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Neduntheevu

Island in Sri Lanka From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Neduntheevu or Nedunthivu (Tamil: நெடுந்தீவு, romanized: Neṭuntīvu; Sinhala: ඩෙල්ෆ්ට්, romanized: Ḍelfṭ) (also known by its Dutch name Delft) is an island in the Palk Strait, northern Sri Lanka. This island is named as Delft in the Admiralty Chart unlike the other islands, whose names are Tamil. The island's area is 62 km2 and it is roughly oval-shaped. Its length is 11 km and its width about 6 km at the widest point.

Quick Facts Native name: நெடுந்தீவுඩෙල්ෆ්ට්, Geography ...

Neduntheevu is a flat island surrounded by shallow waters and beaches of coral chunks and sand. It is home to a small population of Tamil people, mostly living in quiet compounds close to the northern coast.[2] The vegetation is of a semi-arid tropical type, with palmyra palms, dry shrubs and grasses that grow on the pale grey porous coralline soil. Papayas and bananas grow close to the local people's homes. The groundwater is slightly brackish, and it is taken from shallow wells using buckets made from palmyra palm leaves. A naval battle was fought off the coast of the island in 2008 during the Sri-Lankan Civil War. There are feral ponies on the island, descendants of forebears abandoned there in the Dutch period.

The island was named after the Dutch city of Delft by Rijckloff van Goens. He named the eight most important islands after Dutch cities.

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Archaeological ruins

In the north-western part of Delft Island, the ruins of an ancient Buddhist temple have been discovered.[3] The remains of a Hindu temple built in the Chola style in the 10th or 11th century as well as the ruins of a Dutch colonial fort have been identified on the western coast of the island.[4][5]

Inscriptions

In 2013, marine archaeologists from the Maritime Archaeology Unit (MAU) of the Central Cultural Fund (CCF) discovered a few eroded coral slabs containing Tamil scripts. According to their early suggestions, these Tamil scripts belong to the 14th to 15th centuries.[6] However, as another coral slab engraved in modern English script was discovered on the same site in same eroded condition, it was later identified that all these inscriptions were not engraved in the 14th to 15th centuries but in the recent past.[7]

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See also

References

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