
Ville de Hambantota
Hambantota, a port city in southern Sri Lanka, boasts strategic maritime significance. Known for its deep-water port, it plays a pivotal role in global trade routes, particularly for transshipment. The city also features emerging industrial and tourism sectors, contributing to its economic development.
Kirinda
Kirinda is a coastal township located 10 km south of Tissamaharama. It is known for Kirinda Temple that lies atop a small rocky hill nearby the coast. Built by king Kavantissa, the temple is frequented by hundreds of pilgrims and tourists daily. Being at the temple premises, you could see the breathtaking views of the long sandy unpopulated beach, long huge sand dunes, Great Basses reefs off the shore and on the other side, verdant vegetation and national parks. The statue of Queen Viharamaha Devi is also one of best attractions at Kirinda.
About Matara District
Matara is a city on the southern coast of Sri Lanka, 160 km from Colombo. It is one of the largest cities in Sri Lanka. The town contains many remnants of Sri Lanka is colonial past and is divided by the island?s third longest river, the Nilwala Ganga, Blue River a beautiful, wide expanse of water that splits the old town from the new.
In 16th and 18th centuries Matara was ruled by Portuguese and Dutch respectively. The culture and architecture can be still seen in the area. The popular Light house in point Dondra was built by Dutch and it is considered as one of the most beautiful and oldest light houses in Sri Lanka.
About Southern Province
The Southern Province of Sri Lanka is a small geographic area consisting of the districts of Galle, Matara and Hambantota. Subsistence farming and fishing is the main source of income for the vast majority of the people of this region.
Important landmarks of the Southern Province include the wildlife sanctuaries of the Yala and Udawalawe National Parks, the holy city of Kataragama, and the ancient cities of Tissamaharama, Kirinda and Galle. (Although Galle is an ancient city, almost nothing survives from before the Portuguese invasion.) During the Portuguese period there were two famous Sinhalese poets called Andare who was from Dickwella and Gajaman Nona who was from Denipitiya in Matara District, composing poems on common man.
À propos du district de Hambantota
Hambantota est une ville rurale située sur la côte sud-est du Sri Lanka. C'est également la capitale du district de Hambantota, dans la province du Sud du Sri Lanka. Située à environ 240 km de Colombo, Hambantota est en pleine transformation pour devenir un port stratégique et un centre commercial, bénéficiant d'un important développement d'infrastructures. Bordée de vastes plages de sable fin, Hambantota est un emplacement idéal pour visiter les sites touristiques environnants.
Le parc national de Bundala se trouve à 20 km à l'est de Hambantota et le sanctuaire de Weerawila un peu plus loin. Le parc national de Ruhuna et le temple de Kataragama sont d'autres attractions facilement accessibles depuis cette ville.
À propos de la province du Sud
La province du Sud du Sri Lanka est une petite zone géographique composée des districts de Galle, Matara et Hambantota. L'agriculture de subsistance et la pêche constituent les principales sources de revenus de la grande majorité des habitants de cette région.
Les sites importants de la province du Sud comprennent les sanctuaires fauniques des parcs nationaux de Yala et d'Udawalawe, la ville sainte de Kataragama et les anciennes cités de Tissamaharama, Kirinda et Galle. (Bien que Galle soit une ville ancienne, presque rien ne subsiste d'avant l'invasion portugaise.) Pendant la période portugaise, deux célèbres poètes cinghalais, Andare, originaire de Dickwella, et Gajaman Nona, originaire de Denipitiya, dans le district de Matara, composaient des poèmes sur l'homme ordinaire.