Mahanama College
| Mahanama College | |
|---|---|
මහානාම විද්යාලය | |
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| Location | |
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R. A. D. Mel Mawatha Colombo 03 | |
| Coordinates | 6°54′22″N 79°51′15″E / 6.90611°N 79.85417°E |
| Information | |
| Type | Government 1AB National School |
| Motto | විද්වතා සෑම තැනකදීම පැසසුම් ලබයි Vidvān Sarvatra Pūjyate (A scholar is respected everywhere) |
| Religious affiliation | Buddhist |
| Established | 5 January 1954 |
| Founder | Maawiththara Rewatha Thero |
| Principal | Prabath I. Withanage |
| Staff | 350 |
| Grades | 1 to 13 |
| Gender | Male |
| Enrollment | 5,000+ [citation needed] |
| Language | English, Sinhala |
| Colours | Gold, silver and black |
| Song | සිරි ලක වොරදන "Sri Lanka Wardhana" |
| Sports | Cricket, rugby, basketball, athletics, football, boxing |
| Affiliation | Ministry of Education |
| Alumni | Mahanamians, Golden Army, The Golds |
| Website | mahanamacollege |
Mahanama College is a Buddhist school for boys in Colombo, Sri Lanka, established in 1954. As a public national school, it is controlled by the Sri Lankan government rather than a provincial council. It provides primary and secondary education.
Mahanama College is located in Kollupitiya, Colombo, with its main entrance from Richard Aluwihare de Mel Mawatha, Colombo 3. The southern boundary of the campus adjoins Church Missionary Society Ladies' College.[1]
History
Mahanama College was founded on 5 January 1954 by Ven. Maawiththara Rewatha Thero at the Walukarama Temple in Kollupitiya, with an initial enrollment of five students.[2] The school relocated to the site at Walukarama after initially operating from nearby locations, with primary classes temporarily held at Thurstan College. In 1956, the school was registered as a government-assisted junior school.
In the mid-1970s, the Sri Lankan government allocated approximately 2.8 ha (6.9 acres) of land to support expansion.[2] By 1976, the campus included several two-storey academic buildings, with facilities such as additional classrooms and a dental unit added during this period.[2]
During the 1990s, the school expanded its extracurricular and inter-school activities. The annual school carnival, Foot-Loose, was introduced,[citation needed] and the Battle of the Golds, the annual cricket match between Mahanama College and D. S. Senanayake College, was initiated in 1999.[3] A three-floor building incorporating an art gallery was also completed in 1999.[citation needed]
In 2014, Mahanama College's 60th anniversary and annual prize-giving was held under the patronage of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Bandula Gunawardena.[4]
Administration
As a national school, the college receives funds from the Ministry of Education. The ministry appoints the principal who leads an administration that consists of vice principals and academic staff. The school is divided into three levels of education: primary school, middle school, and upper school, and each section has its own head.[citation needed]
Mahanama College only admits Buddhist students. Sinhala is the language of instruction in the school, though students can choose between Sinhala and English as their language of instruction for higher education.[5] The school's motto is Vidvān Sarvatra Pūjyate, which means the scholar is respected everywhere.[citation needed]
Principals
- Ven. Vahalle Dhammananda Thero (1954–1960)
- J. D. A. Jayakody (1960–1968)
- N. E. Fernando (1968–1974)
- T. S. Silva (1974–1976)
- K. N. P. de Silva (1976–1986)
- D. G. Sumanasekara (1986–1990)
- K. K. Ratnadasa (1990–1999)
- G. Liyanage (1999–2003)
- W. H. Premalal Kumarasiri (2003–2012)
- U. M. Prasanna Upashantha (2013–2016)
- L. M. D. Dharmasena (2016–2020)
- R. A. R. M. Rathnayake (2020–2021)
- A. M. A. A. C. Perera (2021–2023)
- Prabath Withanage (2023–present)
School houses
Students are divided into four houses, whose names are derived from the Sanskrit language.[6]
| House | Colour Code | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Mettha | Benevolence, friendliness, amity, friendship, goodwill, kindness. | |
| Karuna | The Buddhist concept of compassion. | |
| Muditha | Joy, or more specifically, sympathetic or vicarious joy; taking pleasure in other people's well-being. | |
| Upekha | The Buddhist concept of equanimity. |
Sports
Eighteen sports are played at Mahanama College.[7]
