Perched with symmetry of grace, Galle claims to be the capital city of the Southern region of Sri Lanka. With nudges from the Portuguese during the 16th century, Galle is still known to be the incomparable benchmark of a fortified city built by Europeans in South and South-East Asia. Many remnants of the Portuguese era pimpled in every nook and corner have now become a tourist flock after the scars remain.
Galle has long been a stopover for foreign travellers; Sindbad the sailor, the Chinese Admiral Cheng Ho, Marco Polo, the Portuguese Admiral Lorenzo de Almeida, the Dutch VOC company and even the first package tours in 1842 with the arrival of the first P&O passenger ship.
All have echoed Marco Polo’s sentiment that "it is the finest island of its size in all the world" and to which Mark Twain added; “my goodness! It is most sumptuously tropical!”. Although Galle may have had its heyday as a trading port, the city and its coastal environs have become the new riviera of choice, whilst still managing to maintain that time warp for the inquisitive traveler.
The Galle attractions detail architectural reserved buildings that connect between the Europeans and South Asians. As you enter this wondrous city, Galle Dutch Fort is amongst the popularized sights in Galle. It is known for being the oldest fort in Asia also declared by UNESCO as a world heritage site. Touched by coatings of ginger, Maritime Museum steeps to exhibit voluminous displays on colonial native crafts, weaponry, folk arts and variety of swords. Rummassala Mountain is home to legends of the Hanuman, Ramayana and Queen Sita as well. Church Street also provides the Galle Cultural Museum, a colonial building that reflects art and history of Southern regions through show casing of the artefacts. Unruffled Koggala Lake, Pedler’s Inn Café, Jungle Beach, St. Mary’s Cathedral, house of the writer Martin Wickremasinghe, and Hiyare reservoir are some of the many things to see and do in Galle that lures every tourist with its own unique features.
A monument of particular interest in the Fort is the Dutch Church dedicated in 1754. It was built on the site of a Portuguese Capuchin Convent and on an earlier Protestant, "Groote Kerk", built in 1640. The present Dutch church as erected as a thank-offering by Gertruda Adrianna Le Grand, wife of the Commandeur Gasparus de Jong, for the long-prayed birth of a son.
According to the legend of the Rama Rawana war, Rama’s brother Luxhmana was injured and Hanuman was sent to the Himalayas to fetch medicinal herbs. Hanuman forgot the name of the herb but he brought a chunk of the peak containing herbs. Rumassala which is located close to the main harbor area is therefore an important marine archaeological site, while the watering point on Rumassala was important during the colonial period. The reef supports a number of traditional fishermen using traditional methods such as hook and line fishing. The reef and secluded beach is popular among locals for recreation and is visited by tourists from nearby areas.
Unawatuna bay provides safe swimming and snorkeling, protected as it is by a reef. Rhumassala Kanda is associated with the legend of the traditional Ramayana story. When the warrior Lakshman was wounded, a Himalayan herb was required for his cure and Rama despatched the Monkey-god Hanuman to fetch it. But Hanuman forgot the name of the herb, so to be on the safe side he tore off a hunk of the Himalayas, carried it on his back and dumped it, where it now ties! Galle is the sort of place from which one must take away a souvenir.
The visitor may make a pick of Galle lace, handmade, like the Brussels or the Honiton types. The shops of jewellers would entice the female of the species! Where but in Galle many visitors plunge their hands into a bucketful of limpid moonstones or the more precious and rarer of gems, the blue sapphire or the ruby! These can be beautifully set according to the whim or wish of the buyer.