But I kept
my cool.
It is true some youth
died in the crossfire but I am proud to say no one was
deliberately killed or abducted or burnt with tyres round
their bodies or mutilated. I asked the misled youngsters, both
men and women to surrender.
I told them as a mother I felt for them and felt
sorry that they should have been so falsely misled with
grandiose ideas of power.
On the
Non-Aligned Movement:
I will always remember the start of the
Non-aligned Movement by Tito, Nehru, Nasser and myself and the
honour of hosting the movement's 5th summit in Sri Lanka in
1976.
On
foreign policy:
I am proud that we
maintained good relations with our immediate neighbours and
that Sri Lanka's stature in global politics was high. In
retrospect there is also the solving of the Indo-Sri Lanka
problem, vis-a-vis the Sirima-Shashtri pact and finally
getting Kachchativu, a bone of contention between the two
countries (India and Sri Lanka) for Sri Lanka.
On the
future:
I still feel I have a role to play in guiding and
advising the government.
I am glad that
history has been kind in making my husband, myself and now my
daughter, leaders of this country.
I hope there will be peace as we had upto 1977
and that my country will once again be able to live in peace,
devoid of violence between ethnic groups and that the
territorial integrity and sovereignty of our country will
remain intact.
I pray for peace and prosperity for this country
I serve and love so that future generations will call her
blessed.
May the Triple Gem bless all her people
irrespective of race, caste or creed. That is my most
ardent wish.
Today marks the seventh
death anniversary of Dr. Jaya Pathirana, former Advocate
of the Supreme Court of Ceylon, Member of Parliament for
Kurunegala (1961-1965) and judge of the Supreme Court of
Sri Lanka. The following excerpts of an article on
S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike by Dr. Pathirana is published as a
mark of respect for the late judge who is remembered as “a
fearless and honest judge’.
TRIBUTE:
Unlike when independence of a country, which had been subject
to colonial rule, had been won after a national liberation
struggle of the people, in those countries where independence
had been achieved from colonial rule after a negotiated
transfer of power, the departing colonial power invariably
handed over the reins of Government to the very elite with
which it had made its compact.
The new ruling elite and the departing colonial
power invariably had common interests. The transition to
independence merely facilitated with greater efficiency the
advancement of their respective socio-economic
interests. The mass of the exploited and
suffering people seldom became the beneficiaries of
independence at least during its initial period.
Mr. S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike had the far sighted
vision to warn the country when we achieved independence in
1948 that unless the mass of the people-symbolically referred
to as the Common Man-was given the benefits of freedom,
freedom meant nothing.
He gave this warning on the 10th of February,
1948 in the speech he delivered as Leader of the House at the
opening of the first session of Parliament after the
attainment of independence.
With his characteristically oratorical skill he
said: “We must not and we cannot allow our newly regained
freedom to run the risk of remaining merely a theoretical
concept, a thing dead and without real meaning for the mass of
the people. We must see that it quickens into a life of the
greater happiness and prosperity for us all. Political freedom
comes alive only when it is utilized to achieve other freedoms
- freedom from poverty, freedom from disease, freedom from
ignorance, freedom from fear.”
These freedoms were embodied in the famous
Atlantic Charter by Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt
during the Second World War.
The social revolution which he brought about
after the 1956 general election, elected him to power through
the peaceful process of the ballot, ushered in the age of the
Common Man.
It is this outstanding and epoch-making
contribution he made to the people of our country which had a
tremendous impact on its social and economic life that is
universally recognised and respected by the people of our
country.
This accounts for the fact that even the
generation that was born after his death in 1959 continues to
gratefully pay homage and tribute to this great son of Sri
Lanka, who opened the door to the ordinary people of our
country to enjoy the benefits of freedom and independence, and
equal opportunities for all its citizens.
His basic faith in the dignity of the common man
in turn instilled in him abiding faith in the democratic way
of life. He was a dedicated democrat and one of the greatest
democrats of our country.
He was fully aware of the struggle of democracy
through the ages to survive and carry on against the more
disciplined forces of totalitarianism. To him “democracy has
provided that form of government, that form of society under
which mankind has made the greatest progress.”
On one occasion, he remarked, referring to the
necessity to keep democracy alive - “We’ll have to fan the
flickeing flame of democracy, so that each individual is
assured of those freedoms, for which democracy has always
stood, and which safeguard man’s self respect and secure
decent, honest and fair dealing between man and man.”
The crucial turning point in his political career
came on 17th July, 1951 when he resigned his portfolio under
the then ruling government, crossed the floor of the House of
Representative and thereafter founded the Sri Lanka Freedom
Party on the 2nd of September 1951.
While this decision of his brought strong
criticism from his political adversaries, paradoxically, it
turned out to be historic and invigorated democracy in Sri
Lanka in that it gave the country for the first time a
democratic alternative to the then ruling party.
The appearance of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party in
the political arena of the country did a service to the
country and the cause of democracy by providing the people of
our country the opportunity by the free and fair exercise of
the vote to change the Government and elect another democratic
alternative in its place without resort to violence or
revolution.
The democratic structure of the country was
preserved and its stability and continuity ensured thereby.
Perhaps if Mr. Bandaranaike had not provided this
democratic alternative, the history of this country may have
taken a different course and eventually have followed the
pattern of some of the African States by establishing some
type of government without a democratic base.
While Mr. Bandaranaike was a firm believer in
individual freedoms like freedom of speech, assembly, press,
worship etc.., he felt deeply that the content of democracy
would lose its essence unless it recognised the collective
freedom like freedom from poverty, freedom from disease,
freedom from ignorance and freedom from fear and those
fundamental rights about which the socialist community had
laid special emphasis like the right to work and right to
live, the latter gaining momentum after the threat to human
survival from the nuclear holocaust.
To him, therefore, democracy was an amalgam of a
number of individual rights and collective freedoms.
Mr. Bandaranaike addressing the Indian Council of
World Affairs in 1957 gave his answer:
“One of the problems of democracy today is to
reconcile individual freedoms with the collective freedoms. At
an early period the stress was laid on individual freedoms.
Today the emphasis has shifted to the collective freedoms and
one of the problems of democracy is to effect a harmonization
and reconciliation between the two needs. It may be that some
of the individual freedoms as they were conceived of earlier
may have to be somewhat restricted in the interest of the
collective freedoms. This is one of the problems that faces
democracy.”
Mr. Bandaranaike’s great contemporary and friend,
Jawaharlal Nehru, was in agreement with him when he said: “The
lesser liberties may often need limitation in the interest of
the larger freedoms.”
The individual liberties and collective freedoms
were enshrined for the first time in the 1977 Constitution of
the Republic of Sri Lanka where emphasis was more on the
collective freedoms.
To Mr. Bandaranaike, a truly democratic society
in a country which had emerged into freedom after long years
of colonial rule could be achieved only if every vestige of
the hang-over of colonialism in all its exploitative forms is
eradicated.
He believed that these countries came under
colonial domination, especially in the region of the Indian
Ocean, due to the intrusion of great power rivalry into our
region.
Any attempt after these countries achieved their
independence to bring them under one or other of the rival
power blocs would again jeopardize their freedom and
independence especially as these countries were economically
and militarily weak and had their own internal domestic
problems, especially those which undermined their national
unity.
One of the essential criteria of non-alignment is
that a country should not grant or permit bases to any foreign
power. In the context of the strategic importance of Sri
Lanka, the presence of foreign bases would make the country
extremely vulnerable in any future war.
When Mr. Bandaranaike took office as Prime
Minister in 1956, it was almost ten years after independence,
but still the Metropolitan power, Great Britain, had her naval
base in Trincomalee and the Air Force Base at Katunayake,
under British control.
This was an erosion of our status as an
independent country. In order to give positive and effective
expressions to our country’s new foreign policy based on
Non-aligned and neutralism. Mr. Bandaranaike successfully
negotiated with the British Government the handing over of
these two bases to Sri Lanka in 1957.
The last vestiges of foreign occupation were
removed and Mr. Bandaranaike was rightly constrained to remark
at the ceremony of handing back of the Airport at Katunayake -
“Today our independence is complete”.
The dignity, cordiality, and good grace with
which Mr. Bandaranaike negotiated with the British Government,
the handing back of these bases, is a shining example of how
controversial problems that confront countries could be solved
in the spirit of friendship.
It was Mr. Bandaranaike, who for the first time,
established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union and
other socialist countries after we gained independence in
1948.
To Mr. Bandaranaike, non-alignment in our foreign
relations did not mean “neutralist” or “uncommitted”. On the
contrary, he told Marshal Tito when he visited our country,
“We are very much committed we are committed to the hilt - to
peace in a positive form, to friendship among nations, to
peace and prosperity and happiness of all mankind.”
