Atapattu Walawwa
by Hemantha Situge
Atapattu Walawwa, the residence of Gooneratne and Dias Abeysinghe
Families, is a richly illustrated antiquarian miscellany on one of Sri
Lanka’s well preserved treasure trove walauwwas – an ancient manor house
– found in Galle - the capital of the Southern province of Sri Lanka.
A Consultant Obstetrician and Gynecologist in Britain, Janaka
Goonetileke, with his marriage to Dharshani Dias Abeysinghe, the sole
heir to the Atapattu Walauwwa, which has survived in the family for well
nigh 23 decades, has gone in search of his wife’s roots and has
documented the same for posterity. The book states that the other
contributors of this work are Senaka Bandaranayake and Susil
Sirivardana.
I read and re-read this fascinating book and what amazes me as a
Gallean is the designing part accredited to Albert Dharmasiri, the
magnificent photographs of Malaka Weligodapola, special portfolio of
drawings executed by Thushara Illeperuma and the two drawings of Babara
Sansoni from her Vihara and Verandahs. Atapattu Walawwa contains 172
pages of pure bliss, each page evoking the contributors’ affection for
this unique manor house.
You cannot read much of the book without longing to go there. After
the book launch at the Barefoot Gallery, Bambalapitiya on Friday July 3,
the following Saturday morning it whetted my curiosity to such an
extent to have been at Atapattu Walauwwa to find out the indecipherable
date inscription bearing 1742 at the entrance of this edifice which was
embedded in my memory. Apparently, it is a later inscribed inscription.
There
are several salient features found in the contents of the book under
the sub titles i.e A Protected Monument, The Setting, Architecture,
Stage of Construction, Technology, Garden and Courtyards, Furniture,
Daily life, Social Background, Edmund Rowland Gooneratne, A Biographical
Sketch, The Gooneratne Mudalindarama, The Cemetery and the Selected
Writings of E.R. Gooneratne.
The most remarkable salutary feature is the Biographical Sketch (page
136 to 161 ) of that foremost erudite oriental scholar Edmund Rowland
Gooneratne the 19-20 century diarist of par excellence, who bestrode
like a mighty colossus in the Sri Lankan nationalist Buddhist
renaissance and carved niche in the annals of national resurgence in the
country. The book contains a rare photograph dated 1917 of the
Anuradhapura Sri Maha Bodhi.
The word Atapattu, a term used in feudal
administration as the title of the book – appears a misnomer. Even
though there is family name called Atapattu, it has no connection with
the Sinhala word ata (eight). There are no eight pattus in Galle. This
is the holder of the post ‘chieftain’ or ‘Mudliyar’ in the officialdom
or Mudliyardom who was in close proximity to the Governor. The other
part of the title of the book is ‘Walawwa’. According to the Sinhala
dictionary it is derived from the Tamil word “walauw” which denotes
‘Residence of an aristocrat’.
According to what I have learnt that there were de facto waluwwas and
de jure walauwwas. The Atapattu Walauwwa is a de jure walauwwa. The
family has held it by virtue of their office for several generations.
Page
8-9 of this book refers to China Koratuwa (Chinese Quarter), more
commonly known as China Gardens or Cheena Koratuwa. This is the place
where in 1810 the British got down the Chinese to cultivate vegetables.
The Sinhalese word Koratuwa denotes ‘a piece of land with vegetable
cultivation’. The other shortcoming found in the book is at page nine is
‘China Koratuwa’, the Chinese quarter, probably recalling a time before
the Dutch intervention that disrupted the intra-Asian trading networks.
Also refer to pages 18 to 20 of Gaalu Ithihasaya (History of Galle) by
E.V.G. William 1967 which also supports this position. Somasiri Devendra
has erred in his article titled ‘Trilingual Inscription of Galle’
describing that Cheng Ho’s visit in 1409 is connected with China Gardens
or Cheena Koratuwa of Galle.
At page nine in paragraph two parenthetically the book states that:
“(Waluvatta – the land of Walawwas today a municipal ward of that
name.)” The municipal ward system was repealed in 1976. Walauwwatta was
never a municipal ward of the 15 municipal wards that prevailed in the
Galle Municipal Council. The Ward No. 2 was China Gardens and the Ward
No. 3 was Bazaar (Kadaveediya) to which the area of Walauwwatta
belonged. According to old deeds and plans “Kekiribokkawatta” in China
Gardens where the Mahagala Walauwwa (vide page 11 of the book) is
situated is the place where the Chinese grew the Sinhalese vegetable
kekiri.
This book Atapattu Walawwa (vide: page 11) bears ample
testimony to the fact that there had been seven walauwwas in the
vicinity of the walauwwa, that the List of Walauwwas in Sri Lanka (Sri
Lankave Walauw Namawaliya) written by Dr. Mirando Obeysekera is a
haphazard incomplete work not only pertaining to Galle but also on the
other waluwwas of Sri Lanka.
Once E.V.G. William told me that the
Atapattu Walauwwa originally owned a large extent of land that went up
to Minuwangoda junction where the tortoise shell shops in this junction
drew income to the walauwwa. It would have been a worthwhile study to go
into the adjacent regional Survey General’s maps and plans on the area
for the study to the extent of land originally owned by the Atapattu
Walauwwa.
