This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's
verifiability policy. Please
improve this article by removing names that do not have independent
reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate
citations.(December 2014)
One comes across fellow Royalists in varying situations in life; instantly a rapport is established for one knows the other — assumes his qualities and understands his character.
SirJames PeirisJP – Vice President of the
Legislative Council and first Ceylonese Acting Governor[3] (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
SirRichard Morgan – first Ceylonese member of the Governor's
Executive Council and Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
SirPonnambalam RamanathanKCMGKC – first elected Ceylonese representative unofficial member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement and Civil Servants)
SirHector van Cuylenburg – first elected Burgher representative unofficial member of the Legislative Council
SirMarcus FernandoFRCP – member of the Executive Council and Legislative Council (note: also listed in Medicine)
SirArunachalam MahadevaKCMG – former Minister Home Affaires of the State Council and member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
SirBandara PanabokkeAdigar – First Minister of Health in the State Council and a member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
E. W. Perera – former Member of the State Council and the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
Donald Obeyesekere – former Member of the State Council and the Legislative Council[16] (note: also listed in Sportsmen and sports administrators)
JusticeSirThomas GarvinKC – former ex-officio Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges and lawyers)
JusticeMaas Thajoon AkbarKC – former ex-officio Member of the Legislative Council[17] (note: also listed in Judges and lawyers)
C. E. Corea – former Member of the Legislative Council, President of the Ceylon National Congress (1924)[18] (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
Charles Ambrose Lorensz – former Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
T M Sabaratnam – former Member of the Legislative Council
James De Alwis – former Member of the Legislative Council[19] (note: also listed in Poets)
K. Balasingam – former Member of the Executive Council and Legislative Council
J. R. Weinman – former Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
A. J. R. de Soysa – former Member of the Legislative Council of Ceylon
SirRazik FareedOBEJP – former Cabinet Minister of Trade, Deputy Speaker, Member of Parliament, the Senate and the State Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
MajorE. A. NugawelaCLI – former Cabinet Minister of Education (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament & State Council[21]
Cathiravelu SittampalamCCS – former Cabinet Minister of Posts and Telecommunications (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament
Abeyratne Ratnayaka – former Cabinet Minister of Food and Cooperatives (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament & State Council
Felix R. Dias Bandaranaike – former Cabinet Minister of Finance, Public Administration, Local Government, Home Affairs,
Justice, Member of Parliament[22]
DeshamanyaNissanka WijeyeratneCCS – former Cabinet Minister of Education, Higher Education &
Justice, Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Colvin R de Silva – former Cabinet Minister of Plantation Industries and Constitutional Affairs, Member of Parliament
Mano Wijeyeratne – former Minister of Plantation Services, Non-Cabinet Minister of Enterprise Development, Member of Parliament
Susil Moonesinghe – former
Chief Minister of the Western Provincial Council, Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Local government and Diplomats)
T. B. Panabokke – former Deputy Minister of Justice & Agriculture and Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Diplomats)
Wijaya Dahanayake – former Deputy Minister of Public Administration and Home Affairs and Member of Parliament[28]
Mangala Moonesinghe – former Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Diplomats)
H. Sri NissankaKC – former Member of Parliament and one of the founders of the
SLFP (note: also listed in Lawyers)
Walwin de SilvaCCS – former Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Civil servants)
SirHarry Dias Bandaranaike – former Acting Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ceylon and first Ceylonese
Barrister (note: also listed in Legislators)
Wilhelm WouterszSLOS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sri Lankan Ambassador to China, Italy and Yugoslavia[57]
Esala WeerakoonSLOS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India and Ambassador to Norway[58]
Lal Jayawardena – Second Vice-Chairman of the
Group of 24, former Sri Lankan High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Ambassador to the
EEC, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Anil Moonesinghe – Sri Lankan Ambassador to Austria and Ambassador/Permanent Representative the UN, Geneva (note: also listed in Legislators)
Mangala Moonesinghe – former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom (note: also listed in Legislators)
Susil Moonesinghe – former Ambassador to Iran (note: also listed in Legislators)
Wickrema Weerasooria – former High Commissioner to Australia and New Zealand[64] (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Ernest Corea – Sri Lanka's former Ambassador to the United States, High Commissioner to Canada (note: also listed in Media personalities and Journalists)
Daya PereraPC – Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Canada and former Ambassador to the United Nations[65]
DeshamanyaNeville Kanakeratne – Sri Lankan Ambassador to the United States and High Commissioner to India[54] (note: also listed in Viceregal)
Oliver Weerasinghe – Sri Lanka's former Ambassador to the United States[66][67] (note: also listed in Architects)