When Mr. Bandaranaike was Prime Minister, two
important events took place which nearly brought the world to
the brink of war. One was the entry of Soviet troops into
Hungary and the other the Tripartite invasion of Egypt by
Israel, Britain and France over the decision of Egypt to
nationalize the Suez Canal Co... Mr. Bandaranaike took
positive positions on both these matters without just being a
spectator of events which were drifting into a world war.
During the Suez crisis, Mr. Bandaranaike was on a visit to
England and the UN Assembly.
He told his friend, the British Prime Minister,
Anthony Eden, and the British Foreign Secretary, Selwyn Lloyd,
that the Tripartite forces must unconditionally withdraw their
forces from Egypt.
He supported the sovereign right of the Egyptian
people to nationalize the Suez Canal Co., whilst at the same
time recognising international rights regarding the use of the
Suez Canal. His firm’s attitude over the Suez crisis earned
him a very appreciative tribute from Gamal Abdul Nasser, the
President of Egypt.
Mr Bandaranaike showed his independence in
dealing with the two crises. As he later quite rightly and
justifiably remarked, “we can tell the Soviet Union, it was
wrong, and we equally have the right to tell the Tripartite
powers that they are wrong.”
To him the main essential pre-requisite for
solving the problems of the world was the necessity for peace,
as problems could no longer be solved through war especially
after the discovery of the atom bomb, war would mean total
destruction of mankind. In one of his speeches he spelled out
his formula for peace which has its full relevance today.
He said: “I feel that, as never before in our
history, we have to recognize the dignity and brotherhood of
man, that we are all one, whatever may be our religion, colour
or race or idealogy. We are all one today.
We cannot permit our likes of one another,
racial, ideological, linguistic, economic, social or otherwise
to reach the point when we feel that we cannot live together.
The whole world is very close together today, and whether we
like it or not, either we have to live together or surely we
shall perish together.”
Time, however, was not on his side to complete
the goals he set out to achieve, for an assassin’s bullet
prematurely cut short his life on 26th September, 1959. He may
not be with us today, but the Bandaranaike image has survived
and lives.
Today in every city, town, village and in every
nook and corner of our island home, a grateful people bow
their heads in reverence to his memory and pay their tribute
and homage to this great son of Sri Lanka.
Serving well at 80!
By Baron de Livera 2006
Rukmani Eheliyagoda nee de Alwis
celebrates her 80th birthday today, March 26. Always cheerful
and smiling, Rukie as she is affectionately known, had her
schooling at St. Bridget’s Convent and still supports her alma
mater, keeping in touch with all school activities. She formed
the ‘Action Group’ of old Bridgeteens 12 years ago and while
undertaking charity work, they also meet every month and
reminisce about their antics in the convent boarding and
outside.
Rukie had a fairytale wedding when she married
Percy Eheliyagoda in 1952. They had five children including
two sets of twin girls. “The joy of my life was dressing up
these four ‘dolls;” she said.All four daughters attended St.
Bridget’s as well. Until recently, she played football with
her grandsons and excelled in her favourite sport table
tennis.
“My only granddaughter Shanika is in the UK
studying medicine and if I could live a few more years until
she passes out as a doctor I will be happy,” she says.
Front row; Aunty Rukie, Tootie, & Aunt
May de Livera
[pic sent by Charmaine Eheliyagoda &
Professor Lakshman Madurasinghe]
[pic sent by Charmaine Eheliyagoda &
Professor Lakshman Madurasinghe]
The Sweet and Simple Kind
Author: Yasmine Gooneratne
Publishing House: Perera
Hussein
Available at leading
bookshops
Price: Rs. 1,000
FICTION: Set in Ceylon in
the transformative moments immediately before and after
Independence in 1948, Yasmine Gooneratne’s novel The Sweet and
Simple Kind, recently short-listed for the 2007 Commonwealth
Writers Prize, presents a narrative trajectory of love, loss
and remembrance.
A novel divided into four parts, it presents us
with the intertwined stories for Latha and Tsunami Wijesinha,
distant cousins and close childhood friends, as they more
through formative periods in their lives.
To her various aunts and to the mothers of
prospective husbands, Latha appears winningly “sweet and
simple”, yet she possesses a clear intellect, a maturity of
sense and a keen love of English literature (revelling in
particular, like the author, in a partiality to Jane Austen
novels).
In some ways, the novel reads as homage to
Austen, with its female-centred and socially embedded
narrative; like Austen’s books, it ends with marriage, yet not
before considering what marriage means for intellectually and
emotionally independent women, and for inter-community
relations in the newly independent island.
It is Latha who provides the organising
consciousness of the novel, for it is she who presciently
grasps the meaning of her cousin’s unusual name, although she
is as yet unsure whether Tsunami is “an earthquake waiting to
happen” or “the one the earthquake hits” (p.53). With this
play on names, Gooneratne ties the gentler world of 1950s and
1960s Ceylon to the ruptures of the present day.
Gooneratne writes this novel in an unhurried
style, which effectively contributes to the gradual
construction of the world of the novel through an accumulation
of details and characters, so that a listing of dishes feasted
upon at tsunami’s home at Lucas Falls, or a description of
everyday life at Peradeniya University adds to the accrued
atmosphere of lived moments in time.
The pace of the narrative also reflects the pace
of memory as it documents the world of “a patrician elite in
which old money and privilege had frequently joined forces
with political power” (p. 195). The first part of the novel is
set in the main at Lucas Falls, the home of the wealthier
branch of the Wijesinha family.
Tsunami’s father Rowland Wijesinha had been the
A.D.C. in the time of the adulterous British Governor
Millbanke, until the mysterious death of Lady Millbanke brings
an end to this particular episode of colonial habitation.
The estate is bought by a young British planter
whose fortunes thrive on tea cultivation until he eventually
sells the property to a wealthy Sinhalese mudaliyar, from whom
the present Wijesinha can descend.
The ghost of Lady Millbanke is said to haunt
particular corridors of the historic house, her spectral
presence neatly tying together colonial deceit with the
intrigues of Independence and the treachery of the
post-colonial era.
Lucas Falls, a fallen paradise within which the
stories of a family register the traces of colonial history
and prefigure the neo-colonial future, is for Latha a life
lived in displacement: she spends there formative moments of
her childhood, away from her own genial father and
conservative mother, keeping secret the English porcelain
baths, rose-patterned quilts, and coloured squares of a
Monopoly board that make her dream of far-away London.
Here, Latha attends Sunday services at church
with her Christian relatives and participates in the
imperialistic renaming of the ayah, chauffeur and other
domestic staff as characters from the verse of Longfellow and
Pope.
However, Lucas Falls also offers symbols of the
plural life of the times, centring around the figure of Helen
Ratnam, the Indian-born mother of tsunami and her siblings.
Helen is an inspired and talented artist who favours vibrant
colours and free-flowing lines; as mistress of Lucas Falls she
must take on certain domestic duties which require her to
channel her energies differently.
While she is unable to tutor the young girls in
Sinhala, an increasingly urgent knowledge for the youth of
Independence, she instead teaches them to quilt, an unorthodox
skill in Ceylon but one learnt by Helen from an English
teacher at her Delhi school.
This is her means to “extend the beauty of her
husband’s ancestral home” (p.56) and she allows the young
girls to tack and hem the bright diamonds and hexagons in
place while she reads to them from her own childhood
favourites including As You Like It, David Copperfield and
Pride and Prejudice.
This homespun artist also plants wild flowers in
a corner of the Lucas Falls grounds, which comes to be
lovingly known to Latha as the ‘Indian garden’.
Its previous mistress, the tea planter’s wife,
had directed the laying out of the roses, lilies, hollyhocks,
mazes, bowers and avenues which point to the imposition on the
tropical land of an obsessive memory of England.
Helen transforms this selected corner into a
space for the nurturing of wild flowers, reflecting the way
that Lucas Falls during her time is a space that allows the
blossoming of open minds.
However, the ties that bind this large and
unconventional family, whose free opinion first unsettles and
then nourishes Latha, soon begin to fray, a process that
prefigures the fragility of an open society and the alienation
of “outsiders” and non-conformists within the increasing
politicisation of an exclusivist Sinhala Buddhist national
identity.
1948 is the year marking Independence, the year
of the Citizenship Act that disenfranchise Indian Tamils
working on the tea estates, and the year which marks the
fracturing of the family, as Gooneratne begins to portray the
privately devastating oscillation caused by seismic shifts in
public life.
Lucas Falls continues to reflect the
transformations taking place in the nation at large, becoming
a space that records the rewriting of history through
polarised “race-memory”.
