Negombo Fort
Negombo Fort was a small but important fort in Negombo, approx. 30 km
(19 mi) north of Colombo, that was built by the Portuguese to defend
Colombo.
In its time the fort at Negombo was probably the next in
strategic importance after Colombo, Jaffna, and Galle. The
original Portuguese fort was a weak structure, which, according to the account
of João Ribeyro;
"Negombo was only a square enclosed by walls, with two redoubts and five guns. A Captain and a few men, with a Chaplain were stationed there"
It was captured by Dutch forces
commanded by Philip Lucasz, in February 1640. The Portuguese made
several attempts to retake it before they were successful in December 1643.
They then strengthened the fortifications and managed to defend the fort until
it was recaptured by the Dutch under the command of François Caron, in January
1644.
The original bastions were destroyed by the
Dutch cannons during the siege of the fort. The Dutch subsequently rebuilt it
in 1672 however not on the usual square pattern, but on a pentagonal one,
though it had only four bulwarks, the fifth was never constructed (possibly due
to the cost). The fort was located on a narrow strip of land
between a lagoon and an inlet of the sea. It was surrounded by a dry moat, and the gate was
accessed via a drawbridge.
In February 1796 it was occupied by the British without
opposition. In the late 1800s the British authorities decided to
demolish the fort and build a prison in its place, constructed from the stones
of the fort. Today all that remains is a section of the
eastern rampart with mounds at its northern and Southern ends, where
the previous bastions existed, and a recessed arched gateway. Above the gateway
is a slab of granite, with the date 1678 inscribed, surmounted by a high
decorative gable.

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