From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Vimaladharmasuriya I
King of Kandy from 1592 to 1604
King of Kandy from 1592 to 1604
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | King Wimaladharmasūriya I | |
| native_lang1 | Sinhala | |
| native_lang1_name1 | පළමුවන විමලධර්මසූරිය | |
| title | Thrisinhaladheeshwara | |
| Lankeshwara | ||
| Bhupathi | ||
| image | King Vimaladharmasuriya I - Colourized Version 2.jpg | |
| caption | Drawing of the king by Alain Manesson Mallet (circa 1685) (colorized) | |
| succession | King of Kandy | |
| reign | 1592–1604 | |
| predecessor | Rajasinha I of Sitawaka | |
| successor | Senarat of Kandy | |
| spouse | Queen Kusumasana Devi of Kandy | |
| spouse-type | Consort | |
| spouses | Dona Amelia (Yakadadoli) | |
| issue | ||
| house | House of Dinajara | |
| father | Weerasundara Bandara | |
| mother | Kosbokke Gedara Vimalu | |
| religion | {{Plainlist | |
| birth_name | Konappu Bandara | |
| birth_place | Peradeniya, Kingdom of Kandy | |
| death_date | 1604 | |
| death_place | Royal Palace Complex of Kandy, Kandy, Kingdom of Kandy | |
| place of burial | Asgiri Temple, Kandy, Sri Lanka |
Lankeshwara Bhupathi | spouse-type = Consort
- Roman Catholic (c. 1580s–1591)
- Theravāda Buddhism (1591–1604)
Wimaladharmasūriya I (died 1604) was the king of the Kingdom of Kandy from 1592 to 1604. He is best known for successfully repelling two major Portuguese offensives: the Battle of Danture in 1594 and the Battle of Balana in 1602, in both of which the Portuguese suffered decisive defeats.
Origin
Name
Wimaladharmasuriya I is referred to by four names by different sources. Rajavaliya mentions his early name as Konappu Bandara and says he is the son of a Kandyan chieftain, Weerasundara Bandara of Peradeniya. Reports of early Dutch visitors Sebald de Veert and Joris van Spilbergen mention him as Don João da Austria. Joao Rebeiro mentions one Don Juan Appuhamy, a commoner who was sent to conquer the kingdom of Kandy and of Konnapu Bandara. Historians have also noted that from 1604 to 1617 there is little information available as to what happened in the Kandyan Kingdom. Therefore, there is the possibility of mixing up of several personalities by later historians in reconstructing the history of that period. As per the deed given by this king to the chief commander of Campaign of Danture, his mother's name is Kosbokke Gedara Vimalu, after whom he took up his name Wimaladharmasuriya.
Early life
Wimaladharmasuriya I, known as Konappu Banḍāra or Galagoda Wimaladharmasurya Bandara before his ascension, was the son of a distinguished aristocrat, from Hatara kōrale (‘four districts’) (roughly equivalent to today’s Kegalla District), Galagoda Weerasundara Bandara. Tikiri Galagoda Kumarihamy was a relation and descendant of the family of Galagoda. Vimaladharmasuriya's father was murdered by Rajasinghe l. As a result Banḍāra had to flee to Portuguese Goa where he became a Catholic convert as Don Juan de Áustria.
Trouble in the Kingdom
Rajasinghe l invaded the Kandyan Kingdom in 1582 with the help of Weerasundara Bandara and overthrew the Kandyan ruler Karalliyadde Bandara. During the invasion, Karaliyadde Bandara was able to decamp from Kandy with his wife, younger daughter (Kusumasana Devi) and nephew (Yamasinghe Bandara). But he and his wife died on the way while his nephew and daughter was able to reach the Portuguese fort at Mannar. Rajasinghe I made Veerasundara Bandara the ruler of the Kandyan Kingdom. But soon became suspicious of him. Rajasinghe I tricked Veerasundara Bandara to come to Seethawaka and killed him.
Under the Portuguese and Baptism
Because of his father's murder, Konappu Bandara secretly ran away from Kandy to the Portuguese fort at Colombo. He was sent to Goa by the Portuguese and was there baptised as Don Juan a and learned fighting techniques from the Portuguese. It was said that he attended some of the battles there with the Portuguese. The ruler appointed by Rajasinghe l for the Kandyan Kingdom was Nikapitiye Bandara who turned out to be a ruthless ruler.
Reign
Kingship

King Vimaladharmasuriya is regarded by some historians as the Kandyan Kingdom's second founder, responsible for its revival. He was baptized under the Portuguese name of Dom João da Austria. In 1594 he married Princess Kusmasana Devi who, as Dona Catherina, was put forward by the Portuguese as the rightful claimant to the throne and became king. After renouncing Christianity and embracing Buddhism, Vimaladharmasuriya constructed a two-tiered shrine close to his palace in order to sanctify his capital, Kandy, and accommodate the politically-important relic of the tooth of the Buddha.
Welcoming the Dutch
The Dutch explorer Joris van Spilbergen offered an alliance to fight off the Portuguese. Following these negotiations, Sebald de Weert was officially sent by Admiral Wybrand van Warwijck to mount a joint counter-attack against the Portuguese. The alliance ended in disaster, however, during a drinking party, where the Dutch became rowdy, De Weert according to François Valentijn insulted the queen, and De Weert and all 47 Dutchmen accompanying him consequently were killed. An alliance would not be possible again until 1612, when a new envoy, Marcellus de Boschouwer, established a treaty with Senarat of Kandy, ultimately leading to the eviction of the Portuguese from the island, and about one century of Dutch rule in coastal regions, until the British in turn took the island in 1815.
Buddhism
At the time of Vimaladharmasuriya's coronation Buddhism was on the verge of disappearing from the island. The king learned that ordained Buddhist monks no longer existed on the island so he sent one of his ministers to Lower Burma and reestablished Buddhism in Kandy. By this time, the relic of the tooth of the Buddha was hidden in Delgamuwa Raja Maha Vihara in Sabaragamuwa Province. The king brought the tooth relic to Kandy and built a two-storied Temple of the Tooth near the Royal Palace of Kandy to house the relic. He also repaired many ruined Buddhist temples throughout his kingdom such as Gadaladeniya, Lakathilaka and Ridi Viharaya.
In popular culture
- Portrayed by Sangeeth Satharasinghe in the 2019 TV Derana TV series Kusumasana Devi.
- Portrayed by Hemal Ranasinghe in the 2025 film Devi Kusumasana.
References
Citations
Bibliography
References
- "chapter 1, Kandyan kingdom, page 15".
- "රාජාවලිය - රාජාවලිය iii - Wikibooks".
- Earliest Dutch Visitors to Ceylon, Nissanka Perera, S. Godage and Brothers, 2008
- Kandy Fights the Portuguese, C. Gaston Perera, Vijithayapa Publications, 2007
- "What happened at Danthure 400 years ago".
- (2019-10-02). "මවගෙ නමින් රජවූ අපූරු සිංහලයා".
- Pilimatalavuva, Ananda. (March 4, 2007). "A kingdom is born, a kingdom is lost". Kandy Times.
- (1992). "Buddhist Monastic Architecture in Sri Lanka: The Woodland Shrines".
- Culavamsa
- Chandrasiri, Jayantha. (2025-05-23). "Devi Kusumasana". Lyca Productions.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Vimaladharmasuriya I — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report