The colonial plantation house takes on another
life, renamed as the Wijesinha maha walauwa, the requisite
ancestral house tying the claims of an opportunistic family to
heritage and land.
Helen’s artworks are swiftly replaced with images
of Sigiriya frescoes, elephants carved from ebony and ivory,
and a gilded papier-mache frieze of Prince Dutu Gemunu adorned
in full battle regalia.
These overt national markers promote the new
identity of Rowland Wijesinha as nationalist politician, who
exchanges European dress for national costume,
self-indulgently woven from fines silk.
The hypocrisy of such self-serving Sinhala
Buddhist nationalism is nicely observed when, following a trip
to the US, the new mistress of the house deems it proper that
Bibles should be visibly positioned because “every
well-appointed guest room should have one”. (p. 438)
Latha and Tsunami’s sojourn at the new University
of Peradeniya occupies the central part of he novel as a
significant transformative space for consciousness and
identity, experienced by the young women students in a
potentially transitional moment for the young nation.
Arriving in Peradeniya in the first class
carriage of the train, Latha takes her seat on the campus
coach next to a girl from whose hair rises the strong aroma of
coconut oil.
Gingerly glancing at her new companion in the
close atmosphere of the coach, Latha notes that she is wearing
a brightly flowered skirt and rubber slippers, and that she
holds “a paper parcel with oil stains on it that smelt of
stale masalavadai” (p. 210).
However, when the coach enters an avenue of
ancient overhanging mara trees, from which garlands of golden
ehela bestow their blossoms on the lush grass beneath, Latha’s
misgivings dissolve, for it is this girl who lyrically voices
the shared experience of beauty and idealism that will envelop
the students in their new world.
Latha looks at her companion with new respect and
reflects: “(I)t’s true... We are moving together, this
stranger and I, and all of us in this coach, through a shower
of gold (p.211).
This moment captures the affectionate and
idealistic tone that infuses Gooneratne’s narrative as it
seeks to recreate spaces of possibility for equality,
intellect and love.
Like the plump cardamom pod that Latha’s father
rolls around his tongue near the end of the novel, whose
flavour has been distilled and almost dissipated as it cooks
slowly in a pot of saffron rice, the novel memorialises what
is now “no more than an exquisite rumour, a mere hint of its
own presence”, a memory of sweetness and the loss of
simplicity.
This review first appeared
in the May/June 2007 issue of Confluence (UK)
Today
(January 8, 2009) falls the hundred and tenth (110) birth
anniversary of Solomon West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike, the
fourth Prime Minister of Sri Lanka, patriot and great national
leader. He was born on January 8, 1899, the only son of late
Sir Solomon Dias Bandaranaike, Maha Mudliyar of Ceylon, under
the British Colonial rule. S. W. R. D. came from a
distinguished aristocracy of Ceylon.
Lives of Great
Men all remind us We can make our lives sublime.
And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the
sands of time. - Wordsworth |
S. W. R.
D. Bandaranaike, had his education at S. Thomas’ College,
Mount Lavinia, one of the leading public schools. He came
under the direct influence of the very famous Warden Stone, a
Classics scholar. After a brilliant academic career, he
proceeded to Christ Church College, Oxford. At the Oxford
University, he showed his prowess as a brilliant student,
orator and debator. Young Bandaranaike, shone like a bright
star in the firmament and he was elected Secretary of the
Oxford Union by defeating Malcolm McDonald, a former Secretary
for Dominions in the then British Cabient. Among
Bandaranaike’s contemporaries at Oxford University, was the
former British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden.
After
serving the Bar in England, in 1925, he returned to Ceylon and
began a successful legal career. But, he was more interested
in serving the people and took to politics, when he was only,
26 years. He became a member of the Ceylon National Congress
and soon became one of its joint secretaries.
The year
1927, was vital for Bandaranaike. He realised that to win the
hearts of the people, he must address the public in Sinhala.
This brilliant young man, learned Sinhala in no time and
became a fine speaker both in Sinhala and English. After his
return to Ceylon from Oxford, he was free to choose one of the
three courses. I presume firstly; a life of luxury and leisure
at Horagolla Walauwa, secondly; a distinguished legal career
at the Bar; thirdly the hardest of all life of service to the
people. He chose the last and the hardest way as he followed,
the socialis and democratic “middle path.”
His
services were not limited to the legislature alone. He engaged
himself practically in all social service activities as well.
He entered politics by contesting Maradana Ward, in the
Colombo Municipality and defeated the then Labour Leader A. E.
Goonesinghe. With the inauguration of the State Council,
Bandaranaike returned uncontested for Veyangoda seat and in
1936 he was re-elected, uncontested and became the Minister of
Local Government. Under the Soulbury Constitution,
Bandaranaike entered Parliament in 1947 by a record majority
from his Pocket-Burrow-Attanagalla. Prime Minister D. S.
Sananayake appointed him as the Minister of Health and Local
Government. He also became the Leader of the House.
The
political differences he had with D. S. Senanayake and the
United National Party, paved the way for his resignation. This
marked the begining of the political change - “The dawn of the
Era of the common man.”
I
consider, July 12, 1951 and July 17, 1951, as the dates that
laid the foundation, for the present era, in the Political
History of this country. It marked the birth of the Sri Lanka
Freedom Party, led by S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike. On July 12th,
SWRD, left DSS Government and crossed over to the Opposition.
Like his shadow, the great national leader from Giruwapattuwa,
D. A. Rajapaksa (Beliatta) followed SWRD andsat in the
Opposition.
He was a
man who adorned the Legislature of this country for over 25
years. He was a gentleman par excellence, fine human being and
a warm hearted man.
In 1952,
elections, he won the Attanagalla Electorate by a majority of
32,544 votes by defeating the UNP candidate A. W. G.
Seneviratne. His Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (People’s United
Front) coalition, brought him to power. He united the all
progressive forces - Sangha - Veda - Guru - Govi - Kamkaru and
routed the English oriented westernised United National Party.
We must mention here, that from 1926 to 1956 in his political
career, he never lost an election.
He was
defeated by “Mara”, (death) September 26, 1959, at the hands
of an assassin.
As an
orator, he was unrivalled. He was popularly known as the
Silver Tongued Orator. In his brilliant speeches he quoted
Latin and Greek at the most appropriate times. Law and
Literature fascinated him. He was a vociferious reader. Burke
and Pitt, Lincoln and Gokhale polished his powers of speech.
SWRD was a master of the spoken word.
I give
below, a few lines from his memorable address of thanks as the
leader of the House of Representatives he delivered on
February 10, 1948, in reply to the speech from the throne by
HRH the Duke of Gloucester. This was considered a brilliant
piece of oratory in the world.
Political
freedom comes alive, only when it is utilised to achieve other
freedoms - freedom from poverty; freedom from disease; freedom
from ignorance; freedom from fear. Nor is that all. We have to
fan the flickering flames of Democracy, so that each
individual is assured of the freedoms for which Democracy has
always stood, and which safeguard man’s self-respect and
secure decent, honest and fair dealing between man and man.
Those are the high tasks that we shall all, to the best of our
ability, try to perform with diligence, devotion and
efficiency.”
Bandaranaike
was one of the noblest sons of Sri Lanka. He was really
brilliant. His mental alacrity was really amazing. Further,
the quickness of perception and the way in which he was able
to master a subject was astounding.
This
great leader and patriot fought for the freedom of the country
and he found one of the most honoured places in the Hall of
Fame.
During
the brief spell of his premiership he opened the doors toward
the well-being of the common masses. In the field of
education, the establishment of the Vidyodaya (Sri
Jayewardenepura) and Vidyalankara (Kelaniya) Universities
created the opportunity to a large sector of village students
to pursue higher studies.
The
nationalisation of transport, taking over of Trincomalee and
Katunayake bases from the British Government, State patronage
of the age old Ayurveda system and the establishment of a
Ministry for Cultural Affairs are some of the remarkable
achievements of this great man.
His life
was gentle and the elements so mixed in him, that nature might
stand up and say to the world.
SWRD: Turning servants into
masters
Doyen of
journalists pays tribute to the Master Builder of the New
Sri Lanka
By D.B. Dhanapala - DM
Wed Sep 26 2007
In the 1930s I described Solomon West Ridgeway
Dias Bandaranaike as a man with a future behind him.
It was a time when in that Mecca of mediocrities
called the State Council of Ceylon he stood out as an infidel,
with cleverness as his creed and smartness as the manner of
his mind.
He had what is called ‘back-ground;. That in
itself was not anything unique. Many of those in the State
Council could with an engaging gesture, point in a leisurely
way towards some kind of estimable association, family
prestige and good education. But Bandaranaike combined ‘back
ground’ with brilliance; a familiar name with unfamiliar
talent.