My indefatigable, passionately curious study on Galle has found the
least references on Atapattu Walauwwa - the ancient manor house - in
books on Galle. The details abound on Goonaratne and Dias Abeysinghe
families in the All Saint’s Church records (Church minutes, baptism
registers, marriage registers and the burial registers) which
substantiate their allegiance to the Anglican Church and the British
rulers. All Saint’s Church Fort Galle has had a vicar named Felix Dias
Abeysinghe (1965 to 1975), Vernon Dias Abeysinghe (vide page 124) was
also a warden of the Church. The rebel of the family of Mudliyar Edmund
Rowland Gooneratne “Gentleman- Scholar of the Sri Lankan Renaissance”-
his fight against the system –it appears that the British rulers have
shown a sense of antipathy towards the family by not appointing any one
thereafter for the said appointment.
Furthermore, the History of Methodist Church in Ceylon edited by Rev.
W.J.T. Small 1964 records the First Methodist School was found at the
upper storey of the Atapattu Walauwwa. This is another point to the fact
that the walauwwa had a pride of place for liberal thinking. It was the
family Gooneratne who was instrumental in establishing the Batemulla
Sinhalese mixed school in Imaduwa which was later taken over by the
Government in 1957.
However, the remains interred in the vault of the Dutch Reformed
Church of Fort Galle of “Don David De Alvis Attepattoe Modiliar of
Galle” whose tombstone is paved on the floor of the Church ‘who departed
this life October 5, 1817 aged 43 years, three months and 17 days’ is
cogent evidence to the fact that the post of Atapattu Mudliyar did not
remain with Gooneratne and Dias Abeysinghe families. J.P. Lewis in his
monumental work, ‘List of Tombstones and Memorials’ does not record this
tombstone. Furthermore, E.R. Gooneratne’s genealogy does not establish
that Atapattu Mudliyar De Alvis belongs to their family. His tenure of
office, it appears only for five years after Don Bastian.
All these
evidence establish beyond doubt that the name Atapattu Walauwwa emerged
as a manor house after the Atapattu Mudliyar title was invested in Don
Bastian Jayatilleke Gooneratne (1758 to 1812). This provides some
credence to the legend that is recorded by Janaka Goonetileke on the
origin of the Atapattu Walauwwa.
The chapter that deals on furniture found from pages 109 to 116
should have been written with the perusal of two authoritative works on
the subject. viz: Dutch Furniture – R.L. Brohier and European Furniture –
Joseph Pearson J.R.A.S. (CB) article. None of the photographs depict
furniture in a bedroom of the era. The timber should have been
identified with the botanical names.
The contributors have extensively used Sinhalese words in the book.
Had these Sinhalese words were identified with diacritical marks, it
would have been convenient in the interest of the readers. The editor of
the Lloyd’s Press, Arnold Wright in his prestigious monumental record
“Twentieth Century Impressions of Ceylon” published by the Lloyd’s Great
Britain company in 1907, sheds more light on the Atapattu Walauwwa.
Mudliyar E.R. Gooneratne in this account (page 754 to 755) recounts
that the Atapattu Walauwwa was built by his grandfather which
substantiates the position maintained by Janaka Goonetileke. The
photographs of the facade of the walauwwa in the era depicts that it
still remains in its pristine glory (figure 1) The others that portray
in the book from this manor house are Arthur Alfred Dias Abeysinghe (at
page 764) Eugene Godfred Dias Abeysinghe (at page 758-759) together with
a photograph of Maha Mudliyar Nicholas Dias Abeysinghe (figure 2) and
Abraham Dias Abeysinghe (at page 768), whose wedding photograph with Eva
Tagora Gooneratne is amongst the few rare Sinhala Govigama elitists
prominent ceremonies celebrated in 1903 in Galle is published in the
rare opus with Janaka Goonetileke’s Atapattu Walawwa.
The other only known elitist Karawa wedding ceremony recorded from
Galle is provided by Norah Roberts in her compendium entitled Galle as
quiet asleep. (page 404) where that affluent aristocrat Charles Henry
Soysa’s son, Arthur Soysa’s betrothal to Regina Perera Abeywardena of
Closenberg fame held at the All Saint’s Church Galle which was reported
in “London Daily Graphic” on March 2, 1899. They were indeed landmarks
in the heydays of Galle.
The Atapattu Walauwwa has withstood the vagaries of time. It is a
unique architectural legacy gifted to posterity. The families of
Gooneratne and Dias Abeysinghe should be commended for their unremitting
perseverance and the exemplary conduct to preserve this manor house for
the future generation. Janaka and his wife Dharshani who continues the
family tradition deserves from the Sri Lankans and the Galleans a
special word of appreciation for bestowing this monumental saga to the
posterity, undoubtedly a veritable mine of information on Galle.
Goonetileke’s Atapattu Walawwa is a kind of ‘enthusiast’s guide’ to the
unique Sri Lankan real estate in the by-gone era.
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