Ruins of the Dutch-era Saint Anthony's Church, Manalkadu

Vadamarachchi East

Manalkadu Dutch Church

Roofless walls and a sand-buried floor — the ruins of a small Dutch-era Catholic church on the dunes east of Point Pedro.

November to March; late afternoon for the light

Best time to visit

Open landscape — accessible at all daylight hours

Opening hours

Free

Entrance fee


The ruins of Saint Anthony's Church at Manalkadu sit half-buried in coastal sand a few kilometres south of Point Pedro, on the eastern edge of the Vadamarachchi peninsula. The church was built by Dutch Catholics in the early 19th century, served the local community for more than a hundred years, and was eventually abandoned to the encroaching dunes. The sand has slowly been reclaiming it ever since.

What stands today is the shell. The roof is gone, the side walls have lost their plaster down to the brick, and the nave floor is a bowl of fine sand that drifts higher each season. The arched window openings frame square views of the dunes outside; the altar end still carries traces of its original niches. It is one of the most photographed ruins in the North.

There is no formal site management, no entrance gate, no signage of any depth. You walk in from the sand track that runs from the village and have the place to yourself for the most part. The light is best in the late afternoon, when the sun comes in low through the western windows and crosses the eastern wall. Pair it with the Point Pedro lighthouse and with Manalkadu Beach for a full day on the eastern coast.

What to know

Visiting quietly

Best season
November to March, when the dune sand stays dry underfoot
Etiquette
Treat the ruins as a place of worship in disrepair, not a play set. Do not climb the walls; the brick is fragile. Take any rubbish out with you.
Getting there
1.5 hours from Jaffna town by road via Point Pedro

A closer look

Location

On the map

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Practical things

Frequently asked

How do visitors find the church?
It sits off a sand track from Manalkadu village, three kilometres south of Point Pedro. A local driver or guide will know the turn from the coast road; signage is minimal.
Can the ruins be entered?
Yes — the site is open and unrestricted. The walls are fragile so do not climb them; walk inside the nave with care, especially after rain when the sand shifts.

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