He certainly was one of the three best speakers
we had then in Ceylon. Never at a loss or a word with a
fluency and a diction that even Radhakrishnan might envy, he
would reel off one perfect period after another with an
astounding ease that baffled slow-witted men like me.
When he rose of an evening especially immediately
after one of our fathers of repetition, his speeches shone
like burnished gold in the sunlight.
For a moment or two lie would play, with velvet
pawed syllables, with his opponent — he might even throw him
the sop of a left-handed compliment.
Then he seemed to roll up his sleeves and get
down to business. He hurled choice epithets at the subject. He
stabbed the foe with jewelled phrases, made on the spur of the
moment — but made to hurt, all the same.
He would pat a favourite — or better perhaps
himself—on the back And then lie rode away in it storm of
oratory, all spontaneity and splendour with the distant thud
of his galloping prose resounding in our ears.
It was neither lightning nor thunder; nor was it
an earth-quake. It was just the Member for Veyangoda.
But his speeches were not faultless. He had the
heavy habit of talking in italics — at the top of his voice.
And he underlined almost every other word of the italics at
the top of his voice. And he underlined almost every other
word of the italics with an absolutely unnecessary emphasis.
The effect of stressing too much was not stressing anything at
all!
With this distressing disease of underlining his
megaphone voice lie combined an irritating appreciation of
himself at every turn of phrase and parenthesis. Maybe, he
paused for just a moment looked round for applause ; then,
finding not enough forthcoming, remedied the defect himself by
giving a little chuckle of appreciation thing between the
clucking of a hen after laying and the laugh of a juggler on
doing a celebrated trick.
He talked in jeweled prose well enunciated. But
the magic was entirely in the fine phrasing; the appeal, in
the strong epithet.
He knew how to say it. I only he had known then
what to say!
Not that there were no occasions when he did know
to a point of cruelty the right thin to utter. Hurt his vanity
and he started to the quick. Give him a personal pinprick to
see how quick he was on the uptake. Pat came the retort,
crushing in vengeance, killing in venom.
He was the maser of the retort discounrteous, the
apostle of the sharp invective in the country.
I remember once Dr. S.A. Wickremasinghe, the
Communist Leader, after attacking the Member for Veyangoda
pretended not to be interested when Bandaranaike’s urn came
for counter-attack. Some Member, with the instinct of the
sportsman, pointed out that Dr. Wickremasinghe was asleep!
With a sneer the enraged Member for Veyangoda
turned to the interrupter and, with high hauteur, said, “Let
sleeping dogs lie”!
On another occasion Dr. N. M. Perera, the
Trotskyte Leader, during a Budget Debate, said that
Bandaranaike could not help being merely the ‘famous son of a
famous father.”
The words of the merciless retort in reply was
dipped in the poison of the Borgias when Bandaranaike alluded
to his opponent as the ‘obscure son of a still more obscure
father.”
It was but natural that Bandaranaike should feel
wronged when referred to as typical of the headmen
‘aristocracy’.
He had with a good deal of difficult said goodbye
to all that — the traditions of the feudatory overlord, the
pompous prestige of the hireling chieftains, the dignity of
the magic circles.
But I believe the phrase hurt more because there
was the ring of truth in the idea.
Although brought up from childhood in an
atmosphere of salaams and a cheap sense of superiority of
birth and breeding that comes of class consciousness, not
allowed to mix with other boys of his own age — except for a
year or so at St. Thomas’ College — it is true he had the
courage to throw overboard the trappings of pompous position.
In this he wisely chose to be human rather than be comic in a
fast-changing world. He preferred to be a symbol of the future
to being an anachronism of the English Squire legend of the
father, Maha Mudaliyar Sir Solomon Dias Bandaranaike, in a
modern world. The son had the independence of mind to kick the
white gods from across the seas at whose altar the father had
always offered pooja with great profit.
He chose his own religion, Buddhism, instead of
taking it ready-made and chosen for him.
But taking to a simple dress, writing well but
not too wisely on the ‘‘Ploughshare and Socialism’’, even
embracing Buddhism — however sensible and suitable these were
— had not changed, it appeared, the spots of the leopard.
The change seemed to be entirely academic in
interest; perfect as a mental pose.
In and out of the Sate Council it seemed to be a
kind of mission then with Bandaranaike to found parties and
societies, to plan circles and cliques.
If these did no good, they did no harm either.
Party-mindedness would be the best thin for
politics if guided by principles and ideals. But the only
principle he had then in mind for these boy scout troops of
politics was his own personality; the only ideal his own idol
as the figure-head.
He was not in search of followers, intelligent
men who would be loyal to police and principle. His search was
it seemed, really for flatterers who would do his bidding.
Politically, he seemed to be the petty chieftain
with a pocket borough mentality, in search of legislative
hirelings and henchmen and not followers.
That was why his parties never then achieved
fruition; his societies existed only on paper. If he had then
the gold of sincerity to cover the currency notes of brilliant
promises he issued, he would have been acclaimed the young
leader of a great party.He wore the simple national dress of a
future day. But I suspected the underclothing to be a Maha
Mudaliyar’s pompous uniform of a past era.
Bandaranaike was a backward child. Until eight, I
believe, he could not master the Alphabet. But the proud
father thought no school in Ceylon good enough for his son and
heir. He got down from England a graduate called Radford to
teach Bandaranaike at home.
When the father saw the son passing his Cam
bridge Senior with the third place in the Empire, he was so
proud of the young boy he took him on exhibition to the then
Governor of Ceylon, Robert Chalmers.
“Are you going to make the little fellow a
Mudaliyar ?“ asked Chalmers after an appreciative inspection
of the sickly-looking Bandaranaike brought up in cotton wool.
Without waiting for the father to reply, young
Bandaranaike said “No thank you, Sir, I shall work for my
country.”
Chalmers raised his eyebrows. This was high
treason! The father was so embarrassed that he felt the ground
was opening under his feet. He hurried the boy home before he
talked more, all the way back giving him a sermon on not
bandying words with his betters.
He went to Oxford in 1919 with wonderful ideas of
heroic leadership of the most dazzling kind among the
undergrads, coloured by recollections of “Tom Brown at
Oxford’.
Before going to Oxford white wandering about
Horagolla he would compose his speeches for the Union On one
occasion he was so engrossed in his peroration while riding,
that in a moment of inspiration he dropped his reins in order
to gesticulate — only to fall off his seat!
Later in life, it was the peroration that always
mattered to him—even if it meant being thrown off his seat of
sense.
While at Oxford some Sinhalese friends had
expressed surprise that Bandaranaike had not cultivated the
Oxford manner.
“That is true”, said Bandaranaike, “but I hope I
have taught Oxford a lot of the Bandaranaike method.”
The first year of Oxford, once the novelty of
things had worn off, was a period of disappointment and
frustration. The most humiliating disappointments were
reserved for the social sphere.
“With positive rudeness and brutal frankness one
might be able to deal more or less effectively bounders and
snobs can be suitably handled”, said Bandaranaike. “But the
tragedy of it was that the vast majority of my fellow
undergraduates did not behave in the former manner and were
certainly not the latter. The trouble was more subtle and
deep-seated; in a variety of ways one was always being shown,
politely but unmistakably, that one was simply not wanted.”
But his conceit saved him from the fate of most
Eastern students who often throw up the sponge.
Although at the Union he never seemed to be able
to catch the eye of the President, he knew that he could make
a better speech than most of those who were given preference;
he knew that there were many members of the tenths team he
could beat if he were only given the chance. He knew he could
write better Greek prose than many of the scholars with their
long rustling gowns who looked so superciliously at the
“darkie”.
He also realized that within the cold outer
Oxford of mere routine, snob cliques and silly prejudice,
there was a wonderful inner Oxford into which it was well
worth travelling to win an entry.
A well-meaning young man seeing the rather
pathetic and lonely state of many Eastern students thought he
would alleviate their suffering by inviting some of them to
tea one day. Bandaranaike was also asked.
“An Englishman is not fitted for this type of
occasion”, wrote the not too thankful guest. “He lacks that
tact and bonhomie which a Frenchman for instance, possesses,
and which are essential to the success of such a function . .
. . Of easy conversation there was none.... The whole thing
was ghastly. I found myself gradually becoming more and more
angry with my fellow- guests as well as our host. I saved
myself from doing something desperate by making a hasty excuse
and running away”.
While working off his anger by having a long
walk, he paused to look at the typically beautiful English
scene before him touched by the mellow light of the evening
sun, the river winding into the distance through soft meadows.
