Gurunagar

Suburb in Jaffna, Northern, Sri Lanka From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gurunagarmap

Gurunagar (Tamil: குருநகர், romanized: Kurunakar) is a coastal village in Jaffna city in northern Sri Lanka. Gurunagar is also known as Karaiyur (Tamil: கரையூர், romanized: Karaiyūr).[2][3]

Quick Facts குருநகர்ගුරුනගර, Country ...
Gurunagar
குருநகர்
ගුරුනගර
Suburb
Thumb
St. James' Church, originally established in 1861
Thumb
Gurunagar
Thumb
Gurunagar
Coordinates: 9°39′24.80″N 80°01′41.10″E
CountrySri Lanka
ProvinceNorthern
DistrictJaffna
DS DivisionJaffna
Government
  TypeMunicipal Council
  BodyJaffna
Population
 (2015)[1]
  Total
3,600
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (Sri Lanka Standard Time Zone)
Post Codes
4136050-4136055
Telephone Codes021
Vehicle registrationNP
Close

The suburb is divided into two village officer divisions (Gurunagar East and Gurunagar West) whose combined population was 3,520 at the 2012 census.[1]

The suburb is mainly populated by Catholic Sri Lankan Tamils, engaged in sea activities.[4] The village is known in Jaffna due to its maritime history and also served as the western sector of the Jaffna Kingdom.[5]

Etymology

Gurunagar, also spelled as Kurunagar derives its words from Kuru and Nagar (Urban centre in Tamil).[6] The word Kuru is a clans name used by the Karaiyars also known as Kurukulam, who make up majority of Gurunagar.[7][8]

Karaiyur, as it was earlier known as stems from the Tamil words Karai (coast) and Ur (village).[9][10] Karaiyur was marked in the Dutch maps as Cereoer.[11]

History

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Old map of Jaffna, depicting the settlement of Gurunagar near the Jaffna fort.

The earliest settlers of Jaffna, were according to local legend, a musician and his kinsfolk. The surmised place they first settled is in the area surrounding Gurunagar and Colombuthurai.[12] The Columbuthurai Commercial Harbor situated at Colombuthurai and the harbor known as ‘Aluppanthy’ situated previously at the Gurunagar area seem as its evidences.[13]

The navy of the Aryacakravarti dynasty was crewed and officered by the people of Gurunagar.[11] The Pattinathurai of Gurunagar was a port for foreign vessels.[12] It is surmised that it was here the Moroccan explorer Ibn Battuta, saw fleet of ships that belonged to the Aryacakravarti kings.[11] The Maniagar and Adappans of Gurunagar served as one of the headmen of the Jaffna ports.[14]

The western section of the Jaffna Kingdom was allotted by the Karaiyars of Gurunagar.[5] There existed a smaller fort in Colombuthurai and one at Pannaithurai near Gurunagar.[15] In 1560, the Portuguese forces with 77 ships arrived in Gurunagar and defeated the Tamil army governing there before proceeding further to Nallur.[16]

The Cathedral of Jaffna in Gurunagar was constructed over an already existing smaller chapel.[17] The chapel was constructed as the place where the Jaffna king Cankili I killed his own son for converting to Catholicism.[18]

Starting from the early 1920s, was the Gurunagar land reclamation scheme started, starting from modern Beach Road to Reclamation Road.[19]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.