Cricket
Mahanama College established its first U11 cricket team in 1979, with the help of coach Vernon Perera and principal K. N. P. de Silva.[citation needed]
Mahanama College has achieved significant success in school cricket, including being crowned the best team of the Western Province in Division One - Tier "A" for the 2023/24 season,[citation needed] winning the SLSCA Under-13 Division II Cricket Tournament,[citation needed] and reaching the U19 Division 1 Limited Over tournament.[citation needed]
Achievements and milestones
- Champions of Singer U17 Division I Schools Cricket Tournament in 2019.[8][9]
- Champions in the U13 Division II Schools Cricket Tournament in 2024.[10]
- Runners up in Sri Lanka U17 Division I Schools Cricket Tournament 2025.[11][12]
- Champions of Sri Lanka U19 Division 1 Schools Cricket Tournament 2025.[13][14]
Battle of the Golds
The Battle of the Golds, which began in 2007, is an annual cricket contest between D. S. Senanayake College and Mahanama College,[citation needed] which attracts large crowds from both schools to the Sinhalese Sports Club Cricket Ground.[15] Ahead of the match, the Old Boys' Association of Mahanama College organise the 'Golden Parade', a vehicle parade through the streets of Colombo with decorated Double-decker buses, trucks, cars, SUVs, and motorbikes, accompanied by music and dancing.[16]
| Year | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Lost | N/a |
| 2008 | Won | N/a |
| 2009 | Lost | N/a |
| 2010 | Won | N/a |
| 2011 | Lost | N/a |
| 2012 | Won | [17] |
| 2013 | Won | [18] |
| 2014 | N/a | N/a |
| 2015 | Lost | [19] |
| 2016 | Won | [19] |
| 2017 | Won | [20] |
| 2018 | Won | [21] |
| 2019 | Won | [22] |
| 2020 | Postponed due to COVID-19 | N/a |
| 2021 | N/a | |
| 2022 | Won | [23] |
| 2023 | Won | N/a |
| 2024 | Won | N/a |
| 2025 | Won | [24] |
Battle of the Golds Annual T20 Encounter
The T20 Encounter of Battle of the Golds is a friendly rivalry T20 cricket match between Mahanama College and D. S. Senanayake College. The First T20 Encounter was held in 2025, organised as a tribute to K. N. P. de Silva, former principal of Mahanama College who played a main role in the development of the school from 1976 to 1986 (10 years),[citation needed] for the K. N. P. de Silva Memorial Trophy.[25][26][27]
| Year | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Won | [27][28] |
Rugby
Rugby began at Mahanama College in 1986. The school were runners-up in the all-island Division One Tournament in 1994/1995, and again runners-up in the Premier Division 01 – Segment "B" in 2008/2009.[citation needed]
In 2024, the school was crowned champions of the Premier Trophy in 2024, defeating Ananda College, and won the championship title in Division 1 Segment B of the Dialog Schools Rugby League, earning them a spot in the top-tier league for 2025.[citation needed] In the 2025 season, they finished runners-up of The Bowl Segment of Division One Group "A" in the Dialog Schools Rugby League.[29][30] They secured their first victory in the Dialog Schools Rugby League in 2025.[31]
Several alumni of the college have represented the Sri Lanka national rugby union team, including Kapila Knowlton (1994), Mithun Hapugoda and Darshana Dabare (2019).[32][33]
Basketball
In the 2019, 2nd semi-final of the Boys' U17 All Island "B" Division Basketball Championship, the team was awarded 3rd place.[34]
The Battle of the Golds basketball encounter takes place every year where Mahanama College compete with D. S. Senanayake College.[35]
Boxing
The Boxing Committee was founded in 2014. Mahanamian boxers became the champions of the 43rd L.V. Jayaweera Interschool meet in 2016,[36] where Kasun Fernando was also named "Best Boxer",[37] and again at the 46th L.V. Jayaweera Interschool meet in 2022,[38][39] where the college's boxing coach, Y. M. Anura Yapa, was also awarded best coach.[40]
In 2019, the team achieved a 3rd place overall at the All-Island Junior Boxing Championship, bringing home a gold, silver, and bronze medal.[41]
W.T.L.M. Abeysekera, R.I.R. Perera, K.A.V.S. Karavita, and H.S. Nambuwasam were among the college's winning boxers in the Stubbs Shield Boxing Championship, in the Junior and Youth Boys categories.[when?][42] St. Sylvester's College was the eventual winner, securing their fourth consecutive title. The tournament saw nearly 500 boxers from 132 schools competing.