Suddenly the solution of his problem flashed through his mind.
“Before I am their equal”, he thought “I must be
their superior”.
This audacious paradox was Bandaranaike’s golden
key to the wonderful inner portals of Oxford.
“An Englishman is generous in recognising merit
in others; it is more difficult to overcome the various
barriers to his friendship. Once, however, his respect is
obtained, it is easy to become his friend. And what a true and
loyal friend he can be!” exclaimed the man who found the
golden key to English friendship.
He strove hard at tennis and came on top with a
Frenchman called Heidsieck who was connected with the
champagne people and therefore, not unnaturally, rather
popular.
But it was when Bandaranaike stormed the citadel
of the Oxford Union that he entered the pale.
One November evening he tried many times to catch
the eye of the President, Beverly Nichols, without success. In
desperation he sent up a note asking whether he would be given
a chance. Back came the note with the words : “Print your
name”. He sent his name in block letters. Late in the evening
there was a nod from the chair and the maiden speech was
delivered.
A few days later he found himself famous when the
“Isis” hailed the speech as the best of the evening.
From then onwards at the Union, Bandaranaike
debated with Horatio Bottomley, Hore-Belisha, Rupert Gwynne,
M. C. Hollis, V. A. Cazalet, Lloyd George, W. M. R. Pringle
and other famous men who would go up to Oxford.
The most memorable of the speeches was in March
1922, on India.
The mover, H.J. S. Wedderburn of Balliol, made
according to the Isis, “a dull speech, badly delivered. The
depression that now weighed as a pall over the House was
ruthlessly swept away by Mr. Bandaranaike.
- From the book
Among those present
Wikipedia:
Sir Don Soloman Dias
Bandaranaike: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Solomon_Dias_Bandaranike
Sir Don Solomon Dias
Abeywickrema Jayatilleke Senewiratna Rajakumaruna Kadukeralu
Bandaranaike KCMG,Maha Mudaliyar ,JP was the chief native
interpreter and adviser to the Governor by appointment as Head Mudaliyar and
therefor was one of the most powerful personalities in British colonial Ceylon.
A member of an elite Sinhalese Anglican Christian family he went on to become
the Maha Mudaliyar highest
position of a Ceylonese could archived in British Ceylon, his service to
the British Empire was marked by the
award of Knight Commander
of Order of St Michael and St George. He add a keen
interest in Horse racing and was the
life-president of the Colombo
Turf Club.
His son became the 4th Prime Minister of Ceylon
after independence and his granddaughter Chandrika Kumaratunga
became both Prime Minister and President of Sri Lanka.
His grandson Anura Bandaranaike became Speaker
of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and is currently the minister
of national heritage.
SWRD: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_West_Ridgeway_Dias_Bandaranaike
Solomon West Ridgeway Dias
Bandaranaike (January 8, 1899
– September 26, 1959)
was the fourth Prime Minister (1956-1959)
of Ceylon (later Sri Lanka).
He was the husband of Sirimavo Bandaranaike, who
became the first female prime minister in the world following
his assassination. He was father of Chandrika Kumaratunga, who
was subsequently Prime Minister and President of Sri Lanka; Sunethra Bandaranaike and
Anura Bandaranaike.
Bandaranaike was born in Colombo, Ceylon to an elite Sinhalese Anglican Christian family and was the son of
the powerful Sir Solomon Dias
Bandaranike the Maha Mudaliyar (the chief
native interpreter and advisor to the Governor) during British
colonial rule. In later life he converted to Buddhism. He was educated at Oxford University, England,
where he was Secretary of the famous Oxford Union. He later qualified as
a Barrister in England.
He entered politics as a member of the United National Party and
rose to hold a cabinet position. As a young lawyer he became
active in the United National Party
(UNP) and from 1931 to 1951 served the party in legislative
and ministerial posts. In 1951, Bandaranaike led his faction,
the Sinhala Maha Sabha, out
of the UNP and established the Sri Lanka Freedom Party
(SLFP).
In order to promote Sinhalese culture and community
interests, Bandaranaike had organized the Sinhala Maha Sabha in 1937.
He became prime minister after winning the 1956 elections at
the head of a four-party coalition. As such, Bandaranaike made
Sinhalese the official language of the country and downgraded
the official status of English and Tamil and promoted
socialist, non-Western policies that profoundly changed the
course of Ceylonese politics in the following decades. Since
the 1950s, SLFP platforms have reflected the
earlier organization's emphasis on appealing to the sentiments
of the Sinhalese masses in rural areas. To this basis has been
added the antiestablishment appeal of nonrevolutionary socialism.
On the sensitive issue of language, the party
originally espoused the use of both Sinhala and Tamil as national languages, but
in the mid-1950s it adopted a "Sinhala only" policy, a change
that gave the party a landslide victory in the 1956 election.
As a party that says it is a champion of the Buddhist religion, which had been
attacked by local Christians and Tamils alike during the
colonial era. The SLFP has customarily relied upon the
socially and politically influential Buddhist clergy, the
sangha, to carry its message to the Sinhalese villages.
As prime minister, he took a neutralist stance in
foreign affairs; domestically,
he was faced by economic problems and disputes over languages.
He is also remembered by the minority Sri Lankan Tamils for his
inaction to use the states resources to control the 1958 riots leading to
countless deaths and rapes by the Sinhalese mobs. Decades
later, the continuing ethnic tension resulted in the Sri Lankan Civil War .
He was assassinated by Talduwe Somarama, a Buddhist monk, in 1959,
and his wife, Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike, assumed
leadership of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. She became the
world's first woman Prime Minister and held the post three
times.
Sirimavo:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirimavo_Ratwatte_Dias_Bandaranaike
Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias
Bandaranaike (April 17, 1916
- October 10, 2000)
was a politician from Sri Lanka. She was prime minister
of Sri Lanka three times, 1960-1965, 1970-1977 and
1994-2000, and was the world's first female prime minister.
She was a leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. She was the
wife of a previous Sri Lankan prime minister, Solomon Bandaranaike and
the mother of Sri Lanka's third president, Chandrika Kumaratunga. She
was also mother of Anura Bandaranaike, Sri
Lankan tourism minister and Sunethra Bandaranaike,
philanthropist.
On her husband's assassination, Bandaranaike took
over the leadership of his Sri Lanka Freedom Party,
which he had formed and led to election victory in 1956, and
kept it for forty years until her death. She became prime
minister on July 21, 1960
and ruled her country on and off throughout the 1960s and
1970s until she was crushingly defeated in a general election
in 1977. In 1980, she was expelled from parliament for abuse
of power, and banned from public office for seven years.
A staunch socialist, Bandaranaike continued her
husband's policies of nationalizing key sectors of the
economy, such as banking and insurance. Unfortunately, she was
on a roller-coaster ride from the moment she took office and
within a year of her 1960 election victory she declared a state
of emergency. This followed a civil disobedience campaign
by part of the country's minority Tamil population who were outraged
by her decision to drop English as an official language
and her order to conduct all government business in Sinhala, the language of the
majority Sinhalese. This they considered
a highly discriminatory act and an attempt to deny Tamils
access to all official posts and the law. This led to an
increase in Tamil militancy which escalated under succeeding
administrations.
Further problems arose with the President's state
takeover of foreign businesses, particularly the petroleum
companies, which upset the Americans and the British, who imposed an aid embargo
on Sri Lanka. As a result, Bandaranaike
moved her country closer to China
and the Soviet Union and championed a
policy of nonalignment. At home, she crushed an attempted
military coup in 1962. In 1964, she entered into a historic
coalition with the Lanka Sama Samaja Party
(LSSP). At the end of that year, she was defeated on a
confidence vote, losing the general election that followed.
Six years later she bounced back, her United Front winning a
substantial majority in the 1970 elections.
Her second term saw a new Constitution
introduced, which ended the country's status as a Commonwealth realm. Ceylon
was renamed Sri Lanka and declared a republic. But
after just 16 months in power, a left-wing youth uprising
almost toppled her government: Sri Lanka's small ceremonial
army could not deal with the insurgency. She was saved by her
skillful foreign policy when the country's non-aligned friends
rushed to her help. In a rare move, both India
and Pakistan sent troops to Colombo
to aid Bandaranaike in crushing the insurgency. In those tough
political years, she turned herself into a formidable leader.
"She was the only man in her cabinet", one of her
officials commented during the height of the insurgency.
The 1973 oil crisis had a traumatic effect on the
Sri Lankan economy; the government had no access
to Western aid and her socialist policies stifled economic
activity. Rationing had to be imposed. Bandaranaike became
more and more intolerant of criticism and forced the shut-down
of the Independent newspaper group, whose publications were
her fiercest critics. Earlier she had nationalized the
country's largest newspaper, Lake House, which has
remained the government's official mouthpiece.
