Sri Lankan Crown Jewels include the Regalia of the Kingdom of Kandy consisting of the crown, throne, scepter and sword of state. [1]
With the capture of Kandy and the last king of Kandy, Sri Vikrama Rajasinha by British and native forces personal possessions of the King which included his crown, sword, sword belt, scepter and other jewellery were looted by their captors including earrings that were torn out from the ears of the Queens. These along with the throne looted from the Royal Palace Complex of Kandy were taken by the British and auctioned, apart from the crown, throne, scepter, sword belt and sword of state which were presented to the Prince regent and kept at Carlton House. When Carlton House was demolished, the items were moved to the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle. The thrown was placed in Garter Throne Room and used for investitures of the Knights of the Garter, including Victor Emanuel of Italy (1861), King Haakon VII of Norway (1906), and Manuel of Portugal (1908).. Its presence was raised by the Ceylon Daily News in 1924 and on 30 November 1933, a resolution was moved by George E. de Silva in the State Council requesting the repatriation of the Crown and Throne, which was passed in February 1934. The King George VI agreed to present the Crown and Throne to Ceylon and in September 1934, Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester on a royal visit to the island presented the Crown, Throne and its step stool at an reception at the King's Pavilion in Kandy and was moved into permanent display at the Colombo Museum. The sceptre, sword and belt were returned in 1936 by King Edward VIII. [1] [2]
The throne of the Kandyan Kingdom was gifted to King Wimala Dharma Surya by the Dutch in 1692. [1] In the 1980s, the throne, then in the Colombo Museum, was vandalized by thieves during a robbery. The damaged areas of the throne were restored by acting Archaeological Commissioner Dr. Roland Silva. [1]
The Crown of King Rajasinghe II was held by the Dodanwela Devale since it was present by the king in 1638 until it was transferred to the National Museum of Kandy and stolen in 1961. [3]
In 2023, the Rijksmuseum returned weapons looted from the Royal Palace of Kandy during the Kandyan–Dutch war. The items included the Lewke's cannon, a Golden Kastane, a Silver Kastane, a Sinhalese Knife and two Maha Guns. [4] [5] [6]
In 2017, Vladimir Putin gifted to President Maithripala Sirisena a royal Kastane of the Kandyan era. [7]