Athletics
The college's athletics program is rooted in its tradition of holistic education, which assigns equal importance to physical fitness as to intellectual development.[43][44]
Athletes from Mahanama College won merit certificate awards in four age groups (under 12, 13, 14, and 15) at the John Tarbet Junior Athletic Meet held in October 2016 at Embilipitiya.[44]
Societies
Mahanama College Media Unit
The Media Unit of Mahanama College (MCMU) was established in 1987,[45] as one of the first school media units in Sri Lanka. The MCMU runs a YouTube channel with 95 videos and over 7000 subscribers.[46] The MCMU website was awarded in Sri Lanka's BestWeb.lk web design competition in 2020,[47] and has received numerous awards at Zonal, Provincial and National Levels.[48] CHATHURMANA is the college's annual Media Day, organized by the MCMU.[49][50]
Leo Club
The Mahanama Leo Club was founded in 1987, operating under Leo District 306 D7.[51] In 2024/2025, the club was named the most outstanding school-based Leo Club in Sri Lanka and the Maldives, as well as in Leo District 306 C2.[citation needed]
Notable alumni
- Danushka Gunathilaka, international cricketer
- Dhananjaya de Silva, international cricketer
- Chathura Randunu, First Class cricketer
- Pavan Rathnayake, international cricketer
- Sonal Dinusha, international cricketer
- Dilesh Gunaratne, international cricketer
- Lalithamana Fernando, international cricketer, member of the Sri Lanka national team who played the first one-day international match in 1989[52][53]
- Hasitha Lakmal de Silva, international cricketer[54]
- Malindu Maduranga, First Class cricketer
- Heshan Hettiarchchi, First Class cricketer
- Shasheendra Rajapaksa, Minister of Parliament, 6th Chief Minister of Uva
- Eranga Weeraratne, Minister of Parliament, engineer, business executive, National List Member of Parliament
- Jayantha Kularathna, Chief of Staff of the Sri Lanka Navy
- Channa Weerasuriya, colonel in the Sri Lanka Army
- Chandana Welikala, Director of Administration, Sri Lanka Air Force
- Pradeep Rathnayake, Dean of the Department of Languages, Cultural Studies and Performing Arts at University of Sri Jayawardenepura[55]
References
- ^ "Mahanama College · WV43+FW2, ආර් ඒ ද මෙල් මාවත, Colombo, Sri Lanka". Mahanama College · WV43+FW2, ආර් ඒ ද මෙල් මාවත, Colombo, Sri Lanka. Retrieved 19 May 2022.
- ^ a b c "History At Mahanama". Dsynit (Pvt) Limited. Retrieved 22 January 2026.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ "History". Retrieved 17 October 2014.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ "President at 60th anniversary celebrations of Colombo Mahanama College". News.lk. Department of Government Information, Sri Lanka. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
- ^ "Festival Of Cricket | Mahanama". Retrieved 19 May 2022.
- ^ "Mahanama College - Brief Information". Mahanama College Media Unit. 18 March 2021. Retrieved 19 May 2022.[unreliable source?]
- ^ "Sports – Mahanama College". Retrieved 26 May 2022.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ Silva, Sithija De (11 October 2019). "Photos : Mahanama College Vs St. Sebastian's College, Moratuwa | U17 Cricket Tournament 2019 | Final".
- ^ "Mahanama emerge U-17 champions" – via PressReader.
- ^ "Mahanama 'B' beat last season champs Royal 'B'". Ceylon Today. 20 December 2024.
- ^ "Mahanama, Devapathiraja clash in final today (18)". Ceylon Today. 17 August 2025.
- ^ Sanjeewa, Kanishka (16 August 2025). "Mahanama & Devapathiraja set for U17 Division 1 Final Showdown".
- ^ "Mahanama College wins U19 Tier 'A' Inter-School One Day Cricket Championship".
- ^ "Mahanama power past Richmond to claim U19 Tier a Crown". 3 November 2025.
- ^ "Battle of the Golds – Mahanama College". Retrieved 26 May 2022.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ "Mahanama College takes the roads with Golden Parade 2019".