Omer Kamil – former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Iran (note: also listed in Mayors)
T. D. S. A. Dissanayake – former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Indonesia and Egypt; prominent Sri Lankan diplomat in the UN[68]
S. J. WalpitaCCS – former Ceylon's Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Vipula Wanigasekera – former Sri Lanka's first Consul General to Norway, Director General, Sri Lanka Tourism Authority, Ministry of Tourism (note: also listed in Civil servants)
DeshamanyaBaku MahadevaCCS – former Permanent Secretary of the Treasury, the Ministry of Agriculture and Food and the Ministry of Public Administration and Home Affairs
Nissanka WijeyeratneCCS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministries of Information & Broadcasting, Transport and Cultural Affairs (note: also listed in Legislators)
Arjuna Mahendran – former Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and former Chairman of Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (note: also listed in Corporate Executives)[74]
Dhammika Kitulgoda – Secretary General of Parliament (1999–2002, 2008–2012), Secretary to the
Parliamentary Council and former District Judge (note: also listed in Judges)[77]
Vidya JyothiJanaka de Silva – Professor Emeritus of Medicine and former Dean, Faculty of Medicine,
University of Kelaniya,[115] and former Director, Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo (note: also listed in Medicine)
Emeritus Professor of Medicine,
University of Colombo, Physician first trained Nephrologist, President Sri Lanka Medical Council, Ceylon College of Physician, Founder National Institute Nephrology and Transplant Institute, Member Sri Lanka Medical Council
^"Historic occasion for Sri Lanka cricket scorers" (Press release). Lake House (Daily News) - Sports. 2007-08-30. Archived from
the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2009-02-15. The significant contributions Ajith C. S. Perera has made to cricket, mostly through his dedicated achievements together with his willingness to further improve individual performance, extends into almost all avenues of cricket one could think of and thereby perhaps remain unparallel". "In the late 80 decade he achieved his goals here to become the 'First Sri Lankan' to be accepted and recognised as a professionally qualified umpire (1985), scorer (1987), then also as a 'Scorer competent in advanced scoring techniques' (1989) and finally as a 'professional training instructor' both for Scorers and Umpires (1990), by the prestigious body in England for Umpires and Scorers, ACU&S.
^Perera, Ajith C. S. (19 August 2008).
"Cricket where Everybody is Included". Features Page 8. Upali Newspapers - The Island. Retrieved 30 January 2009. Although now a wheelchair user, Perera remains very much 'Not Out' as a pioneer disability activist, promoting Environments that are Accessible and dis-Abled Friendly especially at Sports venues.
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's
verifiability policy. Please
improve this article by removing names that do not have independent
reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate
citations.(December 2014)
One comes across fellow Royalists in varying situations in life; instantly a rapport is established for one knows the other — assumes his qualities and understands his character.
SirJames PeirisJP – Vice President of the
Legislative Council and first Ceylonese Acting Governor[3] (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
SirRichard Morgan – first Ceylonese member of the Governor's
Executive Council and Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
SirPonnambalam RamanathanKCMGKC – first elected Ceylonese representative unofficial member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement and Civil Servants)
SirHector van Cuylenburg – first elected Burgher representative unofficial member of the Legislative Council
SirMarcus FernandoFRCP – member of the Executive Council and Legislative Council (note: also listed in Medicine)
SirArunachalam MahadevaKCMG – former Minister Home Affaires of the State Council and member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
SirBandara PanabokkeAdigar – First Minister of Health in the State Council and a member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
E. W. Perera – former Member of the State Council and the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
Donald Obeyesekere – former Member of the State Council and the Legislative Council[16] (note: also listed in Sportsmen and sports administrators)
JusticeSirThomas GarvinKC – former ex-officio Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges and lawyers)
JusticeMaas Thajoon AkbarKC – former ex-officio Member of the Legislative Council[17] (note: also listed in Judges and lawyers)
C. E. Corea – former Member of the Legislative Council, President of the Ceylon National Congress (1924)[18] (note: also listed in Prominent figures in the Independence Movement)
Charles Ambrose Lorensz – former Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
T M Sabaratnam – former Member of the Legislative Council
James De Alwis – former Member of the Legislative Council[19] (note: also listed in Poets)
K. Balasingam – former Member of the Executive Council and Legislative Council
J. R. Weinman – former Member of the Legislative Council (note: also listed in Judges)
A. J. R. de Soysa – former Member of the Legislative Council of Ceylon
SirRazik FareedOBEJP – former Cabinet Minister of Trade, Deputy Speaker, Member of Parliament, the Senate and the State Council (note: also listed in Diplomats)
MajorE. A. NugawelaCLI – former Cabinet Minister of Education (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament & State Council[21]
Cathiravelu SittampalamCCS – former Cabinet Minister of Posts and Telecommunications (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament
Abeyratne Ratnayaka – former Cabinet Minister of Food and Cooperatives (of the first cabinet 1947), Member of Parliament & State Council
Felix R. Dias Bandaranaike – former Cabinet Minister of Finance, Public Administration, Local Government, Home Affairs,
Justice, Member of Parliament[22]
DeshamanyaNissanka WijeyeratneCCS – former Cabinet Minister of Education, Higher Education &
Justice, Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Colvin R de Silva – former Cabinet Minister of Plantation Industries and Constitutional Affairs, Member of Parliament
Mano Wijeyeratne – former Minister of Plantation Services, Non-Cabinet Minister of Enterprise Development, Member of Parliament
Susil Moonesinghe – former
Chief Minister of the Western Provincial Council, Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Local government and Diplomats)
T. B. Panabokke – former Deputy Minister of Justice & Agriculture and Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Diplomats)
Wijaya Dahanayake – former Deputy Minister of Public Administration and Home Affairs and Member of Parliament[28]
Mangala Moonesinghe – former Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Diplomats)
H. Sri NissankaKC – former Member of Parliament and one of the founders of the
SLFP (note: also listed in Lawyers)
Walwin de SilvaCCS – former Member of Parliament (note: also listed in Civil servants)
SirHarry Dias Bandaranaike – former Acting Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ceylon and first Ceylonese
Barrister (note: also listed in Legislators)
Wilhelm WouterszSLOS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sri Lankan Ambassador to China, Italy and Yugoslavia[57]
Esala WeerakoonSLOS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India and Ambassador to Norway[58]
Lal Jayawardena – Second Vice-Chairman of the
Group of 24, former Sri Lankan High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Ambassador to the
EEC, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Anil Moonesinghe – Sri Lankan Ambassador to Austria and Ambassador/Permanent Representative the UN, Geneva (note: also listed in Legislators)
Mangala Moonesinghe – former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom (note: also listed in Legislators)
Susil Moonesinghe – former Ambassador to Iran (note: also listed in Legislators)
Wickrema Weerasooria – former High Commissioner to Australia and New Zealand[64] (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Ernest Corea – Sri Lanka's former Ambassador to the United States, High Commissioner to Canada (note: also listed in Media personalities and Journalists)
Daya PereraPC – Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Canada and former Ambassador to the United Nations[65]
DeshamanyaNeville Kanakeratne – Sri Lankan Ambassador to the United States and High Commissioner to India[54] (note: also listed in Viceregal)
Oliver Weerasinghe – Sri Lanka's former Ambassador to the United States[66][67] (note: also listed in Architects)
Omer Kamil – former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Iran (note: also listed in Mayors)
T. D. S. A. Dissanayake – former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Indonesia and Egypt; prominent Sri Lankan diplomat in the UN[68]
S. J. WalpitaCCS – former Ceylon's Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium (note: also listed in Civil servants)
Vipula Wanigasekera – former Sri Lanka's first Consul General to Norway, Director General, Sri Lanka Tourism Authority, Ministry of Tourism (note: also listed in Civil servants)
DeshamanyaBaku MahadevaCCS – former Permanent Secretary of the Treasury, the Ministry of Agriculture and Food and the Ministry of Public Administration and Home Affairs
Nissanka WijeyeratneCCS – former Permanent Secretary of the Ministries of Information & Broadcasting, Transport and Cultural Affairs (note: also listed in Legislators)
Arjuna Mahendran – former Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and former Chairman of Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (note: also listed in Corporate Executives)[74]
Dhammika Kitulgoda – Secretary General of Parliament (1999–2002, 2008–2012), Secretary to the
Parliamentary Council and former District Judge (note: also listed in Judges)[77]
Vidya JyothiJanaka de Silva – Professor Emeritus of Medicine and former Dean, Faculty of Medicine,
University of Kelaniya,[115] and former Director, Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo (note: also listed in Medicine)
Emeritus Professor of Medicine,
University of Colombo, Physician first trained Nephrologist, President Sri Lanka Medical Council, Ceylon College of Physician, Founder National Institute Nephrology and Transplant Institute, Member Sri Lanka Medical Council
^"Historic occasion for Sri Lanka cricket scorers" (Press release). Lake House (Daily News) - Sports. 2007-08-30. Archived from
the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2009-02-15. The significant contributions Ajith C. S. Perera has made to cricket, mostly through his dedicated achievements together with his willingness to further improve individual performance, extends into almost all avenues of cricket one could think of and thereby perhaps remain unparallel". "In the late 80 decade he achieved his goals here to become the 'First Sri Lankan' to be accepted and recognised as a professionally qualified umpire (1985), scorer (1987), then also as a 'Scorer competent in advanced scoring techniques' (1989) and finally as a 'professional training instructor' both for Scorers and Umpires (1990), by the prestigious body in England for Umpires and Scorers, ACU&S.
^Perera, Ajith C. S. (19 August 2008).
"Cricket where Everybody is Included". Features Page 8. Upali Newspapers - The Island. Retrieved 30 January 2009. Although now a wheelchair user, Perera remains very much 'Not Out' as a pioneer disability activist, promoting Environments that are Accessible and dis-Abled Friendly especially at Sports venues.