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Info

Province Southern Province
Largest Town Hambantota
Total Area 2,609 km2 (1,007 sq mi)
Total Population 596,617
Density 230/km2 (590/sq mi)
Sinhalese 579,032 (97.04%)
Sri Lankan Malay 8,310 (1.39%)
Sri Lankan Moor 6,556 (1.1%)
Indian Tamil 136 (0.02%)
Sri Lankan Tamil 2,111 (0.35%)
Other 434 (0.07%)
Buddhism 577,284 (96.76%)
Hinduism 1,243 (0.21%)
Islam 15,163 (2.54%)
Roman Catholic 1,098 (0.18%)
Other Christian 1,511 (0.25%)
Other 318 (0.05%)

Hambantota

Description

Hambantota District is a district in Southern Province, Sri Lanka. It is one of 25 districts of Sri Lanka, the second level administrative division of the country. The district is administered by a District Secretariat headed by a District Secretary appointed by the central government of Sri Lanka.

About

Hambantota District has a population of 596,617 (2011) of whom 96% are considered rural residents. Some 13.4% of the labor force of 244,847 is unemployed — in comparison to the national average of 8.3%. Of those employed, 42.2% are in the agricultural sector, 23.3% in industry with the remaining 34.5% working in the services sector.Hambantota District has 12 local authorities of which one is a Municipal Council, one is an Urban Council and the remaining 10 are Divisional Councils (Pradeshiya Sabha).

Before modern development took place after the country gained independence in 1948, the agriculture in the district was characterised by swidden cultivation (chena or slash-and-burn) and, to some extent, paddy cultivation on non-irrigated land. In the highlands, kurakkan — a grain used to make an eatable paste — was cultivated with other grains such as corn. Leonard Woolf's Village in the Jungle provides a highly interesting and insightful account of the people, the land and issues of concern during the British Colonial period as he worked as an assistant government agent for Hambantota.

The area has traditionally been home to Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Malay people, who collectively make up 98% of the district's population. The long history of Malay settlement in the district has impacted the local culture of Hambantota, with Sri Lankan Malay being a shared language between the Sri Lankan Malays and some members of the Sinhalese community.