Home Contact US
Traveling
Accommodation
Tours
   Colombo city
Sri Lanka 's largest and most important city, Colombo was the capital until
the seat of the parliament shifted to Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte. Today, this
city of more than one million remains the political, commercial and the
cultural hub of Sri Lanka. A lively city, Colombo effortlessly blends the past
with the present, as it moves into the 21st century.
Colombo has attracted many travelers over the ages with its myriad charms,
even if it may give the appearance of having seen better days. Another
foreigner who dallied here about half a century later was an Andalucian Arab,
Iban Batuta,and he was truly smitten. He called it Calenbou , "one of the
largest and most beautiful (cities) in the island of Serendib ."

Hard on his heels a Portuguese man of the cloth, Father Fernao de Queyroz,
was enamoured with the place, made clear in the gushing letters which he
sent home. When the young Englishman Robert Knox ended up there he
wrote: " Colombo means, in the Chin gala language, the leaf of the mango
tree," too mesmerized to get her name right. The Portuguese spelling of
Colombo prevailed until much later when the Dutch, German and French
came prefer the dazzling city to be spelt with an "o".

Colonial Colombo

Even after the country won its independence, Colombo's heart clung to
the memory of its departed masters. Its monsoon-soaked ribbons of
purple-black road teemed with black Morris Minor taxis, whose drivers
spoke impeccable English and (almost) always gave the correct change.
Their cargo of fashionable wives continued to visit the English stores
Cargill's and Millers, which were still stocked with imported
English goods. Now the shelves carry household items in an attempt to
compete with modern super markets in the malls of the city's luxury a
partment blocks tike Liberty Plaza and Crescat. The traffic swirl of cars
and busses is so great that parking outside these grand emporiums is
almost impossible and shoppers prefer the suburbs.

The traveler who knew Colombo in the early 1900s could return today, at
least  one aspect  of street life would be a little familiar,  the  ubiquitous
trishaw's. These motorized descendants of the man-pulled rickshaws that
once plied the streets are an irresistible and very convenient way of getting
around town. They have grown a third wheel and the sweating laborer has
become a seated driver. In the old days the tariff was calculated by time
rather than by mileage. A "first class" rickshaw cost 10 cents for 10
minutes, 25 cents for 30 minutes and 50 cents for an hour. Today, you
would do better to negotiate the fare before you get in, since they have
no meters.

A whistle-stop tour aboard one of these three wheelers, wending your way
through the carbon monoxide cloud amid packed busses and other traffic,
could endanger your health, even if you survive the fun fair ride. But it can
be fun. Anyone who has experienced the antics of the Indian three-wheel
drivers and their suicidal tendencies take heart; the Sri Lankan version is
much better - they may seem as if they are taking you straight in to the
open jaws of death but very few accidents occur. Their filmy windscreens
are hung with a variety of charms to provide accident insurance: Jesus,
Buddha, Ganesh and the odd guru, all swayingin unified conviction. And
there is nowhere better to head for than the historical heart of Colombo,
once the hub of the city's business, but now torn between a prosperous
past, an ambitious future and a precarious present.


 
  

About Sri Lanka


      Colombo
     

       Back ...
     
      
      
       
        

               Air Tickets | Special Packages |  Hotels  | Villas & Bungalows Rent a car  |  Train tours | Air Taxi & Helicopter | Package tours
                                                Conferences  |  Places to Visit Information |  Sri Lanka in style |  Contact Us
                                  © 2007 -2008 JF Tours and Travels Ceylon Limited.  .: Concept and design by JF IT Solutions :.