- ^ Ariyaratne, Gayan. "Battle of the Golds 2012". www.mcoba.com.au. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ "DS vs Mahanama | Battle of the Golds 2013". Xtream Youth. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ a b "Full Scorecard of Mahanama Col vs DS Senanayake 10th Battle of the Gold 2015/16 - Score Report". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ "All Set for the 11th Battle of the Gold as Mahanama lock horns with DS". batsman. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ "12th Battle of the Golds - D.S. Senanayake, Mahanama battle for supremacy". www.dailymirror.lk. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ Kumarasinghe, Chathura (13 March 2019). "DS-Mahanama lock horns for the 13th time". ThePapare.com. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ "Battle of the Golds ends in draw". Daily News.
- ^ "Gimantha Dissanayake bowls Mahanama to their eighth straight win". 18 May 2025.
- ^ Walpola, Thilina (23 May 2025). "Inaugural DSS-Mahanama T20 Big Match today".
- ^ "REPLAY – D.S Senanayake College vs Mahanama College - Inaugural T20 Encounter 2025". 23 May 2025.
- ^ a b "Mahanama edge DSS to clinch inaugural T20 encounter". Daily News. 25 May 2025.
- ^ "Mahanama edge past D.S. Senanayake on DLS to clinch the inaugural T20 encounter". 24 May 2025.
- ^ Herath, Kanishka (10 August 2025). "Spirited Mahanama thrash Bowl Champions in Nittawela".
- ^ "REPLAY – Mahanama College vs Science College - Dialog Schools Rugby League 2025". 26 July 2025.
- ^ Coggins, Nathan (6 June 2025). "Mahanama College Rugby : Rising to the Pinnacle of Schools Rugby In 2025". Retrieved 11 September 2025.
- ^ "Mithun Hapugoda | ThePapare Stats Center Rugby". stats.thepapare.com.
- ^ "Sri Lanka Air Force - Guardians of the skies". www.airforce.lk.
- ^ Jayathileke, Vibdua (4 April 2019). "Kingswood to finals, Mahanama to 3rd Place".
- ^ Alles, Tharindhie (30 November 2015). "D.S conquers the Battle of the Golds yet again".
- ^ "Boxing: Mahanama take 43rd L.V. Jayaweera title". Sunday Times.
- ^ "Mahanama College emerge LV Jayaweera boxing champions". Daily Mirror.
- ^ De Silva, Romario (2 November 2024). "Mahanama College surprises a few on Day-2".
- ^ "Mahanama wins L.V. Jayaweera Boxing Meet". Daily FT.
- ^ "Mahanama College emerge LV Jayaweera boxing champions" – via PressReader.
- ^ De Silva, Romario (4 November 2024). "Three-horse race leading into the final rounds".
- ^ "At Stubbs Shield Boxing C'ship: Marathon Day of stellar performances". 4 November 2024.
- ^ "GGU Saman Kumara".
- ^ a b "Mahanama grabs 21 merit certificate awards | Daily FT". www.ft.lk.
- ^ "Mahanama College Media Unit". schoolandcollegelistings.com. Retrieved 11 September 2025.
- ^ "TV Mahanama". Youtube Channel. Retrieved 11 September 2025.[unreliable source?]
- ^ "Mahanama College Media Unit". Mahanama College Media Unit. Retrieved 26 May 2022.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ "Mahanama College Media Unit - Media company in Colombo". www.srilanka-places.com.
- ^ profile, Visit. "Mahanama College Media Unit".
- ^ "Mahanama College Media Unit". Mahanama College Media Unit.[non-primary source needed]
- ^ "Leo Club of Mahanama College". www.mahanamaleos.org.
- ^ "Lalithamana Fernando Profile". ESPNcricinfo.
- ^ "Lalithamana Fernando Sri Lankan Cricket Player Profile, Batting and Bowling stats, Recent form". Crex.com.
- ^ "Hasitha de Silva". ESPNcricinfo.
- ^ "Profile | Pradeep Ratnayake". www.pradeepratnayake.com.
External links
- Mahanama College Official Website
- Official website - Mahanama College OBA Australia Inc.
- Mahanama College Media Unit Archived 15 May 2023 at the Wayback Machine
- FM Mahanama Archived 15 May 2023 at the Wayback Machine