Known to her fellow Sri Lankans as "Mrs. B," she
could skilfully use popular emotion to boost her support,
frequently bursting into tears as she pledged to continue her
dead husband's policies. He, Prime Minister Solomon Bandaranaike, was
shot dead by a man dressed as a Buddhist monk in 1959. Her
opponents and critics called her the "weeping widow" .
By 1976, Bandaranaike was more respected abroad
than at home. Her great triumph that year was to become
chairman of the Non-Aligned Movement and
host the largest heads of state conference the country had
ever seen. Despite her high standing internationally, she was
losing Sri Lankan support rapidly amid allegations of
corruption and against the background of a rapidly declining
economy . Nothing, it seemed, could save her. This led her
government, which enjoyed a large majority of more than 75% in
parliament, to use its majority gained in the previous
election to postpone elections by two years, extending her
administration's term to 8 years from the legal 6 years. This
undemocratic action was the main reason her civic rights were
suspended in the later years.[citation needed]
She suffered a crushing election
defeat in 1977 and was stripped of her civic rights due
to abuse of power. The 1980s were her dark days - she became a
political outcast rejected by the people who had once
worshipped her. Banadaranaike spent the next seventeen years
in opposition warding off challenges to her leadership of the
SLFP, even from her own children. Always the politician, she
played her ambitious daughter, Chandrika, and son, Anura, against one another,
holding on to control despite losing every subsequent general
election. She finally met her match in Chandrika who
outmanoeuvred her mother to become prime minister of Sri Lanka
in 1994, when a SLFP-led coalition
won power in the general
elections, and president the following year.
Bandaranaike became prime minister again, but the
constitution had changed since her last tenure; she, as the
prime minister was subordinate to her daughter, the president.
She remained in office just a few months before her death, but
had little real power. She died on election day, having cast
her vote for the last time.
Chandrika:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chandrika_Kumaratunga
Chandrika Bandaranaike
Kumaratunga (born 29
June 1945) was the fifth President (and fourth to
hold the office as Executive president) of Sri Lanka (12 November 1994
- 19 November 2005).
She was the leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party
until end of 2005. She was Sri Lanka's first female president.
Coming from a family that has a long history in
the socio-political arena of the country, her father, Solomon Bandaranaike was a
government minister at the time of her birth and later became
Prime Minister. He
was assassinated in 1959,
when Chandrika was fourteen. Chandrika's mother, Sirimavo Bandaranaike,
then became the world's first female prime minister in 1960
and her brother Anura Bandaranaike was a
former Speaker
of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and is currently the minister
of national heritage. Her grandfather, Sir Solomon Dias
Bandaranike was the Maha Mudaliyar, (the chief
native interpreter and advisor to the Governor) during British
colonial rule.
Chandrika spent five years at the University of Paris,
graduating from the Institut
d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) in
political science. While in Paris she obtained a Diploma in
Group Leadership from the same University. Her Ph.D studies in
Development Economics at the University of Paris were
interrupted by the call to serve her country, where her
mother’s government had launched a wide ranging programme of
reform and development.During her days in France, she was
active in the Student Revolution of 1968. She is fluent in Sinhala, English and French.
After returning to Sri Lanka, she took up
politics in the SLFP and in 1974
became an Executive Committee Member of its Women's League.
Following the Land Reform in Sri Lanka in 1972-
1976,
she was Additional Principal Director of the Land Reform Commission
(LRC). In 1976 - 1977
she was Chairman of the Janawasa Commission, which
established collective farms. In 1976-
1979
she acted as an Expert Consultant to the Food and
Agriculture Organisation(FAO).
Chandrika married movie star and politician Vijaya Kumaratunga in 1978.
He was assassinated in 1988.
Kumaratunga herself was elected
Prime Minister of a People's Alliance
(PA) government on August 19, 1994
and President in the presidential
election held shortly thereafter in November. This ended
17 years of UNP rule. She appointed
her mother to succeed her as Prime Minister. Early in her term
she made conciliatory moves towards the separatist Tamil Tigers to
attempt to end the on-going civil war. These
overtures failed, and she later pursued a more military-based
strategy against them.
In October 1999 Kumaratunga called an early presidential
election[1].
She lost her right eye in an assassination attempt, allegedly
by the separatist Tamil Tigers,
at her final election rally at Colombo
Town Hall premises on 18 December [[1999]. President
Kumaratunga defeated Ranil Wickremasinghe in the
election held on 21 December and was sworn in for
another term then next day. [2]
In December 2001 she suffered a setback in the parliamentary
election. Her People's Alliance
lost to the UNP, and her political
opponent Ranil Wickremasinghe took
office as Sri Lanka's new Prime Minister. She continued as President of Sri Lanka
although her relationship with the Wickremasinghe government
was a strained one.
In February 2002 Wickremasinghe's government and
the LTTE signed a permanent ceasefire agreement, paving the way
for talks to end the long-running conflict. In December, the
government and the rebels agreed to share power during peace
talks in Norway. President Kumaratunga believed
Wickremasinghe was being too lenient towards the LTTE. In May
2003 she indicated her willingness to sack the prime minister
and government if she felt they were making too many
concessions to the rebels. On 4 November 2003,
while Prime Minister Wickremasinghe was visiting the United States, Kumaratunga
suspended Parliament and deployed troops to take control of
the country, effectively putting it into a state of emergency.
Kumaratunga's PA and the leftist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
or JVP (People's Liberation Front) formed the United People's
Freedom Alliance (UPFA) in January 2004. Having won the
election
held on 2 April 2004
the UPFA formed a government with Mahinda Rajapaksa as prime
minister. This marked the first time in history that the JVP
became a partner in a Sri Lankan government.
However, in June 2005, the JVP left her
government over a disagreement regarding a joint mechanism
with LTTE rebels to share foreign aid to rebuild the tsunami-devastated
Northern and Eastern areas of Sri Lanka.
Kumaratunga's six-year term ended in 2005. She
argued that since the 1999 election had been held one year
early, she should be allowed to serve that left-over year.
This claim was rejected by the Supreme Court and
Kumaratunga's term was ended in November 2005. In the 2005 election,
Rajapaksa succeeded her as president, leading all 25 parties
in the UPFA.
Anura: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anura_Bandaranaike
Anura Priyadarshi Solomon
Dias Bandaranaike (born February 15, 1949)
is a Sri Lankan politician, last served as
the minister of national heritage in the government of
President Mahinda Rajapakse. He has previously served as Speaker
of the 11th Parliament, which lasted from 2000 to 2001, and as
minister of several cabinet departments, including as minister
of tourism from April 2004 to January 2007 and as Foreign Minister briefly in
2005. He is the son of former Prime Ministers Solomon West
Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike and Sirimavo
Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike and the brother of former
President Chandrika
Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and Sunethra Bandaranaike,
philanthropist.
His family has a long history in the
socio-political arena of the country. His grandfather, Sir Solomon Dias
Bandaranike was the Maha Mudaliyar, (the chief
native interpreter and advisor to the Governor) during British
colonial rule. The Bandaranaikes are also closely related to
the Obeyesekere family which remained faithful supporters of
British Colonial rule. Because of these family connections,
Bandaranaike as he is known among the voters of Gampaha
district, is considered to be a relatively slow-moving
politician who missed the chance of becoming the President of
Sri Lanka on several occasions, as his sister Chandrika
received the most support from their mother. He left his
family's party in 1993 when his sister came back from London
and did not join back until 2001.
Bandaranaike was born in Colombo,
Sri Lanka and attended Royal College, Colombo.
He then proceeded to London, U.K. to read for a degree but
returned to enter politics without having obtained a degree.
His father Solomon, while serving as prime minister, was
assassinated when Bandaranaike was 10 years old. Bandaranaike
was elected to Parliament in 1977 and has been a member since
then. He was the leader of the opposition from 1983 to 1988,
the minister of higher education from 1993 to 1994, and the
speaker of Parliament from 2000 to 2001 when the party that
his sister leads lost elections. He was in the Sri Lanka Freedom Party
founded by his father for much of his political life, although
he was an MP for the rival United National Party
headed by his childhood friend when it was in the opposition.
When the SLFP led alliance won the elections in 2004,
Bandaranaike became minister of tourism, industry and
investment. Despite being in politics for over a quarter of a
century, he has only been in a governing side for about 3
years.
