History
of Medicine in Sri Lanka
| Pre-Historic Medicine in Ceylon | Medicine under Sri Lankan
kings |
Sri Lanka was known by various people in various
names. It has been called Lanka by the ancient Sinhalese , Taprobane
by the Greeks, Serendib by the Arabs, Ceilao by the Portuguese,
Ceylan by the Dutch and Ceylon by the British. With the promulgation
of the new constitution in 1972, the name was officially changed
to Sri Lanka.
The history of medicine in Sri
Lanka has been fashioned over the centuries by a synthesis of
several intrinsic and extrinsic factors, some of which were unique
to the country. Being an island, Sri Lanka insulated to a large
extent from external forces influencing medicine.
Disease being as old as mankind,
prehistoric man in Sri Lanka would have evolved his own approach
to sickness which need not necessarily have invoked the use of
herbs and other drugs. The history of medicine in Sri Lanka can
be divided in to major historical periods in its ruled.There are
: Ancient Medical Practices, Medicine
under Sri Lankan kings, The Portuguese period,
The Dutch period.
There is hardly any information
on the state of medicine in Pre-historic time. It is traditionally
believed that Ravana, the prehistoric King of
Lanka of Ramayana fame was well-versed in medical lore.
Sri Lanka was ruled by its own
kings from the inception of its written history until 1815, when
the British conquered the Kandyan kingdom. Considerable information
on the structure of the medical system that prevailed during this
period is available from literary and archaeological sources.
The ancient chronicle, the Mahavamsa, is undoubtedly the richest
single source of such information. In that time there were several
Hospitals.
The Portuguese first arrived in
Colombo in 1505. Medicine practiced by the Portuguese at the time
was not entirely western, for it had an oriental flavor as well.
Some of their medicinal knowledge was derived from the Moors of
Spain. That is a Portuguese period in Sri Lanka.
The Dutch period. The Dutch completed the capture
of the maritime provinces by defeating the long drawn out siege
of Colombo in 1656. The impact that the Dutch had on the local
medicine was only a fraction more than in the case of the Portuguese.
They built more hospitals than the Portuguese, and that again
was for the purpose of serving their forces, shipping personnel
and other Dutch nationals in the country. Hospitals were established
in strategic garrison towns, several of which possessed harbours
as well.
The British captured the maritime provinces from
the Dutch in 1796, and annexed the Kandyan kingdom in 1815. They
ruled the country till 1948 when Sri Lanka achieved independence.
The early phase of British medicine belonged
to the military who controlled both the military and civil health
institutions. With the creation of a separate Civil Medical Department
in 1858, a new phase was born by which medical facilities were
provided to the civilian by a department free of military control.
The British were very much concerned about the health of the local
population. Several Governors, in their addresses to the Legislative
Council, indicated their solicitude for the health of the people.