On 22 May 1972 C.E., the island nation known for centuries as Ceylon formally declared itself a republic, adopting a new constitution and a new name: the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka. The moment marked the final, formal break from the British Commonwealth’s dominion structure — and the culmination of a long, layered struggle for self-determination that had begun more than 150 years earlier.
Key facts
- Sri Lanka republic: Ceylon became a fully sovereign republic on 22 May 1972 C.E., ending dominion status that had been in place since independence was granted on 4 February 1948 C.E.
- Ceylon independence movement: The political campaign for self-rule was largely peaceful, led by an educated middle class and shaped by decades of Buddhist revival, temperance activism, and growing national consciousness.
- Democratic Socialist Republic: The new constitution officially renamed the country and established it as a democratic socialist republic, with sovereignty no longer shared with the British Crown.
A path that stretched back generations
British rule over the island had been consolidated through a mix of treaty and force. The Dutch were displaced in 1795 C.E., and the last independent Kandyan Kingdom fell in 1815 C.E. after the British fomented a revolt among the Kandyan aristocracy. What followed were decades of land seizures, plantation economies built on imported Tamil labor from southern India, and a colonial administration that reshaped the island’s religious, social, and agricultural life.
The resistance to that transformation took many forms. The Uva Rebellion of 1817 C.E. and the Matale Rebellion of 1848 C.E. were early, ultimately unsuccessful uprisings. But something significant shifted in that latter rebellion: its leaders were not aristocrats or traditional chiefs but ordinary people — yeomen, artisans, small landowners. A new kind of political energy was beginning to form.
By the late 19th century, that energy found a cultural channel. Anagarika Dharmapala and other Sinhala Buddhist revivalists linked a reformed, modernized Buddhism to a growing sense of national identity. American theosophist Colonel Henry Steel Olcott helped establish Buddhist schools in Colombo, Kandy, and Galle — institutions that educated a generation of leaders who would eventually navigate the transition from colony to nation. It was an unusual cross-cultural alliance in service of local self-determination.
Independence, then republic
Ceylon was granted independence from Britain on 4 February 1948 C.E. — a transition widely described as peaceful, with considerable continuity between the colonial administration and the new Ceylonese government. The country retained dominion status within the British Commonwealth, meaning the British monarch remained head of state.
That arrangement held for 24 years. The push for a full republic reflected a desire to close that remaining gap — to hold sovereignty entirely within the island’s own institutions. The National State Assembly of Sri Lanka passed a new constitution, and on 22 May 1972 C.E., Ceylon ceased to exist as a legal entity. In its place stood the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka.
The name itself carried meaning. “Sri Lanka” is derived from Sanskrit — “sri” meaning resplendent or fortunate, “lanka” the ancient name for the island. It reached back past the colonial period to a longer, pre-European identity.
What the plantation economy left behind
The colonial economy had been built on a specific architecture: land taken from Kandyan Sinhalese peasants, converted to coffee and then tea plantations, worked by hundreds of thousands of Tamil laborers transported from southern India under the indenture system. By the time the republic was declared, this structure — consolidated under large British companies, organized around monoculture export crops — had been in place for more than a century.
The 1972 C.E. republican constitution did not immediately dismantle that legacy. The Tamil workers who had been brought to Sri Lanka under colonial labor arrangements occupied a complicated legal and social position, and their status was one of several unresolved tensions that independence alone could not settle. Human rights organizations have since documented the decades of conflict that followed, with roots traceable in part to ethnic and political divisions that the independence movement itself did not fully bridge.
Lasting impact
The transition to a republic was not merely symbolic. It meant that the constitution, the judiciary, and the head of state were now entirely Sri Lankan in origin and accountability. Sri Lanka’s constitutional history since 1972 C.E. has been contested and revised, but the 1972 C.E. document established the principle that sovereignty rested with the people of the island.
The story of Sri Lanka’s independence movement also offers something worth sitting with more broadly: independence achieved without a prolonged armed conflict, shaped significantly by cultural and spiritual revival rather than military force. The Buddhist revival schools, the temperance movement, the grassroots organizing of small business owners and village leaders — these were the foundations on which a constitutional republic was eventually built.
The island also stands as a reminder that decolonization is rarely a single event. Ceylon’s formal independence in 1948 C.E. was one chapter. The republic of 1972 C.E. was another. And the social, economic, and ethnic reckonings that followed represent chapters still being written.
Blindspots and limits
The independence movement was led primarily by educated, English-speaking Sinhalese elites, and the interests of Tamil communities — both the estate Tamils brought under the indenture system and the longer-settled Sri Lankan Tamils — were not equally represented in the process. The 1972 C.E. constitution has also been criticized for provisions that elevated the status of the Sinhala language and Buddhism in ways that contributed to political tensions in subsequent decades. These are not footnotes to the story of Sri Lanka’s republic; they are part of it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Sri Lankan independence movement
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
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- The Good News for Humankind archive on the modern era
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