Following the assassination of foreign minister Lakshman Kadirgamar in
August 2005, Bandaranaike was appointed as foreign minister,
amidst increased tension throughout the country. He dropped
his position as minister of industry and investment, but
remained tourism minister. He was later chosen as the running
mate of Mahinda Rajapakse for the
presidential campaign after the party rejected Bandaranaike's
own ambitions of becoming the candidate. Following Rajapakse's
election victory it had been widely predicted that
Bandaranaike would be appointed premier or foreign minister.
However he was accused of playing a "negative role" in the
campaign and was offered only the tourism ministry instead. [1]
In a cabinet reshuffle in January 2007, Anura also lost the
tourism ministry. On 9th February 2007, he was sacked
as the minister of national heritage, together with ministers
Mangala Samaraweera and Sripathi Sooriyarachchi after falling
out with the president of Sri Lanka. [2]
Less than two weeks later, after grovelling before President
Rajapakse Bandaranaike, agreed to come back into the
government, again being sworn in as Minister of National
Heritage. [3]
Pic taken in 1992 at
Horogolla Walauwa.
Many relatives of the Bandaranaike, de Livera, de Alwis, de
Saram, Obeyesekere, Pieris Deraniyagala are in the pic
l-r: Chistoffel
Dias Bandaranaike, Don Solomon Dias Bandaranaike, James
D'Alwis, Sir Soloman Dias Bandaranaike with
wife & SWRD as a baby.
http://www.nation.lk/2011/09/25/newsfe4.htm
Literary
side of Bandaranaike |
By Bhagavadas Srikanthadas Western classics Oxford
contemporaries Loathing for
respectable garment Bandaranaike who enjoyed reading classics
found equal pleasure with horror stories and detective
novels. Edgar Alan Poe, Agatha Christie and Sherlock
Homes are some of the writers to whom he alludes in
his writings. In most of his short stories including
The Horror of Mahahena, we come across a fictional
character John Ratsinghe who helps us un-tangle mind
boggling mysteries. Bandaranaike sees in John
Ratsinghe the local counterpart of Sherlock Holmes - a
truth he makes more obvious in The adventures of the
soulless man. |
Migration Pattern
1 Saman Devalaya Sabaragamuwa 1454
2
Sitawaka
3 Matale
4 Nawagamuwa (Francisco Dias Mohotti appuhamy b1625)
5 Mapitigama (Balthazar Dias Wijewickreme
Bandaranaike b1707)
6 Colombo 1740
5 Nawagomuwa (Francisco Dias Wijetunga Bandaranaike
b1720)
6 Mapitigama (Conrad
Dias Bandaranaike b1747)
7 Colombo 1780(Jacobus
Dias Bandaranaike b1780 )
6 Siyane Korale (Daniel
Dias Bandaranaike b1748
7 Attanagalla
(Don Solomon Dias
Bandaranaike b1774)
8 Colombo 1865.(Sir
Solomon Dias Bandaranaike b1862)
Thombu Index-(Dutch period before 1796.Property
Registration started in 1740's)(Dept of Archives)
Name |
Korale |
Village |
Don
Francisco Dias Mohotti Appuhamy
|
Siyane |
Parakandeniya,Giekinamulla |
Don
Francisco Dias Wijetunga Bandaranaike |
Hewagam |
Biyagama, Nawagamuwa,
Makola |
Don
BalthasarDias Wijewickreme Bandaranaike |
Alukuru |
Medamulla |
Don
Balthasar Dias Wijewickreme Bandaranaike |
Siyane |
Pelpita,Dompe,Mapitigama,
Attanagalla,Uruwala |
Conrad
Pieter Dias Wijewardene Bandaranaike
|
Siyane |
Galgamuwa,
Mapitigama |
Conrad
Pieter Dias Wijewardene Bandaranaike |
Hiripittana |
Nungomuwa |
Conrad
Pieter Dias Wijewardene Bandaranaike |
Biyagama |
Welimbula |
Nawagamuwa
Mohottige Don Balthazar Dias |
Colombo |
Wolvendhal |
Legislative Council (1833-1931)emerged
from the Colebrooke-Camaron
reforms and was established in 1833. Initially it consisted of
15 members.9 officials and 6 unofficial members.Of the latter
,3 represented the European community.1 Burgher ,1 Sinhala and 1
Tamil. The Governor also attended the Legislative Council
meetings.
The Sinhala representatives were as follows.
1835-1843 -JG Philipsz Panditharatne (Mudaliyar)
d1860
1843-1860 -John Charles Dias Bandaranaike (Proctor)
1861-1865- Harry Dias Bandaranaike
(Barrister,Judge)d1901
1865-1875- EH Dehigama-lawyer from
Kandy.
1875-1878- James de Alwis (Advocate) d1878
1878-1881- James Peter Obeyesekere 1 (Barrister)
d1881
1881 -Albert
L de Alwis
1882-1900- A de Alwis Seneviratne (Advocate)
1900-1916- Solomon Christofell Obeyesekere.(Proctor)
d1927
1917 -1923 Donald Obeyesekere b1888 d1964
1924-1931 Forester
Augustus Obeyesekere 1880-d1961
1931-1947 SWRD
Bandaranaike (elected) b1899-d1959
The highlighted names of the Legislative council are
all relatives ,who represented the Sinhalese community.
--------
Donoughmore Constitution 1931-1947
State Council 1931-1947
Speaker State Council 1934-1935 Forester Augustus
Obeyesekere
State Counciiors
Donald Obeyesekere
Soulbury Constitution 1947
Independence to Ceylon 1948
Speaker-Anura Bandaranaike 2000-2001
Members of Parliament
SWRD Bandaranaike
1952-1956 UNP
SWRD Bandaranaike
1956-1959 SLFP (Prime Minister)
Sirima Bandaranaike
1960-1965 SLFP (Prime Mnister)
Sirima Bandaranaike
1970-1977 SLFP (Prime Minister)
Anura Bandaranaike
1977-2008 SLFP/PA (MP)/Minister
Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga 1994-2005 PA
(President)
Sirima Bandaranaike 1994-2000 PA (Prime Minister)
SD
Bandaranaike
1952-1982 SLFP MP
Pandu
Bandaranaike 1994-
PA
Dy Minister
Elections and how Bandaranayakes performed.
1926 SWRD Bandaranaike-Member Colombo
Municipal Council
Legislative Council 1924-1947
1931 SWRD Bandaranaike
elected from Veyangoda.(13/6/1931)
1936 SWRD Bandaranaike
elected from Veyangoda.(22/3/1936)-1947
Parliamentary Elections
1947 UNP 42 seats,LSSP 10 seats
(23/8/1947)
SWRD Bandaranaike-Leader of the house (UNP)31463 votes.
DS
Senanayake-Prime Minister.
1948 Sri Lanka gets
Independence
(4/2/1948)
SWRD Bandaranaike forms the new party SLFP on 2/10/1951
On 22/3/1952 DS Senanayake suffered a stroke and
collapsed while riding a horse at Galle Face
Green.
1952. UNP 54 Seats,LSSP 9
seats SLFP 9
seats. (24/5/1952)
SWRD Bandaranaike -SLFP-Attanagalla-38478
votes
SD Bandaranaike 19417 votes
Dudley Senanayake -Prime Minister.
Due to hartal in 1953 Dudley Senanayake gave up and Sir John Kotelawela
took over.
Sir John
Kotelawela was
Prime Minister from 12/10/1953 to 12/4/1956
1956 SLFP 51 seats.UNP 8
seats.LSSP 14 seats. (5/4/1956)
SWRD Bandaranaike -Attanagalla-45016 votes.(SLFP)
SD Bandaranaike-Gampaha-34895 votes.
SWRD
Bandaranaike-Prime Minister
SWRD Bandaranaike assassinated on 26/9/1959 by a
Buddhist monk..After he was
assassinated W Dahanayake took over as caretaker Prime
Minister.
W Dahanayake was
Prime Minister from 26/9/1959 to 20/3/1960
1960-March -UNP 50
seats.SLFP 46 seats.LSSP10 seats.FP 15 (19/3/1960)
Felix D Bandaranaike-Dompe-16227 votes.
SD Bandaranaike 9565 votes.
UNP govt only
lasted 33 days.Was not
stable govt.So called a election in July.
1960-July-SLFP 75 seats.UNP 30 seats.LSSP 12
seats. (20/7/1960)
Felix D Bandaranaike .Dompe-20787votes.
SD Bandaranaike-Gampaha 16842 votes.
Sirimavo D
Bandaranaike-Prime Minister
(World's 1st female Prime Minister)
1965-UNP 66 seats.SLFP 41 seats LSSP 10
seats. Tamil 14 seats. (22/3/1965)
Felix D Bandaranaike-Dompe-26051 votes.
Sirimavo D Bandaranaikke-Attanagalla-26150 votes.
