According to Christian traditions, Thomas the Apostle
first arrived in Sri Lanka (as well as India) during the 1st century. After his
arrival, small Christian settlements were recorded to have been established on
Sri Lanka's coastline. However, the population of Christians in Sri Lanka
didn't dramatically increase until the arrival of Portuguese missionaries
during the 15th century. In the 17th century, the Dutch took over Sri Lanka and
Dutch missionaries were able to convert 21% of Sri Lanka's population to
Christianity by 1722.
In 1796 the Dutch were displaced by the British and in
1802 Ceylon became a Crown colony. Anglican and other Protestant missionaries
arrived at Sri Lanka during the early 19th century, when the British took
control of Sri Lanka from the Dutch. Under British rule missionary work was
undertaken by English societies: Baptist, Wesleyan Methodist, the CMS and SPG. The Salvation Army and Jehovah's Witnesses are
also strong in Sri Lanka.
Even so, Christianity has heavily declined in Sri
Lanka ever since the end of colonial rule. By the 1980s, the population of
Christians (mostly concentrated in the northwest of Sri Lanka) reached
1,283,600, 8% of Sri Lanka's population. Of these Christians, about 88% are
Roman Catholics and the rest are Anglican and Protestant.
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