SD Bandaranaike-Gampaha-21114 votes.
Dudly Senanayake -Prime Minister
1970-SLFP 91 seats.LSSP 19 seats.UNP17 seats. Tamil 13 seats. (27/5/1970)
Sirimavo D Bandaranaike-Attanagalla-31612 votes
Felix D Bandaranaike-Dompe-31515 votes.
Sirimavo D
Bandaranaike-Prime Minister- Coalition govt.
1977-UNP 140 seats.TULF 18 seats. SLFP 8
seats (21/7/1977)
Sirimavo D Bandaranaike-Attanagalla-30226 votes
SD Bandaranaike-Gampaha-26338 votes
Anura D Bandaranaike-Nuwara Eliya-48776 votes.
JR Jayawardena
-Prime Minister...Opposition TULF
1978- New Constitution. Implemented.
According to the constitution Presidential elections are held
and a person can become
President only for two 6 year terms.
Between the period 1980 to
1985 Sirimavo D Bandaranaike's Civic rights were removed,
during
JR Jayawardena's regime. As a
result during that period she could not contest for elections.
1982-Referendum.(extending the
present parliament by 6 years.(No General Election)
3,141,223
votes for
2,605,983 against
1987-Constitution was
amended and Provincial elections are to be held ,in addition
to General and
Presidential elections.
1989-UNP-125 seats.SLFP 67 seats (15/2/1989)
DB Wijetunga
-Prime Minister under President R Premadasa
1993- Provincial Council election Chandrika
Kumaratunga became the Chief Minister of the
Western Provincial Council.
1994-PA-105 seats,UNP 94 seats (16/8/1994)
Chandrika Kumaratunga-Prime Minister under President
DB Wijetunga till 9/11/94
then she wins Presidential election and becomes
President.
Sirimavo Bandaranaike Prime Minister from 14/11/94 to
10/8/2000 under President
Chandrika Kumaratunga.
2000-PA-107 seats,UNP 89 seats (10/10/2000)
Ratnasiri Wickremanayake-Prime Minister under
President Chandrika Kumaratunga
SLMC members left the coalition and joined the
opposition ,which led the coalition to lose
majority.Election was held in 2001. election had lot of
violence.But UNP was able to form
a governtment.
2001-UNP 109 seats,PA 77 seats (5/12/2001)
Ranil Wickremasinghe-Prime Minister under President
Chandrika Kumaratunga
Parliament was dissolved and elections called in
2004 by President Chandrika.
2004-PA 105 seats,UNP 82 seats (2/4/2004)
Mahinda Rajapakse-Prime Minister under President
Chandrika Kumaratunga
Presidential Election
With the new constitution of 1978 JR
Jayawardena automaticaly became President
W.E.F 1978
1982-(held on 20/10/1982)
JR Jayawardena (UNP)3,450,811 votes----------President-JR
Jayawardena
Hector Kobbekaduwa (SLFP)2,548,438 votes (Sirima could
not contest due to civic rights issue.)
1988-(held on 19/12/1988)
R Premadasa(UNP) 2,569,199 votes-----------------President R Premadasa
Sirimavo D Bandaranaike (SLFP) 2,289,860 votes
(Less people voted due to violence and JVP issue.)
1993 May 1st President R
Premadasa was assassinated by the LTTE.
As the President R Premadasa was assassinated,
automatically the Prime Minister DB Wijetunga
became President according to the costitution.
1994 October 24th UNP
Presidential candidate Gamini Dissanayake was assassinated by
the LTTE.
1994-(held on 9/11/1994)
Chandrika Kumaratunga (PA) 4,709,205 votes--------President Chandrika
Kumaratunga
Srima Dissanayake (UNP) 2,715,283 votes
On 19/11/1999 ,there was a assassination attempt by the
LTTE on Chandrika Kumaratunga
as a result she lost one eye, and a wave of sympathy
came in her favour in the election, which
was held 2 days later.
1999-(held on 21/12/1999)
Chandrika Kumaratunga (PA) 4,312,157 votes--------President Chandrika
Kumaratunga
Ranil Wickremasinghe (UNP) 3,602,748 votes
Chandrika Kumaratunga was
President till 19th November 2005.When new elections were held
and Mahinda Rajapakse of PA
became President by defeating Ranil Wickremasinghe of the UNP.
SWRD Bandaranaike b 8/1/1899-d
26/9/1959 Prime
Minister -1956-1959
Sirimavo D Bandaranaike b 17/4/1916-d
10/10/2000 Prime
Minister- 1960-65,1970-77,1994-2000
Chandrika Kumaratunga b 29/6/1945 President -1994-2005
Anura D
Bandaranaike b 15/2/1949-d16/3/2008 MP from 1977-2007.
Was leader of the opposition
from 1983-1988,speaker 2001-2004,Held ministries of
Foreign,
Higher Education, Tourism and National Heritage.
Felix D Bandaranaike b 5/11/1930-d
26/6/1985 MP from 1960-1977.Held Ministries of Finance,
Defence, External Affairs, Foreign, Justice and was
Parliamentary Secretary.
SD Bandaranaike b 1/12/1917- d
3/6/2014 MP from 1952-1982
Pandu D Bandaranaike b 31/8/1962 MP from
1994.Dy Minister for last 20 years.
Bandaranaike
Politicians.
SWRD
Bandaranaike
Sirimavo Dias Bandaranaike
Chandrika. Bandaranaike
Kumaratnge
Anura DB
Felix DB
SD B
Anura Bandaranaike Felix Dias
Bandaranaike SD
Bandaranaike Pandu
Dias Bandaranaike.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nomads Tennis Club (family group founded in
1923) photos 1935
(members are Bandaranaike, de
Livera, de Saram, de Alwis, Dassenaike, Dias Abeysinghe,
Gooneratne, Illangakoon, Obeyesekere, Pieris Deraniyagala and
Senewiratne.
Above Nomads Tennis Club Photos of 1935.
Bandaranayaka, de Livera, de
Alwis, de Saram, Dias Abeysinghe, Dassenaike, Gooneratne,
Illangakoon, Pieris Deraniyagala and Obeyesekere relatives
present.
(4th photo has SWRD, and Sir
Solomon DB)
Gathering in 1926
Nomads Tennis Club
1st
Row-SWRD Bandaranaike, Nedra &Yolande Obeyesekere
2hd
Row-Arthur Lee Dassenaike, George R de Silva
3rd
Row-Irene de Siva
Horogolla old Walauwa built
by Christoffel DB (Attanagalla)
Horogolla new walauwa built
by Sir Solomon DB (1890's)
Bandaranaike
Mansion, “Tintagel” on
Rosmead Place bought by Sir Solomon DB in 1940's
SWRD Tomb (1959)
Dr Abraham William Dias Bandaranayaka
(1837-1911)
Reginald Walter Dias Bandaranayaka
1921-2009
Hon SD Bandaranayake
Samuel Dias
Bandaranayake (1 December
1917 – 3 June 2014) was a Sri Lankan socialist politician and a member of
parliament
representing Gampaha.
Born to a wealthy family, his father was Conrad
Peter Dias Bandaranayake, Muhandiram of the Guard and Siyane
Korale and his mother was the daughter of Mudaliyar
Ekanayake from Matara, his grandfather was
Conrad (Peter) Petrus Dias Wijewardena Bandaranaike, Maha Mudaliyar. He was a cousin
of SWRD Bandaranaike. He
was educated at S. Thomas'
College, Mount Lavinia, St. Thomas' College,
Matara and studied agriculture at the University of Travancore.
While in India he met figures such as Subhas Chandra Bose and Rabindranath Tagore. On
his return he joined the newly formed Ceylon Agricultural
Corps as a Commandant during World War II.
After the war he entered politics, campaigning
for SWRD Bandaranaike and joined his newly formed Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
He was elected to parliament in 1952 general
election from the Gampaha
electorate, however he did not accept the office due
to disagreements with SW RD Bandaranaike on the Sinhala Only Act. However, he
was instrumental in stopping J. R. Jayewardene's march to
Kandy in protest of the Bandaranaike–Chelvanayakam
Pact. He was re-elected in the next four elections in
1956, 1960 March, 1960 July and 1965. He lost his seat to A.
T. Basnayake of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, having
contested the 1970 general
election as an independent.
He was involved in the 1971 JVP Insurrection
against the SLFP led government under Sirimavo Bandaranaike.
The Criminal
Justice Commission which was set up to prosecute
insurgents found him guilty of two counts of being a member
of the JVP and attending the five lectures. He was given a
suspended sentence of two years. In 1977, he was reelected
in the 1977
general election from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
His son, Pandu, is one of the
sitting members of parliament for Gampaha
(1994-present).